Why is my white cake not fluffy?

Why is my white cake not fluffy?

Room Temperature Butter / Don’t Over-Cream Butter is capable of holding air and the creaming process is when butter traps that air. While baking, that trapped air expands and produces a fluffy cake. No properly creamed butter = no air = no fluffiness.

How do I make sure my cake is light and fluffy?

Whisking butter and sugar together is one essential tip to make the cake spongy, fluffy and moist. Whisk butter and sugar for long until the mixture becomes pale yellow and fluffy because of incorporation of air. The process is known as creaming.

Why is my cake so dense and moist?

A cake that is overly dense typically has too much liquid, too much sugar or too little leavening (not excess flour, as is commonly thought). A cake that bakes too slowly takes longer to set and may fall, causing a dense texture.

Why do cakes get hard after cooling?

The culprit behind what makes a cake tough could be overmixing your flour. Flour is the foundation of baked recipes because it provides structure. When combined with liquid and after mixing, flour’s protein (gluten) begins to develop. The mixing times on your recipe are there for a reason, so pay attention to those.

Why does my cake not rise?

Cakes that don’t rise properly or have a surface covered in little holes are often the result of not getting the cake into the oven quickly enough; a common mistake that happens because you forgot to turn the oven on before you started, or you get distracted with something else mid-way through mixing.

What happens if you put too much eggs in a cake?

Although eggs are an essential ingredient in cake baking, adding too many of them can make for a baking disaster. However, if you add too many eggs to your cake batter, then your end result could be spongy, rubbery, or dense. Like flour, eggs build structure in a cake, so they make a cake batter more bonded and dense.

Why do my cakes not rise?

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