Homemade Cake Flour - Does it REALLY work the same?? Let’s test.

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  • Опубликовано: 28 июл 2024
  • I’m sharing how to make cake flour at home using 2 simple ingredients you can find in your pantry: All purpose flour and corn starch. And I am testing if that homemade cake flour really work the same as store bought cake flours.. finally the moment of truth I’d been dying to find out!
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Комментарии • 104

  • @PastryLivingwithAya
    @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +12

    Well, I wish I could give you more simple result or explanation😭 but I hope the video was helpful for you!!
    I think there is still a lot of room to improve for this homemade cake flour like I mentioned in the video. I’ll keep testing and give you updated!

    • @mariahalcoforadopinheiro4
      @mariahalcoforadopinheiro4 8 дней назад

      Have you tried potato starch instead of corn starch? I’ve seen some bakers say is better for the substitution than corn starch

  • @lisahinton9682
    @lisahinton9682 4 месяца назад +1

    Once again, you did so much work to make this video. I am so impressed, and I learned a lot today. Thanks, Aya!

  • @sallyparsons8111
    @sallyparsons8111 Год назад +3

    So grateful for the work that went into this. Immediately subscribed, thank you!!

  • @WendyS1822
    @WendyS1822 2 года назад +9

    Wow! This was so interesting - you’re amazing!! Love all your videos - thank you for sharing all of your talents and knowledge with us!

  • @zora2107
    @zora2107 Месяц назад

    Thanks, this was really helpful, amazing work!

  • @Drovi4
    @Drovi4 2 года назад +1

    Yay! More tests like this, please!

  • @Bukky_O
    @Bukky_O Год назад

    Thank you so much for this detailed work! So useful

  • @delilahboa
    @delilahboa Год назад +2

    Thank you Aya, so interesting, thanks for all the work you put into this tutorial and every one of your other tutorials come to think of it! Xx❤xX

  • @lenapawlek7295
    @lenapawlek7295 2 года назад

    Thanks for all your work on this one! Thats so many cakes!

  • @goldenjourneys1003
    @goldenjourneys1003 2 года назад +1

    Thank you Aya.Such a very good explanation and it help us to follow the right formula if ever we run out of cake flour.

  • @elf7355
    @elf7355 Год назад +7

    Thank you so much Aya for this detailed explanation! I've been trying to figure out how to calculate the ratio and your video has been super helpful!!

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  Год назад

      Awesome!😊❤️ I’m glad it was helpful.

    • @Scotty2-rescue
      @Scotty2-rescue 4 месяца назад

      ​@@PastryLivingwithAya
      I've never baked 1 thing in my entire life and I'm 59.
      But I L O V E & eat mounds of Cake from different places & I have concluded I will try and make what each are missing...
      1 place has such a thin layer of cake& Loads of Butter Cream....Which I love the taste of their buttercream but it's not enuff cake to balance it.
      & They are expensive but not worth it.
      The other the cake is light airy & moist and the buttercream is horrible it's made with granulated sugar & greasy frosting made w shortening....uggg good cake ruined by grease.
      So I want to try and make what I love to eat......
      😂😂😂
      I ordered cake pans and utensils so I'm waiting on those before I embark on my journey
      I was worried about my pan choices I don't like aluminum so I got 2. stainkess steel 2 carbon steel something or other & 2 aluminum. No spring pans I'm not ready for that...any suggestions besides not to eat all the cake?

  • @annchovy6
    @annchovy6 2 года назад +16

    A supposedly better alternative if you don’t have cake flour is to microwave AP flour because it mimics some of the bleaching process, which is a big aspect of cake flour.
    Stella Parks has written on why AP flour and cornstarch is a poor substitute. One of the big issues with it isn’t the protein, but the starch content and how much liquid a starchier mix will absorb.
    “Cornstarch may dilute the overall protein content of the flour, but it jacks up the starch in a totally different way. The result is a highly absorbent dry mix that soaks up way too much moisture, for a cake that bakes up heavy and dense.”

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +6

      I’ve heard of baking all purpose flour to create cake flour. I need to test that next!

    • @gardengalsu
      @gardengalsu Год назад

      " ... is to microwave AP flour ..." for how long? I don't want to create a flour 'bomb'! LOL ...

    • @gardengalsu
      @gardengalsu Год назад

      @@PastryLivingwithAya Same request - - - bake for how long? I understand you can bake plain flour to get ~ what is it now ~ browned flour(?) for an altogether different purpose.

    • @sunflowerhk100
      @sunflowerhk100 2 месяца назад

      What is the science behind microwaving AP flour to make cake flour? Is that to evaporate the water? I just baked 65g of AP flour at 100 degrees celcius for 10 minutes and it came out to weigh 55g. I don't know why. Anyway I used the pre-baked flour to make a chiffon cake which has a better texture with a dome (unlike previously the center would sink)

  • @kaye4971
    @kaye4971 Год назад

    That was alot of research, great work! We appreciate that!

  • @user-gg1he2el9i
    @user-gg1he2el9i 2 года назад +1

    Amazing!! 👏 So interesting !! You`re doing a lot of research 👍
    The comparison in the video was very easy to understand ✨😍
    I`m looking forward to future sweets ! 🥰

  • @utkbyuca89
    @utkbyuca89 4 месяца назад +1

    Good explanation. Now I must have cake flour on hand.

  • @laurasharp7955
    @laurasharp7955 2 года назад

    Brilliant tutorial, thanks Once again.

  • @oolee6862
    @oolee6862 Год назад

    Very meaningful and interesting video! Thanks for doing the experiment. I could not find cake flour in my supermarkets around. Will surely try your formula. Thank you!

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  Год назад

      I’m glad it was helpful!
      If you can find pastry flour, you may want to try it too: it’s like between cake flour and all purpose flour, so it might work better with corn starch!

  • @tihomirhaluzan7917
    @tihomirhaluzan7917 2 года назад

    Wow, thanx! A very interesting experiment.

  • @cherishwonders5802
    @cherishwonders5802 2 года назад

    Interesting to know 😲 thanks for sharing Aya. 🤗

  • @hotoliyeptho7544
    @hotoliyeptho7544 2 года назад

    Thank you sooooo much aya this video means a lot to me 🥰❣️💞💓

  • @sundaybaking
    @sundaybaking 2 года назад +4

    This was really helpful! My subscribers also ask me alternative for cake flour often. I should recommend your video!

  • @beyummy
    @beyummy 2 года назад

    Here in S.A cake flour is a household staple which almost everyone uses to bake cakes,breads I didn't know about different flours just cake flour,thank you for this video I want to share it with my mom...

  • @jamesoliver6625
    @jamesoliver6625 2 года назад +5

    Aya...I did my own tests using biscuits as my test. My original recipe required a blend of 50% AP and 50% store cake flour, cut with both butter and shortening to give me the biscuit structure I desired. Many advised that to get the best biscuit I had to use 100% White Lily Brand flour and when I did the structure was way too soft. White Lily is 100% "Soft Red Winter wheat" (an actual agronomic variety) with the lowest protein level as it grows. Summarizing, I find that mixing 50:50 Store AP with Store cake flour OR 50:50 Store AP with White Lily branded gives me the identical structure/softness compromise I'm looking for and so when cake flour is desired, I use White Lily brand flour.

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for sharing! Is the whiteLily brand cake flour? Do you know the protein content?

    • @jamesoliver6625
      @jamesoliver6625 2 года назад +2

      @@PastryLivingwithAya White Lily is just a high quality utility brand of flour sold mostly here in the South and Texas where I am. It is made exclusively from "soft red winter" wheat which as a specie of wheat is known to be in the 6-7.5% range. They don't sell it as cake flour specifically, just as AP, or SR in my store.My store AP flour is 10%. The White Lily is 6.3%. My son also keeps King Arthur AP because he makes a lot of breads and it runs around 13%. It depends on the specie of wheat. Pasta wheat, "Durham", is different as well.

    • @annchovy6
      @annchovy6 2 года назад +3

      @@jamesoliver6625 White Lily is specifically pastry flour though it’s marketed as all-purpose flour. That is a specific type of flour, though it’s not something that people who don’t work in food service tend to be familiar with, as most places only sell all-purpose, cake, and bread flour. It is lower gluten than all-purpose flour, but higher than cake flour.
      I prefer biscuits made only with all-purpose flour as I think flour like White Lily lacks enough gluten to produce a really good biscuit. But of course which all-purpose flour you use matters. A lot of people use King Arthur all-purpose flour not realizing that it’s basically a bread flour. The type of wheat (red/white, spring/winter) that goes into AP flour affects both protein content and just as important and ignored, starch content.
      I’m not sure where you’re getting that White Lily is that low gluten, because it’s in the 8-9% range, as pastry flours typically are, whereas cake flour is below 8% typically.

    • @jamesoliver6625
      @jamesoliver6625 2 года назад +2

      ​@@annchovy6 I get my White Lily in my regular grocery store right next to the store brand AP. My son was in food service while in school (cooked something like 29,000 steaks in 6 years) but we're just DIY bakers. We keep 7 types of flour in the pantry plus 3 corn grinds, almond, 3 sugars, you know, the regulars. We just like to experiment with baked goods. Straight AP is not light enough, straight White Lily is too soft. Thats why I blend flours and use two fats. I also have a french-door type of air fryer and since I made my first batch in it as an experiment, I haven't used my oven for biscuits since. Now if we start talking cornbread, it's another story.

  •  2 года назад

    Looking very delicious süper 👍 👏👏

  • @RyeAvenue
    @RyeAvenue Год назад

    Useful information 👍

  • @jahjoeka
    @jahjoeka Год назад

    Awesome!

  • @mollybeee
    @mollybeee 8 месяцев назад

    I follow a baker from New Zealand and she uses the substitute all the time because cake flour is not available there because of the way it is processed. I use her recipes all the time and they're terrific.

    • @akritisharma9541
      @akritisharma9541 8 месяцев назад

      Can you tell me the name of baker you follow

  • @janem3575
    @janem3575 6 месяцев назад

    Interesting video. I don't bake. But i like to eat baked goods! I had a thought. In bread making, there's cooking flour with water / milk to make tangzou. People say it denatures some of the gluten and adds moisture. Your thoughts on this to make a cake flour equivalent?

  • @aminakassim7741
    @aminakassim7741 2 года назад

    Wow!!! I think you should do other dessert ingredients than flour experimental videos too

  • @MichaelREFLECTS
    @MichaelREFLECTS 2 года назад +24

    The reason one will never get real store bought cake flour is it contains special ingredients that are not required to be listed by the USFDA and are proprietary treatments on wheat starch. They furthermore contain wheat softeners on a commercial level that is simply unavailable to home bakers. It's also why its more costly than all purpose flour with some corn starch. I knew this for years. The reality is if you want the absolute best for cakes, go store-bought cake flour. If you want a weaker yet comparable cake flour, homemade can work but won't yield superior results. Glad to see someone come to the same conclusion...but I feel if you're on a journey to make 1:1 cake flour to the store...its gonna end up in defeat from a scientific perspective. Just my 2 cents :)

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +2

      Thanks for your perspective! Do you know what the special ingredients are? that are not required to be listed.

    • @MichaelREFLECTS
      @MichaelREFLECTS 2 года назад +2

      @@PastryLivingwithAya thats the billion dollar question. I suspect a lot of R&D went into cake flours. I know quite a few are not obtainable unless a commercial outfit notwithstanding even the super secret blend these companies use.

    • @src3360
      @src3360 Год назад +3

      @@PastryLivingwithAya
      Whatever it is, its most likely considered "proprietary" and not required to divulge, unfortunately.
      Like when something has "spices" in it. The owner doesnt have to list the exact spices if they register it as "proprietary" The ingredient mixture belongs to the creator of whatever product they produce. Happens in skincare as well.

    • @Bukky_O
      @Bukky_O Год назад +1

      Thanks a lot. I suspected this as well

  • @doloresboston8571
    @doloresboston8571 Год назад +1

    So don’t sea levels and humidity come into play when baking cakes also which then you’d have to take into account oven temps and times?

  • @beyummy
    @beyummy 2 года назад

    Is it ok to bake cakes and breads with cake flour?I hear alot about all purpose flour and strong bread flour🤔Aya you keep me busy with research about baking you inspire me...thank you ❤️🤢

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +2

      I'm glad❤️ It's amazing to keep being curious!!
      To bake sponge, I always use cake flour. To make breads, bread flour are often used. Sometimes all purpose flour too but it's rare to use only cake flour for breads even if it is possible. Bread flour contains the most protein and that creates more glutens. Gluten net hold the gas from yeast as they expand during the proofing process and even during the baking process to create the soft and springy texture.
      When people make pastry bread, a lot of people use all purpose flour or mix in cake flour to create more light, less springy texture. So depending on the texture you want to create, you can use different types of flour!

  • @tanakatanie1594
    @tanakatanie1594 2 месяца назад

    Premium content 💯

  • @carolebunyan3122
    @carolebunyan3122 2 года назад +1

    We have self raising flour, plain (all purpose) and cake flour is hard to find so is self raising flour the same as cake flour. I think it's just all purposexwith baking powder added, but contains no cornflour (corn starch). Is this correct?

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад

      Self rising flour is a mixture of all purpose flour, baking powder and salt basically. So the sponge rises more than just all purpose flour but I’m not sure if it works great with genoise sponge. I’ll share if I test that too.
      Which country do you live? I wonder if you can find cake flour or something similar online.

    • @carolebunyan3122
      @carolebunyan3122 2 года назад

      @@PastryLivingwithAya I live in Scotland and have made genoise sponge many times with great success using self raising flour. I have been able to get cake flour and used it to make the same sponge recipe with equal success. It would be interesting to have you try making a genoise with self raising flour if you can get hold of it. I bake most days, making everything from sourdough bread, cookies, celebration cakes, scones, tray bakes and other pastries. I really enjoy watching Pastry Living and am always open to learning new things even though I have been baking for over 50 years. Thank you

    • @romystumpy1197
      @romystumpy1197 Год назад

      I don't know but I'm in the UK,are you, SR flour is just plain flour with added raising agent,I go to my polish supermarket to buy my flour, they have so many types, there,if you have a shop near you have a look, you can translate on internet all the different types.

  • @poopgamer8884
    @poopgamer8884 Год назад

    Do you own a LG oven? I recognize the blue interior. I have one and personally don’t like it because it is on the hot side and takes forever for it to cool down.

  • @christinashawgo6510
    @christinashawgo6510 7 месяцев назад

    Could the issue be that the cake flour uses “soft white wheat grains “?
    Regular flour is usually “Hard red wheat grain”
    I am told that bread flour is usually soft, white wheat.

  • @mae6378
    @mae6378 Год назад +1

    What cake flour do you use pls , it’s so hard to find cake flour in the uk 😭🫶🏻

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  Год назад

      The link is in the description! I hope they are available worldwide!!

  • @TatineeDey
    @TatineeDey 2 года назад

    How about using self raising flour? Will that make any difference?

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +1

      Self rising flour is basically all purpose flour with baking powder and salt. I’ve never baked genoise sponge with it, so I’m not sure if it’ll work but I assume it’ll get fluffier than just all purpose flour only.

    • @annchovy6
      @annchovy6 2 года назад

      @@PastryLivingwithAya Self-raising flour in Europe doesn’t contain salt. American self-rising flour does, though.
      In general European plain and self-raising flour tends to be lower gluten than American all-purpose. It’s often also finer grind.

  • @karencalhoun2503
    @karencalhoun2503 Год назад

    Are you answer my question you really can’t make adequate cake flour from home me personally I would just stick with buying the cake flour and let the chemist do the work of figuring out the ratio then me thank you for that information it was really informative

  • @biswajitsaha5737
    @biswajitsaha5737 Год назад

    Thank you very much for sharing ❤❤❤ It is very helpful to me. As where I live low protein flour is not available, only 12% -14% protein level flour is available in the market. Can I turn this 12-14% protein level flour into AP flour 11%?

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  Год назад

      I’m glad it was helpful!! It is possible to do so by following the calculation but the texture won’t be exactly the same like I shared in the video. Or you might just want to use 12% protein AP flour as it is almost likely as 11 % one.

    • @biswajitsaha5737
      @biswajitsaha5737 Год назад

      @@PastryLivingwithAya Got it. Thank you 🙂

  • @gospatrick
    @gospatrick 2 месяца назад

    Protane and protane accessories.

  • @hasanx8317
    @hasanx8317 Год назад

    You can look for wheat starch

  • @vietnamemperor123461
    @vietnamemperor123461 Год назад

    Homemade cake flour is just a quick fix substitution for store bought cake flour so it was never really meant to have the same or better quality.

  • @IlseBelievesInPink
    @IlseBelievesInPink Год назад

    I really don't like the ap flour+cornstarch "substitute", cakes turn out dry and you can feel some sort of powdery grittiness after you chew, almost as if the cornstarch didn't cook through.

  • @mavissaga7388
    @mavissaga7388 Год назад

    Pls can u drop the recipes

  • @carcard8033
    @carcard8033 11 месяцев назад

    Maybe you can use 00 flour if you do it again.

  • @HonestlyHolistic
    @HonestlyHolistic Год назад

    In Germany we don't even have cake flour, now I know why all my cakes turned out dry when using american recipes

  • @gardengalsu
    @gardengalsu Год назад +1

    aaaaaaaaaaagh!!! Too much math I just MUST keep cake flour on hand!

  • @sherronleo1983
    @sherronleo1983 Год назад

    confusing

  • @mistyrose3042
    @mistyrose3042 Год назад +2

    So complicated.. 🙄😳

  • @lizanderson1669
    @lizanderson1669 4 месяца назад

    for every 1 cup of flour you remove 2 tbsp of flour and replace with 2 tbsp of cornstarch and make sure yo sift it about 3 to 4 times cake flour protein is 10 all purpose is 11.7

  • @lisaboban
    @lisaboban 2 года назад +2

    I never understood why people would want to do this. Corn starch isn't even close to AP flour from a chemistry basis. If the recipe calls for cake flour, use cake flour or bake something else. Plenty of delicious cakes call for AP flour.

    • @PastryLivingwithAya
      @PastryLivingwithAya  2 года назад +5

      I totally get that. I felt the same way until my subscribers told me there are many areas/countries where you can’t get cake flour easily. Since I use cake flour very often for my desserts, a lot of people asked how they can substitute it. I did these tests hoping to help people in that situations!

    • @lisaboban
      @lisaboban 2 года назад +1

      @@PastryLivingwithAya Maybe you could do some cakes with AP flour. I know you enjoy light sponges. But there are lots of great recipes for wonderful cakes using AP flour.

    • @Ummuli01
      @Ummuli01 Год назад

      @@PastryLivingwithAya oh yeah one can't find cake flour in Nigeria