"Who wants cake?"

Wednesday, 16 January 2013

Butter is Better

          The battle between butter and shortening has been an ongoing issue with much discussion and debate in the realm of culinary arts. Are they the same, interchangeable, or even equivalent? Most seem to think so but in reality these two products are completely different. Butter is as old as history. Butter is what we think about when we hear the words “home-baked cookies”. Butter cannot be replicated. So, why do we try and replace it with shortening?

          Knowing the difference between butter and shortening is important to understand when it comes to using these ingredients in baking. Butter is a dairy based product. It is made by churning fresh cream or milk; typically cow’s milk. It is spreadable at room temperature, has a low melting point, and needs to be kept refrigerated. Shortening, on the other hand, can be any fat or oil based fat. Vegetable shortening is more common in baking. Unlike butter, vegetable shortening does not need to be refrigerated.

           In baking, butter is used as a leavener. In a typical cake batter or cookie base, the instructions are to cream together butter and any sugar that is in the recipe. When the butter and sugars are creamed together it creates tiny little bubbles in the mix which expand when cooking in the oven. This is what gives cakes and cookies their fluffy texture. Butter is also a very important leavener in pastries. Pastry dough, or in French “mille feuille” (1000 layers) is made by a process called booking. This process involves flour dough and a block of butter which is wrapped in the dough, rolled out, and folded multiple times in different types of folds in order to create tiny layers of butter between layers of dough. Those tiny layers of butter are what give pastries their signature puffed and layered look. Although some bakeries use shortening in their puff pastry, the result of flaky layers is the same but there is one significant difference; taste.

          When attending college for baking and pastry arts, one of our assignments in theory class was to taste samples of carrot cake and talk about the difference between them. When tasting one of the samples of carrot cake, I noticed this strange waxy feeling covering my tongue. I wasn’t sure what it was but the teacher noticed the strange look on my face. That is when I realized not only does shortening change the taste of something; it also changes the mouth-feel. Vegetable shortening is made from the hydrogenation of oils. Since shortening is made from oil, this causes the melting point of shortening to be a tad bit higher than that of butter. Having the melting point just a tad bit higher (our body temperature is not high enough to melt shortening on contact) is what creates the sickening waxy film which stays in your mouth long after you have finished eating your pastry. Not only does shortening add a waxy film in the mouth, it is also tasteless. Without butter one misses out on that smooth, homey, recognizable buttery taste that every dessert needs.

          Most people believe that butter and shortening are interchangeable no matter the recipe; this is where everyone is wrong. The performance of butter and shortening are very different from each other. Butter and shortening have different fat and moisture contents, by substituting shortening for butter would be detrimental to the final product since each recipe is tailored for the fat and moisture content of butter. Shortening also has limitations on certain recipes that it can be used in. Any recipes that require the melting of butter whether to incorporate sugars or in no-bake recipes, by no means can shortening be a substitute for butter. Using shortening in recipes like these will produce a product that doesn't set up right and most definitely not taste the way it should.

          One of the most common reasons people substitute butter for shortening is that they think shortening is healthier then butter. This is another myth. Shortening is hydrogenated; this is the process where hydrogen atoms are added to vegetable oils. Although vegetable oil is made up of unsaturated fat, adding hydrogen atoms to it to make shortening creates saturated fat. Going a step further, all hydrogenated fats are labelled trans fats. Currently trans fats are the worst possible fats that you can put into your body. Eating trans fats can cause a plethora of health risks such as: heart disease, obesity, diabetes, and cancer just to name a few. Do you really want to feed your child poison cookies made with shortening?

          Butter provides the distinct flavor we all know and grew up with, it creates a product so wonderfully delicious and never fails to impress, and it provides all this while still being healthier then shortening. So I ask again; why replace butter with shortening?

Butter sculpture from the Texas State Fair 2012


Monday, 14 January 2013

21st Birthday

Yay! Finally legal in the USA. This post is a tad late...like a month late, but we can all still appreciate a nice cake. I happened to be in the US for my birthday this year and I was able to share it with a friend here that also has the same birthday. I wanted to make a cake for us but I did't have all my tools here to make an exuberant cake so this is what I came up with: White sponge dyed purple (her favourite colour) with homemade caramel and crushed m&ms for the filling, along with whipped cream covering for the whole cake. Simple and delicious.


Now for my birthday party back home I decided to try something new that I had seen in a blog awhile back. Instead of making flowers or something of the traditional nature, this blog demonstrated how to make ombre hearts that are actually shaped sugar cubes in a sense. The shine that the sugar picks up from the light give this cake such a nice sparkle and it is just so girly and pretty. For this cake the bottom tier is coconut cake dyed green (because I can) with raspberry coulis, toasted coconut, and italian meringue buttercream. Same goes for the top tier except chocolate cake replaces the coconut cake. Here is the link for the blog that shows you how to make the ombre sugar hearts.







Sunday, 13 January 2013

The "Fake" Wedding Cake

Now this one is interesting folks! I was asked to make a wedding cake for my boyfriends grandparents 50th wedding anniversary. Seeing as I was going back to Canada for the Christmas break... if I were to make a cake it would be rotten by the day they needed it for so instead a fake wedding cake was born. When one thinks of a fake cake, the first thing that comes to mind is Styrofoam ....so I took a trip to Micheal's and Hobby Lobby and was faced with an outrageous price for something that was just going to be thrown out.  The brilliant idea of using boxed cake mix was suggested but the problem with that is usually boxed cake mixes are far too moist and I was afraid that the "cake" would end up collapsing. This is where the sweet deliciousness of cornbread come in... that's right a cornbread cake, cheap and strong. Fifteen boxes of cornbread mix, 2 pounds of icing sugar and a box of fondant later, a wedding cake was born. As no one was eating the "cake", I used royal icing to stick the fondant onto the cornbread as well as making the tiny roses out of it, one hundred tiny handmade roses to be exact.