Bake
Thou Shalt Not ‘Wing It’ & Other Baking Commandments We Swear By
Our collective baking wisdom for better cookies, cakes, and pies.
Photo by MJ Kroeger
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29 Comments
Charlene V.
January 12, 2024
I think #51 should be reworded. It almost sounds like you’re giving the opposite advice when the sentence reads, “Wrap it in plastic before it's fully cool, and you'll trap the heat close to the cake's surface,”. I think a better way to write it would be, “Don’t wrap it in plastic before it's fully cool, or you'll trap the heat close to the cake's surface,
Corduval
November 13, 2016
Thank you for a wonderful collection of tips. I learned a few things from them and have forwarded them on to my son, who loves to bake.
Mary A.
November 13, 2016
My mother taught me when making a layer cake to put the first layer upside down on the plate to get a nice flat surface to ice and the second layer, rounded side up to have a beautiful rounded top on you iced cake. My mother was an amazing cook. She married at 18 and shortly after bought a Betty Crocker Cookbook, she lived by that cookbook and became 'the' best cook in both families. Well into her 80's she still cut out recipies from magazines and newspapers. My parent's always had excellent Holiday parties and each year had a outdoor family picnic for both families. My Mom had a potato salad that EVERYONE raved about - I wish that I could make it but it was "a little of this, a little of that, to taste, some pickle juice, according to what kind of pickle juice you have on hand. . . . . She was amazing!
Mary A.
November 13, 2016
I would love tips on PopOvers. I will make them and they turn out perfect and then I make them again -doing everything the same and they just don't "pop"! Frustrating!
Jen
November 13, 2016
Butter & sugar for cakes can be over creamed. I don't think to imply to keep creaming is a great idea. It'll cause the cake to fall.
AntoniaJames
January 6, 2016
Another tip: if you get a bit of eggshell in a bowl of batter or eggs to be beaten, etc., always use a larger piece of eggshell, and nothing else (not your finger, not a fork, not a spoon), to fish out that little piece.
I think I learned that one from Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry in one of the early series. ;o)
I think I learned that one from Paul Hollywood and Mary Berry in one of the early series. ;o)
Sarah J.
December 21, 2015
Something else that seems obvious on second thought but might useful! It seems safer, if baking many items in one day, to start with the recipe with the lowest oven temperature. It's easier to bring oven temperature up than it is to cool it down!
AntoniaJames
December 21, 2015
Yes, when I do all that dough prep, I label each packet with time and temp, e.g., 8-10 at 325, 12 at 350, 8 at 375 and plan accordingly. Same of course with Thanksgiving day baking/ reheating.
If you can't do it in low to high order, however, it really doesn't take long to bring the temperature down with the oven door open, if you have an oven thermometer for testing - though it's a bit irresponsible from a resource consumption perspective. ;o)
If you can't do it in low to high order, however, it really doesn't take long to bring the temperature down with the oven door open, if you have an oven thermometer for testing - though it's a bit irresponsible from a resource consumption perspective. ;o)
AntoniaJames
December 21, 2015
Another tip relating only to "production" baking, for example, when you are making four or five different types of cookies on one day for giving to friends and family during the holidays:
Plan your project so you wash as few bowls as possible until the very end. I recently made the following cookies, in this order, without washing my stand mixer bowl until the very end - and of course re-used my dry ingredients bowls, and pyrex measures to the greatest extent possible, etc. throughout the process.
Candy Cane Cookies https://food52.com/recipes/20160-candy-cane-cookies ; I put all of the dough in plastic wrap, adding food color to half at the very end of my cooke dough prep evening, using my dry ingredients bowl.
St Clements Cookies https://food52.com/recipes/2251-st-clement-s-orange-and-lemon-cookies
Nut crescents https://food52.com/recipes/25462-maple-olive-oil-praline-crescents
Gingerbread cut-out cookies
Lebkuchen. I like the method of spreading on a cookie sheet a dough that's like a thick batter. The Lebkuchen is therefore always made last.
A separate tip for Lebkuchen: make a thin sugar glaze using the sugar syrup from the container of candied orange peel. Brush on while the lebkuchen is still warm, after scoring but before removing from the cookie sheet.
Hope this helps. ;o)
Plan your project so you wash as few bowls as possible until the very end. I recently made the following cookies, in this order, without washing my stand mixer bowl until the very end - and of course re-used my dry ingredients bowls, and pyrex measures to the greatest extent possible, etc. throughout the process.
Candy Cane Cookies https://food52.com/recipes/20160-candy-cane-cookies ; I put all of the dough in plastic wrap, adding food color to half at the very end of my cooke dough prep evening, using my dry ingredients bowl.
St Clements Cookies https://food52.com/recipes/2251-st-clement-s-orange-and-lemon-cookies
Nut crescents https://food52.com/recipes/25462-maple-olive-oil-praline-crescents
Gingerbread cut-out cookies
Lebkuchen. I like the method of spreading on a cookie sheet a dough that's like a thick batter. The Lebkuchen is therefore always made last.
A separate tip for Lebkuchen: make a thin sugar glaze using the sugar syrup from the container of candied orange peel. Brush on while the lebkuchen is still warm, after scoring but before removing from the cookie sheet.
Hope this helps. ;o)
AntoniaJames
December 21, 2015
"[B]y all means use butter where a greased cookie sheet is called for. Nothing else does so much for the finish and flavor." Mimi Sheraton, New York Times, December 9, 1981 . I like this tip so much that I've used it as my subtitle in my Christmas Cookies collection (instead of my usual literary or similar quote).
A corollary to that (written in 1981, when I'm fairly certain that only professional bakers used parchment) is not to use parchment and always to use butter on the baking sheet, for that reason, whenever possible. It really does make the cookies taste better. (Brown butter, anyone?)
;o)
A corollary to that (written in 1981, when I'm fairly certain that only professional bakers used parchment) is not to use parchment and always to use butter on the baking sheet, for that reason, whenever possible. It really does make the cookies taste better. (Brown butter, anyone?)
;o)
Sarah J.
December 21, 2015
Interesting tip—thank you for sharing! Reminds me of MrsWheelBarrow's Not Recipe for stuffing, in which she covers the stuffing with a buttered sheet of parchment for extra flavor. Brilliant! https://food52.com/blog/11754-how-to-make-stuffing-without-a-recipe
AntoniaJames
January 6, 2016
I don't fully understand that tip. My parchment paper (If You Care organic) soaks up any butter used to grease it. That would prevent it from sticking to the stuffing, but I cannot imagine that it would make much difference to the flavor of the dish - especially when one typically pours fat all over the top of the stuffing before covering it. ;o)
NotTooSweet
December 20, 2015
The timing of this article couldn't be better. I just sat down to enjoy a cup of coffee and relax before beginning a marathon of cookie and pie baking. I've read some wonderful tips and will incorporate many of them in my baking today. I especially appreciated the clarification about creaming butter & sugar when making cookies vs. cakes. I agree with Kathy about cleaning up as you go; and with Rosemary about precut parchment paper. The KAF sheets are reusable and SO easy to just grab and go. Thanks Sarah for putting so many great tips in one easy spot. I've saved this and will surely refer to it often. Food52 rocks!
Kathy
December 17, 2015
I am teaching my daughter to bake and one of the most important steps for me is clean as you go. Two of the first things I taught her were to preheat the oven before she did anything (as in Step 11) and to fill the sink with hot soapy water. Then as she is finished with the baking tools and bowls they go into the water and by the time the first batch of cookies or cake are in the oven, the dishes are ready to wash and dry.
rbrock1225
December 17, 2015
Years ago I purchased the set of 50 half-sheet sized sheets of parchment from KAF. One of the best things I ever did. The sheets came rolled into a cylinder and it's easy to draw out the sheets you need. You don't fight with the sheets rolling back on themselves.
When I need citrus zest in a recipe, I peel off thin strips of zest with a vegetable peeler and then grind them with the granulated sugar in my food processor. You capture more of the citrus oil. The only thing you want to be careful is not getting the pith (the white part).
When I need citrus zest in a recipe, I peel off thin strips of zest with a vegetable peeler and then grind them with the granulated sugar in my food processor. You capture more of the citrus oil. The only thing you want to be careful is not getting the pith (the white part).
Jeannie
December 17, 2015
Ditto on what Adam J said below: great list & I learned more in 5 minutes than I ever knew I didn't know about baking!
meryl
December 16, 2015
No mention of baking spray for decorative bundt type pans - Alice always recommends it!
Sarah J.
December 16, 2015
Thanks for adding to our list! That's a smart suggestion. (And she elaborates on all the rules here: https://food52.com/blog/13070-how-to-prepare-pans-for-cake-success)
Eva S.
January 12, 2024
I've been having great success using Cake Goop as a cake release - even when baking an intricate bundt cake. It's equal parts shortening (I use Crisco), vegetable oil and flour. I mix up a batch and keep it in my refrigerator. It's good for about 6 months. I use a silicon brush to paint it into all of the nooks and crannies of the pan. (And just so you know - I NEVER use Crisco for anything else!)
Charlene V.
January 12, 2024
I also love using cake goop. I think I’m on my third or fourth jar. I don’t even keep it in the refrigerator, as nothing in it is perishable. Also, I dedicate a pastry brush to it, and simply wrap it in plastic wrap and keep it near the cake goop jar. I wash it after several uses. That’s also all I use Crisco for (no judgment!)
Bebewatson
December 16, 2015
What about silplat sheets? Is it okay to use them on non-stick sheet pans? How do they effect the shiny vs dark sheet pans? Also, is it better to use flat sheets vs rimmed baking sheets for cookies?
irishchef
December 16, 2015
I disagree a little w/if the egg floats it's bad; it's old for sure not necessarily bad.
nita
December 16, 2015
Thank-you for this early Christmas gift!
Nice to have these tips all in one place.
Nice to have these tips all in one place.
Ted
December 16, 2015
Is there any way to (easily) find the recipes for some of the foods in the photos?
I'd interested in the cake right at the top of this piece; the cookies on the parchment lined tray accompanying tip 13 ("13. Use shiny, light-colored, not nonstick baking sheets."), and; the log cookies being sliced in the image accompanying tip 23 ("23. For perfectly round log cookies, save your paper towel tubes.").
Thank you!
I'd interested in the cake right at the top of this piece; the cookies on the parchment lined tray accompanying tip 13 ("13. Use shiny, light-colored, not nonstick baking sheets."), and; the log cookies being sliced in the image accompanying tip 23 ("23. For perfectly round log cookies, save your paper towel tubes.").
Thank you!
Sarah J.
December 16, 2015
I can help with that! And I'll also update the post so it's easier to find them.
Cake at the top: https://food52.com/recipes/39307-chocolate-almond-giant-cinnamon-bun-cake https://food52.com/recipes/39401-curd-cheese-cookies
Cookies on baking sheet: https://food52.com/recipes/25372-pierre-herme-dorie-greenspan-s-world-peace-cookies
Log cookies:
Cake at the top: https://food52.com/recipes/39307-chocolate-almond-giant-cinnamon-bun-cake https://food52.com/recipes/39401-curd-cheese-cookies
Cookies on baking sheet: https://food52.com/recipes/25372-pierre-herme-dorie-greenspan-s-world-peace-cookies
Log cookies:
Sarah J.
December 16, 2015
Let me try again! Log cookies: https://food52.com/recipes/25372-pierre-herme-dorie-greenspan-s-world-peace-cookies
Sarah J.
December 16, 2015
Updated the bottom of the article with all of the pictured recipes! Happy baking. :)
Adam J.
December 16, 2015
I just learned more about baking in the last 5 minutes than I have in my whole life.
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