God: "I looked for someone to take a stand for me, and stand in the gap" (Ezekiel 22:30)
The fall marks one of the most significant divisions in history, and all of us stand on the wrong side of that division. Many things happen in the Bible that don’t have a universal effect. The fall is not one of them.
Michael Lawrence
"I Can’t Believe This Is a Passover Cake" Yellow Cake
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(0)
CATEGORY
CUISINE
TAG
YIELD
Eggs
Jewish
1
Servings
INGREDIENTS
8
lg
Eggs; warmed
1/3
c
Matzoh cake meal
1/3
c
Potato starch; not packed
3/4
c
Sugar
1
tb
Passover vanilla sugar
1/4
ts
Salt
1
tb
Lemon or orange zest; finely minced
1
tb
Lemon juice
3
tb
Melted; unsalted Passover margarine or oil
Extra Potato Starch for Dusting
INSTRUCTIONS
Technically, this recipe is a cross between a true sponge cake, a classic
genoise and a chiffon cake. I like it because I do not have to separate the
egg whites and yet I get a well- textured cake. It is an exceedingly MOIST
cake that keep well and is a good foundation for fresh fruit, pareve,
Passover mousse, or a chocolate ganache topping. Although the eggs are not
separated you must treat them with care. Another must is a good,
stationary, electric stationary mixer (e.g. such as a Kitchenaid, Rival or
Sunbeam) with a whisk or whip attachment that will properly mount the
warmed, whole eggs. "Are you sure this is a Passover cake" is the reaction
most people have on their first bite of this flavorful cake. For people who
loathe dry cakes and think Passover cakes are suspect at best, this is a
must. A good cake to have if someone in your family has a birthday during
Passover.
Preheat oven to 350 F. Generously grease a ten inch springform pan or a 9
by 13 inch rectangular pan. Dust with potato starch and line bottom with
parchment paper, cut to fit.
Warm eggs (still in shells - do not open) by placing in a bowl and covering
with very hot water for 1-2 minutes (water should be hot but not so hot as
to crack eggs open and cook them but hot enough to warm them up. Do not
leave eggs in water longer than 1-2 minutes). This is the most important
step. Do not omit it. Heat mixing bowl by filling with very hot water and
then dry completely.
Meanwhile, sift together cake meal and potato starch. Place lemon juice and
melted margarine in a small bowl together. Set these ingredients aside.
Break warmed eggs into mixing bowl of an electric mixer along with sugar,
vanilla sugar, salt, and citrus zest. Using whip attachment, beat on low
speed just very briefly just to combine ingredients. Then increase to high
speed for 12 minutes. Batter will be extremely voluminous.
Pour batter into a very large mixing bowl. In a smaller bowl, stir together
the potato starch/matzoh cake meal mixture, combining well. Then fold this
mixture into egg batter, folding gently to combine but taking care not to
deflate the mixture unduly (some deflation is impossible to avoid). Gently
drizzle and fold in lemon juice and melted margarine or oil.
Pour batter into prepared pan. Bake 30-35 minutes until cake is set in
centre or until cake seems just firm when lightly touched. Cool well before
removing. Note: This is not a high cake (anywhere from 1 1/2 inches to 2
1/2 inches high) but it is very flavorful and moist.
Serves 8-10
Posted to JEWISH-FOOD digest by BNLImp@aol.com on Feb 14, 1998
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