Guglehupf, Humph

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mixfinder

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This is a follow up to Gadget Gary's Guglehupf. Say that twice after two too many Greenies.

As is true for all baking that begins with creaming butter and sugar, the butter, eggs and any liquids all need to be room temperature. If you're in a hurry it can be done in the microwave on 30% power. 1 cup butter 40 seconds at 30% 3 whole eggs 30 seconds at 30% 1 cup milk or buttermilk 45 seconds at 30%. Plan to cream a minimum of 5 minutes and as much as 15 depending on the mixer you have and the temperature of all the ingredients. It needs to be creamed until the mixture resembles mayonaise before adding any eggs.

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Beaten Stiff, then folded and mutilated

If any recipe calls for the addition of beaten egg whites. reserve 1/3 of the total sugar in the recipe and add it to the beating egg whites. The whites will have more volume, be much more stable and 10 times easier to fold into the batter. Folding is down though the middle and back up the side, letting the handle of the spatula roll in your hand as you rotate the bowl with the other.

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Spackling the Bundt

I mixed soft butter with flour and painted the grooves in the bundt pan. The batter was eased in to prevent loosing any air from the beaten egg whites. Middle of the oven, 325 convection for 50 minutes.

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I have a hunch

The recipe as it reads has 1 cup of butter, 2 cups of sugar, 6 eggs and only 1 1/2 cups flour. That isn't enough starch to stabilize that much fat. I upped the flour to 2 1/2 cups and we'll see if my hunch is right.
 
WOW
Great baker's "secrets" /hints. I too thought the flour looked like it would be too little.

Mine came out too dark and the house stunk of eggs-- I don't do eggs unless well-masked.

Mine was edible but not even near the delight I remeber it being. How did yours turn out?

My white's wouln't peak either. Well at least I had fun, beating it whipping and creaming.
 
Stinkin' Show Off!

So here it is, waiting for a trip to the neighbors for cards, after church. I used a blend of lemon, lime and orange zest in the batter and then juiced the citrus and made a glaze of citrus juice, powdered sugar and butter and poured over the hot cake so it would soak in.

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Looks delicious to me. I'm going to some friends for a cookout next weekend, I might just have to make that too. I'm going to make potato salad, deviled eggs and baked beans. My KitchenAid needs a good workout.
 
Wow The cake looks beautiful. I am glad I read this. I have printed Gugelhupf cake recipe out and changed it to 2.5 cups of flour. I am also at high altitude. I am making the 1234 cake for my grandsons birthday and the Gugelhupf cake for a casual get together here at the house. I like your idea of the citrus flavors. I love your red mixer with the glass bowl. What kind is it. Thanks Dano
 
What's the best KitchenAid beater for a 1234 cake? I have the standard accessory set that came with the mixer (paddle, dough hook and whisk). Is there a better one to use?
 
Let them eat cake!

Steven, my good friend, the Guglehupf is unspeakably good. Close textured and moist, with a mouth "spring" it accomplishes everything it takes to make a great Gugle with out waiting for yeast to raise. It is unspeakably good. The Red mixer is a Kitchenaid 4 C. It was a very tired white, which I repainted with Rustoleum's Painter's touch. It is clearly the best spray paint I have ever used.
I was digging through mom's drawers and came across a hand written journal of events and recipes. On our birthday we always got an Angel Food cake, glazed with yellow icing and dribbled with chocolate. Since we had chickens, an Angel Food Cake was almost free. We cooked on a wood stove until the early 60's. Success with Angel Food scratch cakes can elude even the most seasoned of bakers. Get the timing right on the egg whites, not too soft, not too dry, sifting the dry ingredients enough, making sure you have cake flour, folding the dry ingredients into the whites without it deflating and then cutting it out of the pan with out tearing the sides. I ran across this recipe:

Synthetic Angel Food Cake

Place the following ingredients in a large mixer bowl:
14 egg whites
Dash of cream of tartar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 cup sugar
Begin whipping on medium speed. When the whites look soft and foamy increase speed to medium high and whip just until soft peaks form. Do not over beat the whites. If you must err on this one, err on the side of under beating.

While the whites are beating, sift together:
2 cups cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup sugar

To the dry ingredients, add
1 cup hot (like Coffee) milk
Stir to combine.

When the whites have sufficiently whipped, remove the bowl from the mixer and pour the milk batter over the top of the whites. Using a rubber spatula, carefully fold the batter into the whites.
Ease the batter into a clean and dry tube pan. Bake in the oven at 375 for 50 minutes. If the cake looks as if its begin to deflate it is a sign its done and beginning to loose moisture. Immediately invert the angel food cake pan over a funnel or narrow necked bottle. Let the cake cool upside down. When the cake is cooled, run a thin sharp knife around the edge. Remove the pan and cut around the bottom and tube of the insert. Invert the cake on a serving plate to serve. Always cut Angel Food cake with a sawing motion. Try not to push down and crush the cake.

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Beat Me!

There is a conundrum with baking butter cakes using a Kitchenaid. Using the paddle all the way through on a butter cake recipe will make an acceptable offering. The paddle does not aerate so the cakes are a touch dense. If I'm cooking to show off, I cream with the whip attachment (butter must be room temperature or the wires of the whip will bend) When the creaming portion is completed, remove the whisk and use the paddle to mix in the dry ingredients.

There is also a process called reverse creaming. It makes a very tender cottony cake that closely resembles a mix, but without the added sugar and preservatives.

In a reverse mixing method for butter cake place all the dry ingredients and the butter. Using the white, crumble the mix on low speed until you cannot see any butter. Combine all the wet ingredients (eggs too)and add 2/3 of the total to the crumbled dry ingredients, Mix on low to combine and then increase to medium and beat one minute. Reduce speed to low and add the rest of the wet mixture. Increase speed to medium and beat for one minute. Bake as recipe directs.

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Dark Easy and Chocolate

Hershey's Hot Water Fudge Cake

2 cups flour
2 cups sugar
1 1/2 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon salt
3/4 cups Hershey's cocoa
1 egg
3/4 cup Wesson oil
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 cup buttermilk
Combine of low speed and increase to medium. Mix for 1 minute. Turn mixer to it's lowest setting and add
1 c boiling water
Mix to combine. Batter will be thin. Pour cake into prepared pan(s) and bake at 350.
9x13 35 minutes
layers 28-32 minutes
cupcakes 22 minutes for large 18 for small

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Dark Refind Redolent

The above recipe was a permutation of the Hershey's recipe on the can. Here is the recipe, enhanced.

In a small bowl combine
3/4 cup cocoa
1 cup boiling water
Set aside

Sift together and set aside:
2 cups cake flour
1 1/2 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon salt

In the mixer place:
1 cup soft butter
1 cup granulated sugar
1 cup packed brown sugar
Beat 5 minutes and add
2 eggs
Beat 2 minutes and add
2 teaspoons Mexican vanilla
1 cup buttermilk
Sifted dry ingredients
Reduce the speed to low and alternately add the dry ingredients in thirds and the buttermilk in two portions.
Mix just to combine and then add cocoa mixture. Mix just to blend and bake as directed.
 
Glasses?

I make no apology; I simply am born without proof reading. In the reverse creaming method there are enough misplaced and misused words to make it confusing. Here is a second chance at me getting it wrong. But look how mixed up my mind is, I wear mixers for hats.

There is also a process called reverse creaming. It makes a very tender cottony cake that closely resembles a mix, but without the added sugar and preservatives.

In a reverse mixing method for butter cake, place all the dry ingredients and the butter in the mixer bowl. Using the paddle, crumble the mix on low speed until you cannot see any butter. Combine all the wet ingredients (eggs too)and add 2/3 of the total wet to the crumbled dry ingredients, Mix on low to combine and then increase to medium and beat one minute. Reduce speed to low and add the rest of the wet mixture. Increase speed to medium and beat for one minute. Bake as recipe directs.

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HI Kelly...... Try this one in that Kitchenaid of yours. lol

A nice decadent dessert, sure to please.....

CHOCOLATE REGAL

Maida Heatter's Book of
Great Chocolate Desserts
by Maida Heatter, 1995, Random House

“The ultimate chocolate extravaganza! WARNING: This should be served only to avowed chocolate lovers, preferably in small portions after a light luncheon or dinner. This looks like a cake and cuts like a cake, but there any similarity ends. Call it what you will, but it is simply wonderful and wonderfully simple. And easy and foolproof to make. It tastes somewhat like a rich pot de crème, only more so.
It may be made a day or two before serving. But before you start, you will need a 9-inch springform pan; it can be deep or shallow, but the sides and the bottom of the pan must fit securely or the mixture, which is thin, might run out. (If you doubt your pan, place it on a square of aluminum foil and bring the sides of the foil securely up around the outside of the pan. Unless the pan is really bad, probably very little will run out anyhow.)

12 portions

1 pound Maillard’s Eagle Sweet chocolate, broken into pieces (see Note)
1 cup milk
Pinch of salt
3/4 pound (3 sticks) sweet [unsalted] butter, at room temperature
(it must be soft, but don’t melt it or cream it first) and cut into pieces
6 or 7 egg yolks (6 from eggs graded extra-large or jumbo;
7 from smaller eggs)

Adjust rack one-third up from the bottom of the oven and preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Cut a round of baking-pan liner paper or wax paper to fit the bottom of a 9-inch springform pan. Butter the sides (not the bottom) of the pan and one side of the round of paper. Place the paper in the pan, buttered side up.
Place the chocolate, milk, and salt in the top of a large double boiler over hot water on moderate heat, or in a heavy 1 1/2- to 2-quart saucepan over low heat. Stir frequently with a rubber spatula, scraping the bottom and sides, until the chocolate is completely melted – don’t worry if the mixture isn’t smooth.
Transfer to the large bowl of an electric mixer and beat on low speed only until smooth. Then let stand for 4 or 5 minutes to cool slightly.
On low speed alternately add pieces of the butter and the egg yolks, scraping the bowl with a rubber spatula and beating only until incorporated after each addition. Do not beat on high speed and do not beat any more than necessary – the mixture should not lighten in color.
When it is smooth, pour the mixture into the prepared pan.
Bake for 25 minutes, no longer. It will still be soft and shiny and will not look done. Remove it from the oven!
Let stand until it reaches room temperature. Then refrigerate for a few hours until completely firm. It may be kept refrigerated for a day or two if you wish.
With a small, sharp knife cut around the sides to release – press the blade firmly against the pan in order not to cut into the dessert. Remove the sides of the spring form. Cover the dessert with a flat cake plate and invert. Remove the bottom of the pan. (If it doesn’t lift off, insert a narrow metal spatula or a table knife between the paper and the pan and gently and carefully work it around to release the pan.) Peel off the paper lining. The Chocolate Regal will be 1 inch high.
Now cover it generously with the following whipped cream, or refrigerate it and whipped-cream it later on.

Regal Whipped Cream

2 tablespoons cold water
1 teaspoon unflavored gelatin
2 cups heavy cream
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1/4 cup honey

Place the cold water in a small heatproof cup. Sprinkle the gelatin over the top and let stand for 5 minutes. Then place the cup in a small pan of shallow hot water over low heat to melt the gelatin.
Meanwhile, in the small bowl of the electric mixer (the bowl and beaters should be chilled) whip about 1 3/4 cups (reserve about 1/4 cup) of the cream and the vanilla. While beating, gradually add the honey and scrape the bowl with a rubber spatula – the honey might settle to the bottom. Whip only until the cream has increased in volume and thickened, but not until it is form enough to hold a shape.
When the gelatin is dissolved, remove the cup from the hot water. Stir the reserved 1/4 cup of cream into the gelatin and immediately, while beating, add it all at once to the partially whipped cream. Continue to beat until the cream holds a shape and is stiff enough to spread. But remember that it is always more delicious if it is a bit soft and creamy instead of stiff.
The cream may be put on simple and smoothly in a thick layer, or it may be swirled with a rubber spatula or the back of a large spoon. Or spread only a thin coating to cover the dessert, then use a pastry bag fitted with a star tube and, using the remaining cream, form either a lattice design on the top or decorate with rosettes or swirls.

Optional: A bit of shaved chocolate may be sprinkled over the top. Or a few chopped, unsalted green pistachio nuts. But there is something regal about keeping the decoration at a minimum.
Brandied black bing cherries go well with dense chocolate desserts. They may be served with this, placing a spoonful of them alongside each portion. Use the bought ones or prepare your own as follows: A day or two before using, drain a can of plain pitted black bing cherries. Add 2 tablespoons of Cognac and 2 tablespoons of kirsch. Let stand, covered, stirring occasionally – they may either be refrigerated or at room temperature.
Note: Maillard’s Eagle Sweet, despite its name, is semisweet. I am sure that this can be made with other semisweet chocolates. Just remember that there is no sugar, no vanilla, no coffee, rum, Cognac, etc. The only flavor is the chocolate, so use a delicious one.
 
Regal For Sure

Maida Heatter is a lovely, gentle practitioner of food. I loved and followed her because she had a Model 12 Sunbeam with an extra set of beaters. She used it in developing all her desserts and carried it with her to present cooking demonstrations in great halls acrossed America. I have wondered what she uses now that Bowl-Fit beaters as we knew them cease to exist. I can feel the gentle chocolate sludge settling in the arteries of stomach and giving me a great sense of satisfaction. True gluttony occurs when your jaws will still move, but your throat cannot swallow.
Rare Chrome Vista model V-14 displays it's Bowl-Fit beaters

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Great looking Sunbeam V-14CS

Kelly that is a great looking Mixmaster Mixer! I did not know they existed until I saw one for sale on eBay and discovered WACEM. The only one I found at a flea market was so badly pitted and and lacked the bowls and beater that it was not worth rescuing. I have the juicer attachment for a white V-14 I bought and I can tell you it is a PIA to use. The entire juicer bowl vibrates (not due to the joggling strainer) and requires a hand to steady it during use. The PTO for the grinder has a modified "foot" to fit the base that works well. Some V-14s have metal stands and most white mixers came with plastic stands. I am sure your chrome Vista Mixmaster has a metal stand. I wonder what it retailed new back in 1963? I think the mixer was made up until the mid 1980s for Montgomery-Ward. (Almond motor, brown plastic stand, clear glass bowls and was advertised on television nationally for the Christmas of 1983.
 

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