Sugar for baking cakes
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Sugar for baking cakes
Hi there,
Can someone please enlighten me where in Luxor I can get hold of white fine-grained sugar suitable for baking? Or, please give me a hint on how to bake cakes on the normal "yellow" sugar. It seems to me impossible to mix it fluffy with egg!
Also, I am in need of findingcocoa powder. Trying to make a chocolate cake on "drinking chocolate powder", as the girl in the supermarket recommended, ended up in disaster!
Any help with this matter would be much appreciated!
Carolin
Can someone please enlighten me where in Luxor I can get hold of white fine-grained sugar suitable for baking? Or, please give me a hint on how to bake cakes on the normal "yellow" sugar. It seems to me impossible to mix it fluffy with egg!
Also, I am in need of findingcocoa powder. Trying to make a chocolate cake on "drinking chocolate powder", as the girl in the supermarket recommended, ended up in disaster!
Any help with this matter would be much appreciated!
Carolin
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Re: Sugar for baking cakes
[face=Comic Sans MS]I'm not familiar with the 'yellow sugar' you describe but I am guessing that it is of a larger, coarser grain than the white granulated or even finer caster suger we would use in the UK for baking. If this is the case you can:carolinjohansson wrote:Hi there,
Can someone please enlighten me where in Luxor I can get hold of white fine-grained sugar suitable for baking? Or, please give me a hint on how to bake cakes on the normal "yellow" sugar. It seems to me impossible to mix it fluffy with egg!
Carolin
a) pop it in a food processor or blender with a metal blade and give it a quick 'whizz' to break it down.
b) put it in a plastic bag and roll firmly over it with a rolling pin.[/face]

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Is caster sugar the one that is called "sukkar poudre" or is that the icing sugar????
When I first cam here I couldn't find caster sugar and had to resort to the blender method - It sort of worked - but like Tony said, you had to be quick about turning the blender off else you ended up with a mound of icing sugar. The pulse button worked the best.
When I first cam here I couldn't find caster sugar and had to resort to the blender method - It sort of worked - but like Tony said, you had to be quick about turning the blender off else you ended up with a mound of icing sugar. The pulse button worked the best.

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TONY wrote:It sometimes pays to look on all the shelves in Omar as they have a strange idea about what things go together sometimes, and even that isnt consistent.
Tony
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There is no reason why you cannot use cane suger for cake-making. Refined beet sugar is less sweet, or you could use icing sugar, honey, or golden syrum, or even sugar-water to make cakes. If you are making sweet pastry, then icing sugar could be used, and very little of it is necessary to sweeten. This prevents the pastry taking on a 'spotty' or grained appearance and gives a softer and better texture to the pastry.
If you are combining eggs and sugar together, the sugar will disolve more quickly if the eggs are warm. Indeed, they should be warm for cakes, and not taken from the fridge. Cold eggs and warm sugar or fat causes curdling. So place your eggs into a bowl of tepid water/warm for 10 minutes before mixing, and your sugar will disolve quicker.
I rather depends what you are making, but sugar only usually acts as a sweetener, so one could use any sweetener, even saccarine, as in diabetic cakes.
If you are combining eggs and sugar together, the sugar will disolve more quickly if the eggs are warm. Indeed, they should be warm for cakes, and not taken from the fridge. Cold eggs and warm sugar or fat causes curdling. So place your eggs into a bowl of tepid water/warm for 10 minutes before mixing, and your sugar will disolve quicker.
I rather depends what you are making, but sugar only usually acts as a sweetener, so one could use any sweetener, even saccarine, as in diabetic cakes.

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