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40 votes
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As Denmark celebrates the crowning of Frederik X, one legendary patisserie, Conditori La Glace, has prepared a decadent chocolate cake
4 votes -
The history of fruitcake
7 votes -
Using 'spent' coffee and tea to boost shelf life and nutritional value of cakes
28 votes -
Sweden's favourite chocolate bar in cake form – a fluffy sponge and a rich Daim buttercream all covered in a nutty, chocolate glaze
6 votes -
The real Betty Crocker's pineapple upside down cake
17 votes -
Made with vanilla sponge, meringue, almonds, custard and whipped cream – Norwegians love this cake so much they nicknamed it "the world's best cake"
28 votes -
The idea of seasonal eating reaches its apotheosis in Sweden on Midsummer Eve, a magical day of feasting where a cake layered with strawberries and cream is the crowning glory
13 votes -
Cake in the office should be viewed like passive smoking, says UK food regulator
13 votes -
Mona Lisa targeted in Louvre cake-throwing attack. Famous work by Leonardo da Vinci wasn't damaged.
10 votes -
The case for 'Is It Cake?,' Netflix's new game show
9 votes -
Ancient Egyptian tiger nut cake
5 votes -
Claire Saffitz makes confetti cake | Dessert Person
9 votes -
Ancient Roman Placenta – Honey Cheesecake
6 votes -
The mesmerizing geometry of Malaysia’s most complex cakes
9 votes -
How to keep my cake from getting crumbly
The month of May brings my birthday and wedding anniversary, so we usually end up making a cake or two. We don't usually do anything fancy. Usually a store-made cake. But this year with the...
The month of May brings my birthday and wedding anniversary, so we usually end up making a cake or two. We don't usually do anything fancy. Usually a store-made cake. But this year with the pandemic, we ended up just getting some boxed cakes - Betty Crocker, Duncan Hines. Those sorts of things.
The problem is that they call for eggs and I'm allergic to egg yolks. (Not egg whites, oddly enough - just egg yolks.) So I've found some egg substitute. It works pretty well considering there's no egg in it. But I've found that when I use it in cakes, sometimes they turn out just fine, and other times they end up falling apart.
I know that eggs can be used for flavor, as a rising agent, as a binder, etc. but it's not clear to me how to tell which thing it's being used for in a given recipe. So my question is, in the case of a cake, are there other things I could substitute for egg yolks? The stuff I'm using has potato starch, baking powder, and psyllium husks. I guess the baking powder handles the rising aspect and the psyllium husks are probably like a binder? Are there other things I could be using?
6 votes -
David Atherton's recipe for Swedish crown cake – this ‘kronans kaka’ is made with potato for a gluten-free sweet treat
2 votes -
Chris Morocco makes easy chocolate cake | From the Test Kitchen
3 votes -
1915 Black Pepper Cake recipe
4 votes -
US Supreme Court hands narrow win to baker over gay couple dispute
18 votes -
Supreme Court rules narrowly for Colorado baker who wouldn't make same-sex wedding cake
10 votes