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Default white cake baking question

I have a 10x3 inch round spring form pan. if I am making a cake whose
recipe calls for using 3 8x1.5 inch round pans, is my pan too big?
How can I adjust this? How should I adjust the baking time? the cake
is the white cake recipe in the joy of cooking, and looks to me to be
pretty standard, but i'm not sure what to do with my gargantuan pan
(and using another set of pans isn't really an option here...)

also, a lot of recipes I see call for "8 (or 9) inch round baking
pans"...well how high is that? is it 1.5 inches? 2? 3?

Finally, is there a simple tool I can use to scale up recipes for use
with my larger (10x3 inch round) pan?

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Default white cake baking question


> wrote in message
ps.com...
>I have a 10x3 inch round spring form pan. if I am making a cake whose
> recipe calls for using 3 8x1.5 inch round pans, is my pan too big?
> How can I adjust this? How should I adjust the baking time? the cake
> is the white cake recipe in the joy of cooking, and looks to me to be
> pretty standard, but i'm not sure what to do with my gargantuan pan
> (and using another set of pans isn't really an option here...)
>
> also, a lot of recipes I see call for "8 (or 9) inch round baking
> pans"...well how high is that? is it 1.5 inches? 2? 3?
>
> Finally, is there a simple tool I can use to scale up recipes for use
> with my larger (10x3 inch round) pan?


If I'm not mistaken, a spring form pan is used to make cheesecakes and
things with a crust that won't allow seepage out of the connection. Are you
planning on lining the pan with parchment paper? You need a good method of
removing cakes from pans without wrecking the cake? To check this out, try
and fill your springform pan with water and see if holds. Might prevent a
giant disaster in the oven.
I don't make much cake anymore, anybody else chime in on this one?
Edrena

>



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