Came across a Japanese Cotton cake recipe using black sesame powder. Out of curiosity, I tried this cake but made it into a zebra pattern. Since I do not have the black sesame powder, I used ground toasted black sesame seed [not fine enough]. I find it a bit difficult to blend the paste with the batter, that's why certain parts have a big patch of black sesame due to uneven mixing [I was afraid to deflate the meringue due to over-mixing]. Next time, I must really grind the black sesame into a fine paste or get the powder...
Overall the cake tasted good and the texture is still cottony soft and moist. The cake doesn't shrink much.
Overall the cake tasted good and the texture is still cottony soft and moist. The cake doesn't shrink much.
Ingredients
[8 or 9 inch square baking tin]
5 egg yolks
1 egg
45 ml corn oil
70 ml milk
65 gm cake flour - sifted - set aside
1/4 tsp salt
5 egg whites
100 gm sugar [I reduced to 80 gm]
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
[8 or 9 inch square baking tin]
5 egg yolks
1 egg
45 ml corn oil
70 ml milk
65 gm cake flour - sifted - set aside
1/4 tsp salt
50 gm black sesame powder [you can grind toasted black sesame seeds into paste]
100 gm sugar [I reduced to 80 gm]
1/4 tsp cream of tartar
- Line base of a 8" square tin with grease proof paper. I greased the sides, too and sprinkle lightly with a little flour [this way, the cake can be easily removed from pan after cooling].
- Preheat oven to 170 degrees C. Place a baking tray on the lowest rack, pour in enough water [about 1.5 cups] for steam baking, then place a baking rack over it.
- Whisk egg yolks and 1 whole egg until creamy then gradually drizzle in the corn oil followed by milk. Whisk until well combined.
- Fold in sifted flour and stir until batter is smooth. Set aside.
- Use a cake mixer, whisk egg whites until frothy, then add in cream of tartar. Beat until soft peaks then gradually add in the sugar in 3 batches and whisk until stiff peaks formed. Do not over beat egg whites otherwise it may be difficult to fold in to egg yolk mixture.
- Fold in 1/3 of the meringue into the egg yolk mixture until combined. Then fold in the rest of the meringue lightly in two portions until well combined. Remove 1/3 of the cake batter to another bowl. Add in the black sesame powder, mix well.
- Scoop the 2 batters alternately to create the zebra effect of the cake into prepared cake tin [using a small ladle, put the plain portion in the centre of tin and top with black sesame batter, shake the pan lightly and the batter will spread out itself]. Tap baking tray on work surface a few times to release trapped air bubbles before baking.
- Place it over the baking rack to steam bake cake in a preheated oven at 160 degrees C for 10 minutes, then lower temperature to 140-150 degrees C and continue to bake for 50-55 minutes [by then the water bath would have dried up].
- Remove cake and invert it to cool for about 5 minutes [otherwise the cake base may be moist because of vapour from steam-baking]. Remove baking tin and the paper linings immediately and leave cake to cool on a wire rack [base facing upwards]. The cake may shrink a little when cooled because of less flour used [low gluten cake].
- Turn the cake over when completely cooled. Refrigerate before slicing if preferred.
Kimmy, I also saw Ogura Sesame Cake at Christine's. I wonder how it taste, got strong sesame flavour? I want to try it but scared family members might not like the taste.
ReplyDeletehi,,your cakes and home cooked food,
ReplyDeletealso make people lua nuah,how i wish can b your neighbour next door so every good good cake n food to makan,,haha,,
nigela --sg
Wow! Still on the cottony cake trail huh! Never ending flavors! I like this too!
ReplyDeleteHi Phong Hong, not too strong but nice aroma if you like sesame. Some people expects cakes to be sweet and not a bit bitter. But I like the combination - bitter/sweet.
ReplyDeleteHello Nigela, just too bad but ppl are funny, when they are nearby, they don't feel this way. Sometimes when I share food with them, they don't say 'TQ' but say 'Phai Say'.
ReplyDeleteHello Jeannie, I really loved to bake cottony cakes cos' of its' ingredients [low sugar, oil and flour]. You can get a 'big' cake,too. Hehehe! Also it stays good for days in the fridge [at least 2 weeks].
ReplyDeleteHi Kimmy...waaw..teringin jugak nak rasa kek manis2 pahit ni... terimakasih kongsi recipe ya..
ReplyDeletethis sound similar like ogura cake, must be full black sesame aroma.
ReplyDeleteHi Queenie, kek ini bagus, tak akan berat badan kerananya. Cubalah...
ReplyDeleteHi Sonia, it is Ogura cake, it's also Souffle Cake but for my easy reference, I called them Cottony Cakes...
ReplyDeleteI've been telling myself to bake a cottony cake from your collection ...mmm, another reminder. Lovely swirls!
ReplyDeleteHi Cheah, you sure can do it well and like it too. Hope you'll fall in love it.
ReplyDelete