I'd like to get some opinions. When I bake, anything, cookies, muffins, banana bread, whatever, I'm totally ANTI-Box mix. If Im going through the trouble to make someone a beautiful cake it just goes totally against my grain to use a box mix. I guess I think they can go to the store and buy it themselves (probably cheaper too) if I was just gonna mix up a box?! I feel like Im cheating somehow. Maybe its the way I was raised? Everything ~ dinner desserts whatever, made from scratch, even grown fresh when possible. I watched my grandma stretch dough across the dining room table while making the BEST APPLE STRUEDEL EVER!!! Maybe that's what it is??
But anyway, is this just my dying opinion? I was looking at some recipes and variations that start with (or at least include) a box mix, then other variables are added (so its only half-scratch). It seems so much easier than scratch-made...in fact maybe thats the problem, too easy? Don't get me wrong, I'm all about easy, but still have this nagging thought of "I'm cheating"..lol
Any other thoughts out there, or is it just me?
Thanks for sharing...maybe you can save me from myself. LOL
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I used to share your same heart-felt opinion. I struggled to find a good, moist white cake recipe. They were all too dry with an unappealing texture. Then our cake club did a side-by-side taste test. We blind tested all the top brands of box mixes, a generic store brand, and a good scratch recipe. Then we rated them according to taste, appearance, and texture. The Betty Crocker box mix won!!! This was much to the gall and surprise of many well known professionals including two Food Network Challenge winners. I use a recipe that combines the box mix, instant pudding, coffee creamer, and other ingredients and I get the best moist white cake ever. I can use it for sculpting and it bakes up beautifully without tunnels, cracks, high crowns or any of the other pitfalls that make us crazy. It also gives me enough batter to make thicker layers that torte well. So there you have it. The scratch cake came in 4th place! The worst one was the generic box mix. It was awful. There really is a difference between box mixes. The second best was Duncan Hines, followed by Pillsbury Moist Supreme. Hint: veg oil makes a moister cake than butter. So lay your guilt to rest and give your clients a great tasting, beautifully decorated cake!
Well now, another "snag"...after my disappointment with the WASC using a box, I've had people (more than usual) coming to tell me how GREAT the cake tasted, and asking for the recipe!!!! :( Now I have to rethink the whole thing. lol
I used to share your same heart-felt opinion. I struggled to find a good, moist white cake recipe. They were all too dry with an unappealing texture. Then our cake club did a side-by-side taste test. We blind tested all the top brands of box mixes, a generic store brand, and a good scratch recipe. Then we rated them according to taste, appearance, and texture. The Betty Crocker box mix won!!! This was much to the gall and surprise of many well known professionals including two Food Network Challenge winners. I use a recipe that combines the box mix, instant pudding, coffee creamer, and other ingredients and I get the best moist white cake ever. I can use it for sculpting and it bakes up beautifully without tunnels, cracks, high crowns or any of the other pitfalls that make us crazy. It also gives me enough batter to make thicker layers that torte well. So there you have it. The scratch cake came in 4th place! The worst one was the generic box mix. It was awful. There really is a difference between box mixes. The second best was Duncan Hines, followed by Pillsbury Moist Supreme. Hint: veg oil makes a moister cake than butter. So lay your guilt to rest and give your clients a great tasting, beautifully decorated cake!
I must also add that I am and "organic" baker... hence the reason for my choice of NOT using a box mix. Again yet another reason why my customers are willing to pay the extra price for my product. Of course at my level I have that option. If I were mass producing cakes on a larger scale, I would have to cave and use a pre-made mix in order to keep the cost of goods down to a minimum and increase the bottom line.
Scratch -vs- Box is a personal choice. For scratch bakers once we find that perfect chemistry in a recipe, we stick with it. However it IS chemistry. Beginning with with room temp butter and eggs, all the way down to the order in which the ingredients are added to the bowl, including how long you mix or beat the batter and the temp and time that the project is baked. If there is one chemical imbalance in the formula the results are a poor crumb, to dense, or too soft cake, and sometimes even a cake that falls flat.
Jenifer said:hmmm....so its a tie so far! LOL....keep em coming. :)
Hi Everyone!
I just came across this website and am so excited to be a part of a "baking community"!!!
Now I bake everything from scratch...I started scratch baking because my youngest daughter has a nut allergy, and scratch baking allows me to control EVERY ingredient in the dessert so that she can enjoy it without fear of reaction.
But over time, I found that scratch baking calms me...I love the final results (obviously)...but each stage is an amazing sensory experience...I love the smell of the butter after the sugar is beaten in!!!! I have tried box mixes since scratch baking....and now I find the preservatives off putting, no matter how I doctor the mix!
I have also converted my family and friends...and now they turn their noses to box mix cakes!!!
I usually do a doctored cake mix. Not only for the time saving, but I have had times when I made scratch and people thought the cake was heavy. I too like to make pies, rolls ect from scratch. I started when I was 10 making cookies on Saturday. Saturday was the day my mother did baking when I was little.
SO I know where you are coming from but I will continue to make doctored cake mixes for most unless they request scratch.
I've never made a cake to sell that was done with a box mix. I always use my scratch recipes. I've always gotten great reviews on how moist my cakes are, and my brides love it! I've had them request the recipes, but since they're my Great Grandma's family recipes I don't share them out.
Don't get me wrong, I've used boxed mixes before, especially when I was doing my wilton courses. They were just easier to throw together at the last minute. I really don't like the taste of box mixes though. I'd rather scratch made cakes any day!
I guess it just comes down to personal taste.
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