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Well seriously Kelsey...is there such a thing as bad cake???? (cheesy grin). I have used them all and I can't say there is really a difference. I usually buy what's on sale that week.
I use Duncan Hines when I do not bake from a scratch recipe. I use the WASC basic recipe to start with and just switch up the flavors. For a really good chocolate cake, use the WASC base with DH triple fudge cake and use room temperature brewed coffee instead of the water. I also add about 2 tbls. of dark cocoa to the mix.
So, it ends up being
1 mix
1cup of flour
1 cup of sugar
3/4 tsp salt
2tbls cocoa
2tbls vegetable oil
2tsp vanilla extract
1 cup sour cream
3 eggs
I hope this helps!
Disregard the box directions completely. Don't forget the 1 1/3 cup of of liquid. If I am making chocolate I use coffee. If I am using another flavor of mix then I just use water. I mix all of the dry ingredients together and then mix all of the wet ingredients together in a separate bowl. Then combine the two. The WASC recipe is similiar, but double the amount of ingredients. The WASC recipe makes a lot of cake!
Here is the link to the recipe for WASC. http://www.recipezaar.com/White-Almond-Sour-Cream-Wedding-Cake-69630
I never bother with just using egg whites. I prefer to use the whole eggs (6 of them).
I would like to argue about my experiences with D-H brand cake mix not working well for cakes with fondant or sculpting, but just the fact that I have not met ANY cake decorator that makes cakes like mine who use that particular brand of cake mix is enough to keep me from buying it. D-H brand used to be pushed by Wilton Industries and they stopped that...wonder why? Maybe because it doesn't hold up well to the abuse that spreading something thicker than whipped cream puts the cake through? I am not brand loyal. There are about 4 brands of cake mix that I think will work okay...but none that you buy on the shelf are much more than junk unless you modify the recipe.
I don't agree Dena. I do 3d cakes, stacked cakes, fondant, buttercream, poured ganache, you name it and it works wonderfully. They even have an alternate recipe on the box for use with decorated cakes, but I don't even bother with that. My customers love my cakes and I have a moist cake tip that I had published in Cooking Pleasures Magazine in 2004. It has nothing to do with any additions and works equally well on scratch cakes as well as boxed cakes.
Dena Bryngelson said:I would like to argue about my experiences with D-H brand cake mix not working well for cakes with fondant or sculpting, but just the fact that I have not met ANY cake decorator that makes cakes like mine who use that particular brand of cake mix is enough to keep me from buying it. D-H brand used to be pushed by Wilton Industries and they stopped that...wonder why? Maybe because it doesn't hold up well to the abuse that spreading something thicker than whipped cream puts the cake through? I am not brand loyal. There are about 4 brands of cake mix that I think will work okay...but none that you buy on the shelf are much more than junk unless you modify the recipe.
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