Wanna make a sugee cake that's light and fluffy? That's right, the Eurasian classic doesn't have to be dense and heavy. Let me, a half-Eurasian, show you how. What? You didn't know I'm half-Eurasian? Hey, half of Eurasian is Asian and I'm 100% Asian. That makes me 50% Eurasian, right?
There're many sugee cake recipes out there and after comparing several, I became very confused. How much sugee
So many questions and, I tell ya, soooo many different answers. Every recipe I looked at was different. The conclusion I came to was: sugee cakes are like zebras; no two are alike.
Guess what? Another zebra just joined the
To fry or not to fry? The sugee, that is, aka semolina. Definitely fry. If you don't believe me, try it
To soak or not to soak? Definitely soak because browned semolina is very dry and sandy.
What to soak in? Definitely butter, whipped to within an inch of its life. Why not softened or melted butter? Because the butter must have lots of air if you want a light and fluffy cake. Why not milk? Because the batter has the right thickness without any milk (or cream). It's what I call the "plop consistency", i.e. the batter goes "plop" when you drop it from your spatula/spoon/whatever.
How many egg whites? Two. How many yolks? Five. To be exact, it's 80 g each for a 18 cm cake. This is the right amount if light and fluffy is your kind of thing. The cake rises well but doesn't collapse or crack. There may be a slight dome but it subsides nicely once the cake is removed from the oven.
Should you add a leavener? Definitely, to help the cake rise. I go for baking soda but I'd imagine an appropriate amount of baking powder works just as well.
Would you dare bake a killer cake? Of course you would! Good cake is worth dying for . . . isn't it?
Here it is, the making of a killer:
The Eurasians serve sugee cake on special occasions such as weddings, birthdays, Christmas, New Year, christenings and, I hear, funerals.
SUGEE (SUJI) CAKE Source: adapted from Rose's Kitchen (Recipe for one 18 x 5 cm cake) 165 g unsalted butter, at room temperature 35 g castor sugar 1 tsp golden syrup 2 tsp brandy 60 g semolina spread thinly on baking tray lined with aluminium foil; bake 10 minutes at 180°C; stir thoroughly; continue baking till light brown and fragrant, another 5 minutes or so; leave till cool 35 g castor sugar 1 tsp vanilla extract 60 g almonds bake at 180°C till brown and fragrant, 6-8 mins; chop roughly when cool; grind till fine 20 g cake flour1/6 tsp baking soda 80 g egg whites 1/8 tsp cream of tartar 35 g castor sugar Whisk 165 g butter and 35 g sugar till thick and pale. Add 1 tsp golden syrup and 2 tsp brandy. Mix till combined. Add baked semolina. Mix thoroughly. Set aside till semolina is soft, about 1 hour, in air-conditioned comfort if weather is unusually hot. Whisk 80 g yolks and 35 g castor sugar till thick and pale. Add 1 tsp vanilla extract and ground almonds. Sift 20 g cake flour and 1/6 tsp baking soda into mixture. Mix evenly. Add to butter mixture. Fold till almost even. Pour batter into cake pan and level top. Bake till cake shrinks very slightly from sides, around 40 minutes. If cake browns too fast – check 25 minutes into baking – block oven's top heat with baking tray. Remove cake from oven. Let cool a few minutes. Unmould and leave on wire rack till completely cool. |
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