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  • - Hey, I'm John Kanell, and today on Preppy Kitchen,

  • we're making an easy, delicious pound cake.

  • So let's get started.

  • First off, set your oven to 350 so it's nice and hot.

  • And now, in a medium bowl,

  • we're gonna combine our dry ingredients,

  • starting with 1 1/2 cups or 180 grams of flour.

  • I want my pound cake to be melt-in-your-mouth amazing,

  • and step one for that is not over-measuring your flour.

  • For some contrast, I'm adding one teaspoon of salt.

  • Here we go.

  • And to puff things up, half a teaspoon of baking powder.

  • This is not in the original pound cake.

  • The original pound cake recipe from the 1700s in England

  • was a pound of flour, a pound of butter,

  • a pound of sugar, a pound of eggs,

  • and it made a big four pound dense cake that you could share

  • and transport easily,

  • and honestly, I've made it before just as on a lark.

  • I wanted to see what it was like

  • and I definitely prefer the contemporary version.

  • Grab a whisk, give that a good mix.

  • We really wanna distribute the salt and baking powder

  • and set that aside.

  • Before I move along, I wanna get my loaf pan situated,

  • so, you have choices here.

  • Are you gonna have a nine by five

  • or a one pound eight by four?

  • This is actually a bit bigger and this is,

  • I feel like this is gonna work,

  • so I'm gonna use this today

  • 'cause I want my loaf pan to be puffier and higher.

  • The big pan will make it a little bit lower and wider.

  • Butter and flour.

  • And you don't need a ton of butter on this.

  • To make getting things out a little bit easier,

  • I'm gonna add a paper sling.

  • It just goes along the long sides

  • and this way you could pull it out easily at the end.

  • Could you use baking spray for this?

  • Yes, you definitely could.

  • But when you have a light-colored cake like this

  • with a long bake time,

  • the cake spray will definitely darken up the side

  • and I just don't like the way that looks,

  • so I always stick with buttering and flowering

  • unless it's like a chocolate cake.

  • All right, let's kick around a little flour

  • just for the sides that don't have paper.

  • Wonderful.

  • All right, this is all ready to go.

  • Now, let's get our butter together.

  • To my mixing bowl,

  • I'm adding one cup or 226 grams

  • of unsalted room temperature butter.

  • This step is important

  • because here we're gonna beat the butter and sugar up

  • until they're light and fluffy.

  • And if the butter is too cold,

  • it'll be like little nodules of butter hanging around.

  • If it's too soft, it won't aerate,

  • so, you need to be room temperature.

  • You could press in with your finger

  • and it'll yield to the touch,

  • the butter will bend, not break, and that's basically it.

  • If it's a cold day like it is here

  • and your butters been on the countertop for hours,

  • it'll still be ice cold.

  • Microwave it at ten second increments

  • at half power until it's softened.

  • Pop your butter in, add your whisk attachment,

  • and we're gonna cream it up just for like 10 seconds

  • and give it a head start before we add the sugar in.

  • Doing this is just an insurance policy

  • to make sure that nothing is gonna be like

  • a hidden surprise in the butter.

  • To sweeten things up and soften the cake,

  • I want one cup or 200 grams of sugar.

  • And I'm just gonna measure this out with a measuring cup.

  • Sugar is actually counted as a liquid in recipes,

  • so, this is fine.

  • Unlike flour, you can't pack granulated sugar in,

  • so, what you see is what you get.

  • With flour, it's totally different,

  • and brown sugar is different as well.

  • Set this to medium and add the sugar in.

  • (upbeat music)

  • Let your mixer work for a few minutes

  • just to incorporate the butter and sugar

  • and get them to be light and fluffy.

  • We're pumping air in and making it really creamy.

  • (upbeat music)

  • And it's always a good idea

  • to scrape the bowl down several times

  • because the top is getting fluffy and amazing

  • and the bottom is getting compacted

  • and probably doesn't even have that much sugar on it.

  • It's pure butter.

  • If you're making this recipe with a hand mixer,

  • you're gonna scrape the bottom of your bowl with the beaters

  • and you can skip this step.

  • While the butter's mixing,

  • I'm gonna crack four eggs into a mixing cup

  • just so I can make sure they're cracked

  • and there's no fragments of shells hanging out.

  • That is not the texture we want for this cake.

  • I'm gonna mix it up for, like, 30 seconds more

  • and then start adding the eggs in.

  • (mixer whirring)

  • Just to show you the texture before we move on.

  • Right now, ooh, it is a cloud of butter and sugar

  • and it really changed color.

  • It went from being a pale yellow to an off-white

  • and it got a lot of air pumped into it,

  • so the volume's increased as well.

  • Back to mixing on medium,

  • I'm adding the eggs in one at a time,

  • and yes, you should scrape down again

  • because the top will be very eggy and liquidy

  • and the bottom will be pure butter and sugar.

  • It's just the way it is.

  • (mixer whirring)

  • Pound cake, by the way,

  • is like the original snacking cake and it is so versatile.

  • You could have it with whipped cream and berries.

  • It could be the base for a baked Alaska.

  • It's just good by the slice as a snack.

  • And the nice thing is it lasts for a long time,

  • so, you can make it and enjoy it

  • over the course of a few days

  • and it'll still be delicious on the last day.

  • If you have some interesting poundcake uses,

  • let me know in the comments.

  • Someone just told me they toast it

  • and add cream cheese on top.

  • That sounds delicious.

  • Last egg.

  • (mixer whirring)

  • One more scrape down.

  • And right now the mixture looks crazy.

  • It looks like cottage cheese.

  • Lots of little butter pieces suspended in egg.

  • That's fine though.

  • And that's just how it is.

  • The mixture breaks

  • because we added so much water from the eggs.

  • But the flour will bring it right back on together.

  • This is a modern edition as well,

  • but half a cup of sour cream gives you a wonderful tang.

  • And, once again, I say this all the time,

  • but sour cream is weakly acidic

  • and that weak acid will inhibit gluten from connecting

  • and give you a more tender, just beautiful crumb.

  • It also gives the cake some substance

  • because this is not a light, fluffy cake,

  • it's a denser cake in the best way.

  • It's really substantial and each bite is like, I feel it.

  • It's like the butter and the sugar

  • and it's like, mmm, that's good.

  • Totally different from, like, an angel food cake

  • or, like, a grocery store vanilla cake

  • where it's like a cloud.

  • For some flavor, I'm adding two tablespoons of vanilla.

  • (mixer whirring)

  • This is as mixed as it's gonna get.

  • It's time to add our flour mixture.

  • And before I do that, I just wanna tell you,

  • the mixer is gonna do a little bit of work to get it started

  • and I will finish it with my spatula

  • because aside from adding too much flour in,

  • one thing that can go wrong is over-mixing your cake.

  • Add the flour in.

  • Mix for just a few seconds on low.

  • (mixer whirring)

  • That's good.

  • Our mixer is done, so put it away.

  • Use your spatula and just finish bringing it together.

  • Really focus on getting all that junk at the bottom

  • up to the top because that'll be least mixed.

  • And then any remaining streaks of flour should go away.

  • Time to transfer our batter into our prepared pan.

  • And if you're used to, like, a normal cake batter,

  • this will look a little bit more broken than other cakes.

  • And that's just how it is

  • because of the amount of eggs and butter we have.

  • Give your loaf a little bit of a shimmy

  • and just smooth the top out.

  • If you want a dramatic crack at the top,

  • you could add a little bar of butter right on top

  • and that'll give you that one crack.

  • I'm leaving it alone because it'll look good either way,

  • and this already has enough butter for me.

  • This is ready to go into the oven, 350 for about 40 minutes

  • or until a skewer comes out clean from the center.

  • This is a slightly smaller pan,

  • so I might need to add five or 10 minutes.

  • In you go.

  • Allow your cake to cool,

  • give it a slice, and it's ready to enjoy.

  • I did not need any butter on top. It looks beautiful.

  • Hmm.

  • There is something so satisfying

  • and just good about the simple flavors of a pound cake.

  • It's a pleasure to bite into and it melts in your mouth.

  • I hope you get a chance to make this recipe,

  • and if you like this video, check out my easy cake playlist.

- Hey, I'm John Kanell, and today on Preppy Kitchen,

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Amazing Pound Cake Recipe

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    Jay に公開 2024 年 03 月 04 日
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