White
Vanilla Cake with Vanilla Butter Cream
Makes 2, 9-inch
cakes
This is a good, basic vanilla cake. It becomes spectacular
with the butter cream recipe that follows.
Ingredients
3 cups sifted cake flour
1 tablespoon baking powder
6 tablespoons butter
1-1/2 cups sugar
1 cup milk
2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
6 egg whites
Instructions
Preheat oven to 325 degrees F. Grease and line 2 9-inch cake
pans with parchment.
Sift together flour and baking powder. Set aside.
Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.
With a mixer on slow speed, add flour mixture to the butter mixture,
alternately with milk. Beat after each addition. Beat in vanilla.
Whip the egg whites until stiff but not dry. Fold them into the cake batter
gently, making sure not to over mix. Pour into prepared pans.
Bake for 25 - 30 minutes or until a tester comes out clean. Place cake pans on
cooling rack and allow to cool completely before removing from pans.
Vanilla Butter Cream
Makes about 5 cups
This icing is very perishable and should not be made more than
a day in advance. If you are looking for a wonderful creamy and not very sweet
icing that showcases the vanilla bean, I think you will love this one.
You can choose to use either the vanilla bean or vanilla extract. When using the
bean, you will have the tiny seeds in your butter cream. I prefer the bourbon
vanilla for its bold flavor.
Ingredients
1 pound unsalted butter, room temperature
2 cups milk
1 vanilla bean or 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
3 eggs
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
Instructions
In a heavy bottom saucepan scald the milk with the vanilla
bean split and scraped. Remove from heat and allow mixture to steep for at least
30 minutes.
Mix together sugar and cornstarch. Add eggs and mix well, making sure all lumps
are mixed out.
Pour half the hot milk into the egg/sugar mixture and stir until incorporated.
Pour back into the saucepan and cook until thick enough for a ribbon to stand on
top of the custard.
Cool on an ice bath, stirring continuously. When it is at room temperature
remove the vanilla bean.
Important: Test the custard with an instant read thermometer and make sure that
the temperature difference between the butter and the custard is not more than 5
degrees. Ideally they should be around 65-70 degrees. This is important because
if you begin to add the butter and the custard is too hot then you will get
soup, not butter cream. If the butter and custard are too cold it will look like
cottage cheese.
When the temperatures are correct, put butter into an electric mixing bowl and
with the paddle attachment cream and mix on slow speed until it is smooth. Begin
adding the custard little by little. Don’t turn the speed of the mixer up or you
will beat in too much air. The butter cream will look creamy and smooth when it
is ready to ice the cake. If using vanilla extract, add it now. Taste butter
cream. If you can still taste butter, then add more vanilla. Keep adding vanilla
until you are satisfied that the vanilla is what you taste and not the butter.
from www.vanilla.com