| ½ | cup butter | |
| 1½ | cups sugar | |
| 2 | eggs | |
| 1 | tsp. cinnamon | |
| 1 | tsp. vanilla | |
| ½ | tsp. salt | |
| 3 | Tbsp. cocoa | |
| 1 | tsp. red food coloring | |
| 2 | Tbsp. water | |
| 2½ | cups sifted cake flour | |
| 1½ | tsp. baking powder | |
| 1 | cup buttermilk or sour milk (or stir 1 tablespoon vinegar into sweet milk and let stand 10 minutes) | |
| 1 | tsp. baking soda | |
| 1 | Tbsp. vinegar |
Culinate editor’s notes: The cinnamon makes this a rather unconventional red velvet cake, tasting more of spice than of chocolate. Omit it if you prefer a more traditional taste.
You can also cut the sugar down to 1 cup and, for more intense color, increase the red food coloring to 2 tsp.
For a more even color in the baked cake, sift the cocoa with the dry ingredients instead of mixing it into a paste with the food coloring and water.
The traditional frosting for a red velvet cake is a buttercream or cream-cheese frosting, not the marshmallow-flavored White Fluffy Frosting.
This content is from the book James Beard’s American Cookery by James Beard.
| | Table Talk: November 17A local-foods feastJosh Viertel and Jennifer Maiser want to help you have a local-foods Thanksgiving. Read the transcript of their online chat. |
The Produce DiariesMorelsPleasure in the hunt | Dinner Guest BlogA quiche lessonThe crux is the crust |
FeaturesFabulous favasA green herald of summer | Dinner Guest BlogWabi-sabi cookeryCooking is a constant history lesson |
There are no comments on this item
Add a comment
Unrated