
1. To prepare cake: Preheat oven to 375 degrees F. Coat two 9-inch round cake pans with cooking spray.
2. Whisk all-purpose flour, whole-wheat flour, cocoa, baking powder and salt in a medium bowl.
3. Beat sugar and butter in a large bowl with an electric mixer on medium speed until crumbly, about 2 minutes. Beat in egg yolks one at a time, then vanilla and food coloring (if using) until smooth.
4. Beat in half the buttermilk on low speed until smooth, then half the flour mixture. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, then beat in the remaining buttermilk. Beat in the remaining flour mixture just until combined.
5. Clean and dry beaters. Beat egg whites in a clean medium bowl at high speed until soft peaks form. With a rubber spatula, gently fold the whites into the batter until just incorporated, using long, even strokes. Divide the batter between the prepared pans, spreading to the edges. Gently rap the pans against the counter once or twice to settle the batter.
6. Bake until a toothpick inserted into the center comes out clean, 15 to 20 minutes. Cool on a wire rack for 10 minutes, then invert the layers onto the rack, remove the pans and let cool to room temperature, about 45 minutes more.
7. To prepare frosting & assemble cake: Beat cream cheese, confectioners' sugar and vanilla in a large bowl with an electric mixer on medium speed until smooth. Place one cake layer top-side down on a serving plate; cover with half the frosting, spreading just to the edges. Set the second layer on top, top-side down. Spread the remaining frosting on the top only. Sprinkle with grated chocolate, if desired.
Cake-Baking Tips:
When using cake pans, they must be greased and floured to create a thin layer of protection against the oven’s heat. For greater convenience, use a cooking spray that has flour in the mix, such as Pam for Baking, Baker’s Joy or Crisco No-Stick Flour Spray.
Whole-wheat pastry flour has less gluten-forming potential than regular whole-wheat flour, making it a better choice for tender baked goods.
To properly measure flour when baking, use a spoon to lightly scoop flour from its container into a measuring cup. Once in the measuring cup, use a knife or other straight edge to level the flour with the top of the cup. If the measuring cup is dipped directly into the container—a common mistake—the flour will be packed into the cup and result in extra flour being added to the recipe, yielding tough, dense baked goods.
Room-temperature butter for a batter is one of the biggest culinary missteps. In fact, butter must be below 68°F to trap air molecules and build structure. Otherwise, the fat will be liquefied and the cake will be flat. To get "cool" butter: Cut refrigerated butter into chunks and let them sit in a bowl for 5 minutes before beating.
Eggs must be at room temperature for the proteins to unwind enough to support the cake’s crumb. Either set the eggs out on the counter for 15 minutes or submerge them in their shells in a bowl of lukewarm (not hot) water for 5 minutes.
Although you cannot overbeat the eggs, sugar and butter, you can overbeat the flour. If you do, you’ll develop the gluten and create a quick bread rather than a layer cake. Beat the flour just until there are no white grains of undissolved flour visible but not until the batter is smooth.
Ingredient Note: If you prefer not to use food dye, you can omit it completely: just add 4 more teaspoons of buttermilk to the batter (your cake will, however, be more brown than red). Natural food dyes, while less vibrant than conventional dyes, are chemical-, lactose- and gluten-free, but they vary widely in availability. Check for them at your local natural-foods store.
Calories 285 Carbohydrates 38 Fat 12 Saturated fat 8
Mono unsaturated fat 2 Protein 7 Cholesterol 67 Fiber 2 Potassium 127
This recipe has been added to the following public cookbooks:
Sheilla's Cookbook,
Roxann's Greatest meals,
Fourth of July Recipes,
soul,
Monica's Cookbook
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| Rating | Submitted by | Comment Summary |
|---|---|---|
| ★ ☆ ☆ ☆ ☆ | pamela
09/03/09 06:45 PM | A TRUE RED VELVET CAKEA LITTLE FYI..... MY GRANDMOTHER IS A TRUE RED VELVET CAKE COOK AND THE NAME OF THE CAKE IS RED VELVET CAKE WICH MEANS IT HAS NO ASSOCIATION WITH CHOCOLATE WHICH MEANS NOOOOO COCOA OR COCOA POWDER OR VINEGAR.... TRY IT YOU WILL LOVE IT..... I MAKE THEM ALL THE TIME FOR OTHERS AND THEY LOVE THEM. |
| ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | Tweetie Pie
03/26/09 01:48 PM | What a way to go!I'm very allergic to dairy. But, if I ever get despondent and decide to end it all, this is the way I want to go! Is there such a thing as Red Velvet Cake where some of the milk can be substituted? (Would using beets accomplish this?) If anyone knows, could you post it here? Thanks! |
| ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | m2nov
04/10/08 08:47 PM | red velvet cake with cream cheese frostingi liked this recipe better and like to see someone make this for valentine's day, or as their wedding cake. but they have to make more smaller, gradulated sizes for a wedding cake. |
| ★ ★ ★ ☆ ☆ | Darlcat
02/23/08 08:19 AM | Beets in Red Velvet CakeOriginally, beets were used in Red Velvet Cake. One recipe used strained baby food beets, which makes it so moist! |
| ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ | aubautista
02/01/08 11:22 PM | Giant CupcakesI made a Red Velvet Cake Giant cupcake (using 1 1/2 of the recipe, decorated it with giant confettis, giant hearts and stars. I brought it as a gift to a medical rep and everyone loved it... now i have orders to make for parties! |
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