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Then crack the egg open in a cup and note the weight of the egg. Then divide that number by 4. So for example, if your egg weighs 50g, you would need 13g of egg. Again, beat the egg before so you’re not just getting just egg white. I hope that helps. Happy baking. Reply Sarah- April 25, 2019 at 1:28 pm I want to make sure I understand.
This chart helps down and upscale cake recipe quantities and assumes that the recipe you are using is the most common size/shape, which is an 8 inch (20cm) round cake and 3 inch (7.5cm) deep. For square cakes, use the round quantities below and deduct 1 inch from the round cake chart, or alternatively, see the cake tin sizes chart above.
Hi Alka, The ingredients totally depend on what type of cake you want to bake. For example, the flour weights change if you’re doing chocolate, vanilla, and some cakes have less flour because they use milk or buttermilk, etc.
Yes, you’re correct. The chart converts from one 8-inch cake recipe. To upscale this to 12-inch, you would multiply the recipe’s ingredients by 2 ½. As you said the recipe you’re using uses two 8-inch round pans in one recipe, the formula should work the same. I hope this helps? Thanks for stopping by. Happy baking. Reply Pavan-
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