Looking for tips when making boxed cake mixes
My wife's birthday is coming up soon and she wanted a lemon cake/frosting from the store. We enjoy stuff like that on celebrations, however would like to know if anyone has any tips so that we could potion it better, store it, etc. For example, does cake and frosting freeze well after its made? Or possibly Make individual cakes for the family and freeze the rest of the batter for later use? Any thoughts?
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maybe make it form half of the mix? measure whatever the mix weighs and just split it in half? put away the other half for later use?0
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maybe make it form half of the mix? measure whatever the mix weighs and just split it in half? put away the other half for later use?
but also if you want to freeze cake I would advise not to put the frosting on
have a great time with your celebrations0 -
maybe make it form half of the mix? measure whatever the mix weighs and just split it in half? put away the other half for later use?
yes and use half the frosting and put the rest in the fridge. it will be fine in there and says so on the tub.
Then you will have half a cake which is usually I think like 5 servings because if i recall correctly most mixes make like ten servings. I would bake it in a single round pan. That's the best way to cook half since they are made that way anyways when making the full one. That the two of you can eat over a day or two as long as you keep it under a cake dome or in some other way covered on your counter.0 -
I'm not much of a fan of previously frozen cake. If I were you, I'd do one of the following:
Make cupcakes, eat a couple, drop the rest off at work or a friend's.
Get a smaller cake pan, divide up the mix and make a portion of the cake. If it calls for 2 eggs, easiest is to divide in half. If your cake pan is larger than a half, it'll be a shorter cake and require less time to bake. If your cake pan is smaller than a half of the regular size, it'll be taller (might have to discard some batter to keep from overflowing) and will require more baking time.0 -
Get the box mix…. Take one can of diet 7-up, or diet Sprite. Mix only these two things together & bake per the box directions (maybe a tiny bit longer). Voila!!! Lower calories & I swear….NO one will know the difference!
P.S. you won't even need frosting!!! It is so moist!0 -
be sure to pick a cake mix w/o trans fat. Many of the general grocery store ones & popular name brands have sneaky trans fats and "ain't nobody need that..."0
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Get the box mix…. Take one can of diet 7-up, or diet Sprite. Mix only these two things together & bake per the box directions (maybe a tiny bit longer). Voila!!! Lower calories & I swear….NO one will know the difference!
P.S. you won't even need frosting!!! It is so moist!
You just blew my mind.... can you do this with any box cake mix???0 -
cupcakes. frost and freeze them if you want them for yourselves for later. or just give away the rest. cupcakes are infinitely better than cakes imho when it comes to actually eating them bc you don't need plate/fork and they're super easy to give away.0
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maybe make it form half of the mix? measure whatever the mix weighs and just split it in half? put away the other half for later use?
but also if you want to freeze cake I would advise not to put the frosting on
have a great time with your celebrations
Don't frost the part you want to freeze. Cake will freeze just fine .....frosting, not so much.
MAKE your own frosting.....the canned stuff has trans fat (still). Better yet, raspberry (or blueberry) sauce & lemon cake .....mmm. You can serve Cool Whip on the side.
You could also make a lemon custard ...... from a cooked pudding mix. Dollop custard on each piece & serve with Cool Whip.0 -
Get the box mix…. Take one can of diet 7-up, or diet Sprite. Mix only these two things together & bake per the box directions (maybe a tiny bit longer). Voila!!! Lower calories & I swear….NO one will know the difference!
P.S. you won't even need frosting!!! It is so moist!
You just blew my mind.... can you do this with any box cake mix???
yes. diet clear sodas best for lemon/vanilla cakes, diet colas for chocolate, and I once had a really good diet root beer/spice cake!0 -
Get the box mix…. Take one can of diet 7-up, or diet Sprite. Mix only these two things together & bake per the box directions (maybe a tiny bit longer). Voila!!! Lower calories & I swear….NO one will know the difference!
P.S. you won't even need frosting!!! It is so moist!
You just blew my mind.... can you do this with any box cake mix???
yes. diet clear sodas best for lemon/vanilla cakes, diet colas for chocolate, and I once had a really good diet root beer/spice cake!
Banana cake & cola.....yum
Thanks for the root beer tip!0 -
Not sure if this helps but my wife uses unsweetened apple sauce instead of oil. Cuts down on sugar too. Don't know the exact way she does it but I'm sure you can find the answer on the internets.0
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Not an expert when it comes to boxed cake mixes (I bake from scratch and have never tried the soda trick I've read so much about!), but what my mum did one year for my birthday was make lots of cupcakes. Then she put them all on a giant cake board and decorated them to look like a bunch of balloons. They were iced with different colours with thin strips of liquorice arranged to look like the 'strings'. So still fun, and with the portions are under control. Which wasn't what she was aiming for, but in retrospect a good idea.
If you go the cupcake route, you can get those layered display serving things (I don't know what they're called). If you don't want to go all out with icing (although I think there was a lower calorie recipe involving Greek yoghurt and sugar-free jelly mix somewhere on the internet, but don't quote me on that), fruit is always a good way to decorate. Sometimes a dusting of cinnamon or icing sugar is all you need for presentation. Or you could make it like a build-your-own-cupcake thing where you have bowls of decorating options for people to choose from. That way, you know how much you're eating and if guests want to drown theirs in Nutella and whipped cream and sprinkles, they can do so.
As for lightening up recipes in general, I tend to use applesauce to replace about half the butter/oil a recipe calls for. Two egg whites for every egg is another way to cut down on calories (although it can take away the richness so I when I do it I replace some of the white sugar for brown). It's a bit of a balancing act, figuring out what to substitute for what and by how much.
Also, cake is fine to freeze. But frosting...no.
Hope this helps0 -
You can freeze cake batter! Just bake 4 or 5 cupcakes, then freeze the batter for later use. You could even portion out 4cupcake servings in each ziplock bag. Thaw on the counter for 20 min, cut the coner of the bag, and fill and bake. Or you can fill
The cupcake papers and freeze them right in the tin. When they are frozen, put them into a ziplock bag. When you want a few, just pull them out and bake. Instead of frosting, try a lemon glaze. Mix lemon juice with powdered sugar and drizzle onto the cupcake. Just as sweet without the extra fat you get in frosting.0 -
love the pop cake, its so good and easy, I make them often0
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I've used this recipe as a base (it's from scratch but super simple!), cut down on the vanilla, replaced the sugar with stevia and the butter with unsweetened applesauce, added fresh lemon juice and some lemon zest they turned out absolutely delicious!
http://www.howsweeteats.com/2011/03/one-bowl-vanilla-cupcakes-for-two/0 -
I don't know if frosting freezes well, but cake freezes just fine (as long as it's baked first.0
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get the cake have your party and donate it to work the next day that sucker will be gone in minutes0
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I freeze slices individually in wax paper then a freezer container. Then u can have one slice as wanted but u have to allow it to thaw. Takes a conscious effort. Enjoy her birthday.0
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I would definitely go the cupcake route. You could even make it more special by baking them from scratch. They are SO much tastier and you know exactly what goes into the recipe. Plus, like others have said, there's a few swaps you could do to make them healthier, depending on the recipe.
Here's a list of cupcake recipes. There's some awesome ones on here with full instructions that are not difficult to make!
http://mlkshk.com/p/MGG90 -
A spice cake mix, and a can of pumpkin (not pie filling, but canned pumpkin) make a delicious, moist "fall" cake.
I usually use a cream cheese frosting.
And cupcakes to share at work are a great solution to having to store leftovers.
Kaye0 -
You can freeze cupcakes, just don't frost them, I bake mine and put them in a gallon freezer bag, pull some out as needed and frost them then...sometimes I don't even frost them0
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bump - I will have to try this! - Thanks0
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This cake is delicious with just diet 7up and lemon cake mix. I use fat free cool whip as icing (it takes about half the tub to ice a 9x13 cake). Good luck!0
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My hobby/side "business" is baking. You can definitely freeze the left overs. Wrap it up with two or three layers of your favorite plastic wrap and put it in the deep freeze. No problem at all. And enjoy your special occasion!:drinker:0
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I know you are doing the lemon, but here are some tips for lemon and chocolate as well. With lemon or chocolate you can sub in light sour cream for part of the oil(if it calls for a quarter cup of oil, use 2 Tablespoons sour cream and 2 T oil) and you can also use coffee for 1/2 of the water on chocolate for a richer flavor.
When making the lemon cake you can buy lemon curd at the store and put a thin layer on the cake and then top with Cool Whip for a sweet and tangy flavor. If you make buttercream it freezes well, but the store bought frosting...not so much. Good luck with whichever way you go.0 -
when I saw this I was so excitded cos I was going to post about the soda... ....it not only works it makes a moist cake.....its amazing/0
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I have modified box cake recipes by adding flour (whole wheat is better), and depending on what the foundation of the frosting is by adding cream cheese.0
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