However, if you add too many eggs to your cake batter, then your end result could be spongy, rubbery, or dense. Like flour, eggs build structure in a cake, so they make a cake batter more bonded and dense.
How does the number of eggs affect a cake? If you add too many eggs to a cake, you'll get a much thinner consistency of cake batter and, while it will be a stunning golden colour, you'll end up with a cake tasting and textured more like a baked custard.
Overall, changing the number of eggs in your cake recipe can alter the properties of your cake. Too few eggs will yield a cake that is overly compact and doesn't hold together will. Too many eggs can leave you with a spongy or rubbery mess.
If there isn't enough egg, your batter or dough may not be able to hold its structure or could end up overly dry or dense. On the other hand, if there is too much egg, your baked goods could lose their shape due to excess liquid, or have a rubbery (or even overly cakey) texture depending on the recipe.
The generally rule is 1 egg per 1 & 1/4 cup of flour for muffins and 2 eggs per 1 & 1/4 cups of flour for cakes. Generally speaking, when you go from 4 to 3 eggs, you are not making that much of a difference, and most recipes are built around large eggs, and most people buy extra large eggs.
Whisk together water, oil, and baking powder.
This is a great substitute if you need to replace multiple eggs in a recipe, as it won't make the baked good too greasy or change its flavor profile (like some other substitutes). A simple combination of water, baking powder, and vegetable oil mimics eggs almost to a T.
Four large eggs: When the recipe calls for four large eggs and you don't have the right size at hand, use other egg size equivalents with confidence. You can substitute three jumbo eggs, four extra-large eggs, five medium eggs or five smalls.
The reason why a cake gets rubbery is that the overmixing of flour activates the gluten. It makes cakes hard instead of the lovely soft spongy texture we associate with a good cake. And the over mixing is usually caused from incorrectly creaming butter and sugar.
Egg size matters more in some baking recipes than others. One good rule of thumb to keep in mind: The more eggs in a recipe, the more size will have a significant impact. As you add more eggs, that difference in weight—~2 ounces for a large compared to ~2 ¼ ounces for an XL and ~2 ½ for a jumbo—is amplified.
Eggs play an important role in everything from cakes and cookies to meringues and pastry cream — they create structure and stability within a batter, they help thicken and emulsify sauces and custards, they add moisture to cakes and other baked goods, and can even act as glue or glaze.
You can instead use 300g plain flour + 1.5 teaspoons baking powder. Eggs – you'll need 3 large room temperature eggs for this cake, or you can use 4 medium eggs.
if your cake rises and falls during baking then the batter had more moisture than the flour can handle. If your cake doesn't rise much at all and leads to gummy or mushy cake then most likely the baking powder is too old. Do not add the all dry ingredients at once.
Using a different size egg will alter the liquid ratio in a recipe and also potentially deprive it of the required leavening power (or provide too much, which might cause a cake to rise too quickly and then collapse). What if a recipe calls for one large egg and you only have extra-large eggs?
If a recipe calls for 2 large eggs you can use 3 medium eggs instead if you prefer.
The Large egg is the standard used in most recipe development. Using a different size, without making an adjustment, will affect texture, flavor balance, consistency, and in most cases will give an unsatisfactory result.
Room Temperature Butter / Don't Over-Cream
Butter is capable of holding air and the creaming process is when butter traps that air. While baking, that trapped air expands and produces a fluffy cake. No properly creamed butter = no air = no fluffiness. Aka a dense cake.
Cake Is Heavy or Dense
Possible reasons your cake is heavy/dense: Too little baking powder. Too many eggs. Batter is overmixed.
The sinking part is what makes the dense and gluey streaks. This can be result of over-creaming the eggs, butter and sugar. To prevent this, cream the ingredients at medium speed. To prevent overmixing, fold dry ingredients into wet ingredients just until there are no more traces of flour.
Double yolked eggs can in most cases be used on a one-for-one basis for regular eggs in baking.
As you can see, if a recipe calls for a single large egg, you can simply substitute any size of chicken egg. Once it calls for two or more, you may need to make an adjustment if you have only small or medium eggs or if you have only extra-large or jumbo eggs.
The egg white is known as the albumen, which comes from albus, the Latin word for “white.” Four alternating layers of thick and thin albumen contain approximately 40 different proteins, the main components of the egg white in addition to water.
Cakes become spoiled due to a confluence of elements, the most important of which are the presence of moisture, temperature, and microbes.
Cake batter breaks when the ingredients you are attempting to emulsify are too cold and unable to combine. The most common cause of broken cake batter is cold eggs. When cold eggs are added to room temperature batter they bring down the temperature of the entire mixture and cause it to break.
Milk: Add MILK, not water, when your box mix calls for liquid. The milk adds density, fat and, most importantly, extra flavor to your mix. Egg WHITES: Not adding the yolks to the cake makes the cake fluffy and whiter!