Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (2024)

Grammy’sOld-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe is an original made-from-scratch family recipe that was legend in our housegrowing up. The subtle crème brûlée burnt sugar flavor is incorporated into both the cake and icing. This chiffon cake is light and moist.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (1)

The burnt sugar flavor of this cake reminds me of caramel, but has a lighter, delicate and more complex flavor. This cake is tender, delicious and addictive. It’s nearly impossible to stop at one slice!

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (2)

My paternal Grammy was a Mainer and an excellent baker at that. Fora time she and my Grampy set the alarm for3 a.m. every dayto make fresh doughnuts they delivered by wagon a few hours later in the neighborhood to help make ends meet. While my Grammy was never rich in dollars, she had many gifts.

She was kind. She had an incredible green thumb and could arrange flowers like a blue ribbon florist. She nosed out the best deal at a yard sale like nobody’s business. And she was an excellent baker. We still make some of her favorite recipes today: hermit cookies from the Maine bakery where she worked, and this Old Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (3)

My Grammy requested thisBurnt Sugar Chiffon Cake for her birthday and often made it for my dad’s because it was his favorite too. A few weeks ago my mom and I were talking about my dad’s upcoming 78th birthday, and before I knew it, I’d opened my big mouth and offered to make him this cakefor the party.

The truth is, I’d never made the cake before. It always fell to my Grammy or Mom to make it. There’s a first time for everything and I really did enjoy the process of baking this cake. (And I have new respect for the baking skills of my mom and grandmother.) I’m also grateful that my mom carefully preserved my Grammy’s original recipefor many decades so I can share it here with you today.

I want to be very clear about this recipe. It’s not for inexperienced bakers. It has a number of sequenced steps and is not a quick cake to whip together. That being said, it is has an amazingly delicate burnt sugar flavor that’s nearly impossible to replicate.

It’s worth every bit of time and effort but you’ll definitely need to pay close attention to each step. If you are planning to make this cake for a special event, I highly recommend doing a test run first. It’s the burnt sugar syrup that can be tricky.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (4)

The first, most critical step is making the burnt sugar syrup on the stovetop. (And not burning it.) The burnt sugar syrup takes a total of 10-15minutes to make.

You are slowly melting sugar over low heat on the stovetop. After all the sugar is melted, it looks like the picture above. It should be a medium golden brown color.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (5)

After you (very carefully) slowly whisk in the boiling water, the burnt sugar syrup should become smooth and amber colored, without lumps. (See above.) Set it aside and cool completely for useinthe cake batter and icing. The syrup will thicken as it cools to nearly the consistency of honey.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (6)

Preheat oven to 325°. Then sift flour, 1 1/2 cups sugar, baking powder and salt into a medium sized mixing bowl. Make a “well” in the center of the flour mixture and add, in order: cooking oil, unbeaten egg yolks, 1/3 cup cooled burnt sugar syrup, cold water and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (7)

Mix egg yolk batter, stirring by hand until just combined and set aside.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (8)

Separately, in a larger mixing bowl, beat egg whites and cream of tartar on high speed until stiff peaks form. (Do not under beat!)

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (9)

Gently pour egg yolk batter over the stiffly beaten egg whites.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (10)

Very gently combine the stiffly beaten egg whites with the egg yolk batter, using a rubber spatula. The idea is to keep the batter very light and airy and break as few of the air bubbles in the stiffly beaten egg whites as possible.

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When your batter is just combined and looks light and airy like this, transfer it to an ungreased 10″ x 4″ tube cake pan and bake immediately.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (12)

I use a two piece tube pan, because it’s so much easier to remove from the pan later.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (13)

Bake cake for 60-70 minutes at 325°, ’til cake is golden brown and cracked on top and a cake tester comes out clean. (Be careful not to check the cake too early, you don’t want it to fall while baking.)

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (14)

Remove cake from oven, and immediately hang upside down on the top of a glass vinegar or mineral water bottle to cool. (It’s a good idea to find a glass bottle in your pantry ahead of time to insure that the hole of your cake pan will fit onto it.)

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (15)

Mix together burnt sugar frosting with an electric mixer until smooth.

When chiffon cake is completely cooled, remove from glass bottle. Using a very sharp knife, carefully separate the cake from the cake pan on the sides, around the center tube and the bottom. Turn cake out onto a cake platter. Brush the crumbs off, then frost with a very thin coat of icing to capture any remaining crumbs. Let set. Then frost with a regular layer of the Burnt Sugar Icing.

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (16)

  • Make the burnt sugar syrup on the stovetop first. Do not walk away from the stove during this process. Allow about 15-2o minutes total for this process, then set aside to cool.
  • Sift together the dry ingredients, then hand mix together with the egg yolks and wet ingredients.
  • Separately, beat the egg whites and cream of tartar with an electric mixer on high speed until very stiff.(For great tips from my baking friend Liz on separating eggs and beating egg whites, clickhere.)
  • Gently incorporate the egg yolk cake batter into the stiff egg whites and bake immediately.
  • Remove the cake from the oven and turn upside down onto a glass bottle to cool. (A glass vinegar or perrier bottle works well.)
  • When cake is completely cool, remove from the glass bottle and loosen all edges with a sharp knife. Remove from the pan.
  • Frost with Burnt Sugar Icing.
  • Use an electric knife or a metal tined angel food cake cutter to slice. (This will keep the cake from getting crushed while serving.)

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (17)

Ingredients

Burnt Sugar Syrup:

  • 1 1/2 cups white sugar
  • 3/4 cup boiling water

Burnt Sugar Cake:

  • 2 cups sifted flour
  • 1 1/2 cups white sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 1/2 cup vegetable oil
  • 7 large egg yolks unbeaten
  • 1/3 cup cooled burnt sugar syrup
  • 1/4 cup cold water
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 7 large egg whites
  • 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar

Burnt Sugar Icing:

  • 3 1/2 cups powdered confectioner's sugar
  • 1/2 cup butter softened
  • 7-8 tablespoons burnt sugar syrup
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1-2 tablespoons half and half or cream or as much as needed for spreading consistency

Instructions

Burnt Sugar Syrup:

  • Please allow about 15-20 minutes to make the burnt sugar syrup. Do not hurry the process and don't walk away from the stove.

  • In a heavy saucepan with high sides (not a frying pan and not cast iron), melt 1 1/2 cups sugar over low heat on the stovetop until melted completely, stirring often.

  • The mixture will be thick and a medium brown color when all the sugar is melted.

  • The goal is a thick syrup without any hard sugar lumps in it.

  • (I had a few stubborn lumps that absolutely refused to melt and I finally removed them with a slotted spoon.)

  • Remove mixture from the heat.

  • Very very slowly, whisk in 3/4 cup boiling water.

  • The mixture will bubble up a lot and may spatter as you add the boiling water. (Be very careful, the mixture is extremely hot.)

  • Whisk all the boiling water in until the mixture is as smooth as you can get it. You don't want any lumps in it.

  • If it has lumps at this point, strain them out with a slotted spoon.

  • Set aside the mixture to cool completely and reserve for later use in the cake and icing.

  • The burnt sugar syrup will thicken to nearly the consistency of honey as it cools.

Burnt Sugar Cake:

  • Preheat oven to 325°.

  • Sift together flour, 1 1/2 cups sugar, baking powder and salt in a large mixing bowl.

  • Make a well in the flour mixture and add these ingredients to the well in this order:

  • Cooking oil, unbeaten egg yolks, 1/3 cup burnt sugar syrup, 1/4 cup cold water and 1 teaspoon vanilla extract.

  • Stir ingredients together until just mixed and set aside.

  • Separately, in a large mixing bowl, with an electric beater, beat 7 large egg whites and 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar until egg whites form very stiff peaks.

  • VERY IMPORTANT: Do not underbeat.

  • Pour egg yolk batter gradually over whipped egg whites, very gently folding it in with a rubber scraper. The idea is not to break the delicate bubbles of the egg whites.

  • Immediately pour into an ungreased 10" X 4" tube pan and bake at 325° for 60-70 minutes.

  • Remove cake from oven, and turn tube pan upside down over a glass bottle to cool completely. (A glass vinegar or perrier bottle does the trick.)

  • When cake is completely cooled, loosen all edges including around the center tube with a sharp knife and turn cake out of the pan onto a cake platter.

  • Ice with Burnt Sugar Icing.

Burnt Sugar Icing:

  • Cream softened butter with electric mixer until it's creamy and there are no lumps.

  • Beat in 1 cup powdered sugar until smooth and creamy.

  • Beat in a second cup of powdered sugar until smooth and creamy.

  • Stir in 7-8 tablespoons Burnt Sugar Syrup.

  • Beat in remaining 1 1/2 cups of powdered sugar.

  • Stir in 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract and 1-2 tablespoons half and half or cream.

  • Add more or less cream if needed for spreading consistency.

  • Frost cake.

  • Cut with a serrated or electric knife or use a metal tined angel food cake cutter.

You may also like: Salted Caramel Apple Cake

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (19)

Grammy's Old-Fashioned Burnt Sugar Chiffon Cake Recipe - Through Her Looking Glass (2024)

FAQs

What is the difference between a chiffon cake and a sponge cake? ›

While both chiffon and sponge cakes have a light and airy texture, they have some differences that set them apart. The primary difference lies in the ingredients used. A sponge cake typically contains flour, sugar, eggs, and baking powder. In contrast, chiffon cake also includes oil, which gives it a moist texture.

What ingredient defines the chiffon method of cake mixing? ›

Mixing a cake with the chiffon method involves the folding of whipped egg whites into a batter. It's a little like an angel food cake, but much richer because the batter contains egg yolks and oil.

What is chiffon cake method? ›

A chiffon cake combines methods used with sponge cakes and conventional cakes. It includes baking powder and vegetable oil, but the eggs are separated and the whites are beaten before being folded into the batter, creating the rich flavor like an oil cake, but with a lighter texture that is more like a sponge cake.

Why should you not grease the cups for chiffon cake? ›

The reason we do not grease our (preferably aluminum) cake pans for chiffon is because the batter needs to adhere to the side of the pan, ensuring it rises properly. If you were to spray the cake pan with cooking spray, the chiffon would likely bake up flat, dense, and not at all airy and light as we are going for.

Why is my chiffon cake not fluffy? ›

Inverting the pan and cooling it down is important because it prevents the chiffon cake from shrinking, deflating, or sinking. Cooling it down helps the cake set and keep its height, which is how you get a light and fluffy chiffon cake.

What's the difference between angel food cake and chiffon cake? ›

Chiffon cake has a richer flavor and, while still airy, a crumbier texture than angel food cake. Angel food cake is the foamiest foam cake around, with little flavor beyond a general sweetness. The fat in chiffon cake gives it more depth, and it is more likely to pack a punch with its flavors.

Why is there a hole in chiffon cake? ›

Mixing of Eggs and Milk into Cake

For the improper cake: Creaming was stopped prematurely, butter and sugar not fully mixed, insufficient air is incorporated. This causes the cake to be extremely dense, trapping air ( such as carbon dioxide released from baking powder ) during baking, creating such huge pockets.

Do you grease the pan for a chiffon cake? ›

Do not grease or line the pans in any way! The cake needs traction to both rise and cool, so we don't want to do anything that would help it slip free, which would cause it to lose volume as it bakes and when it cools.

Should eggs be room temperature for chiffon cake? ›

Tips from our Bakers. Separate the eggs carefully; even a small amount of yolk in the whites will prevent them from beating up properly. The eggs separate most easily when cold, but allow them to come to room temperature before mixing, for best volume in the egg whites.

What is another name for a chiffon cake? ›

These cakes go by many names: chiffon cake, angel food cake, sponge cake, you name it.

What is a substitute for cream of tartar in chiffon cake? ›

A good replacement for cream of tartar in baking is 1 teaspoon of vinegar or lemon juice for every 1/2 teaspoon of cream of tartar.

What kind of pan do you use for chiffon cake? ›

The finished product is a flavourful, light cake with a texture far more spongey than any other cake I have had the pleasure to try. A classic chiffon cake is baked in a tube pan. These are like bundt tins but have flat sides and a flat base – something I will discuss later.

Can you use baking soda in chiffon cake? ›

A basic chiffon cake combines cake flour with baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar. Cake flour is used to keep the cake light and tender, however, all-purpose flour can be substituted.

What are the three common causes of failure in cakes? ›

Below we go in-depth about these cake mistakes:
  • Underbaked. The number one culprit of a sunken cake is underbaking. ...
  • Too Much or Too Soft of Butter. Another common cake mistake is using a type of butter that's the wrong temperature. ...
  • Opened Oven Door Too Much. ...
  • Overmixed.

What are common mistakes when baking a cake? ›

Common Baking Mistakes (And How to Fix Them)
  • Baking at the wrong temperature. ...
  • Not measuring ingredients. ...
  • Checking on your items too frequently. ...
  • Your ingredients are at the wrong temperature. ...
  • Your dough isn't rising. ...
  • Nothing is baking evenly. ...
  • Your dough or batter is too tough. ...
  • Wrap Up.

Why did my chiffon cake collapse in the oven? ›

This is because too much batter in one cake tin may result in the weight of the batter being too much for the cake to support, causing the cake to collapse and sink in the middle as it bakes. This is especially true for cake recipes which have a more softer, delicate structure to them, which many of my cake recipes do.

What are the common baking failures? ›

11 Common Baking Mistakes That You Should Avoid
  1. You Forget To Add A Key Ingredient. ...
  2. You Don't Measure Your Ingredients. ...
  3. You Open The Oven Far Too Often. ...
  4. You Use The Ingredients At The Wrong Temperature. ...
  5. You Don't Sift Your Dry Ingredients. ...
  6. You Don't Know What Your Oven Needs. ...
  7. You Don't Read The Recipe.

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