
I don't understand why people would want to frost the hell out of a perfectly good cake. I mean, if the cake itself is good, they why do it? And if you do, why make it so thick? I had a cake once that had saccharine frosting that was layered on so thick that my head felt like it was going to implode from all my blood vessels constricting.
That's my rant for the day I guess. Anyway, on to the main point. I finally bought a cake pan; a
9" Wilton round cake pan. It took me forever to decide to actually buy one and then after that it took another eon for me to select a particular brand. Therefore, I decided to buy the Wilton nonstick 9" round, since they come with lovely
handles for easy manipulation. I only bought 1 though since at that point I still wasn't sure if it would be a good choice or not, and about
$5-$6, it was worth a risk. When I finally used it to bake a cake, it
worked perfectly. It
browns the bottom and edges a dark brown, which has
great flavor and a firmer, almost
crisp, crust. The handles made turning during baking and handling overall a lot easier too.
Good surface. With a light run around the sides with a spreader,
the cake almost seemed to fall out of the pan.

On to the recipe itself. I used and adjusted a basic
One-Bowl Chocolate Cake from
Better Homes and Garden's New Cook Book;
however, I didn't do it all in one bowl. I just kinda did mine in steps since I don't have an electric mixer. If I did I might have done it all in one bowl...but ya~
For this recipe I had to buy some
cocoa powder, so I settled for
Dutch processed. The original recipe I followed only called for milk, so I used
2% milk and I added some
sour cream, which is supposed to add tenderness (that line sounds kinda weird, doesn't it?). Another thing was that the cake came with a Rocky Road Frosting, which I decided not to try since I don't really like frosting on my cake. Turned out I was right in doing this because it
needed no frosting what so ever. It was
moist,
just sweet enough, and
perfect just by itself.
I believe a good cake can hold it's own~ Though it is true frosting makes it more presentation quality. In those cases, I would make a special, mildly sweet, and frost on only a thin layer.

Makes one 9" round layer
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- 1 cup sugar
- 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder (Dutch processed makes for a darker, less red, cake)
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 baking soda (originally: 1/4 tsp)
- 1/4 tsp of salt
- 1/2 + 1/8 cup of (2%) milk, room temp
- Enough (light) sour cream to make milk total: 3/4 cup (a little over 1 tbsp)
- 1/4 cup butter, room temp, and cut into 8 cubes/pieces (originally: margarine)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 egg, room temp
- Preheat oven to 350F
- Spray a 9" round cake pan with cooking spray, line the bottom with parchment, spray bottom again, and lightly flour pan. Set aside. (I just spray it all once, put the parchment on the bottom, touch it till it gets oil all over the one side, and then flip it around and press in against the pan).
- Use scoop and level method (scoop out an overfilled amount of flour and level) and to measure out one cup of flour. Mix by first stirring flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, baking soda, salt, and sugar together in a bowl, then sift 1-2x, using another bowl between transfers. Set aside
- In another bowl (if you used another bowl when you were sifting the dry ingredients back and forth, use the empty one you have after step 3) mix the eggs, vanilla, milk, and sour cream together until well blended/mixed. Set aside
- Using a whisk, add 2 cubes of butter into the dry ingredients at a time and mix by pressing the butter into the dry ingredients until all the butter is distributed in the dry ingredients and are about the size of small rocks. Add half of the wet mixture into the dry ingredients, whisk rather vigorously until the dry ingredients are all incorporated (~20-30 seconds). Then, mix in the rest of the wet mixture until a smooth batter forms. Scrap the bowl down and mix w/ just a few more turns.
- Pour batter into prepared pan. Even out the batter and put bake at 350F for 30-35 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the middle comes out clean. (Remember to turn the cake around 1/2 way through baking, so as to ensure even cooking).
In the end, I think you can use any method you want to mix this cake up,
providing you are using some type of cake making method. I hope this works out well for everyone who decides to try it. if you really wanted to, you could even frost it...if you want to. I personally feel its perfect the way it is ^_^. Time to study for my Calc and Chem midterm!...crap~