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Most cake recipes call for creaming the butter and sugar first, then adding liquids and flour alternately . Recently I have seen several recipes instructing to add cool butter in small chunks to the flour/sugar mixture beating after each butter chunk, then adding the milk and eggs. what does this produce? Thanks

Pam Rollins
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    flaky dough usually done for biscuits or crusts, dose not sound like a method used for cakes. – Chef_Code Apr 23 '15 at 05:23
  • Can you post one of these recipes? – Catija Apr 23 '15 at 19:36
  • Not exactly a duplicate, but related to http://cooking.stackexchange.com/questions/55584/how-does-the-order-of-mixing-ingredients-affect-the-resulting-cake – SourDoh Apr 23 '15 at 22:13
  • @Chef_Code Mixing the butter directly into the flour is sometimes used for cakes: http://www.joepastry.com/category/pastry-components/cake-layers/white-cake-layers/ – SourDoh Apr 23 '15 at 22:14

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As Jason Sandeman already said in his answer, adding the butter to mixed dry ingredients (including things other than sugar) is called the "two step" or "two stage" method. Many professional bakers recently have advocated using it to produce more a more tender crumb with a velvety consistency.

In terms of food science, the difference is primarily due to gluten production. In a typical creaming method recipe, the butter and sugar are combined to create bubbles, and those bubbles are stabilized by alternating additions of flour and liquid, which form gluten strands to support the bubbles. The cake rises high due to big bubbles and a support structure.

When the flour is combined with the fat first, the fat envelops many of the flour particles, inhibiting their ability to interact with liquid when added later. Thus, less gluten is formed. Bubble formation is also inhibited somewhat (and bubbles are smaller sized). That means an exceptionally tender cake with a fine crumb, but which won't rise quite as high or be as "light."

The reason it's called the "two stage" method is to differentiate it from a "single stage" mix (or a "quick mix"), where all ingredients are just thrown together, as in a boxed cake mix. (I believe the "two stage" method was originally developed in the 1940s or 50s, when boxed mixes were first becoming popular.) The problem with the "single stage" method is that it will fail with "high ratio" cakes, i.e., those having a significant amount of sugar compared to flour. In that case, a "single stage" mix won't allow the moisture to dissolve the sugar granules fully, resulting in a somewhat "crunchy" or "mealy" sugary texture (like a sugar cookie).

If you don't want your financiers to taste like a sugar cookie, you need to dissolve the sugar thoroughly. And if you value tenderness over lightness, try adding the flour along with the sugar to the butter before the wet ingredients.

Athanasius
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  • Have you heard of anyone trying a hybrid approach where some of the fat is creamed with the sugar and the rest of the fat is cut with the flour? I wonder if that would produce some middle ground of tenderness and larger bubbles. – Dolan Antenucci Apr 29 '15 at 13:52
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    @DolanAntenucci, I don't recall seeing a recipe like that. As I mentioned, the gluten production is important; mixing the flour with fat will inhibit gluten. Bigger bubbles are good, but if they don't have the gluten structure to support them when they expand in the oven, I'm not sure how effective they will be. If I had to speculate, this hybrid approach might produce something closer to the two-stage result. To achieve a middleground, I imagine you'd have to cream sugar with fat, cut *part* of the flour with fat, and add in the rest of flour afterward (for some gluten). But that's a guess. – Athanasius Apr 30 '15 at 01:20
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Creaming the butter and sugar together incorporates air into the mixture. The air is trapped in the butter and sugar mix. The other method is known as a Two step method... Cakes won't rise as high that way, but will have a smooth texture.

The two are slightly different, and will produce different results. The reason for using the two step method is when your sugar is equal or greater than the weight of the flour in the mix. This way you avoid the mixture splitting.

  • I just baked a cake using this method, actually... and I noticed that it does in fact have more sugar than flour in the recipe. (It's the Blitz Torte recipe from ATK, if anyone's curious). The cake layers are actually two-part each: a dense but very smooth cake with a meringue layer baked directly on top. – Catija May 05 '15 at 17:23
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This sounds like a simplified version of, indeed, an ice water pie dough, where you do not beat but cut the butter into unleavened, optionally sweetened/salted, flour, eg by using a pastry cutter, stout wire whisk (used like a pestle - works a charm but takes some physical force, but hey you'll be eating rich pie later :) or bladed food processor (usually not very effective, will melt too much of the fat) and then join the resulting crumbs with very cold water (so they will not melt and dissolve).

rackandboneman
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