Baking
utensils and directions have been so perfected and simplified that even the
amateur cook may easily become and expert baker. There are five basic types of
cake, depending on the substance used for leavening.
The
most primitive peoples in the world began making cakes shortly after they
discovered flour. In medieval England, the cakes that were described in
writings were not cakes in the conventional sense. They were described as
flour-based sweet foods as opposed to the description of breads, which were
just flour-based foods without sweetening.
Cakes
were called "plakous" by the Greeks, from the word for
"flat." These cakes were usually combinations of nuts and honey. They
also had a cake called "satura," which was a flat heavy cake.
During
the Roman period, the name for cake (derived from the Greek term) became
"placenta." They were also called "libum" by the
Romans, and were primarily used as an offering to their gods. Placenta was more
like a cheesecake, baked on a pastry base, or sometimes inside a pastry case.
The
terms "bread" and "cake" became interchangeable as years
went by. The words themselves are of Anglo Saxon origin, and it's probable that
the term cake was used for the smaller breads. Cakes were usually baked for
special occasions because they were made with the finest and most expensive
ingredients available to the cook. The wealthier you were, the more likely you
might consume cake on a more frequent basis.
By
the middle of the 18th century, yeast had fallen into disuse as a raising agent
for cakes in favor of beaten eggs. Once as much air as possible had been beaten
in, the mixture would be poured into molds, often very elaborate creations, but
sometimes as simple as two tin hoops, set on parchment paper on a cookie sheet.
It is from these cake hoops that our modern cake pans developed.
Cakes
were considered a symbol of well being by early American cooks on the east
coast, with each region of the country having their own favorites.
By the early 19th
century, due to the Industrial Revolution, baking ingredients became more
affordable and readily available because of mass production and the railroads.
Modern leavening agents, such as baking soda and baking powder were invented
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