Message Boards

Guidelines

  • Please be sure posts are category appropriate.
  • No off-topic or off-color postings.
  • Postings may be deleted at the discretion of HGTV Moderators.
  • No advertising is allowed.
  • Be Nice. No name calling, personal attacks or flaming.
  • Certain words will trigger moderation of the post. These words mostly cover political and religious topics, which are OFF the topics covered by HGTV.
  • For general message board help, click the tab labeled "Tools," and choose "Help" from the dropdown menu.
Full Guidelines

  HGTV.com
  HGTV Message Boards
Hop To Forum Categories   At Home
Hop To Forums   Food & Entertaining
  Pkg. Cake mixes getting smaller? What makes them get lighter?
Go
New
Find
Notify
Tools
Reply
  
Pkg. Cake mixes getting smaller? What makes them get lighter? Sign In/Join 
posted
I just read a whole blog (at Duncan Hines) from bakers complaining that box mixes are smaller and not rising in a 12" pan like they did before.

What do you add to a box mix to make it raise higher and lighter? I think pudding (instant) but what else?

THank you guys so much for all your help!
 
Posts: 1668 | Location: Allentown PA USA | Registered: Oct 03, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
posted Hide Post
I'm a pretty good cook but only a "so-so" baker so I don't have a suggestion for additions ~ myself, I would simply use a smaller pan! Big Grin
 
Posts: 6248 | Registered: Jan 01, 2008Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Froo Froo
posted Hide Post
The size reduction is not surprising as most products in the grocery stores have shrunk. You COULD use a smaller pan OR buy another box of cake mix. I'm sure the bake mix companies are banking on the latter option.
 
Posts: 16717 | Location: Right here, duh! ;) | Registered: Nov 03, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of KeepYouInStitches
posted Hide Post
They think we are not smart...smaller packaging, less mix...same or greater cost.

At least with homemade from scratch...a cup is still a cup!
 
Posts: 14750 | Location: Daingerfield, TX | Registered: Feb 07, 2003Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Froo Froo
posted Hide Post
You got THAT right! Another good reason to bake from scratch and no preservatives or artifical anything.
 
Posts: 16717 | Location: Right here, duh! ;) | Registered: Nov 03, 2005Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of ga.karen
posted Hide Post
I use only jumbo eggs when I bake anything. They tend to help things rise lighter.


"The soil is the source of life, creativity, culture and real independence." David Ben-Gurion
 
Posts: 2905 | Location: SW Ga. 8a/b | Registered: Apr 21, 2011Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of nettiejay
posted Hide Post
IMO, the smaller amount of mix only produces so much batter. Adding stuff to it to increase the air space around the cake crumbs changes the texture and doesn't fix the basic problem. I used to bake mixes in either two 8-inch or 9-inch pans. Since they shrunk the product, I only use 8-inch pans so the cake layers will be thick enough.

So... For me, the answer is to use smaller pans, or split a second box of mix in half and add one half to a full box. A kitchen scale makes it a cinch to divide a mix into parts and is useful for many other kitchen tasks as well. If a scale is not an option, you can measure the mix in cups and divide by two. That's not as accurate as a scale, but works pretty well.
 
Posts: 3915 | Location: zone 6b, Missouri | Registered: Sep 19, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of Linderhof
posted Hide Post
The new size cake mix has more leavening in it which makes for a higher and lighter cake and can use the same pans as the bigger size.

And with less flour and more leavening -- you have a cake that has less calories!

Martha
 
Posts: 4177 | Registered: Dec 17, 2006Reply With QuoteReport This Post
Picture of nettiejay
posted Hide Post
quote:
Originally posted by Linderhof:
The new size cake mix has more leavening in it which makes for a higher and lighter cake and can use the same pans as the bigger size.

Interesting, but I don't find that's the case. Before I knew about the change, I was making the smaller mixes in 9" pans as always, and finding them coming out so thin they couldn't be split to make a 4-layer cake. I complained to a personal friend that I thought I was losing my baking edge because of it. Then she told me it happened to her and only then discovered the product shrinkage.
 
Posts: 3915 | Location: zone 6b, Missouri | Registered: Sep 19, 2002Reply With QuoteReport This Post
  Powered by Social Strata  
 

HGTV.com    HGTV Message Boards  Hop To Forum Categories  At Home  Hop To Forums  Food & Entertaining    Pkg. Cake mixes getting smaller? What makes them get lighter?