Adnow native

How to: make naturally coloured organic rainbow cake

How to: make naturally coloured organic rainbow cake

Today we’ll be making an organic rainbow cake, coloured with all-natural, non-toxic food colours. We’ll top it off with fluffy vanilla icing.

The time needed to make a naturally coloured rainbow cake

Ample time!

Naturally, the coloured rainbow cake is not a project to do on a whim because the homemade dyes take some time, as does assembling and decorating your cake.

  • Make your food dyes: 1-2 hours (you can do this a day ahead of time if you like).
  • Mix, bake, assemble and decorate your cake: 2 to 3 hours.

Choose your cake pans

When I make a rainbow cake, I use mini pans, because nothing is cuter than a mini rainbow cake.

I’ve made a mini round rainbow cake using little porcelain ramekins which is a snap. The last time I made a rainbow cake, I wanted a mini square rainbow cake, but don’t have square baking pans, so I used my 9 by 5 inch bread pans, then sliced the layers in half.

You don’t have to make mini cakes though.

This recipe makes enough cake batter for either two mini square 8 to 9 layer cakes or three mini square 5 to 6 layer cakes. If you want to make a typical round cake, you can totally do that. To make one normal-sized cake, use 8 or 9-inch pans, dividing the batter equally into as many layers as you like (six layers would work well).

The process of making, baking, and assembling your cake is the same no matter what size cake you’re making.

You can also make and colour your batter, then layer it in reusable baking cups for adorable rainbow cupcakes. Or even try making a swirl cake!

Organic flour & sugar vs. conventional

Before we dive into the cake ingredients, we should discuss flour types.

Organic flour and sugar are unbleached and darker than conventional flour and sugar. Conventional products are processed differently and usually bleached crystal white. The darker your batter is, the less it’ll take on natural food dye, which begs the question – should you use conventional flour and sugar instead or organic flour and sugar if you want a really white cake?

Conventional rainbow cake on the right – organic rainbow cake on left

To see if it really makes a difference, I tested it out. I made one naturally coloured rainbow cake with conventional flour and sugar and a second rainbow cake with USDA certified organic flour and sugar.

Colour-wise, the cakes aren’t THAT different. You’ll still get a white cake batter if you go organic, it’s just not quite as pure white as conventional. The difference once the batter is coloured, is negligible, as you can see in the image above.

The cake made with conventional cake flour ended up with layers that were a more pastel-coloured, but also keep in mind that I took the conventional picture outside, so it’s naturally brighter AND I made the organic cake with organic whole wheat pastry flour vs. regular organic white flour (pastry flour is a bit darker).

Taste-wise, I thought the organic cake was way better, but of course, I love organics so I’m an impartial judge. Although everyone else who taste-tested the cakes (my son, roommate, and son’s friends) liked the organic cake better too.

Rainbow cake recipe ingredients

I’m using an adapted recipe for one of the best vanilla bean cake recipes I’ve tried. But really, you can make a rainbow cake with any white cake recipe you like.

  • 5 large organic egg whites at room temperature
  • 3/4 cup whole organic milk at room temperature
  • 2 and 1/4 teaspoons pure Fair Trade, certified organic vanilla extract
  • 2 and 3/4 cups organic white flour sifted (or other flour of your choice)
  • 1 and 3/4 cups organic granulated sugar
  • 1 tablespoon + 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon salt
  • 12 tablespoons unsalted organic butter, softened and cut into cubes
  • Natural food dyes – see below

Fluffy vanilla bean frosting ingredients

You can choose any frosting you like for your cake, although I’ll point out that this frosting is REALLY good – not too thick or sweet, but just sweet enough, plus light and airy.

  • 3 sticks + 2 tablespoons of organic, unsalted butter (vegan butter is a-ok to use instead, but the frosting won’t taste quite as rich)
  • 2 teaspoons pure organic Fair Trade vanilla extract
  • 3 cups organic powdered sugar
  • 3 tablespoons organic milk (you can use cow’s milk or an alternative, such as almond milk)
  • Pinch of salt – optional
  • 1 organic vanilla bean – scraped – optional

Step 1: make your natural food dyes

You’ll need about 2-3 tablespoons (TBS) of homemade food dye for each cake layer. If making mini cakes you can make up to about 7 to 8 different colours per mini cake. If making a big cake, you can choose 6 to 8 colors, depending on how thick you want your layer.

To make your natural, homemade food colouring, read my tutorial: Make Natural Food Dyes for Organic Baked Goods Without a Juicer. You can make your homemade dyes up to a few days before baking your cake, if you like, or do it all on the same day.

Step 2: get your pans ready

Lightly grease the bottom and sides of your pans with a dab of organic olive oil (or whatever oil you keep around). Place cut pieces of unbleached parchment in your pans. Grease the parchment a little as well, again with organic oil. Dust the pans with flour. Set pans aside.

If you only have a few pans on hand vs. enough for all the cake layers at once, be sure to re-oil and re-parchment, oil and flour your pans for each new cake layer you bake.

Step 3: mix up the rainbow cake batter

Preheat oven to 350°F – I don’t normally preheat (to save energy) when making bread and other baked goods, but I do preheat when making most cakes.

  • In a small bowl, combine and stir the egg whites, 1/4 cup of milk, and the vanilla.
  • Using a larger bowl, combine all your dry ingredients together. I use an inexpensive handheld mixer for this, but you can mix by hand too.
  • Add all of the butter and the other 1/2 cup of milk. Mix on low speed (or by hand) until just moistened. Increase your mixing speed and mix for about 2 minutes.
  • Scrape the sides of the bowl to make sure everything is mixed well.
  • Add your egg mixture in THREE separate batches, beating on medium speed for 20 seconds after each addition.

Step 4: the colour of the rainbow cake batter

Gather up all the food dyes you made during step 1. Grab some bowls and a spatula.

Divide your batter into equal parts. For this recipe, I suggest scooping out 3/4 cup of cake batter per layer (for a mini square cake). This will give you about 8 or 9 long layers of cake.

The amount of colour you add to your batter depends on what size cake you’re making and how much batter you’re using per layer. In general, the following rules apply…

  • Use about 1/4 cup (4 tablespoons) of food dye to colour 2 cups of batter.
  • Use about 2-3 tablespoons of food dye to colour 1 cup of batter.
  • Use about 1-2 tablespoon of food dye to colour 1/2 cup of batter.

To colour your cake batter, choose a food dye, and add one tablespoon of colour to start. If the colour seems lacklustre, which it likely will be with just one TBS, add another tablespoon.

Below is typically what I use to colour one 3/4 scoop of batter, but results vary, so play around (see a full cake colour gallery here).

  • Bright green – 2 tablespoons spinach juice
  • Lighter green – 2 teaspoons green tea powder
  • Dark pink – 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of beet puree
  • Bright yellow – 1 full dropper of yellow Chocolate Craft liquid food colouring
  • Peach / light yellow – 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of carrot puree
  • Purple – 2 tablespoons blackberry juice
  • Light pink – 1 tablespoon strawberry puree
  • Violet – 1 tablespoon raspberry juice
  • Dark blue – 2 and 1/2 full droppers of Chocolate Craft liquid food colouring
  • Dark blue/purple – 2 tablespoons of blueberry juice
  • Orange – 4 full dropper red + 1 full dropper yellow Chocolate Craft liquid food colouring
  • Light blue – 1 full dropper of blue Chocolate Craft liquid food colouring

What to do with leftover food dye? Freeze leftover produce purees and juices in ice cube trays. Put the cubes in a container and save them for the next time you make homemade popsicles or smoothies.

Step 5: baking & cooling your cake

  1. After you colour all your batter, pour into your prepared pans and bake for 14 to 20 minutes (depending on how hot your oven runs).
  2. Watch the cake closely, because as soon as you can insert a toothpick and it comes out clean, it needs to come out of the oven. If it’s not done at 14 minutes, check it at 1-minute intervals.
  3. Let the pans cool on racks for 10 minutes.
  4. Loosen the sides of the cake with a small silicone spatula (so you don’t scratch your pans) and invert onto lightly greased wire racks.
  5. Gently turn cakes right side up.
  6. Cool completely.

Step 6: prep your rainbow cake for decorating (optional)

You don’t have to prep your cake for decorating, but if you do, your rainbow cake will be easier to frost.

To get started, if you’re making mini square cakes using a bread pan, cut each cake layer in half. If you’re using mini ramekins or regular cake pans, simply skip the cutting in half step and wrap your minicircle layers of cake in parchment.

Wrap each cooled cake layer in parchment paper, then freeze all the layers for a few hours. Frozen cake slices are way easier to frost because you won’t run into crumbs as much and the slices will be less soft, more solid.

How to: make naturally coloured organic rainbow cake How to: make naturally coloured organic rainbow cake Reviewed by Satbir singh on June 01, 2020 Rating: 5

No comments:

Powered by Blogger.