Angel Food Cake
Updated Jan. 26, 2024

- Total Time
- About 2 hours
- Prep Time
- 10 minutes
- Cook Time
- 55 minutes, plus 1 hour cooling
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 1cup/112 grams cake flour
- 1½cups/285 grams superfine sugar (see Tip 1)
- 1½cups/about 335 grams egg whites, at room temperature (from about 10 or 11 eggs; see Tip 2)
- 1½teaspoons cream of tartar
- ½teaspoon kosher salt (such as Diamond Crystal)
- 1½teaspoon vanilla extract
- Whipped cream, for serving
- Fresh berries, for serving
Preparation
- Step 1
Heat the oven to 325 degrees with the rack in the center position. Sift the flour and ¾ cup (143 grams) of the sugar into a medium bowl six times; this ensures there are no lumps and the dry ingredients are very airy. (For extra assurance, you can also pulse these ingredients in a food processor a few times and then sift once.)
- Step 2
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the egg whites, cream of tartar and salt. Whisk on medium-low until the egg whites start to get foamy around the sides of the bowl, about 2 minutes.
- Step 3
Increase the speed to medium-high. Add the remaining sugar, 1 tablespoon at a time, in a slow and steady stream. Continue whisking until the mixture reaches glossy and firm peaks, about 5 minutes, checking regularly so you don’t overbeat. Add the vanilla and quickly whisk to combine.
- Step 4
In three batches, sift the dry ingredients over the top of the egg whites, using a spatula to fold the dry ingredients in between each batch until just incorporated. Be mindful not to overmix so the egg whites don’t collapse.
- Step 5
Transfer half of the batter into the tube pan (do not grease or flour) and gently spread it out evenly with an offset spatula. Using a butter knife or a chopstick, swirl the batter around a few times to break up any air bubbles. Repeat with the remaining batter.
- Step 6
Bake until golden brown and a toothpick inserted comes out clean, 35 to 40 minutes. Turn the cake upside down and cool completely, about 1 hour. If your tube pan doesn’t have feet, turn it upside down and place the center hole over a wine bottle.
- Step 7
Once cool, turn the cake right side up and, using a sawing motion, run a butter knife along the outside and inside edges of the cake a few times to loosen it. If your pan has a removable center, take it out and run the butter knife under the cake to release it. Using two wide spatulas, lift the cake up and out of the center stand, or release it onto a board, using your hands to guide it, then invert it right side up onto a cake stand or platter. (If your pan doesn’t have a removable center, carefully invert the whole pan.)
- Step 8
Slice the cake with a serrated knife. Serve with whipped cream and berries. Cover cake with plastic wrap for up to 2 days at room temperature or up to 3 days in the fridge. It can also be frozen for up to 3 months.
- Tip 1: Superfine sugar, also called baker’s sugar, can be found in many grocery stores or online. As a substitute, blitz 285 grams granulated sugar in the food processor until very fine. If you don’t have a scale, blitz 1½ cups granulated sugar and measure out 1 cup for the cake. Reserve any remaining superfine sugar for stirring into iced tea or coffee.
- Tip 2: Use the leftover yolks to make ice cream, lemon curd, pastry cream or aioli.
Private Notes
Comments
Personal preference - 1/2 Vanilla Extract +1/2 Almond Extract. Great Recipe and as far as greasing and flouring the pan - DO NOT DO IT. The Batter needs the friction of the non greased pan in order to climb high up the sides - otherwise you have a 2" high angel food cake. Use a long spatula or bread knife in an up and down motion all the way around the pan to release it from the sides of the pan when cooled.
No, no, no! Do NOT grease and flour! The batter needs to "grab" the pan, to prevent a collapse into an unseemly mess. It can be hard to release the cake from the pan. I have a two-piece, an outer edge and an inner part with the bottom and the tube. Use a thin-bladed (filleting) knife to separate the cake from the sides of the outer pan, flip and lift off the outside leaving the bottom and tube. Flip again and work the knife around the tube and the base, then flip onto a plate and lift off.
This was so delicious - but I had two issues: 1. our tube pan required grease & flour, which I didn’t find out until we turned the cake out! 2. we used Tip 1 to pulverize the sugar, which helped, but some of the sugar wasn’t fine enough to sift through with the flour. I recommend testing your sugar through the sift to ensure it’s fine enough before mixing with flour.
Has anyone made muffins with the recipe instead of cake? Beatrix restaurant in Chicago makes the most mouth-watering angel food muffins with a huge crusty top that I want to try to emulate!
@julie I currently have a batch in the oven. I am trying to use a regular muffin pan, as that’s all I have, but I think Beatrix uses a much larger muffin tin and I am worried that I won’t be able to turn these out. I plan to rest the edges of my muffin tins on top of something so that I can cool them upside down. (I adjusted the recipe down by 1/3, only using one cup of egg whites, etc. It has made 18 ‘muffins’.) I also made six in some standalone paper muffin cups that I happened to have hanging around and those seem to be working better. The batter seems to be climbing the sides in those. I also know that I’ll be able to tear the paper to get them out of the cups if I need to, but I don’t think I’ll be able to hang them upside down to cool. Overall, though, it looks like the recipe just isn’t rising the same when used for muffins. They aren’t getting the big explosive puffy tops like the ones at Beatrix. Even if they don’t look the same, I expect that they will taste delicious. Next step is to try and make the lemon and chocolate glaze!
Delicious! We make berry ice cream in the summer, so I freeze leftover egg whites and save them specifically for this recipe. It's a treat to have in spring with last year's frozen macerated berries, lemon curd, and whipped cream. An early taste of summer on a rainy day!
@suzy That's so kind of you to find a workaround for your friend! Good luck with the new adaptation A friend of mine loved yellow cake and faced a similar issue. I would adjust a yellow cake mix to turn it into bar cookies, which would blend much better with vanilla ice cream for a "cake milkshake".
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