|
||
|
|
||
| E-mail to a friend While no one know exactly when and where Red Velvet Cake originated, a story (and a recipe) began circulating around the United States in the 1920s about a cake that supposedly was served at the restaurant in New York's Waldorf-Astoria Hotel. Here's an account of this urban legend as it appeared in Jan Brunvand's book, The Vanishing Hitchhiker (W.W. Norton, 1989):
Because of this story, and similar variations, Red Velvet Cake is also known as Waldorf-Astoria Cake, $100 Cake, $200 Cake, etc. There's also a scientific myth associated with Red Velvet Cake. It has sometimes been asserted that the cake's red color comes from a chemical reaction between the baking soda and the chocolate in the recipe. This is the result of a simple misunderstanding of the chemistry involved. While cocoa powder contains anthocyanins (red vegetable pigments) they are only red in the presence of acids --they turn blue-green in the presence of bases. When cocoa is mixed with the baking soda, a base, the combination should turn the cake an unappetizing brownish-gray. It doesn't, of course, because the anthocyanins are present in very small quantities, and any color shift is masked by the more prominent brown of the chocolate. The red color of the cake comes from a much simpler source: large amounts red food coloring. The supposed red color resulting from the baking soda/cocoa combination also appears in connection with Devil's Food Cake. I wonder if Red Velvet Cake was created because Devil's Food Cake doesn't look nearly as red as its name would suggest. This is akin to some folks adding green food coloring to Key Lime Pie because it doesn't appear "limey" enough.References Beard, James and Thollander, Earl. James Beard's American Cookery
Brunvand, Jan Harold. The
Vanishing Hitchhiker: American Urban Legends and Their Meanings McGee, Harold. On
Food and Cooking: The Science and Lore of the Kitchen
|
||
| Article © 2002–2008 Gary Allen. All rights reserved. Visit Gary's Web site, On the Table. Photo © 2002 Low Carb Luxury. All rights reserved. © 1999–2008 Leite's Culinaria, Inc. All rights reserved. Terms of use. |
||