Let’s talk about cake flour!
You might recognize cake flour as that ever-present box in the back of your parents’ refrigerator. Maybe that’s just me. My mom always had a box of cake flour in the fridge.
Cake flour is a finely ground flour used in many (but not all) cake recipes. Cake flour has a lower protein content of about 8%, as compared to a 10-11% protein content in all-purpose flour. The protein is important! It helps to add structure to our cakes. The lower protein content of cake flour ensures that our cake layers have structure and a soft and light (not tough) texture. Cake flour is especially important in chiffon or Angel Food Cake. Cake flour is our friend, and we should have it in our pantry… but we probably don’t.
You may be fresh out of cake flour when the need for cake arises. I understand this all too well! Luckily, we can easily make a substitute for cake flour using ingredients you probably already have in your kitchen: all-purpose flour and cornstarch. Good news, right?
How To Make Cake Flour:
Measure out 1 cup of all-purpose flour. Remove 2 tablespoons of all-purpose flour and place it back in your flour canister. Replace the removed all-purpose flour with 2 tablespoons of cornstarch.
Sift flour 5 times. Yes… 5 times. Sifting the flour and cornstarch together will help thoroughly combine the mixture and help to lighten and aerate the flour.
By replacing a bit of the all-purpose flour with cornstarch, we’re removing some of the gluten and replacing it with a tenderizing element. But cornstarch is so neutral, how is it a cake tender? Well, cornstarch works alongside other cake ingredients (like sugar, for example) to inhibit gluten development. It’s ingredients like sugar and cornstarch that compete with the flour for liquid absorption (think: eggs and buttermilk) in a recipe. If flour gets to gobble up all of the liquid in a recipe and is worked in a mixer (like we work cake batter), it’s gluten development will be off the charts… and you’ll basically have a baguette. Cornstarch (and sugar) makes the flour share liquid, easing the gluten development and creative beautifully tender cake texture.
King Arthur Flour makes my favorite store-bought cake flour. I love it because it’s an unbleached cake flour (pretty rare because cake flours are usually bleached), has no weird chemicals, and has a slightly higher protein content that helps make consistently great cakes.
If you’re like me and want to read majorly nerdy textbooks about food, Understanding Food: Principles and Preparations is a massive reference book about everything from food service to food science. It’s a splurge. The used book is the way to go.
Happy baking this December!
Past Baking 101 lessons:
Baking 101: How To Read A Recipe
Baking101: Must We Sift This Flour?
Baking 101: Why We Use Unsalted Butter
Baking 101: The Difference Between Baking Soda and Baking Powder
Baking 101: The Difference Between Dutch Processed and Natural Cocoa Powder
53 Responses
If using gluten free flour, is this necessary?
This is very helpful! Thank you! I was curious because the recipe that I am using calls for 3 cups of cake flour. So do I use this formula for every cup, or for just one?
I was wondering the same thing. I have a recipe that calls for 3 cups of cake flour as well.
Thank you for explaining why cornstarch makes it work. I love the science lessons in cooking/baking.
Can you do the 5 sifts in the food processor?
Sure!
So after you sift the all-purpose flour and corn starch, do you remeasure the now called cake flour? Or would the 1 cup minus 2 tablespoons all-purpose flour plus 2 tablespoons cornstarch equal 1 cup cake flour??
It will equal one cup cake flour.
can tapioca starch or another starch be used instead? I’ve developed a sensitivity to corn.
Unfortunately I’m not sure how those alternative starches would work. So you will just have to experiment. Good luck!
Thank you kindly, most helpful and entertaining presentation!!
Thank you, Joy! Now i have hope that i can make a great angel food cake for me and mt family without having to leave the house.
Thanks!! This is great. I love this. I almost wasted a trip to the store.
Perhaps, an easier way is to add 2 T corn starch to measuring cup, fill with AP flour, dump in sifter. Sift 5 times.
Thank you for your tip i am learning . . .
thank you again so much! you have saved me again. you are so very awesome!
Hi, I am from South Australia and was wondering whether Self Raising flour is the same as cake flour.
Self raising flour consists of cake flour and baking powder combined.
Question: when you sift it, it gets fluffier and that 1 cup ought to measure a little bigger than one cup, so do you measure it back down? I assume so, but I want to be sure.
I am purchasing flour from Italy, cause it is not modified like our
American flour (which the wheat grain was altered in 50’s.
By avoiding the American wheat I can control my blood pressure with out medication.
So I am going to try your -2 tblsp and add 2tblsp of cornstarch. Thank You.
To substitute for cake flour—–can I use unbleached flour????
thanks for explaining this better and for the book reference