Dictionary Definition
cake
Noun
1 a block of solid substance (such as soap or
wax); "a bar of chocolate" [syn: bar]
2 small flat mass of chopped food [syn: patty]
3 made from or based on a mixture of flour and
sugar and eggs v : form a coat over; "Dirt had coated her face"
[syn: coat]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Etymology
From kaak; akin to Danish kage, Dutch koek, Old High German kuocho, and Swedish & Icelandic kaka.Pronunciation
- , /keɪk/, /keIk/
- Rhymes with: -eɪk
Noun
- A rich, sweet dessert food, typically made of flour, sugar, eggs, and baked in an oven.
- A block of any of
various dense materials.
- A cake of soap.
- A trivially easy task or responsibility; from a piece of cake.
Synonyms
Derived terms
- a piece of cake
- ague-cake
- angel cake
- angel food cake
- ash-cake
- ashcake
- baked in the cake
- Banbury cake
- barm cake
- Battenburg cake
- batter-cake
- battercake
- beefcake
- birthday cake
- bridecake
- bundt cake
- cake bar
- cake-bread
- cake-eater
- cake-fumbler
- cakehole
- cake-house
- cakelet
- cake-meal
- cake mix
- cake of soap
- cake saffron
- cake slice
- cake tin
- cake-urchin
- cakes and ale
- cakes and cheese
- cakewalk
- cakewalker
- caking
- caky
- carcake
- carrot cake
- cattle-cake
- cheesecake
- cherry cake
- chocolate cake
- chocolate fudge cake
- chocolate sponge cake
- Christmas cake
- coffee cake
- coffeecake
- corn-cake
- cotton-cake
- cream cake
- cupcake
- devil’s food cake
- Dundee cake
- Eccles cake
- every cake has its fellow
- every cake has its make
- every cake has its mate
- fairy cake
- fish cake
- fishcake
- flannel cake
- friedcake
- fruitcake
- fudge cake
- go like hot cakes
- griddle-cake
- have one’s cake and eat it
- haver-cake
- heart-cake
- hoecake
- Johnny cake
- johnny cake
- journey-cake
- knead-cake
- Land of Cakes
- lardy cake
- layer cake
- linseed cake
- Madeira cake
- marble cake
- nutcake
- oatcake
- oilcake
- one’s cake is dough
- Pan-Cake
- pancake
- parliament-cake
- pat-a-cake
- patty-cake
- plum-cake
- pomfret-cake
- Pontefract cake
- pound cake
- queencake
- rape-cake
- rice cake
- rock cake
- rose-cake
- rout-cake
- saffron cake
- salt-cake
- seed-cake
- seedcake
- sell like hot cakes
- Shawnee cake
- sheet cake
- shortcake
- simnel cake
- singing cake
- soul-cake
- spice-cake
- sponge cake
- take the cake
- teacake
- tharf-cake
- the icing on the cake
- the national cake
- tipsy cake
- Twelfth-cake
- Twelfth-night cake
- upside-down cake
- Victorian sponge cake
- wedding cake
- yellowcake
Translations
a sweet dessert
- Arabic:
- Chinese: 蛋糕, 蛋糕 (dàngāo)
- Czech: dort
- Danish: kage
- Dutch: taart , cake italbrac more sober, gebak
- Esperanto: kuko, torto
- Finnish: kakku
- French: gâteau , pâtisserie
- German: Kuchen
- Greek:
- Ancient: πέμμα
- Modern: τούρτα (toúrta), κέικ (kéik)
- Ancient: πέμμα
- Guarani: mbujape he'ẽ
- Hebrew: עוגה (uga)
- Hungarian: torta, sütemény, tészta
- Icelandic: kaka
- Italian: torta italbrac large cake served in slices, pasticcino
- Japanese: ケーキ
- Korean: 과자 (菓子, gwaja), 케이크 (keikeu)
- Latin: placenta
- Mapuche: kochü kofke
- Norwegian: kake
- Old Norse:
- Polish: ciasto, ciastko
- Portuguese: bolo
- Quechua: peqachu
- Russian: торт
- Scottish Gaelic: breacag , aran milis , bonnach , bannag
- Serbian: kolač
- Slovak: torta, koláč
- Spanish: italbrac birthday or wedding cake bizcocho , cake , pastel , ponqué italbrac Colombia, pudín italbrac Colombian Atlantic Coast, queque , tarta italbrac Spain standard usage, torta
- Swedish: tårta, kaka
- Vietnamese: bánh
- Welsh: teisen
a block of solid material
a trivially easy task or responsibility
See piece of
cake
- ttbc Breton: gwastell , gwastelloù p, gwestell p
- ttbc Esperanto: kuko (2)
- ttbc Hebrew: עוגה (uga)
- ttbc Indonesian: kue tart
See also
- biscuit
- Black Forest gâteau
- brownie
- bun
- cruller
- crumpet
- dessert
- donut
- doughnut
- éclair
- flapjack
- frangipane
- gâteau
- gugelhupf
- jumbal
- koeksister
- kruller
- kuchen
- kugelhopf
- kugelhupf
- ladyfinger
- lamington
- Linzertorte
- madeleine
- muffin
- parkin
- pastry
- patisserie
- petit four
- pie
- pikelet
- pudding
- rum baba
- Sally Lunn
- scone
- sponge
- Swiss roll
- tart
- torte
- Victoria sponge
- yumyum
Verb
Synonyms
- italbrac-colon coat with a crust of material crust, encrust
Translations
Coat with a crust
- Dutch: bedekken, vastkoeken
Fijian
Adverb
cakeFrench
Etymology
From English cake.Pronunciation
/kɛk/, /kek/Noun
fr-noun m- fruitcake (containing rum).
- quick bread (a smallish loaf-shaped baked good which may be sweet like an English cake or salty and with bits of meat. See insert).
Extensive Definition
Cake is a form of food that is usually sweet and
often baked.
Cakes normally combine some kind of flour, a sweetening agent (commonly
sugar), a binding agent
(generally egg, though
gluten or starch are often used by vegetarians and vegans), fats (usually butter, shortening, or margarine, although a fruit
purée such as applesauce is sometimes
substituted to avoid using fat), a liquid (milk, water or fruit juice),
flavors and some form
of leavening
agent (such as yeast
or baking
powder), though many cakes lack these ingredients and instead
rely on air bubbles in the dough to expand and cause the cake to
rise. Cake is often frosted with buttercream or marzipan, and finished with
piped borders and crystallized fruit.
Cake is often the dessert of choice for meals at
ceremonial occasions, particularly weddings, anniversaries and birthdays. There are literally
millions of cake recipes (some are bread-like and some rich and
elaborate) and many are centuries old. Cake making is no longer a
complicated procedure; while at one time considerable labor went
into cake making (particularly the whisking of egg foams), baking
equipment and directions have been simplified that even the most
amateur cook may bake a cake.
Varieties of cake
Cakes are broadly divided into several
categories, based primarily on ingredients and cooking
techniques.
- Yeast cakes are the oldest, and are very similar to yeast breads. Such cakes are often very traditional in form, and include such pastries as babka and stollen.
- Cheesecakes use mostly some form of cheese (often cream cheese, mascarpone, ricotta or the like), and have very little to no flour component (though it sometimes appears in the form of a (often sweetened) crust). Cheesecakes are also very old, with evidence of honey-sweetened cakes dating back to ancient Greece.
- Sponge cakes are thought to be the first of the non-yeast-based cakes and rely primarily on trapped air in a protein matrix (generally of beaten eggs) to provide leavening, sometimes with a bit of baking powder or other chemical leaven added as insurance. Such cakes include the Italian/Jewish pan di Spagna and the French Génoise.
- Butter cakes, including the pound cake and devil's food cake, rely on the combination of butter, eggs, and sometimes baking powder to provide both lift and a moist texture.
Beyond these classifications, cakes can be
classified based on their appropriate accompaniment (such as
coffee
cake), contents (e.g. fruitcake or flourless
chocolate cake), or occasion (wedding
cake, birthday
cake, or Passover plava, a type of Jewish sponge cake sometimes
made with matzo
meal).
Cakes may be small and intended for individual
consumption (for example madeleines
and cupcakes). Larger
cakes may be made with the intention of being sliced and served as
part of a meal or social function. The cutting of a wedding cake
constitutes a social ceremony in some cultures. The Ancient Roman
marriage ritual of confarreatio originated in
the sharing of a cake.
Particular types of cake may be associated with
particular festivals, such as stollen (at Christmas),
babka and simnel cake
(at Easter),
or mooncake.
Some varieties of cake are widely available in
the form of cake mixes, wherein some of the ingredients (usually
flour, sugar, flavoring, baking powder, and sometimes some form of
fat) are premixed, and the cook needs add only a few extra
ingredients, usually eggs, water, and sometimes vegetable oil or
butter. Such mixes are available under a number of brand names,
including Betty
Crocker, Duncan
Hines, and Pillsbury; while
the diversity of represented styles is limited, cake mixes do
provide an easy and readily available homemade option for cooks who
are not accomplished bakers.
Cake flour
Special cake flour with a high starch:gluten ratio is made from fine-textured, soft, low-protein wheat. It is strongly bleached, and compared to all-purpose flour, cake flour tends to result in cakes with a lighter, less dense texture. Therefore, it is frequently specified or preferred in cakes meant to be soft, light, and or bright white, such as angel cake. However, cake flour is generally not considered mandatory for good results, and its effect on the cake's texture can readily be simulated by adding corn starch and/or baking soda to all-purpose flour Some recipes explicitly specify or permit all-purpose flour, notably where a firmer or denser cake texture is desired.Cake decorating
A finished cake is often enhanced by covering it with icing, or frosting, and toppings such as sprinkles, which are also known as "jimmies" in certain parts of the United States and "hundreds and thousands" in the United Kingdom. Frosting is usually made from powdered (icing) sugar, sometimes a fat of some sort, milk or cream, and often flavorings such as vanilla extract or cocoa powder. Some decorators use a rolled fondant icing. Commercial bakeries tend to use lard for the fat, and often whip the lard to introduce air bubbles. This makes the icing light and spreadable. Home bakers either use lard, butter, margarine or some combination thereof. Sprinkles are small firm pieces of sugar and oils that are colored with food coloring. In the late 20th century, new cake decorating products became available to the public. These include several specialized sprinkles and even methods to print pictures and transfer the image onto a cake.Special tools are needed for more complex
cake
decorating, such as piping bags or
syringes, and various piping tips. To use a piping bag or syringe,
a piping tip is attached to the bag or syringe using a coupler. The
bag or syringe is partially filled with icing which is sometimes
colored. Using different piping tips and various techniques, a cake
decorator can make many different designs. Basic decorating tips
include open star, closed star, basketweave, round, drop flower,
leaf, multi, petal, and specialty tips.
Royal icing,
marzipan (or a less
sweet version, known as almond paste), fondant icing (also known as
sugarpaste) and buttercream are used as covering icings and to
create decorations. Floral sugarcraft or wired sugar flowers are an
important part of cake decoration. Cakes for special occasions,
such as wedding cakes, are traditionally rich fruit cakes or
occasionally Madeira
cakes (also known as whisked or fatless sponge), that are
covered with marzipan
and either iced using royal icing or sugarpaste. They are finished
with piped borders (made with royal icing) and adorned with a piped
message, wired sugar flowers, hand-formed fondant flowers, marzipan
fruit, piped flowers, or crystallized fruits or flowers such as
grapes or violets. Some famous kits are
the Betty
Crocker kits.
References
See also
cake in Tosk Albanian: Kuchen
cake in Old English (ca. 450-1100): Cēcel
cake in Arabic: كعك
cake in Catalan: Pastís
cake in Welsh: Teisen
cake in Danish: Kage
cake in German: Kuchen
cake in Spanish: Pastel
cake in Esperanto: Kuko
cake in Persian: کیک
cake in French: Gâteau
cake in Korean: 케이크
cake in Croatian: Kolač
cake in Indonesian: Bolu
cake in Icelandic: Kaka
cake in Italian: Torta
cake in Hebrew: עוגה
cake in Lithuanian: Tortas
cake in Dutch: Taart
cake in Japanese: ケーキ
cake in Norwegian: Kake
cake in Norwegian Nynorsk: Kake
cake in Narom: Gâche
cake in Polish: Ciasto
cake in Portuguese: Bolo
cake in Kölsch: Kooche
cake in Russian: Кекс
cake in Simple English: Cake
cake in Finnish: Kakku
cake in Swedish: Tårta
cake in Thai: เค้ก
cake in Turkish: Pasta
cake in Ukrainian: Торт
cake in Walloon: Wastea
cake in Yiddish: קוכן
cake in Chinese: 蛋糕
Synonyms, Antonyms and Related Words
Boston cream pie, angel cake, angel food cake,
baked Alaska, bar, block, body, bun, candy, cheesecake, chocolate cake,
chunk, clabber, clot, clump, cluster, coagulate, coffee cake,
concrete, concretion, condense, congeal, conglomerate, conglomeration, consolidate, crystallize, cube, cupcake, curd, curdle, dry, encrust, fruitcake, gateau, gel, gelatinate, gelatinize, genoise, gingerbread, granulate, harden, honey cake, incrassate, inspissate, jell, jellify, jelly, jelly roll, jumble, knot, layer cake, loaf, lopper, lump, marble cake, mass, node, pastry, piece, pound cake, savarin, set, shortcake, slab, solid, solid body, solidify, spice cake, sponge
cake, take a set, tea cake, thick, thicken, white cake, yellow
cake