Do you have a kitchen disaster story? I have a lot. I had a total cooking disaster with this pandan chiffon cake. There were a few of my lucky twitter followers who had witnessed the disaster live on twitter as I was tweeting it away as it happened.
Pandan chiffon cake is something very nostalgic to a lot of Malaysians and Singaporeans. We basically grew up with it. We ate so much that sometimes we got sick of it. Now, many years later, I begin to miss it. I miss the smell of the pandan leaves flavour when the cake was baking in the oven. I miss the silky soft texture of the chiffon cake. I miss the shade of green that reminds me of home.
It was a last minute decision. It was a cold rainy evening. I was craving for pandan chiffon cake. I didn't have a chiffon cake pan. I didn't have a proper pandan chiffon cake recipe. I had never baked one before but I had all the ingredients in my pantry to make one.
I flipped to the page of vanilla chiffon cake recipe from an old trusty cookbook and started to look for a suitable cake pan. I thought bundt cake pan should do the trick but this was one of the two mistakes I made that day. It turned out that the bundt cake pan I have was smaller than I thought. Not that much smaller though. The biggest blunder I found out later was that I mistakenly used baking soda instead of cream of tartar. The two boxes were standing side by side in the pantry and I didn't know how and why, I picked the wrong box without realising it.
What happened to the cake as a result of my mistakes?
It kept rising and rising. How I wish I was making a souffle. It would be a mega success :) Nevertheless, the cake turned out to be as good as it should be. The smell of the pandan flavour was as good as my childhood. The texture was good except for some small air pockets caused by the use of baking soda.
** The worst part of the disaster is cleaning up the aftermath. The cake dough overflew from the bundt cake pan. Burnt bits sticked to the wire rack and bottom of the oven. It took me a good couple of hours of scrubbing to get rid of them.
There was nothing one can't do with some clever knife work to give the cake a good trimming. Looking at these pictures, you won't have a clue about the disaster.
Pandan Chiffon Cake
(Loosely adapted from The Good Housekeeping Step-By-Step Cookbook)
Makes 16 servings
Ingredients
2 1/4 cups cake flour (not self-raising)
1 tbsp baking powder
1 tsp salt
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
1/2 cup vegetable oil
5 large egg yolks
1 tbsp pandan essence
1 tsp pandan paste
7 large egg whites
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
Method
- Preheat oven to 325F. In large bowl, combine flour, baking powder, salt and 1 cup granulated sugar. Make a well in center and add oil, egg yolks, pandan essence, pandan paste, and 3/4 cup cold water; whisk into flour mixture until smooth.
- In another large bowl, with mixer at high speed, beat egg whites and cream of tartar until soft peaks form. Beating at high speed, gradually sprinkle in remaining 1/2 cup granulated sugar, 2 tbsp at a time, beating well after each addition, until whites stand in stiff peaks when beaters are lifted. With rubber spatula, gently fold one-third of whites into yolk mixture; fold in remaining whites. Pour batter into ungreased 9- to 10-inch tube pan.
- Bake 1 1/4 hours, or until top springs back when lightly touched. Invert cake in pan on funnel or bottle; cool completely in pan. Carefully run metal spatula around side of pan to loosen cake; remove from pan and place on cake plate.

39 comments:
Smart!!! And I actually find the cake very cute even though you regard it a disaster, haha.
I can't see any sign of disaster in the cake except for the great height. I too love chiffon cake but not my husband. He said is like eating a piece of sponge :)
Wow, you cleaned that cake up good! No signs of a disaster at all! Great work on the colour of the cake too - it looks just like the ones I had as a child!
All your green props totally work with the photos!
You're soo funny! Now you know people are going to use baking soda for their souffles! Haha! It still looks fab as you said. I noticed you post the recipe for baking powder but I think I'll try it with the soda! Haha
oh yum i love pandan chiffon cake. i agree with trissa - should we all switch to baking soda instead of cream of tartar? lol
Yum this looks fantastic! I know it's technically not supposed to look like that, but I rather like the mushroom top of the cake that's in the oven hehehe
I love chiffon cake, but haven't tried the pandan one...looks delicious and nice color as well, what disaster???
WHERE is the disaster??? I LOL-ed at the souffle comment. You can actually call it pandan souffle!!! That's really original ;) Great presentation, and I am very sure, great tasting cake!
Hehe I think it looks far from a disaster. :) I know what you mean about cravings, sometimes you just NEED to eat something.
Well done on this, it looks really nice and soft. And now I'm craving for some too! ;)
@ KennyT: Thanks! You should see it live. The cake dough overflew and my oven was in need a good clean after that. hehe...
@ ICook4Fun: My hubby didn't like it too. He didn't like the idea of eating a green cake. lol!! The real disaster lied in the oven. I spend hours scrubbing the wire rack and the bottom of the oven. The burnt dough was hard to get rid off.
@ Rilsta: Thanks! The trick of the perfect green is to use both pandan essense and pandan paste. Pandan essense gives the flavour but lack of colour. Pandan paste gives too much green if using it alone to get both flavour and colour.
@ Trissa: Thanks! You are hilarious! Never thought about using baking soda to make souffle... This recipe asked for baking powder and cream of tartar. I mistakenly used the baking soda (cream of tartar) + baking powder that caused the disaster :)
@ Helen: Lol!!! I like the idea... will experience it :)
@ Jacq: Haha! Not until you see burnt cake fough all over my oven.
@ Juliana: Tr it. The pandan flavour is delicious. You need to inspect my oven to appreciate the extend of the disaster.
@ The Little Teochew: Haha! I was cursing while cleaning the oven. Pandan souffle... you are putting idea in my mind :)
@ Su-Yin: Thanks! Haha... Someone who truly understand the meaning of CRAVING!
complimenti!! una delizia per il palato!
aaah...Chiffon. That definately harkens back those childhood memories. My parents used to alway buy the damn coffee flavoured variety though! LOL
Great job and nice pics yo.
What is so disasterous about this pandan chiffon cake judging from the first and the last picture????
You read my mind! I was looking for a pandan cake recipe today. It must be a green week. I just posted a recipe myself for green tea cake. Check it out!
Oh tell me about it! lol I just blogged a disaster myself for the very same cake...a pandan!
I wouldn't even have thought that it was a disaster, Ellie! Great great job....... I can just imagine how light and fluffy this cake is!
Haha! It looks so good that I wouldn't have known about your disaster if you had not posted it. I've had similar mistakes before but it was on my stove. My pot over boiled and everything went onto the kitchen top. I sure hate cleaning messes such as this, so can sympathize.
I love pandan! I once tried baking pandan chiffon cake in a loaf pan- because I had no other pan to bake it in. It shrank heaps but still tasted great- but yours still looks heaps better. haha.
Where do you get pandan paste from? I've only ever found pandan essence...
It looks pretty good. Doesn't seem like a disaster to me.. The cake looks pretty fluffy and nice. My chiffon making has not succeeded yet. Seems like you've got one great recipe for me to try on!
Wow Ellie, if you didn't admit to it, I wouldn't have had a clue that this was a "disaster"!. It doesn't look like it at all - in fact it looks perfect. Well done.
I was going to say--where's the disaster? The photos are wonderful as is the color of your cake!
Could have fooled me. (Well, you did fool me!)
At least you could eat your disaster! Sometimes that doesn't happen. Alas! I might be making one right now, as I wrote on The Little Teochew's blog...
You're right, the photos of the cake look too perfect I would've never guessed it had a tough time in the oven!
And of course this totally wins my vote, because I'm a HUGE pandan chiffon fan (the eating bit, not baking, of course) :P
As always, your photos are impeccable. Can't believe how much that cake overflowed in the oven .. such a pain to clean up. BUT, would you look at the color?? and it just LOOKS delicate and light and delicious!
Good save, and lovely cake!
Kitchen disasters are a necessarily evil to cooking! I think the cake looks lovely nonetheless!
lol where's the disaster?? it looks really good :)
I love chiffon cake...all time favourite.
lol it does look like a souffle! Things like that always happen to me.
that is one beautiful disaster! :)
at least its yummy right!
heh could never tell if you didnt tell.
i could finish the whole cake on my own :P
Hahaha holy cake explosion batman! I think it's a good thing though, the bigger it is the more you have to enjoy - and that's always a good thing with pandan chiffon cake!
what a disaster!
but i cant tell a thing went wrong :)
Hello! Your cake looks lovely from the beautiful first picture =)
You know what helps with removing all the burnt crud though, is white vinegar. Truly... here's what it did for my saucepan... http://mrsmultitasker.com/2009/03/29/sour-power/
We can vie for title of Queen of Kitchen Disasters - I can't remember hosting a dinner when something DIDN'T go wrong, but I totally agree, that a little handy-knife work (and/or emergency dash to the store), can solve most problems.
Looks really lovely - as most perceived kitchen disasters usually do!
Your cake looks great - terrific save! Love the greean colour.
Hello Ellie! Came from Little Teochew's and Zurin's. Pandan chiffon is definitely a cake only MalSing ppl can appreciate. Since moving to Abu Dhabi, I have found many fans of this cake as it is not available at stores here.
My first attempt at chiffon was a recipe from a food blogger, Florence. She said it was her 'bestseller' and she is right! I have never failed using her recipe (http://wlteef.blogspot.com/2005/04/orange-chiffon-cake.html). However, I adapted her recipe to make a pandan chiffon (never actually made the orange version before!) by substituting the same amount of juice with milk and adding abt 3 tbsp of santan powder and 1 tsp of pandan paste.
Disaster? Sure. When I promised a friend to bring a chiffon for her Hari Raya Open Hse. So many chiffons I have made, all tall and light, THIS had to be the one which turned out otherwise - senget one side! But luckily taste-wise it was fine. :)
They look absolutely gorgeous with a beautiful color and texture. I consider you a great baker so whatever disaster you encounter, you will be able to fix it. I think lesson learned for the disaster. Your photos are stunning as always.
@ Federica: Thanks!
@ Adrian: Coffee flavour... I nearly forgot this falvour exist :) My mum never bought them because she believes caffeine is bad for us. :) I like the pandan and coffee marble swirl ones.
@ Quinn: Cleaning the oven. lol!
@ Something dishy: It's a green cake week :) Saw your green tea cake. It's lovely!
@ Zurin: Haha! What a pandan disaster week :)
@ Trisha: Yes, it's fluffy and YUM!
@ Jo: We all have our bad cooking and baking days.
@ Von: You can get pandan paste from Asian grocery store. they are stored in tiny bottle (smaller than the essense). It gives you better colour than essense.
@ TriceMoo: Try this recipe. It's easy and gives good results.
@ Shaz: Thanks! I didn't get the better chiffon cake shape :(
@ Barbara: Thanks! The oven cleaning bits are BAD!
@ Muneeba: Thanks! The use of both pandan essense and paste resulted in the perfect green.
@ Nate-n-Annie: Thanks!
@ Chocolate Shavings: Thanks!
@ Swee-San: Look at the shape of my cake. lol!!
@ Angie's Recipe: Thanks!
@ Pigpigscorner: It's a huge souffle, I must say :)
@ muffinsareuglycupcakes: The whole cake... it's really big, you know :)
@ Stephcookie: You are so right... more fluffy and more to eat :)
@ Betty: Come and help me to clean the oven :)
@ Mrs Multitasker: Thanks! I did use white vinegar. My mother-in-law taught me the same trick.
@ Jessie: Yes, we do indeed :)
@ Cakelaw: Thanks!
@ Kat: Love your stories! I will stop by your blog after this comment. Can't wait to read your recipe.
@ Divina Pe: Thanks for your kind words. You are always so sweet.
It looks like a bought one! It's one of my favourite cakes too but I don't know if I'd ever attempt to make it myself.
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