Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Why did you make the substitutions? And what was the point of adding the banana? When you make substitutions, especially in baking recipes, you always substantially increase the risk of failure.
Oil and sour cream are not the same and will not have the same outcomes. There's a reason we use milk in cakes and rarely cream. You can't just swap one liquid for another or one fat for another and expect the same outcome.
It reminds me of these online reviews that say I changed this and that and replaced X with Z and used a different sized pan, and it was TERRIBLE so I'm giving this recipe NO STARS.
I was trying to add nutrition for my kid. Also I found a reddit/bakeoff thread that clarifies stodgy vs claggy
Anonymous wrote:Why did you make the substitutions? And what was the point of adding the banana? When you make substitutions, especially in baking recipes, you always substantially increase the risk of failure.
Oil and sour cream are not the same and will not have the same outcomes. There's a reason we use milk in cakes and rarely cream. You can't just swap one liquid for another or one fat for another and expect the same outcome.
It reminds me of these online reviews that say I changed this and that and replaced X with Z and used a different sized pan, and it was TERRIBLE so I'm giving this recipe NO STARS.
Anonymous wrote:What is the point of these substitutions? If you’re making a cake, just use the regular ingredients. I assume you’re not planning to eat the whole thing.
Anonymous wrote:Did the sour cream have thickeners like guar gum, locust bean gum, or carrageenan? If so, it could make the cake slimy.
Anonymous wrote:The term you are looking for is “claggy”. A word I leaned from the Great British Baking Show.
