Paper-lined Sponge
Roland tried a few recipes and said that the texture is not soft and spongy so here I am doing experiments. I read the recipes from Jo's Deli and St Anna Cakes Collection D.I.Y book and here's the birth of this recipe which is a marriage of Jo's, St Anna and my method.
The final product is fragrant and spongy.

The idea of baking it in paper cups was from Jo's Deli Bakery.

Cross section of the sponge.

Ingredients: (10 pieces in standard paper cups)
5 egg yolks
30g sugar
1/4 tsp salt
1/2 - 1 tsp vanilla esssence
55g warm corn oil / melted butter
60ml warm milk
80g cake flour
20g corn starch
1/2 tsp baking powder
5 egg whites
50g castor sugar
Method:
1. Sieve flour, corn starch and baking powder together.
2. Beat egg yolks, sugar, salt and vanilla essence together till thick and creamy. (I beat my egg yolk by sitting the mixing bowl in a basin of hot water).
3. Stir the warm corn oil/melted butter and milk into the yolk mixture. Mix well.
4. Fold in the sieved flour mixture and mix well.
5. Beat egg whites till white in colour and add in sugar by thirds and beat till egg white is stiff.
6. Fold half portion of the egg white into egg yolk and blend well.
7. Pour the yolk mixture into the remaining egg white and blend well.
8. Spoon batter into paper cups lined with baking paper up to 80% full and bake at 180C for 20 minutes or till golden brown.
Notes:
Cut baking paper into 19cm x 19cm put it on top of a paper cup then use another paper cup to push the baking paper into the cup (idea from Jo's Deli).
Be careful not to dirty the baking paper while spooning in the batter otherwise you will get dark brown patches on the baking paper and the paper-lined sponge will not be presentable.
The paper cups are tall so if you are baking in a small table top oven, for the first 10 - 12 minutes bake it in the middle rack then move it to the lower rack and bake till cooked.
Labels: Cakes


32 Comments:
Hi Florence,
The cake look spongy,but its not easy to get cake flour here, can i subsitutues with low protein flour?
Hi Angie,
Yes, you can use low protein flour. Actually low protein flour is suitable for baking cakes too!
One of my favourite in my younger days.
Now with so many varieties of bread and cakes on the market, even HDB cake shops don't sell them any more. Luckily, Prima Deli still sells this.
When the urge to eat is there, I know where to look for recipe :)
.....jojong
Hi Florence,
Thank you very much, certainly will try out this recipe, cause my hubby like spongy and chewy cake very much
Good Idea!!~@~~~
em gota find paper cups, i can see plastic cups ~
actually the one u uses is it those muffin paper cups? :D
ur cake is lovely and gold! hehe love to have a bite!
Hi Angie,
I'm sure your hubby will be looking forward to it! :D
Hi jojong,
Long time no see! Have you been busy lately? Ya, I missed those sold by the HDB cake shops. What I missed even most is those coconut bread buns sold by the old lady who sells them door to door. You know those with the brown shredded sweet coconut in the buns are so yummy.
Hi suziedepingu,
Actually I used those paper cups for drinking coffee. It will be a good idea to use those tall muffin paper cups too!
Wanna bite...send some via the net for you...catch them! :D
Hi Florence
I would like to know if this cake has strong egg smell? Thanks
Hi,
Can I use any baking paper? Or is it a special one for the cake? Thanks.
Hi,
Just use the normal baking paper will do.
Happy trying! :)
hiya florence,
I've given this recipe a try finally ;)
It taste really good ... really bring back some childhood memories. This is one of the cakes that my mum would get for us when were kids. Nowadays don't see them in the confectionary shops already.
Now with your recipe, I can have it as and when I feel like it !!!
Irene
Hi Irene,
This cake brings back lots of childhood memories for me too!
Glad that now we can bake it when we feel like having some. :)
Hi Florence,
Do you have any recipe for baked sponge cheesecake? Not the traditional NY Cheesecake or the chilled cheesecake. But the kind that used to be very popular in HK.
Thanks!
Iris
my mom really love these and i wanted to make it for her; however, after getting all the ingre, i realized the measuring system is quite different than what i am use to. i live in the states and really, we hardly measure by gram. furthermore, i don't have anything to weight it. is there any way for you to convert it to cups, ect?
Hi, I tried the recipe (with reduced portion cos only have 3 eggs left). It turned out ok, but not as fluffy & light as I would like, & it also has a very strong eggey smell. Can advise what I did wrong? Tks.
I tried this recipe last week. I used 6 small eggs and 1 tablespoon for every 30g. The cake turns out perfect but there was only enough batter for 7 cakes. Thanks for sharing this wonderful recipe!
My bad. It was actually 2 tablespoons for every 30g.
Hi Florence,
Can you tell us the reason for using warm oil and milk. Thanks.
Hi!
I love your blog! I wish I had an oven so I could try out your recipes! I was curious about the recipe book you mentioned: St Anna Cake Collection DIY book. Where did you get this book, because I would love to get my hands on it! You see, I'm looking for a recipe to make Chinese Swiss/Egg rolls and I was wondering if the book has this recipe. Please let me know, because I have been looking all over the net for this recipe (and this book), but I can't find anything, except recipes for the traditional Swiss rolls....
Thanks!
Florence,
I am interested in experimenting. Could you please post the paper lined sponge recipe from the St Anna Cakes Collection D.I.Y book here, at KC, or email it?
I'd be eternally grateful!
Thank you soooo much for posting this. I've been looking for this recipe!!
i just made this using your recipe! =DD im so impressed! turned out realy well! thank you so much for sharing this recipe! XDD looking forward for more new recipes and will be trying your other recipes! compliments to the chef!
valentina
YUMMY YUMMY!! Thanks for the recipe florence. I have tried your recipe many times but it is never as light and fluffy as I would want it. What is the secret to making it light and fluffy?
Hi,
I would say it's the egg whites and folding technique that makes the cake light and fluffy.
Hi Florence,
I've tried your green tea yogurt mousse cake before and it turned out great! Today I made these paper-lined sponge by replaced the milk with warm orange juice and zest from 1 orange to make an orange-flavored cake. It smells very fragrant, but the surface of my cakes started cracking while they were still rising in the oven! I preheated the oven to 180 degrees and baked for 20 minutes like you said (I also monitored the temperature with an oven monitor). Do you have any idea what could have gone wrong? The tops of your cakes look so smooth!
Hey Florence,
I am new to your wonderful delicious blog! This is the best recipe for those within the states because we don't have ovalette or cake emulsifier readily available. My current question is regarding the egg yolk step. I can't seem to get the egg yolk to a "thick and creamy" state. Should it drip from the mixer or leave a marking when we draw something on the surface?
Hi Florence,
Found your blog and tried the recipe. It turns out very yummy. Thanks for sharing.
However would like to know why need to beat egg yolk sitting in a basin of hot water? Will the cake turn out ok if I just beat egg yolk without sitting in basin of hot water?
Hi Florence,
Found your blog and tried the recipe. It turns out very yummy. Thanks for sharing.
However would like to know why need to beat egg yolk sitting in a basin of hot water? Will the cake turn out ok if I just beat egg yolk without sitting in basin of hot water?
Thank you so much for posting this recipe! I made it for an early Father's Day present, as Paper Wrapped cakes are one of my dad's favourite treats and it's a hike to the bakeries down in Philadelphia.
The cakes were SO perfect, he was THRILLED!!! My next step is to try and make a gluten-free version. Shouldn't be too bad, as the egg whites give the cake structure.
Thanks again!
Christina,
Beating egg yolk on a tub of hot water:
Gives you fluffier cakes; better yolk volume and shorten the time span needed to beat the yolk to required stage.
Lindsay,
I'm glad your dad liked them.
Happy trying the gluten free version.
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