Cast Iron Skillet Dump Cakes: 75 Sweet & Scrumptious Easy-to-Make Recipes
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About this ebook
If you love cakes but get overwhelmed by the many steps involved in making them, then these seventy-five dump cake recipes are for you! All you need to do is preheat the oven; prepare a butter/sugar mixture in the bottom of your cast iron skillet; add a few goodies to a cake mix; “dump” it on top; and bake. In less than an hour, you simply invert the skillet and enjoy a delicious dessert—Chocolate Mint Cake, Killer Carrot Cake, Lemon Honey Cake, and Strawberry Deluxe Cake—that will please the family or impress your guests.
Read more from Dominique De Vito
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Cast Iron Skillet Dump Cakes - Dominique DeVito
Welcome to the wonderful world of cast iron skillet dump cakes—delicious desserts that are so easy to put together, you’ll wonder why you ever bothered to take the time to make a fussy layer cake from scratch. Here, all you need to do is dump a cake mix and a handful of ingredients into a bowl, give them a stir, then pour the batter into a 12- or 12½-inch cast iron skillet for baking. Some forty minutes later, a big, delicious cake comes out of the oven ready to go. No layers, no frosting, and nothing more to add other than maybe a scoop of ice cream or a dab of whipped cream. I make these simple cakes all the time—whenever I want a quick snack, something for the kids after school, a last-minute dessert, or even something to serve at a dinner party or bring with me when I’m a guest.
Although savory dump
recipes have been around for several years now, dump cakes are a recent phenomenon. Who knew that elevating a box cake mix into a fabulous cake could be so easy?
The mix allows you to skip the time-consuming task of measuring out the flour and leavening agents. But that’s just the beginning. What you add beyond the eggs, oil, and water (or their substitutions) can be as creative as you like. My goal was to keep the concept of the dump cake as simple as possible while elevating its flavor and character with a few delicious additions.
But what really makes these dump cakes unique is the large 12- or 12½-inch cast iron skillet that’s used as the baking vessel of choice. There are so many reasons for a cook to love a cast iron skillet, and for this collection of recipes I was reminded of the most elemental: versatility and ease. The simple skillet takes you from preparation to baking to presentation—all with delicious results. And a lot less cleanup! The virtues of this culinary tool are well known in savory cooking, but few realize how ideal the skillet can be for baking cakes. Most of these recipes start out by melting a few tablespoons of butter in the skillet to create a lovely, light-brown crust when the finished cake is flipped out of the pan. Sometimes fruit or chocolate or coconut is added to the butter for a more exotic topping.
This book is divided into six cake flavors based on the basic cake mixes used in each category—vanilla, chocolate, carrot, spice, lemon, and strawberry. And now the fun begins. Imagine what a few pieces of Andes™ Thin Mints can do to transform a simple chocolate cake mix batter! What about cocoa powder and Rich Chocolate Ovaltine®, or peanut butter chips and peanut butter? To a basic lemon cake mix batter, perhaps add a swirl of cherry jam? Or a bit of light brown sugar and coconut flakes for a yummy topping? I let my imagination take these cakes to the next level with flavor pairings that really work. My hope is that you’ll try many of these cakes, then create dump cakes of your own.
In the following sections, I’ll give you more ideas for stocking your pantry, so you’ll be ready to make these dump cakes whenever the urge hits you. Honestly, many of the ingredients you can add to your cakes are those you’ll want to snack on anyway—unsweetened applesauce, unsweetened coconut flakes, nuts, fruits, berries, and even mini marshmallows and candies. Then I’ll give you a few simple instructions so that you can keep your skillet in top shape. Turn the page, and let’s get started!
The premise of this cookbook is to show you how to make delicious cakes as simply as possible. Before I discovered the beauty of creating dump cakes in my cast iron skillet, making any cake—from scratch, or even from a box mix—involved multiple pots, pans, and cooking instruments. There were the mixing bowl(s), the measuring spoons and cups, the whisks or beaters, the cake pans and their preparation (so the batter didn’t stick)—and this was just for the cake itself, never mind the frosting. It wasn’t difficult, per se, but it was time-consuming at all stages, including cleanup. Of course, the results were delicious and impressive—there’s no doubt about that—but I always had to think twice before taking on a cake because it was a project.
But what if you could reap the reward of a truly yummy cake without so many pots and pans to clean up, without so many measurements of this and that, and without needing to make sure the baking dish was prepared just so? It is possible, thanks to a few simple tweaks.
Simplify with a Cake Mix
First, you have to make your peace with using cake mix from a box. I know, I know. . . . It’s junk, right? Not real food.
A glance at the ingredients panel isn’t exactly reassuring either, but consider this: You’re not eating box-mix dump cakes all day, every day; you’re adding real
ingredients like eggs, butter, and other goodies; and you’re preparing something tasty and largely homemade with better quality ingredients than you’d get from a pre-packaged, grocery store cake.
Box mixes come in many different flavors, with more and more being introduced—chocolate, vanilla, white, spice, lemon, fudge, carrot, strawberry, and devil’s food, to name a few. Basically, each mix contains the flour, sugar, leavening, and flavor ingredients that you otherwise would have to carefully measure out (and clean up after). And each mix requires that you add water, oil, and eggs for moisture and substance. So, essentially, box mixes are nothing more than a base—a base to which you can add almost anything. However, all cake mixes are not created equal, even though all are supposed to yield a moist, flavorful cake. Some need three eggs, some just two. Some call for one-third cup of oil, some for half a cup. Some cake mixes even come with add-in flavor packets.
It was a revelation to me that I didn’t need to strictly follow the suggested cake mix additions. While it’s critical to add moisture for obvious reasons, you don’t have to stick with water, vegetable oil, and eggs (though you certainly can still do this). In this cookbook, I use a variety of the most basic mixes and change up the moisture ingredients before adding my own special ingredients. As you will see, all of these simple changes make a big difference and drastically improve the flavor.
Here are some simple (and often healthier) substitutions for the basic add-ins:
Instead of water, use fruit juice, coconut water, soda, or wine.
Instead of vegetable oil, use melted butter, yogurt, sour cream, or unsweetened applesauce. (I was delighted to find that 6-ounce large
cups of unsweetened applesauce, the perfect amount to substitute for oil, are now available, eliminating any measuring and cleanup!)
Instead of eggs, use banana, unsweetened applesauce, silken tofu, or even peanut butter.
You can use mayonnaise as a substitute for the oil and eggs asked for in the mix. Use the same amount of mayonnaise as the recipe calls for oil, and use no eggs at all.
Embrace the Cast Iron Skillet
By using a cast iron skillet instead of baking pans, you can eliminate all the fussy pan prep work. No more spraying nonstick cooking spray on to every surface of a cake pan or greasing your cake pans with butter and then adding flour and tapping it around to cover the butter so that the batter won’t stick to the side of the pan. Once the cast iron skillet is properly seasoned, a small amount of butter or oil is all that’s needed to keep foods from sticking to the surface. The more a cast iron skillet is used, the better the seasoning gets.
And with the cast iron skillet, there is no need to measure out the batter as equally as possible between two pans. In fact, there is no more worrying about layers at all. A cast iron skillet that’s 12 or 12½ inches in diameter holds the full amount of batter. All you have to worry about is melting some butter in the skillet, dumping
in the batter, baking, and then (if desired) inverting the big, single-layer cake onto a platter.
As you will quickly notice by handling its hefty weight, cast iron cookery is solid and distributes heat evenly. As a healthy bonus, a very small amount of iron is leached from the skillet into the cake but does not alter flavor. (See page 18 for more information on seasoning and caring for your cast iron skillet.)
Forget About Frosting
A classic layer cake is frosted. Frosting is typically a combination of butter, sugar, and flavoring (vanilla or chocolate, usually), and making it requires a whole other set of bowls and cooking tools. It can be messy, and it can be tricky to apply. For starters, it has to be properly allocated so you don’t run out of it before you’ve covered the cake! While it’s true that a good frosting can make or break a classic cake and a frosted layer cake is a thing of beauty as well as a great treat, making it is, well, an effort. Part of the joy of dump cakes is that you can ditch the frosting. They’re fashioned so that when they’re turned out of the skillet, they have good stuff on what