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How To Make A Rainbow Cake!

Posted on February 14, 2009 in: Featured, How-To | 2,878 views |


SharePeople seemed to miss the point that I am a 25-year-old woman on a diet with no kids. Since kids don’t really need fat-free anything, there’s no need to make it a soda cake, and if you don’t like dye, don’t make this for dinner for them every night for a month. Okay, folks, thanks [...]






People seemed to miss the point that I am a 25-year-old woman on a diet with no kids. Since kids don’t really need fat-free anything, there’s no need to make it a soda cake, and if you don’t like dye, don’t make this for dinner for them every night for a month. Okay, folks, thanks for the allowance to disclaim.
Aaannnndddd, she’s back!

So I did mention something about health and/or diet food in my last post, and while this recipe is the latter, it is most certainly not to be confused with the former. I posted about my rainbow cake here, and it got a lot of traffic on over to my livejournal, and everyone wanted the “recipe.” The cool thing is that if you’re making something so distractingly colourful, people will think it’s delicious no matter what.
This presents me with the option to use an old Weight Watchers trick—the one-point cupcake. Except I’m making a cake and I created my own frosting. Kinda. I’ve seen it done before, but I swear I made it up first!
This cake is suitable for many occasions:

  • A child’s birthday
  • Your mom’s birthday
  • Coming out to your conservative parents
    • If you’re a lesbian, they’ll be thrilled that you won’t be forgoing your feminine kitchen duties.
    • If you’re the kind of gay dude who makes cakes for your parents, they were probably on to you anyway.
  • Coming out to your conservative parents on your mother’s birthday
  • Your friend’s jam band CD release party

. . . so I’m sure you’ll find a use for this recipe soon.
And of course, you can use any white cake recipe you’d like. This is just how I make it because I have delusions of wearing size 2 someday.
Oh yes, and do me a favour: DOUBLE THE RECIPE AS PHOTOGRAPHED HERE!! The recipe at the bottom is accurate, but this made for a really REALLY small cake, and there was not nearly enough frosting, especially considering its lightness.
Okay, on with the ingredients.

How_To_Make_Rainbow_Cake_001

That’s all. Notice the lack of fat in here? Mmmmmm . . . chemicals. Though I don’t need to defend my method thanks to the double-dub (WW) aspect, even when I make a “real” cake I usually use box mix because let’s face it: Betty’s been doing it way longer than I have, and has pretty much perfected the art.
Pour a can of soda (16 oz) 2-16 oz cans of soda into the cake mix two boxes of cake mix. No eggs, no oil, no water, no sweat.

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The action shots weren’t too thrilling. Now we measure it.

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I’m going to round to 30 oz 60 oz because I have six colours and isn’t that just too convenient? It worked out to 3/4 c 1.5 c per colour, measurementwise. So I divvied that up and used my gel colours.

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(the gel colours, while not as good as pigment dye, are much bolder than the very liquidy food colouring you probably grew up with)

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The first colour you drop into the pan, use about 2/3 of the mix for that colour. Otherwise, the top (last) colour will really dominate. I used a heaping 1/4 c 1 cup of each colour.

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Drop the colours, one by one, into the middle of the pan, in neat concentric-ish gobs. Remember the cake is going to be sliced in the side there, so mixing it around on top isn’t going to make your slices any more psychedelic (trust me, I did the three-dimensional thinking for you already).
When you’re three colours in, start doing the reverse with the other pan. Since I’m going in rainbow order: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, purple, I got from red to yellow in the first pan, then purple, blue, green in the second. This is so that your two pans are equal if your measurements aren’t exact (and they’re not likely to be).

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Now finish up.

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Follow the box’s baking instructions and do your dishes.

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Such lovely dishes!
Now for the frosting: 1 box 2 boxes of fat free sugar free pudding mix, and 8 oz 16 oz (two of the 8 oz tubs pictured) of fat-free whipped topping. Or sugar-free. Or light. Or regular. They’re all pretty much the same. But that’s it.

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Holy shit, the cake’s done! Toothpick clean and everything! Get that shit out of the oven!!!

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The purple top kind of made a little turkey silhouette.

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The frosting will be a little tough to spread, so treat it like a buttercream (I guess, I’ve never frosted a cake with buttercream). Putting gobs all over, then smoothing in worked well for me.

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And look at that thing! It’s so pretty-lookin.

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Here’s what this particular cake looked like. See how it’s tiny and too rounded and it kind of isn’t all that great? That’s because I didn’t double the recipe. It’s a mistake I’ll only make once.

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Here’s what that really should look like: same process, twice the batter.

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Mmmmm.
Sunny Day Rainbow Cake
2 boxes white cake mix
24 oz of clear diet soda (2 cans, ginger ale and sprite work well)
gel food colouring
16 oz whipped topping
2 oz instant fat-free sugar-free pudding mix (2 smallish boxes)
The Dieting
Mix the cake mix with the soda according to regular instructions on box. It will be lumpy afterward. Again, you can use any white cake recipe you want, this is just how I do it.
The Rainbowing
Measure the total volume (by my estimate, 64 oz), then divide by 6 and measure into separate bowls. There are 8 oz in a cup, so 64/6 = 10 to 11 oz, or 1 cup + 2 tbsp.
Stir colour into each bowl with its own spoon. For the first colour into the pan, measure out 2/3 to 3/4 of your mix (in this case about 1 c) as close to the middle as you can. Drop in your first three colours, then work on the other pan with the last three colours. So if you’re doing rainbow order, the first pan should have red, then orange, then yellow, and now the purple, blue and green go into the second pan. As a recap, this is so both layers are roughly the same size.
Bake the cake as instructed on the box.
The Frostinging
Meanwhile, make your frosting. Just mix the pudding mix in with the whipped topping for a few minutes. Dye if you’re into that.
Frost your fat-free cake with your fat-free whipped frosting. Eat.

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Note : no children were harmed in the making nor consumption of this cake.

Source : omnomicon.blogspot.com

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  1. shawana
    Posted February 23, 2009 at 7:13 AM

    Thank you for sharing this recipe. I made is for my niece’s birthday. The kids and adults loved it. The work was minimum for sure a huge payoff. I made a few changes but only to make it easier. I used regular icing and classic white cake batter. But everything else was yours. My cake looked exactly like the picture, which never happens lol. Thanks

  2. Posted February 23, 2009 at 10:05 PM

    @shawana : ur welcome

  3. Posted March 10, 2009 at 2:13 AM

    That is a really good idea! Kind of a tie-dye cake. Love it

  4. Angie
    Posted May 2, 2009 at 1:50 AM

    Thanks for sharing Ive not made the cake yet but I am soooo excited about making it!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

    Thanks again
    Angie

  5. Ymelda
    Posted May 20, 2009 at 9:18 AM

    OMG i loved this… i was just googling cakes. and this popped up and NOW I TOTALLY WANT TO MAKE IT. Why have i never heard of the sprite thing? Does it have to be sprite Zero though? just curious

  6. Posted May 28, 2009 at 4:29 AM

    Hi i love the look of your cake but live in england and all our cake mixes are sort of a creamy colour. Will it still work?

  7. person
    Posted May 31, 2009 at 5:46 AM

    That’s a damn fine looking cake…makes me want to eat my brother’s play-dough.

  8. carbon-based lifeform
    Posted May 31, 2009 at 5:51 AM

    it’s…it’s beautiful. i got to get to the store.

  9. Posted December 15, 2009 at 3:38 PM

    Social comments and analytics for this post…

    This post was mentioned on Twitter by wickedlyhip: How To Make A Rainbow Cake! http://url4.eu/vi7Y...

  10. Posted January 17, 2010 at 8:53 PM

    [...] ????? ???????? ??????? ??????????? ??? ????. ?? ???? ?????? ??? ??? ??????? ??? ?? ??? ?????? ???. [...]

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Hello, I am Anil Chopra from Koppal , a small city near Hubili. To put it in a few words, I love my iphone, and sharing the world with you. Blogging is my hobby” " Life is nothing without Internet"

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