Half a croissant, on a plate, with a sign in front of it saying '50c'
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Cake Router

For advanced baking.
  (+18, -2)(+18, -2)
(+18, -2)
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The traditional victoria sponge cake is limited in its capacity to take the yummy jam and whipped cream. These limits are imposed by the size of the human mouth and the physical properties of the filling. Too much filling makes the cake too big to fit into the mouth and also makes it fall apart when it's cut or carried.

How can we maximise the amount of filling without straining the eater's jaws whilst maintaining cake integrity?

The answer is the cake router.

During final assembly of a traditional two layer cake, use the router to grind a flat-bottomed circular hollow from the top of the lower layer. Next, remove a thin annulus of cake from the outside of the underside of the upper layer making sure to leave a rim at the top. The diameter of the lower hollow must match the diameter of the ground part of the upper layer. Crucially, the depth of the lower hollow must be greater than the extent of the upper part which fits into it.

The end result is that the top part of the cake fits snugly into the bottom part with a gratifyingly secret hidden air gap between the two layers. The air gap gives enhanced filling opportunities without overstretching the mouth. Furthermore, the presence of a rim around the filling increases the structural integrity of the cake.

For those needing additional structural integrity, a spiral guide is fitted around the cake to constrain the router to cut a thread into the top and bottom. The top may now be screwed into the bottom to give a munition like sturdiness to the cake.

No more cake on the floor, much more in the mouth.

DenholmRicshaw, Sep 28 2008

[link]






       [+]
8th of 7, Sep 28 2008
  

       I recently made a treasure chest (two, in fact) cake for my little girl's birthday. I could have used a cake planer, router, nails and clamps.   

       Last year I made a cake to look like "Jack Skellington"'s head. It was dome-shaped and had red-dyed vanilla pudding inside (so when you cut it, blood oozed out - my kids have a weird dad).   

       I used a mould for the dome shape that included a second part (essentially a smaller dome that fit into the larger one) to form the hollow, and a third part to form the base. This sounds a lot like what you're after and I wonder if it wouldn't be easier.
phoenix, Sep 28 2008
  

       [+] Could it be combined with a CNC machine for producing novelty cake designs?
Wrongfellow, Sep 28 2008
  

       Maybe the cake router should come in a case, paired with a biscuit jointer ......
8th of 7, Sep 28 2008
  

       But would this give a greater filling/substrate ratio than the "Swiss Roll" design? Anyway, this is innovative, so [+] and an award from the Society of Farinaceous Engineering for you.
hippo, Sep 29 2008
  

       The cake router could also allow radial compartments to be ground into the hollow to further add to strength as well as present opportunities for multiple fillings in the same cake.   

       The "never the same twice cake".
DenholmRicshaw, Sep 29 2008
  

       Solid gold.
calum, Sep 29 2008
  

       + bun for //without overstretching the mouth//!!
xandram, Sep 29 2008
  

       Never been so proud of such crumby workmanship.   

       "multi-user" and "cake" are not compatible. An essential tenet of efficient cake-access architecture is the ability to lock out all other users while you are accessing the cake.   

       A chair wedged under the door handle usually does the job.
8th of 7, Sep 29 2008
  

       ...I don't know - I've seen very large cakes multiplexed into discrete, uniformly-sized packets, called 'slices'.
hippo, Sep 30 2008
  

       The problem with the Space-division-multiplexing (slicing) approach is ensuring that each user gets the same bandwidth (siz of slice). Uneven allocation - or worse, getting a slice with extra jam or icing - can lead to contention, and sometimes fisticuffs ....
8th of 7, Sep 30 2008
  

       //Too much filling makes the cake too big to fit into the mouth and also makes it fall apart when it's cut or carried//

I liked the use of the words 'cake', 'yummy', 'jam' and 'cream' in this idea but the above sentence is where you lost me, I'm afraid. For me, cakes are as much about making a mess as they are about scrumminess. Cakes should always be too big to fit easily into the normal human mouth and should always have fillings that squirt out of the sides when you bite into them or should fall apart at inconvenient moments.

Your safety-first approach to cake eating can only result in a much duller world, possibly ruled by celebrity chefs and the editors of fashion magazines. For the sake of humanity, I am forced to unobtrusively slip a fishbone into your cake mix.

Hungry now...
DrBob, Oct 01 2008
  

       [DrBob] - good points; the law of unintended consequences has struck. Would it help if we filled the cake with something unexpectedly runny and sticky?
DenholmRicshaw, Oct 01 2008
  

       // something unexpectedly runny and sticky? //   

       Thixotropic adhesive ?   

       <aside>   

       [Ian], you've got a little fleck of foam at the corner of your mouth.   

       Again.   

       </aside>
8th of 7, Oct 01 2008
  

       //Would it help if we filled the cake with something unexpectedly runny and sticky?//

Might do. Or something unexpectedly and fantastically hot.

Mr Tindale's creationist theory of filled comestibles is, of course, easy to refute. Although superficially similar in appearance, cakes and sandwiches occupy completely seperate ecological niches.

Sandwiches are generally short lived - average lifespan of 2 to 3 hours is normal, although records exist of them achieving extended life spans in the buffet section of trains. Possibly due to time dilation effects. Their natural environment is in darkened containers, often plastic, and consequently they have a tendency toward savoury flavours when consumed.

Cakes, on the other hand, (particulalrly the larger sub-species) can live for several days and delight in basking in the sun throughout. The mass of energy that they absorb in this way not only results in a delicious, sweet flavour when eaten but also makes them drowsy and easy to catch.

It is true that cakes and sandwiches can interbreed but their offspring, the pie, is sterile and often tragically deformed by armour plating which, when overdeveloped results in the so-callled 'crusty pie' (which is inedible) or, if underdeveloped results in the filling weeping through the skin. Such creatures are best put out of their misery and destroyed by the close range blast of an elephant rifle.
DrBob, Oct 02 2008
  

       Ah, but, like domestic dogs, there are considerable variations within the captive-bred species of pie.   

       What you have probably encountered is one of the unfortunate "battery-farmed" pies. As their name implies, they are largely composed of minced-up batteries, giving them an unmistakeable gritty, chewy texture and an chemical, acidic taste. Tooth erosion, loose fillings, vomiting and diahorrea are the typical outcome of consuming these genetically-engineered "Frankenpies".   

       They bear no comparison with the free-range pies which exist in the North of the UK, where they roam the heather moorland of Derbyshire, Lancashire and Yorkshire. These wild Northern breeds of pie are renowned for their flavour, texture and digestibility, especially when washed down with copious quantities of the local Real Ale.   

       Further North still, beyond the bounds of know civilisation, crustless pies known as "Haggis" have evolved, which roam the snow-capped peaks, pouncing on unwary golden eagles and wolves and tearing them limb from limb. Don't go there, it is a bad place.
8th of 7, Oct 02 2008
  

       <close-up on David Attenborough's face>"...and, in the far south west of the country, there lives a truly remarkable member of the pie family. Shy and secretive, yet delicious and with a rich, flakey crust, it is of course the noble Cornish Pastie" <camera pulls out to reveal David Attenborough siting on the ground in front of a Cornish Pastie> "This is a juvenile Pastie without the fully-formed crust crenellations of the adult..."
hippo, Oct 02 2008
  

       The debate continues to rage as to whether or not Cornish Pasties are a sub-spiecies of true Pies, or are a genus on their own. Genetic analysis has so far been inconclusive, because before the testing was complete, the pub closed for the night.
8th of 7, Oct 02 2008
  

       Let us not forget the pygmy cousin of the cake, the biscuit.   

       For example, early Jammie Dodgers were larger and weaker than today and it is theorised they evolved from the bottom part of an unfinished and creamless victoria sponge. These feeble creatures thrived despite their shortcomings.   

       Faced however with competition from other mutant biscuit-cake hybrids such as the Jaffa Cake and generic jam tart, the Jammie Dodger evolved a twice-cooked sturdiness and longevity as well as the ability to give birth to multiple offspring.   

       The biscuits we eat today are these offspring. The location of the adults is a mystery.
DenholmRicshaw, Oct 03 2008
  

       Did you know we share 99% of our DNA with the Cornish Pastie?
hippo, Oct 03 2008
  

       I have no idea what your talking about but it sounds great.
pashute, Dec 08 2020
  

       Stick around then, you might just learn something ...
8th of 7, Dec 08 2020
  

       [pashute] Just replace 'cake', 'pie', 'sandwich', 'haggis', etc., with 'matzoh ball', 'hummus', 'gefilte fish', 'manakeesh' etc; and imagine that you live somewhere where certain neighbouring peoples, given a choice of (a) subjection to a foreign ruling class, (b) being forced to leave their ancestral lands, and (c) having said lands subject to foreign occupation, must be violently reminded every now and then that (d) 'none of the above, we'll look after ourselves thanks' is not an option. And for shooting miscegenic offspring, replace elephant gun with Tavor X95.
spidermother, Dec 09 2020
  
      
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