It’s been happening under our noses this whole time – making cakes in rice cookers is standard practice across the Asian community. Many high-tech rice cookers have a cake setting, but you don’t need anything fancy to make one at home. Cooking on the standard rice setting works just fine.
A rice cooker is a very energy-efficient way of baking a cake, and great for when you don’t want to turn the oven on during summer.
For this recipe, I used , but you can make anything from a madeira to a baked cheesecake. The one big thing to note is that the top of the cake will be very blonde, and the bottom edges shaped to your rice cooker pot. You can get away with a blonde top by flipping it upside down and making that the bottom.
A rice cooker is a very energy-efficient way of baking a cake, and great for when you don’t want to turn the oven on during summer.
A rice cooker works by , simply put, when all the water in the bowl is absorbed (which doesn’t go above 100°C) and the temperature of the rice starts to rise, the cooker automatically switches off.
The same thing happens when you put a cake in. The cooker should click off when the water is cooked out and the temperature of the cake rises, even on rice setting. Worst case scenario, you open it and it’s not ready, then just click the on button again and check when it beeps or clicks off.How to make a rice cooker sponge cake
This is what you'll need for Donna Hay's sponge cake recipe. Source: Camellia Aebischer
Recipe here
My nan’s sponge cake
Make the batter, and pour it into a buttered rice cooker bowl. If you like, add a round of baking paper to the bottom for easy removal.
Place in the cooker and turn on your regular rice setting (or if you have a cake setting go with that). Once it’s cooked, check for doneness. The top should spring back when poked. If it’s not done just set it on again then check after (it took me two goes).
Cool in the rice cooker pan then turn out onto a wire rack or serving dish. You may need to run a knife gently around the edge to loosen the cake but rice cooker pots are all non-stick so it should slide right out.
These make great layering cakes for a party or a nice tea cake with a little jam and icing sugar.Love the story? Follow the author here: Instagram .
You can avoid the tearing here by adding a round of baking paper to the bottom of your cooker - nothing a bit of icing sugar can't fix. Source: Camellia Aebischer