Happlify: de leukste shopping guide + blog van Nederland en België 💛

I found this on YouTube a while ago, I think it's a Corona hobby that got out of hand: baking edible sponges. It's not April 1 yet, but 'why wait'?! A little fun can't hurt and we baked look-a-like dishwashing sponges ourselves last weekend. Spoiler alert: they are delicious too!

If you search for a while you will find quite a few of these YouTube videos. Below I'll post one that we think is the best, from food blog Emma Fontanella , and whose recipe we tried out. It was still a bit of a thing to get dye, but you can also easily shop online.

colored batter
We colored this batter with Tasty me dye, 5 bottles for €14,-

Ingredients

Quantity: (if all goes well) six sponges
Needed: two cake tins of 18 cm or 20 cm

  • 140 g regular flour
  • 120 g granulated sugar
  • 3 medium eggs
  • 135 g soft butter
  • 3 tbsp lemon juice
  • lemon zest grated from 2 lemons
  • pinch of salt
  • ½ teaspoon baking powder
  • ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • yellow and green food coloring
  • 1 tbsp apricot jam
For the foam (for the sponge)
  • 1 egg white
  • 2 tbsp sugar
  • ½ teaspoon lemon juice
sponge cake

Preparation method

  1. In a large bowl, whisk together the softened butter, sugar, lemon zest, and vanilla extract.
  2. Add the eggs one at a time and mix well after each addition.
  3. Sift in the flour, salt and baking powder. Add the lemon juice and mix until smooth. Do not mix too much. Don't worry if the mixture looks like it has curdled. This is due to the citric acid in the lemon juice. It will not affect the texture of the final cake.
  4. Pour a third of the batter into a separate bowl (±200 g to 220 g), and set aside.
  5. To the larger (two-thirds) portion, add yellow food coloring and stir to get an even color.
  6. To the smaller (one third) portion, add the green food coloring and stir to get an even color.
  7. Pour each portion of batter into individual cake tins lined with parchment paper. Try to distribute it as evenly as possible.
  8. Bake both filled cake tins in a preheated oven at 160°C.
  9. The green cake will cook faster than the yellow cake. So remove the smaller, green cake after ±10-12 minutes. Remove the larger, yellow cake after another 5 minutes (a total baking time of ±15-17 minutes).
  10. Let both cakes cool completely.
This is how you make the sponges
  1. Spread the apricot jam over the yellow cake. The jam acts like glue. Place the green cake firmly on top. We put it all back in the fridge for a while with something heavy on top.
  2. To create the shed texture on the green cake, run a sharp serrated knife over the top. See also the video for this.
  3. Trim the sides of the cake and cut into six sponge-sized rectangles.
For the foam (the soap)
  1. Take a small clean bowl and add the egg whites, lemon juice and sugar. Beat as you would a meringue, but stop beating once soapy bubbles form. Scoop a bit of the soapy water onto your dishwashing sponge and voila, your fake sponge is ready.
TIP
Make the suds just before serving. The texture does not last very long and your sponge will quickly become soggy.

    And... are you going to give it a try?!

    Mariko Naber

    Author - Mariko Naber
    Mariko is the happy brain behind Happlify. Together with partner Mark she runs Sell your stuff online, branding agency Loaded ink BNO and Atelier Naber . She loves feel good, random acts of kindness, meatballs, chocolate mousse, family time, zee, piña colada, sugar & spice and everything nice 💛

    De links op onze website kunnen gesponsord zijn, zie voor meer informatie onze gebruiksvoorwaarden.

    Leave a comment

    Please note, comments need to be approved before they are published.

    This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.