The Cold Oven Cake | 1976 Recipe

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  • Опубліковано 29 вер 2024

КОМЕНТАРІ • 13 тис.

  • @transwithnoplans
    @transwithnoplans Рік тому +1409

    You’re so chill in the longer videos. The TikToks you do are so chaotic that it’s such a weird shift. I came here expecting to witness a bar fight with lard and crying over gelatin, but I left with a new scarf and a mug of warm soup. Thank you very much.

    • @rltt379
      @rltt379 Рік тому +36

      I like both, I feel like it could've been a little more chaotic and still feel natural though

    • @becky4183
      @becky4183 Рік тому +12

      I love this and I agree with you!

    • @heidivaliev3706
      @heidivaliev3706 Рік тому +15

      I love your videos!! Articulate, funny and adorable!😊

    • @Asstolfo96
      @Asstolfo96 Рік тому +8

      Eh- gies!

    • @0joshdude
      @0joshdude Рік тому +1

      The biggest wipe lash or it a parlel unervers of him

  • @Christyleadbitter
    @Christyleadbitter 2 роки тому +1742

    Professional chef here with nine years patisserie experience. You’re initial explanation is perfect. Allowing the larger air bubbles to escape through slow heating process creates a tighter crumb giving you that slight fudge like texture especially when it comes looser batters like in this recipe.

    • @gh_007
      @gh_007 2 роки тому +34

      Since the temp isn’t at full blast for the whole time, does the gradual heating of the batter before cooking temp is reached have any impact on the crumb/flavor?
      The larger bubbles rising and popping makes sense for the flatter top/bottom and tighter crumb, but doesn’t explain the fudgier texture to me. I’m wondering if the slow warming of the batter, with emulsified eggs and milk and starch creates a pudding-like interim phase that cooks at the full temp for a short amount of time?
      And is it possible that the slow heating helps create a flatter top/bottom by heating the whole cake through more evenly (vs. a blast of heat on the outside moving into the middle), much like how a wet fabric cage collar achieve flatter cakes for stacking?
      I’ve been baking (always from scratch, no boxes mixes for me!) since I was 11, but not a pro by any means. I began yeast and sourdough baking in 2018, and nerded out on different techniques, science behind gluten/starches, hydration levels, and impact of time/hydration/lipids on flour. I love learning new science-behind-the-baking stuff, and your thoughts would be appreciated!

    • @foegettergames252
      @foegettergames252 2 роки тому +20

      Followup question, is there any particular reason cold oven baking isn't more popular? Is it primarily a concern for time? or just the prevalence of preheating?

    • @JonathonDezLaLour
      @JonathonDezLaLour 2 роки тому +35

      @@foegettergames252 Cold oven baking does change the behaviour of the mix, and the end result can vary a lot by the type and age of the oven (older ovens tend to be slower to heat up, and non-fan ovens tend to have less equal distribution of heat) so pre-heating the oven is often the best way to make something come out reliably. There's also a lot of recipes that favour the lighter, more open, and generally less dense end results that come from baking in a pre-heated oven (speaking largely of cakes here). And some bakes just won't work at all if they can't start building their structure right away (cookies, flourless cakes, yorkshire puddings/popovers etc)

    • @jpunkins
      @jpunkins 2 роки тому +11

      @@gh_007 I think you're right, my guess is that the fudgier consistency is due to the combination of the denser crumb and the fact that it wasn't at full temp for the whole time so it didn't dry out as much. I think it might be a little closer if it was cooked at a slightly lower temp for slightly less time but I still don't think it would be "fudgy", just more moist and springy.

    • @suemetzger5302
      @suemetzger5302 2 роки тому +8

      @@JonathonDezLaLour popovers , the things I've learned. We grew up eating these delicacies for breakfast with obnoxious amounts of butter, then I had a spell were they just didnt rise , that lasted till I saw the flour my hubby bought was self rising, changed the recipe and almost killed me . If I can't make a decent popover, why live?

  • @taraleemoran5525
    @taraleemoran5525 2 роки тому +445

    We have a family "tradional" coffee cake that has to have a cold oven start. We had orders one year for family members and tried throwing the 2nd cake into the warmed oven (for just shorter time, right).. it didn't raise and somehow tasted horrible when we smelt it burning only half way through the cooking time. That was an experience . But this "pound cake" and the little asides (specifically the flour/sugar ratio) sound familiar to the family coffee cake.

    • @perkipushb
      @perkipushb 2 роки тому +19

      Can we get that recipe, please?

    • @divinelyengineered
      @divinelyengineered 2 роки тому +11

      my MILs fruit cake recipe (the BEST I've ever had) is a cold start, and it had a similarly tight crumb to this "pound cake."

    • @teneillesw.4312
      @teneillesw.4312 2 роки тому +36

      @Jesus is LORD bro we are just baking

    • @jmicaha2655
      @jmicaha2655 2 роки тому

      @Jesus is LORD repent to my balls

    • @tyranictester
      @tyranictester 2 роки тому +3

      Coffee cake?
      Can we get the recipe good sir?

  • @ayumizetsulover
    @ayumizetsulover Рік тому +811

    Dylan I gotta say, getting to hear you infodump about history and baking like this is a huge treat! I would watch videos like this all the time. Please make more! I feel like I'm learning so much, and it's so nice to see your education and knowledge of baking and it's history shine through as you talk! Your shorts are sweet and funny, but this has the same feel as tasting history, and I'm totally hooked.

    • @sarahdenkins3431
      @sarahdenkins3431 Рік тому +7

      Dylan hall is makes my day so much happier when I see his videos!uh-huh grahuh.. I meant to speak to you directly, Dylan Hollis! I love everybody you do! I cannot wait to get your book like smash point! Lol.. I didn't even mean to say smash point! Love you!

    • @garethkalum8297
      @garethkalum8297 Рік тому +2

      I enjoyed Dylan's shorts, but his longer videos are excellent. I really appreciate the extra history and baking info.

    • @ghomerhust
      @ghomerhust Рік тому

      these longer format videos are a treat that we don't get on his tiktok platform, which is where i first found him. been a fan for a long time now, only recently found his youtube channel. we pre-ordered the cook book a WHILE ago, cannot wait for that to show up so we can make some fun old food!

  • @KTinKY
    @KTinKY 8 місяців тому +1

    You remind me of modern Alton Brown and I love when you explain why things work.

  • @niccvier
    @niccvier 2 роки тому +169

    Dylan is such a charming person, aside from the humour he's also very eloquent, has a pleasant, soft way of speaking and it's absolutely charming to see the fascination and effort he puts into this hobby. I can watch his videos endlessly, short or long
    Thanks for being awesome Dylan

  • @camilasotelo15
    @camilasotelo15 Місяць тому

    3:27 -4:10 awww so the reason he does that is to make it non materialistic and cozier i love it ❤

  • @cassiaprior453
    @cassiaprior453 2 роки тому +55

    I love how his face tells us the verdict before he is able to do it. XD
    So happy I found this channel. Thanks for sharing the recipies!!

  • @lornaharkin2126
    @lornaharkin2126 Рік тому

    darling Dylan, this is the firsr time ive watched a longer version of your channel,i was expecting you to be bouncing around the place, half dissapointed you were not {joking} but i was soooo glad i watched this video. your honesty in your little dissaster with the cake tin and your very very true words about the mixing bowl and not needing big fancy mixers just made me like you even more. love from Ireland xx

  • @jaysonbunnell8097
    @jaysonbunnell8097 2 роки тому +43

    This is the first of your long form videos I've seen and I LOVE your method of writing. Very bedtime-storyesque, very classy, very near to the period you bake for!!

  • @IamJustJ.
    @IamJustJ. 10 місяців тому

    Dylan, thank you. I've been enjoying all the videos randomly suggested by the Almighty UA-cam algorhithm. Also, I'm going to share this with my sister - she has your hard copy cookbook as her Christmas present this year. And I got the Kindle version as well.

  • @ZzeroEffort
    @ZzeroEffort 2 роки тому +27

    You have great energy and I love how you make baking so inclusive proving you don’t need fancy equipment or ingredients to make a delicious product. Cooking is about making delicious food for the people you love and care about most and the only thing that matters is if those people enjoy your food. The thing I love most about cooking is every recipe weather it is one passed down , in a cook book, or one you find online is they all have their own twist and personal touch that makes cooking an art. Very well done video

    • @melissajardee4918
      @melissajardee4918 2 роки тому +2

      Absolutely agree! I enjoy reading cookbooks and trying new recipes...but most of them are not realistic for every day meals (not to mention cost more because they aren't always ingredients you keep on hand).

    • @foegettergames252
      @foegettergames252 2 роки тому

      If you don't live in a purely victim mindset then you don't need random people online telling you that you're OK.
      Grow a spine.

  • @uniquelymadison
    @uniquelymadison 2 роки тому +13828

    Chaotic Dylan is fun but calm Dylan is so cozy and just a delight to watch too. Its like baking with friend through a Face time or something. 😊

    • @Myako
      @Myako 2 роки тому +735

      "Chaotic Dylan" and "Calm Dylan", I love it! 😂😂👏🏻👏🏻

    • @BDylanHollis
      @BDylanHollis  2 роки тому +3764

      I always aim for these to feel like you're baking with a friend :D It's the best type of baking!

    • @annechenlowey7462
      @annechenlowey7462 2 роки тому +764

      Chaotic Dylan is an coffee-based cocktail at the rave, and Calm Dylan is a lovely cup of tea at the kitchen table. Both are fun, and have their times for the best experience.

    • @uniquelymadison
      @uniquelymadison 2 роки тому +43

      @@annechenlowey7462 😂

    • @uniquelymadison
      @uniquelymadison 2 роки тому +28

      @@Myako 😁

  • @torymiddlebrooks
    @torymiddlebrooks Рік тому +1329

    I had no idea that Dylan could be anything less than 100 miles an hour, this is a very pleasant and relaxing surprise.

    • @kathrynwitte3398
      @kathrynwitte3398 Рік тому +26

      Considering that Dylan is from Bermuda where the highest speed limit is 35km/h (22mph) and the lower is 25km/h (15.53mph) in cities/towns the description of Dylan @100mph is ironic! For those metric incapable, 100mph is equivalent to 160.93km/h!

    • @MrBnwest
      @MrBnwest Рік тому +3

      youtube does allow you to speed up Dylan ... which I do ;)

    • @rynodragon2316
      @rynodragon2316 Рік тому +9

      Ya this is seriously weird seeing him calm

    • @stevenazar9940
      @stevenazar9940 11 місяців тому +5

      You know he was running laps around the house between takes 🏃🏃🏃

    • @wewendela
      @wewendela 10 місяців тому +17

      As an introvert who can be around high energy people but it wears me out really fast. I appreciate the calmer Dylan. I do get the level of high energy in his shorter form videos, which is probably partially due to the length of the video and the attention span that he's expecting from the people who watched the short form videos. He's adjusting for the audience that he's expecting for that type of content. Which shows intelligence as a content creator.

  • @radar12564
    @radar12564 2 роки тому +1309

    I can't decide if I like it more when he's screaming about FLOOF POWDER or explaining things calmly like a lovely, experienced teacher. He's not the hero we wanted, but he's the hero we needed. ♥

    • @whatsit177
      @whatsit177 Рік тому +39

      I like the moo juice

    • @deborahhuxley8745
      @deborahhuxley8745 Рік тому +48

      His energy reminds me of dog (I'd say a good golden) who somehow learned to cook. The "floof powder" reinforces that. I love him. Good boi.

    • @MiniAngelMom
      @MiniAngelMom Рік тому +10

      I totally and wholeheartedly agree

    • @Zutzuuu
      @Zutzuuu Рік тому +37

      I agree, but that tingling that I get when he screams "CIMANON" just cracks me up😆

    • @juliestewart3244
      @juliestewart3244 Рік тому +22

      EGGIESSSSS!!

  • @popehentai
    @popehentai 2 роки тому +10539

    "Crisco: Its digestible!" Still the greatest official slogan ever.

    • @MJ-jq4kc
      @MJ-jq4kc 2 роки тому

      and also probably the most false. Crisco is crystalized cotton seed. probably the one thing your body has the most trouble digesting. so it stores it in fat cells. hence making the person consuming it, fatter. the process that is involved in its creation also makes it a carcinogen.

    • @XxLelunaMeloaxX
      @XxLelunaMeloaxX 2 роки тому +244

      even better when you learn about the connection between Crisco, gays, disco and lube~

    • @BlueIdiotPie
      @BlueIdiotPie 2 роки тому +310

      like I know the original slogan of Crisco is "it's digestible" bc in the Victorian era all other brands of lard were made out of things the human digestive system *couldn't* process and so made for some Very Bad times on the toilet (or "toilet" depending on how you want to look at it) while Crisco was made out of pig fat [edit: cottonseed oil, it's make out of cottonseed oil, not pig fat] and thus genuinely digestible by humans, but seeing "it's digestible" just tickles me every time

    • @AZyzk
      @AZyzk 2 роки тому +14

      @XxLelunaMeloaxX I can't dissociate those 😋😄

    • @MJ-jq4kc
      @MJ-jq4kc 2 роки тому +115

      @@BlueIdiotPie no, crisco is not pig fat. pig fat is pig fat, crisco is crystalized cotton seed. literally.

  • @CrackedWreckingBallProductions
    @CrackedWreckingBallProductions Рік тому +1779

    Dang, I wish you did more long-form content like this. Your passion comes through at a whole new level.

    • @baysidesue
      @baysidesue Рік тому +24

      I agree, wholeheartedly!!

    • @Quantum36911
      @Quantum36911 Рік тому +47

      Yes I agree! I love the chaotic energy and dark innuendos of the shorts, but this could be in a humanities curriculum, the passion and expertise in food culture really comes through, so well written

    • @sarahbartilson2915
      @sarahbartilson2915 Рік тому +9

      Came to say the same thing!

    • @angryhobbit5919
      @angryhobbit5919 Рік тому +7

      Right?! This made my morning!

    • @im_munted
      @im_munted Рік тому +18

      i think so too, the shorts are fun and sporadic but this explains more

  • @greerbriggs8421
    @greerbriggs8421 10 місяців тому +593

    as an anthropologist, your dedication/fascination with seeing how people cooked and ate in the past (especially with these home cooking books) is a very familiar feeling
    you're studying this field in your own way with your own perspective that offers something I've not seen in many of my peers, food is a key aspect of culture and your hands on exploration and willingness to take others along this path with you is so interesting and human in a way that is often lost in this study Ɛ>

    • @Boyakishan
      @Boyakishan 6 місяців тому +3

      How did you reverse your 3???

    • @IkutoH
      @IkutoH 6 місяців тому +5

      ​@@Boyakishan Probably a special character or a character from another language.

    • @nemesisofeden
      @nemesisofeden 6 місяців тому +8

      That's an incredibly interesting way of looking at it. He's a food archeologist that's influencing future generations to the potential of the past.

    • @objective_psychology
      @objective_psychology 6 місяців тому

      @@Boyakishan Copying and pasting or using a custom keyboard shortcut

    • @terryhasseman5239
      @terryhasseman5239 5 місяців тому +3

      Food and religion are something every society in history has had. Examining them definitely helps understand the cultures and people of the past (yes I'm late to the game, but my algorithm only started suggesting the long-form content of this channel yesterday after years of the shorts being watched and saved on my profile

  • @valkeakuulas
    @valkeakuulas 2 роки тому +15661

    The point about not necessarily needing all of the cutesy gadgets to bake in your home is such a welcoming and good point and it's nice that we have someone saying it out loud.

    • @MeepChangeling
      @MeepChangeling 2 роки тому +125

      Yeah but if you bake more than once a week... Get a good mixer or a food processor that can do mixing.

    • @AmericanDivaa
      @AmericanDivaa 2 роки тому +160

      :o Right? I appreciated that message way more than I expected. I mean...yeah! A bowl, and a wooden spoon or whisk is really all you *need*. ^^

    • @Torlik11
      @Torlik11 2 роки тому +151

      @@MeepChangeling I agree, it's nice to have a reminder that you can cook without it but without going for the expensive stuff, a cheap basic hand mixer can make a world of difference. I got mine for 5$ at a second hand store and it made baking much more fun.

    • @ruffethereal1904
      @ruffethereal1904 2 роки тому +70

      @@Torlik11 The hand mixer opens up so many great avenues like frosting, whipped cream, and homemade ice cream. I'm just lucky my dad bought a heavy-duty, big boy KitchenAid for my mom and now, I'm the one who keeps baking several times a week with doughs that would beat the ever loving daylights out of any lesser mixer.

    • @hodgeelmwood8677
      @hodgeelmwood8677 2 роки тому +124

      I always say that if my grandmothers and great-grandmothers could bake without fancy gadgets, so can I.

  • @KKRB3
    @KKRB3 2 роки тому +645

    I genuinely absolutely adore the high contrast of absolute Chaos(tm) in the shorts versus the very gentle, educational and downright soothing long-form videos - it makes for a perfect balance of video styles + twice as enjoyable for both personal 'chaotic-brain' days and 'want-soft-and-soothing' brain days! well done!! :D

    • @galeparker1067
      @galeparker1067 2 роки тому +2

      Well said!!

    • @beleva09
      @beleva09 2 роки тому +8

      Completely agree, it is my favourite aspect of Dylan's content
      You just can't really deal with the same amount of energy every day

    • @KKRB3
      @KKRB3 2 роки тому +3

      @@beleva09 Exactly!! And a creator can't *give* the same amount of energy every single video either, so it probably helps that he doesn't have to be "on" re: the chaotic energetic side all the time (since a number of other people here on YT have burnt themselves out that way), and instead can choose when to be Full Chaos(tm) and when to be soothingly low-energy. It's brilliant on both sides! :)

    • @lacytaylor1501
      @lacytaylor1501 2 роки тому +3

      It reminds me a bit of Good Eats with Alton Brown's goofy skits but more serious yet still light hearted educating on the cooking process. I adore watching Good Eats and similar sort of silly yet serious food education shows so now I understand why I so enjoy this content.

    • @KKRB3
      @KKRB3 2 роки тому +1

      @@lacytaylor1501 SAME!!! Very well said!

  • @Sassafrass95
    @Sassafrass95 Рік тому +771

    Anyone else love calm Dylan as much as chaotic Dylan? both are versions of himself I'd watch all day

    • @Saohesc
      @Saohesc Рік тому +18

      First I'm seeing calm Dylan after watching his shorts for a while. I'm actually very relieved that he can be calm.

    • @The_Big_Jay
      @The_Big_Jay Рік тому +19

      I kinda prefer calm Dylan. I mean, I don't hate chaotic Dylan, his blind baking jokes get me every single time, but his more calm, curious, almost educator like demeanor is.. nice.

    • @drunkenhippie69
      @drunkenhippie69 Рік тому +5

      Agreed. I love him his chaotic self reminds me of me lol cause I totally do a lot of the same weird shit lol

    • @flamedance58
      @flamedance58 Рік тому +2

      A part of me wishes he used costumes lol

    • @ruditya4219
      @ruditya4219 Рік тому +4

      when Dylan become chaotic, the video tend to be funnier to watch and full of jokes. but when calm Dylan rose up, it become more educational and that's good.
      you see, not a lot of baking channel give many information of the recipe (like the history or something else). then Dylan as one of many, give us that and that's quite nice to get.

  • @Varizen87
    @Varizen87 Рік тому +459

    I absolutely love this format. Dylan has such a great speaking style, which I say as someone who has taught public speaking at college level. The way he presents information is top notch, and the fact he follows up on his curiosity creates a fantastic discussion point. Honestly, he’s on par with class Alton Brown for his deep dives on these topics in long form. His shorts are fun but long form is engaging.

    • @monroerobbins7551
      @monroerobbins7551 9 місяців тому +14

      Same :) plus, his voice is so soothing, I’ve been using his long videos as sleep aids, and they’ve worked a treat.

    • @carolharris2357
      @carolharris2357 7 місяців тому +3

      You need berries and whipped cream. And real butter.

  • @willemroux321
    @willemroux321 2 роки тому +1299

    Bro, you're way more professional in a homely manner than some of the "network" bakers on tv and it makes a huge difference. You don't seem hollow and soulless in fact. Please never stop making these 😉

    • @elizabethculver555
      @elizabethculver555 2 роки тому +11

      Agreed!

    • @stefhanieinsinga-ash2093
      @stefhanieinsinga-ash2093 2 роки тому +10

      Bless! He's my favorite baker

    • @DK-fq4bn
      @DK-fq4bn 2 роки тому +12

      I too, greatly enjoy watching you bake.
      I enjoy you honest reaction to the finished product.

    • @JeshuaMorbus
      @JeshuaMorbus 2 роки тому +3

      He, at least, doesn't have a lot of dad jokes to throw to us (serious cultural question: Do TV cooks do that outside of Spain XD?).

    • @marzbarz72
      @marzbarz72 2 роки тому +5

      @@JeshuaMorbus I would say that Alton Brown, who many would consider the king of American cooking shows, is full of dad jokes.

  • @codyuntch4850
    @codyuntch4850 2 роки тому +698

    Just wanted to share that an older lady shared one of your baking videos with a whole room of other older ladies at a self reliance conference we had a few months ago at our church. She went on for a few minutes about how wonderful your videos are and suggested everyone look up your channel. It made me laugh. Love your videos and your love of baking and history!

  • @calihoyer1415
    @calihoyer1415 2 роки тому +672

    I love how Dylan actually explained the physics of baking and why/how certain ingredients & methods matter & change the way recipes turn out; that kind of thing has always been something that vexed me a little, because I never really got it and no one I asked could explain it, so I’m delighted that now I understand! Thanks, Dylan!

    • @sleepyinseattle1209
      @sleepyinseattle1209 2 роки тому +5

      Reminds me of "Good Eats," which was a favorite of mine growing up. Highly recommend if you want more of the science behind baking, and cooking in general.

    • @jameskahre8488
      @jameskahre8488 2 роки тому +1

      YEP

    • @chevgage6210
      @chevgage6210 2 роки тому +1

      I learned it when I took chemistry in highschool lol

    • @amyormsby841
      @amyormsby841 2 роки тому +2

      @@sleepyinseattle1209 Yes - reminds me of a combination of "Good Eats" and "Bill Nye the Science Guy". Love the videos!

  • @deltahillcreative
    @deltahillcreative Рік тому +161

    Many years ago when I queried her on such a topic, my grandmother explained to me that by starting in a cold oven, the cake has time to settle resulting in a "fluffier" texture. It also helps the cake develop a thicker crust meaning it lasts longer without going stale.
    As much as I love your short-form content Dylan, I absolutely adore these longer videos. It's really nice getting a more in-depth tutorial and your information delivery methods are on point.

    • @jemm113
      @jemm113 Місяць тому

      Did she explain about time and temperature differentials if you wanted to adapt a recipe to a cold oven method?

  • @belzi87
    @belzi87 2 роки тому +863

    I am LOVING your longer form content. I came for the EGGY and stayed for the education. Thanks Dylan

    • @DulcetFox
      @DulcetFox 2 роки тому +16

      I can attest to the cold oven method for bacon as well. You get a lot less bacon shrinkage as well.

    • @sboz86
      @sboz86 2 роки тому +7

      @@DulcetFox Pray tell, how does one do this cold oven bacon?

    • @aewtx
      @aewtx 2 роки тому +8

      I use the pre-heat time to warm up leftovers. When that buzzer goes off, the food is heated. Good for foods don't do well in microwaves, even if it takes longer.

    • @jamesharder6632
      @jamesharder6632 2 роки тому +9

      Eggucation, one might say >_>

    • @toribarron8937
      @toribarron8937 2 роки тому +1

      Oh really?! I’m gonna have to try that! The things we learn!!! Thank you!

  • @undertalefan5867
    @undertalefan5867 Рік тому +928

    This guy has maxed out charisma. He just makes me smile

    • @benduso2327
      @benduso2327 Рік тому +18

      He dumped str for it, worth every penny

    • @tybofborg
      @tybofborg Рік тому +15

      @@benduso2327 Yeah not a single point in straight, it's how I roll too

    • @raphaelbernard7954
      @raphaelbernard7954 Рік тому +11

      I agree he does have plenty of charisma and his use of language is intriguing as well as his presentation. All in all very enjoyable.

    • @RaoulDukeSr
      @RaoulDukeSr Рік тому +7

      Couldn't agree more..a joy to watch 👌

    • @unkownhistory7660
      @unkownhistory7660 Рік тому +3

      Charisma 100000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000000

  • @lettuce3484
    @lettuce3484 2 роки тому +555

    I’m incredibly happy you started this longer-form type of content. While your shorts/tik toks are definitely entertaining, I feel like you’ve really done something special with these longer videos. They allow you to dive into the history of, methodologies of, and your personal philosophy on baking, which are topics you’re clearly passionate about, but are hard to fit into 60 seconds. In these videos, that passion is very clear and it’s infectious. I don’t have any real interest in baking, but these videos really draw me in regardless, and always provide me something to learn. Hopefully you enjoy making them as much as you seem to, because I think I speak for a lot of your viewers when I say I can’t wait to see more

  • @LittleBlue001
    @LittleBlue001 10 місяців тому +154

    I came across a pie crust recipe that said to use a food processor to cut the fat and flour together and even noted that it would not turn out the same without using a food processor. I didn't own one so I ignored that, used my grandma's old hand-held pastry cutter and the crust turned out beautifully. I'm sure a fork would have worked too. You are right, you don't need fancy stuff to make a recipe, just use what you have.

    • @LogjammerDbaggagecling-qr5ds
      @LogjammerDbaggagecling-qr5ds 8 місяців тому +5

      Cake was invented hundreds of years before electricity, so it's silly for them to try to tell people that they can't make one without it.

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien 8 місяців тому +8

      Yay for grandma's pie crust recipes!
      Mine has the best cooking instruction I've ever seen in a recipe. This is just after cutting the fat into the dry ingredients.
      "Turn on the faucet gently just until the water doesn't break up into droplets right away. Then, with loose fingers, floomph the dough very gently while swiping the bowl under the water, letting it all absorb between swipes. Do this until it feels right." 'Floomph' is so very much like her, heh.
      Before she passed, I had her walk me through what "feels right" means, and it turned out to be even more fascinating! It's when the dough, under that gentle, loose-fingered, floppy-wristed floomphing, magically goes from a bowl of loose crumbs to a single ball of dough. You really can feel as it's about to happen, and you start doing quicker and quicker swipes through the water for less and less until _poof._ It's a ball.
      Soooo crispy and flaky... and then I improved on it even further by switching from shortening to butter (which needs some extra cooling and resting steps so the butter doesn't soften beyond being able to be cut with the dry ingredients).

    • @gwirgalon3758
      @gwirgalon3758 7 місяців тому +3

      also two butter or dull edged knives, criss crossing them, how I originally learned to make it ; )

    • @emilyflotilla931
      @emilyflotilla931 7 місяців тому +4

      I loved my pastry cutter! My crusts always turned out flaky.

    • @emilyflotilla931
      @emilyflotilla931 7 місяців тому +2

      ​@@gwirgalon3758Same, in home economics!

  • @Odester117
    @Odester117 2 роки тому +542

    Dylan is quickly becoming my favourite online personality. So wholesome and well mannered, not to mention the humour he brings to everything he does. Keep up the great work!

    • @nuclearbirds
      @nuclearbirds 2 роки тому +8

      “Wholesome and well mannered”
      Remember the candle salad?

    • @jamessockman5971
      @jamessockman5971 2 роки тому +2

      Agreed, love this man

    • @NoZenith
      @NoZenith 2 роки тому

      Check out Glen and Friends

    • @froggyrox42
      @froggyrox42 2 роки тому +9

      He definitely gives me captain america if he didnt join the war and decided to dive into baking and homemaking instead vibes. He is wholesome and damned funny! 🤣

    • @jamessockman5971
      @jamessockman5971 2 роки тому +3

      @@froggyrox42 yo, I was going to comment "wow Steve Rogers knows his way around the kitchen" lol

  • @dougkunzelman5745
    @dougkunzelman5745 Рік тому +710

    I don't cook, I don't bake - I have no idea why UA-cam suggested this video to me, and I have no idea why I decided to watch it. This is the first video from this guy I have seen and he totally cracks me up! He doesn't crack jokes, but he's hysterical. And now I want to try this cake!

    • @E23K1LL
      @E23K1LL Рік тому +37

      In 4 days I am sure you have seen his shorts by now, but he most certainly does make jokes. I strongly encourage you to check them out if you haven't already. They can be crass, but hilarious none-the-less.

    • @CuriousCat987
      @CuriousCat987 Рік тому +16

      you should watch him on TikTok

    • @theresalogsdon765
      @theresalogsdon765 Рік тому +9

      What ever brought you to this Site,
      Gave you a few minutes of fun. It is always this way. He is a Real Character.
      Enjoy

    • @xxwintermoonxx1528
      @xxwintermoonxx1528 Рік тому +13

      He doesn't crack jokes he cracks eggs

    • @dougkunzelman5745
      @dougkunzelman5745 Рік тому +9

      @@theresalogsdon765 Thanks, I will. In fact, I made hid Peanut Butter Bread a couple nights ago and it was amazing!

  • @alyssaohleyer8416
    @alyssaohleyer8416 6 місяців тому +57

    My mother taught me a trick for measuring shortening. In a glass 2-3 cup measuring cup, add a cup of water. Then add enough shortening to displace the amount of water for the shortening measurement. So if you need 1/2 cup, you add shortening until the water reaches 1 1/2 cups. If you need 1 cup, add shortening until the water reaches the 2 cup line. Then, block the shortening and dump the water out. You now have your perfect amount even though it's a messy blob.

    • @clarkha99
      @clarkha99 3 місяці тому +7

      @alyssaohleyer8416 -- This is genius! Water displacement would be so perfect (and so much less messy). Thank you so much for sharing, and "thank you" to your mother 😇💞

    • @kristiswa
      @kristiswa 3 місяці тому +2

      Yeah, I learned that in 1963 in Home Ec. When did people forget it?

    • @vma862
      @vma862 2 місяці тому

      When feminism start 😐​@@kristiswa

    • @sevenember3332
      @sevenember3332 2 місяці тому

      I believe the use of hydrogenated fats started to be phased out around the mid to late nineties. Mainly because I don’t remember using it in any of my home ec type classes.

    • @lauralynpilakowski12
      @lauralynpilakowski12 2 місяці тому

      @@sevenember3332 That is how my mother taught me as well! I was just telling my 22 year old son about that a couple of days ago!

  • @alainajohnson2021
    @alainajohnson2021 2 роки тому +1506

    I just made this cake with my grandma. She had never heard of this type of cake and was excited to make it with me. while it was cooking she took out one of her old recipe books from the 50's and we looked through and found some interesting cakes that were going to make next time we get together. Thank you Dylan for making the videos because now I am going to have a whole bunch of new memories to make with her!!!

    • @beatrizd.rodriguez9051
      @beatrizd.rodriguez9051 2 роки тому +26

      I am literally crying reading this post... Bless you and you grandmother... 😭😭😭

    • @bananapudding1367
      @bananapudding1367 2 роки тому +16

      Don't be shy drop some recipes 👀

    • @HeatherD831
      @HeatherD831 2 роки тому +15

      This comment made my day, I lost my maternal Grandmother back in 2002 and my paternal Grandmother is on the other side of Canada so I don’t get to see her much.

    • @emilyrln
      @emilyrln 2 роки тому +4

      Awwww that's lovely!

    • @chimkinNuggz
      @chimkinNuggz 2 роки тому +1

      1950s? Geez i wonder if any of the instructions included slaves

  • @vanitystreak
    @vanitystreak 2 роки тому +701

    If the other comments aren't enough, let me add on with mine: I absolutely adore and look forward to your longer form videos, especially as a beginner cook excited to explore more recipes I feel that it's easier to absorb instructions as you are bringing us through the process, explaining the techniques and steps used. Plus the vibes are immaculate, I just enjoy such videos so much. Please do not leave out long form videos 😊

    • @tiffanyfennimore534
      @tiffanyfennimore534 2 роки тому +16

      Hear hear! I agree! I like the shorts quite a bit, but adore and love the longer videos, more please?!?!?!?

    • @samspielmann7704
      @samspielmann7704 2 роки тому +4

      This exactlt!

    • @CrungySpungus
      @CrungySpungus 2 роки тому +10

      His personality translates so much better than the minute long ones👌

    • @karaadams9381
      @karaadams9381 2 роки тому +3

      He needs his own show on tv!

    • @Daggoth65
      @Daggoth65 2 роки тому +3

      @@karaadams9381 people need to let TV die, he needs a show on Netflix or just to get regular sponsors on UA-cam

  • @inguaz5480
    @inguaz5480 2 роки тому +526

    Apart from all the wonderful things everybody is saying about Dylan's longer videos, I have to say I love how his experiments with his baking are also really accessible - there's a lot of cooking videos on UA-cam that do things like deconstruct and combine and whatnot, but it's surprisingly refreshing to have him just change the baking method slightly and observe the results!

  • @jadecoolness101
    @jadecoolness101 Рік тому +68

    3:40 "I just really love to bake"
    I felt this in my CORE. I'm "the baker" of my family, always making cakes and cookies. My family sometimes wants me to make box cakes or premade cookie doughs, but I find that to be so soul crushing. I don't think these are bad products, but when I want to bake, I want to BAKE. I do 't want to open a box and just add water and an egg. I want to have flour and sugar and butter, and put it in an oven and know that I'm the one that literally transformed it into a dessert.
    I use electric mixers because the joints in my hands are. Bad. But I enjoy baking.

  • @tokkinvic
    @tokkinvic 2 роки тому +563

    "You'd be surprised what you can get done with a bowl, a wooden spoon and a whisk"
    This singlehandedly motivated me to bake (I've always love to try it by myself!) but then I remembered I don't have the most crucial part... the oven. I guess I'll wait several years to work for my baking needs 😌 great vid as usual, Dylan!

    • @juliastock3771
      @juliastock3771 2 роки тому +45

      There's some great cake recipes you can do on a stove top with steam for example!! That might be something fun for you to look into until then😊

    • @IsaacIsaacIsaacson
      @IsaacIsaacIsaacson 2 роки тому +17

      I bake small goods in my airfryer and it works really well. I've made cookies, even small sponges. :)

    • @natascha7868
      @natascha7868 2 роки тому +10

      @@juliastock3771 I think China and Japan have traditions of steamed cake (maybe some other asian countries too)

    • @ladyofthemasque
      @ladyofthemasque 2 роки тому +10

      The Townsends channel has some examples of baking pies in a cast iron Dutch oven with coals from a fire. If you have a barbecue on your back porch or balcony, and some briquettes, this could be doable, and you can usually find Dutch ovens at thrift stores, Just remember to get a metal trivet to raise the pie or cake pans up off the bottom of the pot, and that you'll want to rotate the pot over the coals one way and the lid with the coals on it the other way every so often.

    • @anyjen
      @anyjen 2 роки тому +6

      You can bake some cakes in a pan with a lid with really low heat, if the pan is thick.

  • @mannye
    @mannye Рік тому +8674

    Kathy passed away in 2019. It would be so nice to let her children know that her recipe is making so many people happy.

    • @everyoneytubes
      @everyoneytubes Рік тому +347

      Condolences to you. I didn't know her. But I did have a friend in that building in 1976.

    • @kal1543
      @kal1543 Рік тому +262

      Kathy is an amazing baking innovator! Love her dedication to send it in and share with everyone ❤️

    • @dp7650
      @dp7650 Рік тому +183

      I didn't know you Kathy, but much love to you and your children.

    • @tazkrebbeks3391
      @tazkrebbeks3391 Рік тому +85

      My condolences.

    • @bilindalaw-morley161
      @bilindalaw-morley161 Рік тому +261

      I've just comments that nobody these days(yes I'm a Boomer) can imagine the happiness and pride she would have felt at her recipe being chosen.
      Perhaps if you get a thousand likes on a comment? Maybe.
      I hope someone can share this vid with her family. Thank you for letting us know.

  • @koitsenka
    @koitsenka Рік тому +23

    In the WW2 era, my grandmother had to run a farm with one old man and a few kids. Grampa was "froze in" to war work as a molder in a tank factory. She had 2 cows and had to sell half her chickens for gas to run a borrowed tractor to plant the crop that year. The family survived on smeerkaas, eggs, wild dandelion greens, and homemade bread.
    Butter was too expensive an ingredient, even if you made your own. She took to to the market, where she sold it, and bought oleo and flour. The oleo came looking like lard, with a little packet of yellow powder you could mix in if you wanted to make it yellow, like butter.
    Thank you for representing for the common folk, sweetie.

  • @kammymarie13
    @kammymarie13 2 роки тому +348

    I was really curious how it would differ going in a pre-heated oven so I'm SO glad you decided to try it out!! I love these longer in-depth videos so much!!

  • @jenasorbera6707
    @jenasorbera6707 Рік тому +697

    Dude. seriously. Im a retired pastey chef. The amount of information you give so perfectly in explaining the science and reason behind every step is perfect. Beautiful job you Joyous human.

    • @jenellehardin2670
      @jenellehardin2670 Місяць тому +8

      I just stopped the video to comment that I NEVER KNEW WHY alternating wet and dry. After 60 years of baking.

    • @KatrinaBeasse
      @KatrinaBeasse Місяць тому +3

      Me either, Jenelle. And I have been baking for 35 years!

  • @ChroniclerC
    @ChroniclerC 2 роки тому +520

    Like you speculated for the first cake, the higher starting heat for the pre-heated cake means that more of the water content of the cake turned to steam during the formative period of baking. This resulted in more lift (the higher dome), bigger air pockets in the cake (the looser crumb), and more of that water leaving the cake (the drier cake).
    Anyway, I'm really appreciating these longer-form videos. You're doing a great job!

    • @thepeppermintkid1
      @thepeppermintkid1 2 роки тому +14

      You know honestly the thought of steam (and likewise the water content) didn't even cross my mind as a reason for the difference; this was very informative, thank you!

    • @spencergellner5471
      @spencergellner5471 2 роки тому +12

      Its for the opposite reason you want things like your pizza dough and bread to go into a high heat oven or in this case pre heated oven. Since we want to create these larger air pockets. I just love the idea of doing the reverse for a pound cake.

    • @EphemeralLuna
      @EphemeralLuna 2 роки тому +2

      Came here to say exactly this. Starting at an already high temp allows it to heat faster thereby allowing for more moisture loss. And margarine has a LOT of moisture in it.

  • @lauraroberson9937
    @lauraroberson9937 Рік тому +49

    Try that with a tsp of nutmeg, and leave out the coconut flavoring. Yum. I have a cold oven recipe I've used for years. Mom and grandmom taught me to not only cook from scratch, but to adapt them if i wanted to.

  • @VoodooRogue
    @VoodooRogue Рік тому +992

    Ya know, I love the high energy humour you put into the tiktok length videos... And now seeing this, it just cements the idea that we need to get you a Cooking/Food Network show of your own.
    The neat collector aspects you brought up, the weird history glimpses, the positive "go bake even without gadgets", and the peek at the science were all better than full production shows I've seen.
    Yeah, I did a bit of baking before seeing your videos. But I do a lot more now. Thank you!

    • @jenniferdistler2136
      @jenniferdistler2136 Рік тому +14

      I whole-heartedly agree! I would start watching tv again if Dylan was on food network!

    • @stevenmendes111
      @stevenmendes111 Рік тому +25

      His shorts are entertaining but I really enjoy the longer versions where he talks a bit more about the culture of the time and science of the recipes.
      He’d be great on Food Network. He’s like a funnier, gay Alton Brown.

    • @carriehart6370
      @carriehart6370 Рік тому +3

      I agree you need your own show

    • @Tarabara
      @Tarabara Рік тому +2

      I would love to see him as a judge on Nailed It if they ever bring it back.

    • @janetteknox5149
      @janetteknox5149 Рік тому +3

      Oh God yes that would be great

  • @drewpickle2237
    @drewpickle2237 2 роки тому +316

    Seeing Dylan in his slower videos is extremely refreshing. They perfectly contrast his higher-octane TikTok cooking videos, and it widens the scope on how he actually acts. It shows that the way someone presents themselves isn't exactly how they actually are. Keep up the good work, and I do want to see more of these longer videos.

    • @TwilightStar91
      @TwilightStar91 2 роки тому +5

      He's like this in his TikTok Live sessions as well, he still has to talk fast to keep up with the chat but he's very lovely and sweet.

    • @galendeig6747
      @galendeig6747 2 роки тому

      Exactly what I was thinking.

    • @rose77778888
      @rose77778888 2 роки тому

      I just told my son that I like him better this way. Although, I do enjoy the others.

    • @_rvth_
      @_rvth_ 2 роки тому +1

      took the words right out of my mouth. love the candor and process in these videos.

  • @BumChops
    @BumChops 2 роки тому +583

    It's lovely to see someone who doesn't let the pressure to create content diminish their love for baking, I wish all content creators had his unstoppable humour and enthusiasm.

    • @MeepChangeling
      @MeepChangeling 2 роки тому +14

      He's creating for fun, not profit. What ruined youtube was "Wait I can make money doing that?! :O" and now everyone treats this place like a business or a career instead of a social media site for sharing videos.

  • @carolcalklumb2990
    @carolcalklumb2990 11 місяців тому +25

    My guys (I.e sons) sent your channel my way and, as usual, I love their gift. My mom (born 1927) had those cookbooks, that she and her 5 neighbors shared back and forth. Thank you! And you’re right again. I (born 1956) as a young married baker (1975 - way too young lol) had no mixer. Thank you again.

  • @erikharrison
    @erikharrison 2 роки тому +507

    Starting with a hot oven gives you more "oven spring" - the water in the batter starts to steam, and the gasses expand, then the cake sets before it can deflate. Dylan's theory is exactly correct (well known in bread making). Thats why you get that classic pound cake dome with cracked top. And the margarine/crisco combo probably helps with that "fudgey" texture too - butter is about 15% water, so there is actually more fat in this than in a traditional pound cake.

    • @RaspK
      @RaspK 2 роки тому +17

      You are quite correct; and for the trivia aficionados, butter is typically 82% fat, with a minor part of milk solids added, and the rest is water.

    • @marmitenot.
      @marmitenot. 2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for the explanation!

    • @ginger_nosoul
      @ginger_nosoul 2 роки тому +5

      @@RaspK you are correct, butter is made of butter and adds a butter flavor.

    • @knuckle12356
      @knuckle12356 2 роки тому +15

      @@ginger_nosoul you are correct; better butters bake best by butter biters bitter battles better butter batter and the butter batter battles embitter bigger butter butlers. Basically.

    • @matter8293
      @matter8293 2 роки тому

      @@knuckle12356 cheese

  • @arklytte
    @arklytte Рік тому +917

    I'm a retired chef, and while I'm not a baking expert (I was never a very good pastry chef, sadly), I can still dance the tune. And I can tell you from experience, both in cooking and baking, initial and continuing heat conditions can absolutely make a *world* of difference in the final product. I was 100% positive, watching this, that the second cake was going to end up less dense, less 'fudgey', and with a drier, more open crumb. It just made sense based on experience.
    Nevertheless, I really loved this video, and your baking vids in general. The pure crackhead energy of your tiktoks/shorts is absolute fantastic and wonderfully entertaining, but your deep dives have me absolutely hooked (and I'm genuinely devastated that is seems like you're not doing them anymore, since it's been months since you posted one).
    You have a way of explaining things that is both entertaining and informative, without talking down to the viewer, but you still get your message across very eloquently. It's honestly inspiring, and I truly hope to one day see more of this type of video for you (either that, or you with your own show on one of the various cooking channels :D).
    Also, also, I ADORE your 'you can bake with simple tools and get just as good results' comments!! Again, retired chef, so cooking is very near and dear to me, and, while, yes, I do have a few cooking gadgets in my kitchen, most of my stuff is no different than what you'd find in anyone else's reasonably well stocked kitchen...I just make sure my tools are the best quality I can afford, because a few good quality tools are worth more than all the high tech gadgets in the world.
    At the end of the day, cooking and baking are about technique, skill, and practice. Anyone can cook...or bake...wonderful things if they're willing to invest a little time and effort in learning, and they practice.
    Thank you for doing what you do Dylan! I've had the good fortune to study under some truly incredible chefs in my life, and you, sir, like they, have the soul of a teacher. That's a rare and precious gift, and not one to set aside lightly. Thank you, as well, for reigniting my desire to try to improve my own (not so awesome) baking skills.

    • @neta6304
      @neta6304 Рік тому +26

      I agree Chef, with all you said. I just hope that Dylan sees your posting here.

    • @arklytte
      @arklytte Рік тому +7

      @@neta6304 Thanks! I appreciate that.
      And me too. :)

    • @ladytaz6137
      @ladytaz6137 Рік тому +17

      Being an ex CCA ( California Culinary Academy) student, I could not have said this soliloquy any better. Good luck in your efforts, sir.

    • @arklytte
      @arklytte Рік тому +11

      @@ladytaz6137 Thanks!! I've been working on some different kinds of homemade bread...mostly simple stuff so far. But I figure, if I can get the simple stuff down to where I can do it consistently, then I can move onto more advanced stuff.
      Picked up the King Arthur Flour baking bible and have started looking through it for inspiration as well. My wife and I have been having tons of fun trying out some new things, and our friends and neighbors love the homemade gifts we've been handing out. :)

    • @ladytaz6137
      @ladytaz6137 Рік тому +4

      @Ark Lyte I bet, yummy goodies are always welcome. 😋

  • @vampstamp679
    @vampstamp679 2 роки тому +450

    dylan, this was so fun! i watch all your tiktoks, but i gotta say i kinda prefer the youtube format- you’re really fun to watch, and i loved your little aside about mixing by hand! i mix everything by hand because it’s good for your wrist muscles, but accessibility is an even better reason

    • @pikachuneoncat6480
      @pikachuneoncat6480 2 роки тому +4

      I also do it because while I have an electric mixer, it's always buried beneath everything else and I never wanna dig it out.

    • @therealopaartist
      @therealopaartist 2 роки тому +6

      My mom says that electric mixers doesn’t have the same amount of love that doing it by hand does.

  • @debraboober608
    @debraboober608 Рік тому +825

    Dylan, I am 68 and quite familiar with those cookbooks! They had hardbacked editions in my school for Home Economics class and were phasing them out as our teacher was quite uninventive in the kitchen, so I am the proud owner of several of these cookbooks! So many of your recipes are ones I remember my grandmothers making! Both of them were very inventive in the kitchen! Keep doing what you are doing, you are bringing baking to a new generation!

    • @markclifford1857
      @markclifford1857 Рік тому +1

      Hello 👋 Debra. How are you doing? Hope you are fine. I'm Mark Clifford and am from Denver Colorado, where are you from? You seem like a real country girl

    • @parsleypalace3272
      @parsleypalace3272 Рік тому +4

      I remember those, too!!!! When Dylan showed one, I got Sooooooooo happy!!!!!

    • @Kieron-Davies
      @Kieron-Davies 9 місяців тому

      Could you please send me a link to find that book as I am struggling to find it

  • @MahoganyMilkshake
    @MahoganyMilkshake 2 роки тому +209

    This very calm and collected vibe was something I wasn't expecting since my only exposure to Dylan has been through his short videos. But I have to say, I'm really enjoying it. And I also appreciate that it's not completely toned-down, and that his eccentricities are still sprinkled in throughout this video at various points.
    Bottom line is, you're an awesome creator Dylan. Both your shorts and normal videos are thoroughly enjoyable to watch. Keep it up!

  • @JohnSmith-gg7qh
    @JohnSmith-gg7qh 10 місяців тому +21

    Dylan - you are loved by all here in my home. I was raised with everything starting in a cold oven. Nobody could afford the extra gas or electricity for heating the oven with nothing in it. Very simple reasoning. Most recipes I learned were geared toward that. Good job! Keep teaching us!

  • @nedabagheri5764
    @nedabagheri5764 Рік тому +412

    You are like the Fred Rogers of baking. Thoughtful, entertaining, intelligent and charming. I love all the interesting information in this video and I feel like I am watching a friend.

    • @paulamusicnme5234
      @paulamusicnme5234 Рік тому +15

      You’re so right and I hope he knows what a compliment this is.

    • @wasteland5000
      @wasteland5000 Рік тому +13

      It's a beautiful day in this kitchen.

    • @ryangray8075
      @ryangray8075 Рік тому +4

      this is so accurate and you're a genius for putting it together /g

    • @txlady1049
      @txlady1049 Рік тому +4

      That's a really nice, and accurate, thing to say!

    • @frankney8284
      @frankney8284 Рік тому +1

      "The Fred Rogers of baking" I like that. He'd be going "who's Fred?"

  • @cryosblaze5867
    @cryosblaze5867 2 роки тому +351

    I love chaotic Dylan's energy, but calm Dylan just feels like the sorta guy I wanna have a nice cup of tea with and a chat.

    • @debbyherrick6676
      @debbyherrick6676 2 роки тому +7

      I would love to have him as a friend 😉

    • @Zineeta
      @Zineeta 2 роки тому +2

      Yes I agree

    • @FlinnyWinny
      @FlinnyWinny 2 роки тому +2

      Tea AND CAKE

    • @lalaj5831
      @lalaj5831 2 роки тому

      Especially if he bakes.

    • @kodaaxolotlnerd9352
      @kodaaxolotlnerd9352 2 роки тому

      only seen this guy in passing while I was browsing Tik Tok, but this version of him feels kinda... Uncle Iroh-ish? In the way that he'll calmly explain how a cup of tea is made, or a baked good, and all the nuances that go into making it correct, and then being like "apply that knowledge for not just tea or baked goods"

  • @amethystcat6844
    @amethystcat6844 2 роки тому +1107

    My best friend's 91 yo aunt told me a few years ago that baking cakes starting with a cold oven would result in them being more moist, especially pound cakes. I've been using cold ovens for cakes ever since and it really does make a difference in texture and overall moisture!

    • @chrsd2536
      @chrsd2536 2 роки тому +31

      I'm going to test this out.
      I bake my breakfast casserole starting in a cold oven and honestly it's just fine.

    • @Puglover130
      @Puglover130 2 роки тому +39

      I wonder if that’s the secret when we taste supermoist , almost steamed , dense cakes.
      But I makes me wonder if sponge cakes would also be superior this way- they may end up a little too mushy/ soggy

    • @creativesea.design
      @creativesea.design 2 роки тому +18

      What I find interesting is the concept that moist cakes are better, I am used to fluffier being better and dense being something of a lower value :))

    • @Armorlord04
      @Armorlord04 2 роки тому +31

      @@creativesea.design I'd note a difference between moist and dense, cakes both dense and fluffy can be too dry. I'd associate moist more with softness, though density and dryness can both lead to needing the aid of a beverage.

    • @Armorlord04
      @Armorlord04 2 роки тому +15

      Did she have any recommendations for changing times or temperatures with that method? Curious to give it a try.

  • @cathleencavanaugh2113
    @cathleencavanaugh2113 11 місяців тому +64

    I’m seeing this much later than the original air
    date. With that said I will weigh in on the cold oven bake. My grandmother was born in 1887 and worked in a boarding house as a 13yo. She was a fantastic baker and I learned pies, cakes and noodles from her. I didn’t preheat an oven til forced to in Home Ec class in the early 70’s. I think preheating the oven would have been considered a waste of money. I have recently found your channel. I truly am enjoying all the episodes as I try to go back and watch them all. Ty

    • @barefootalien
      @barefootalien 8 місяців тому +5

      Interesting... I do wonder if the not-preheating thing was economic in inspiration. Not long before _that,_ I'd think preheating would be absolutely mandatory, since it would involve building a fire.

    • @ElaineCullen-if8dr
      @ElaineCullen-if8dr Місяць тому

      ​@barefoo😊talien

  • @alicial1239
    @alicial1239 Рік тому +293

    One more possible reason they used a cold oven: When a cold oven is heated, it heats very quickly. This cake has a lot of fat in it. So when the cake is in the fast-heating oven, the extra heat will FRY the edges before going into the baking stage at 350°. The hot stage gives every edge a crispiness that you usually only get on the top.

    • @F4sy
      @F4sy Рік тому +11

      This comment deserves a pin

    • @rexbeavers6746
      @rexbeavers6746 Рік тому +7

      My oven takes about 15 to 20 minutes to heat so I don’t know how this would work depending on how long the preheat takes.

    • @seanmivey
      @seanmivey Рік тому +7

      Yeah, the more I think about it, you're right. The radiant heat during the "cold" phase would more quickly crisp the edges (even in the pan). Kinda like a toaster oven. Yet the cake is still less "done" because it's at a much lower air temperature until the 12-minute mark.

    • @karleeadams
      @karleeadams Рік тому +1

      Save on electricity 😅

  • @rustinscott4389
    @rustinscott4389 2 роки тому +306

    My wife does all her cakes cold oven style. Mostly because she forgets to preheat. Love every one -perfect crumb! Keep it up!

    • @astathea
      @astathea 2 роки тому +12

      ahahah That's exactly what I do too xD Give your wife a hug from me, a fellow forgetful baker

    • @derwinfater9156
      @derwinfater9156 2 роки тому +3

      Hey me too. Same reason or just don't see the need to waste so much energy. Thinking of what he said, this might be the reason why my (rare) baking products all come out so nicely. 🤔

  • @uSCOTTpwnd
    @uSCOTTpwnd 2 роки тому +543

    I love your emphasis on accessibility in cooking. Not everyone can afford butter and not everyone has an electric mixer. Wish every cooking-based content creator was like this.

    • @IronMessenger
      @IronMessenger 2 роки тому +5

      Unless one day he gets a big sponsorship from the fat cats at the mixer company! Then he will sell out just like all the others... You know who you are Mrs Ray. ;)

    • @maxperezcelani
      @maxperezcelani 2 роки тому +1

      i was just thinking the same

    • @XxNightmare128xX
      @XxNightmare128xX 2 роки тому +8

      Despite Crisco being used in a lot of recipes, try to use animal based fats like lard as substitutes. The vegetable and plant based ones play a significant role in heart related health issues.

    • @IlyaNLeo
      @IlyaNLeo 2 роки тому +4

      I absolutely agree with you sweetheart
      At the same time im glad they arent ALL like this
      There can ONLY BE ONE DYLAN B HOLLIS
      AND I LOVE HIM JUST THE WAY HE IS.

    • @braydenwoods9432
      @braydenwoods9432 2 роки тому +1

      If you enjoy his videos for that reason, I believe you would enjoy Adam Ragusea, as he also does all his recipes by hand (except homemade noodles).

  • @i.lowlife
    @i.lowlife Рік тому +24

    I would just like to say, I recently baked his version of this cake that he put in his cookbook and it is as delicious as he describes. His version is almond flavored and pound cake-like. I baked it for my brother's going away party during his 2 week home recruitment before he was stationed in El paso. I'm very pleased to say that everyone enjoyed it. I was ecstatic to even get the thing out of the pan, and even more pleased to find it tasted as good as it looked. I also found that it tasted good with fruit and when I go back and attempt it again, I might make a fruit compote or jelly for the topping. 10/10

  • @benjaminoechsli1941
    @benjaminoechsli1941 2 роки тому +629

    I _love_ Dylan's longer videos. I was introduced to him as "a guy who bakes as part of his thesis on the science behind the art", so to see him explain parts that wouldn't fit in a one minute long video, as well as reminding us all that you don't need expensive gear to make a quality cake, is delicious. Thank you, sir. ^^

    • @TheMystic_239
      @TheMystic_239 2 роки тому +6

      I’m not sure if that’s why he bakes. He has a music degree in old-timey jazz. He just bakes cause he collects vintage and antique things, recipe books being one of them

  • @thetaaaa
    @thetaaaa 2 роки тому +227

    It's lovely to watch you in a longer, chiller, more grounded recipe video. I love the hilarious fast-paced vintage recipe shorts, but this feels like so much more of a genuine experience. It's the first time I properly grasped the extent of your passion for baking, as well as how thoughtful and gentle you seem to be alongside the chaos. I look forward to seeing more from you

    • @julianlaresch6266
      @julianlaresch6266 Рік тому +9

      I've only ever seen the shorts before- this longer video is very nice. I love the passion he has for baking.

    • @Kellyesan
      @Kellyesan Рік тому +3

      Agreed!

    • @no-Just_Ice
      @no-Just_Ice Рік тому +1

      Thanks for making it to where I don’t have to say anything more

  • @DraftySatyr
    @DraftySatyr Рік тому +241

    There's a simple joy to watching someone expound so eloquently, enthusiastically and entertainingly on a subject he so obviously loves.

  • @vee8099
    @vee8099 2 роки тому +227

    I absolutely love how you thought about we poor folks. Yes, it's true that many of us can't afford simple luxuries such as a $400 mixer. Nor a lot of "special" ingredients. Margarine, unfortunately is a staple in my household. Thank you for just being the wonderfully kind person you are.

    • @Leah-ic1et
      @Leah-ic1et 2 роки тому +20

      It’s a staple in my kitchen also, it’s a great substitute for people with life threatening dairy allergies. I’m not sure if we are used to the taste and texture but can’t tell the difference between butter in cakes and Marg in cakes. I have a fancy mixer but it is annoying to wash another appliance so I don’t use it. I’m also wondering if this person was going through hardship and used a cold oven to conserve power and came out with this tasty cake.

    • @curiousKuro16
      @curiousKuro16 2 роки тому +10

      I grew up with margarine and I always liked how spreadable it is!

    • @jenniferstrover1276
      @jenniferstrover1276 2 роки тому +11

      @@Leah-ic1et I grew up with margarine because my sister and I had dairy allergies as kids. Margarine is also used in Kosher cooking, because you're not supposed to mix meat and milk, so it's a good substitute for butter in meat dishes.

    • @falconlore9666
      @falconlore9666 2 роки тому +2

      I inherited my Mom's kitchen Aid that is now 30 years old. Thankfully those kitchen Aid stand mixers were built to last it is dang heavy though and the leaver arm does not raise the bowl as high as it used to.

    • @ayajade6683
      @ayajade6683 2 роки тому +1

      Tbh I like taking my agression out on my baked goods as the stand mixer is a pain to set up and the hand mixer is my great grandma's from the 1960's so it's very heavy. But if you really want a a mixer the hand crank ones work just as good and are usually $15-20

  • @nimroddess_
    @nimroddess_ Рік тому +627

    THANK YOU for actually testing the two baking methods side-by-side! The whole time you were discussing your thoughts on why the cold oven method gave the results it did, I was saying "Prove it! You need to test it!" And then you DID and it made me so happy!
    Please make more long-form videos like this, I am loving them all!!

    • @MeghanMarklesLies
      @MeghanMarklesLies Рік тому +21

      He should now test it with butter instead! I'll bet it's much better..

    • @angiegaa
      @angiegaa Рік тому +2

      @@MeghanMarklesLies Thats what i was hoping he would do!

    • @deborahbranham-taylor6682
      @deborahbranham-taylor6682 Рік тому +7

      I am going to make it with butter!

    • @MeghanMarklesLies
      @MeghanMarklesLies Рік тому +5

      @@deborahbranham-taylor6682 please tell us how it goes.

    • @lillynichols9884
      @lillynichols9884 Рік тому +9

      I'm so glad he did the side by side comparison - I would have felt lopsided for days, had he not!

  • @bekcorvus823
    @bekcorvus823 2 роки тому +829

    it's all down to chemistry, by spending less time at a high temp, the cold oven cake forms looser bonds which creates that almost fudgy consistency that you talk about, it also helps that it means it retains much more of it's moisture, by the time it would leave the cake a crust is already forming, thus keeping the moisture in; whereas in the preheated version (especially at the same high temp) it both forms stronger bonds, and much sooner too, it also pushes the moisture out before a crust forms all the way around. As to why a stronger bond could form a more crumbly cake, think about a rubber band left in the sun, and then you pull it as hard and quick as you can, the bonds are stronger but that means much less flexibility thus the bonds snap rather than stretch, causing it to crumbly not fudgy

    • @PaniniYT
      @PaniniYT 2 роки тому +22

      So could you add a pre determined amount of time and do this with a store bought cake mixture as well to make it more fugdy? Because one of the reasons I'm not a cake fan as much is because it is so crumbly. Just wondering if it was just that way because of the butter and Crisco or if it'd do that without it too

    • @deth3021
      @deth3021 2 роки тому +8

      So it's the opposite to meat? As normally with meat you want the preheated oven or pan to create a skin to keep the juices in?

    • @yaniquebisson7152
      @yaniquebisson7152 2 роки тому +20

      @@PaniniYT yes you can! It's my trick and it's made it a lot more enjoyable. I also only put about half-3/4 the recommended oil. When time to ice it, it doesn't fall apart on you as much. The oil helps make it moist, no need if you don't bake the moisture out lol

    • @Weehapaa
      @Weehapaa 2 роки тому +20

      @@deth3021 actually really similar to meat. Exposure to high heat pushes out moisture faster, due to a stronger structure (muscle fiber tensing). Which is why searing is typically done for short intervals (couple min per side). The crust formed by high heat actually doesn't keep in moisture, this has been tested. And is why seared meats are often basted or rested in a fat, or roasted meats are covered/wrapped in foil, to protect/ reuptake some of that juice. Instead, the purpose of searing is maillard browning and the flavor that develops from that.
      The purpose of preheating for meat is likely to reduce the amount of time that is spent in the danger zone between cold and cooked.
      For tender juicy meat low temp for a long time is the way.

    • @hellothere702
      @hellothere702 2 роки тому +6

      @@PaniniYT if you like fudgey cakes try a box of lemon pudding mix and a box of yellow cake mix 1 1/4 cup water* 1/3 cup oil and 4 eggs cook for 40 mins at 350 makes the most moist cake I have ever had it's like straight fudge and if you use the jello brand pudding then you can't taste the lemon at all
      *edit: it's 1 and 1/4 cups water not 1/4 cup whoops

  • @augustaimperatrix
    @augustaimperatrix 2 роки тому +5435

    I said this the last time and I'm going to say it this time, because Dyllan deserves every last bit of praise I can offer:
    I love these longer videos. I love the way he talks, how invested he is in everything that comes with baking these recipes and of course I love his humor.
    Plus, I commented on the last longer baking video (as I said, similar to this comment) and all I got in response were genuinely nice comments, agreeing with me. I've never seen this before, especially on UA-cam. No nagging, no insulting, nothing. It was just... rainbows, flowers blooming and bees humming in the comments beneath my own comment and it makes me happy every time I get a new notification.

    • @FutatabiRyouji
      @FutatabiRyouji 2 роки тому +100

      I concur

    • @pewnit
      @pewnit 2 роки тому +220

      I legit thought I was gonna be in the minority that picked up on this, I think his personality on screen is extremely entertaining to watch which plays a huge role.

    • @anthonypetruzzi158
      @anthonypetruzzi158 2 роки тому +164

      totally agree. his short videos are funny as hell, but these longer videos are something special.

    • @Jerepasaurus
      @Jerepasaurus 2 роки тому +115

      He's an absolute gem and we're so lucky to have him in our day. I can never stop commenting and supporting this wonderful guy. ♥

    • @s1lentsymphony607
      @s1lentsymphony607 2 роки тому +73

      I could not agree more. He is something special to this world and this platform. Genuinely appreciate everything he does

  • @obiwankenobi1608
    @obiwankenobi1608 2 роки тому +330

    I love this guy's channel. He just makes the best cooking videos and I always love seeing them pop up

  • @IslandMarigold
    @IslandMarigold Рік тому +39

    I would recommend alternating wet and dry ingredients, beginning with dry and ending with dry. It's supposed to help improve the crumb of the cake by covering the starches with the lipids and then absorbing the remaining liquid in the end. It makes a difference in muffins for sure. 😊

    • @laurab5750
      @laurab5750 Рік тому +5

      Also recommend adding the flavorings to the milk...better incorporation into the batter with less mixing.

  • @machouchacha
    @machouchacha 2 роки тому +240

    Your point about the expensive kitchen gadgets really struck a chord with me. I can't count the amount of recipes I had to click away from because of how fancy and expensive the equipment was. Often, these recipes don't even provide an alternative solution for those who don't have that kind of equipment. Thank you for shining a spotlight on this. And thank you for keeping it simple!

    • @ariadne0w1
      @ariadne0w1 2 роки тому +5

      seconded...everything but meringues and whipped cream, etc, I do by hand with a fork and/or silicon spatula regardless of what it calls for. No issues so far, but my goodness would a food processor make my life so much easier. I also sew (in the middle of making a dress right now) and I don't own a sewing machine. Sometimes you just got to take the long way around.

    • @poke-talia268
      @poke-talia268 2 роки тому +5

      @@ariadne0w1 I borrowed my grandma's sewing machine to stitch together my cloak, but stretchy faux fur doesn't agree with sewing machines, so most of it ended up being hand stitched by myself. Gave me so much more respect for people who hand stitch replicas of historical clothing. Especially those who do it frequently.

    • @TectonicAtomic
      @TectonicAtomic 2 роки тому +5

      Don’t even get me started with homemade pasta

    • @bluefox5331
      @bluefox5331 2 роки тому +2

      @@ariadne0w1 That gave me some comfort preparing to take up sewing by hand this summer! :D I have no room nor I am willing to shell out for a machine just starting out

    • @ariadne0w1
      @ariadne0w1 2 роки тому +1

      @@bluefox5331 It certainly takes longer, but given how many clothes I also have that's a good thing. Also makes for a more impressive humble brag. "Oh this old thing? I sewed it myself...by hand"

  • @AjaOlander
    @AjaOlander 2 роки тому +219

    I’ll chime in with everyone else to say that I love this format as much as the short format, high energy tik toks! I think you’ve found a wonderful niche and you’re just a joy to watch. Thanks so much for all you do!

  • @kevinbialkowski3694
    @kevinbialkowski3694 Рік тому +194

    Hey bud, we need some more longer format videos. Love the shorts, but i think u really have something here. Informative, likeable, knowledgeable, cozy. Definitely would watch more of these

  • @asmrkatyaa
    @asmrkatyaa 8 місяців тому +12

    Yesss! Your explanation for not using a stand mixer makes my heart swoon. Thank you for being the most humble and honest baker around.
    Also, mixing things by hand, is so stress relieving. Bad day at work? Mix. Feeling sad? Mix it out, boo.

  • @bookfanatic
    @bookfanatic 2 роки тому +273

    My Grandmother’s pound cake uses sour cream instead of milk and a mix of vanilla and lemon extracts. It’s fantastic! The crumb is tight, but the best part is the crispy top. Because of this, she uses a springform tube pan and doesn’t flip it over.
    Pound Cake
    3 cups sugar, less 3 tablespoons
    1/2 lb. butter
    6 eggs, one at a time
    3 cups flour
    1 teaspoon baking powder
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    1 cup sour cream
    1 teaspoon Vanilla extract
    1 teaspoon Lemon extract
    Cream sugar and butter well. Add eggs one at a time. Beat well. Sift dry ingredients and add alternately with sour cream. Add Vanilla and Lemon extract. Pour in a 10-inch greased tube cake pan. Cook 1 hour and 10 minutes at 325 degrees.

    • @angieodonoghue9654
      @angieodonoghue9654 2 роки тому +8

      Thank you for sharing!!

    • @LeoMidori
      @LeoMidori 2 роки тому +7

      It sounds nice! I use sour cream in my chocolate cakes, it makes them incredible. :D

    • @ksharpe8137
      @ksharpe8137 2 роки тому +3

      Sounds awesome! Will try it soon since we love pound cake. 😉

    • @darksentinel082
      @darksentinel082 2 роки тому +1

      I’ll have to try this soon! Thank you so much for sharing

    • @jaybira77
      @jaybira77 2 роки тому +2

      Thanks for sharing I will try this!!

  •  Рік тому +1059

    Listening to Dylan is like hanging out with happy Golden Retriever that knows how to bake. Its comforting.

    • @garysouza772
      @garysouza772 Рік тому +13

      Mr. PeanutButter Bread, but more grounded.

    • @eleanorfielding2114
      @eleanorfielding2114 Рік тому +16

      Oh goodness- that’s spot-on.

    • @pam8962
      @pam8962 Рік тому +1

      😅😂😅yes ❤😊

    • @tinaw.5538
      @tinaw.5538 Рік тому +13

      I'd go more high strung, like border collie, or Irish setter, but yes. Nice boy😊

    • @angelafranklin2267
      @angelafranklin2267 Рік тому +1

      True! But maybe a Chihuahua!!! Lol love him!

  • @Niquiunique
    @Niquiunique 11 місяців тому +8

    Recently discovered this guy, so entertaining, and couldn’t put my finger on who he reminded me of, till today!
    Bill Nye! Anyone else, or just me?

  • @Rendosian
    @Rendosian 2 роки тому +193

    The dichotomy of UA-cam Dylan & TikTok Dylan is amazing! This was so cozy. I feel like my grandmother is in the kitchen baking and I’m anticipating the awesomeness of it. Love it.

  • @missjazzybaby88
    @missjazzybaby88 2 роки тому +97

    “Kathy..oh dear 😮” I chocked when you showed the last name!!! 😂😂😂😂 you truly are an amazing person!! If only we had more yous in the world! Love your baking and personality ❤️❤️❤️❤️

  • @Jerepasaurus
    @Jerepasaurus 2 роки тому +223

    Your genuine joyful and tickled enthusiasm for the reality of period cooking is such a treat, Dylan. You have such a sparkle in your eye as this brilliant energy surges through you in that glorious smile, emphatic gesticulation and overall body language. Even the way you style your hair seems to convey this power of expression like a smooth wave of playful charisma just radiating from every inch of you. You bring us comedy, theater, and a wild assortment of fantastic or foul baked goods to experience through your lively and upbeat attitude.
    You're a wonder and I'm so thankful you're here sharing your hobby and passion with us. ♥
    I also REALLY want to thank you for explaining how you'd rather not normalize expensive living. My own life is not in a good place, hasn't been for many years, and I could have cried, thankful, for someone like you to have brought that kind of thing up. :')

    • @kathimorrical9912
      @kathimorrical9912 2 роки тому +6

      I couldn't agree more! You ARE a bright spotlight on a sometimes dank and dreary landscape. I personally want to thank you for your humor and level headed views. Would you consider playing your accordion again? I always enjoy musical interludes, and you ARE talented, musically as well as astronomically. Keep the longer versions coming, but don't stop the short, more entertaining vids please!?!

    • @EMSpdx
      @EMSpdx 2 роки тому

      😀

  • @monroerobbins7551
    @monroerobbins7551 11 місяців тому +12

    I’m a 21 year old man, and I’ve always loved cooking and baking, but watching your videos, and learning about vintage recipes, it’s completely boggled my mind. It makes me so happy, cause while I love cooking, I hate that a lot of modern recipes need super specific tools or ingredients. Vintage recipes feel more accessible, and… it reminds me of memories I had when I was young, reading the Babysitter’s Club and thinking about what my life will be like. Instead of recipes from faceless people along the internet, I feel more like I’m reveling in the recipes of past generations, passing them on to the next.

  • @gaefaelevi6670
    @gaefaelevi6670 2 роки тому +149

    I will forever stand by my point that this man needs an official cooking show. Like maybe on normal TV, Netflix, Hulu, etc idc I just want one!

    • @billhanna2148
      @billhanna2148 Рік тому +1

      No truer words 👍👏👏👏

    • @lorijudd2151
      @lorijudd2151 Рік тому

      I would completely vote for that!!!

    • @TheStorm45
      @TheStorm45 Рік тому +1

      Yeah, except TV and stardom RUINS all the greats, it POISONS them...I wouldn't wish that curse on ANYONE. He's perfect just HOW and WHERE he is ❤💯

    • @TheSamantha51682
      @TheSamantha51682 Рік тому

      I actually think I saw him on something that was Netflix or Hulu on of them...

  • @marvelfan281
    @marvelfan281 2 роки тому +174

    As a lover of history, this is by far the best cooking content I've seen. I love your TikToks, but this video especially was great. I liked the longer-form video and how much more information you were able to put in because of that. I also really appreciated your insight as to why you prefer certain cookbooks. It is truly fascinating to get a small glimpse of how people were living back in time - and it's so fun to see what they were eating!

  • @thevampirelover
    @thevampirelover 2 роки тому +209

    I love these walkthroughs so much! The historical context is so interesting - particularly as someone who is not American - and the meticulous analysis of the process and the results is just fascinating. I'm rubbish at baking, but I love cultural deep-dives and cooking in general so these videos are just an absolute delight.

    • @giraffesinc.2193
      @giraffesinc.2193 2 роки тому

      I doubt you are rubbish if you are bothering to watch videos such as these! Give yourself credit!

    • @thevampirelover
      @thevampirelover 2 роки тому

      @@giraffesinc.2193 oh I am xD I can cook just fine, and love it, but baking bread and cakes is a different beast. I can certainly still appreciate the craft though, even if I have no mind for it myself.

  • @planningwithlyons9027
    @planningwithlyons9027 Рік тому +8

    I just have to say thanks!! You are so fun to watch I feel like it's live. But you are great for my ADHD. I want to become a better baker, BUT have the hardest time reading baking cook books that are super technical. I learned more about baking in this vid then trying to focus on a book. It's also great to see the stages to the end product. Thank you!!

  • @TheUnofficialNinja
    @TheUnofficialNinja 2 роки тому +246

    this actually reminds me a lot of the opposite baking method, "forgotten cookies", which are just meringue cookies that you leave in a cooling oven overnight! personally, I've only ever made meringue cookies the normal way and I keep forgetting to actually try the forgotten ones to see the difference

    • @enderborn6860
      @enderborn6860 2 роки тому +2

      thats funny

    • @bunk-o2495
      @bunk-o2495 2 роки тому +12

      I've literally only ever made meringue cookies over night and I didn't really ever consider that you could make them "normally" lolol which is silly like of course you can lol

    • @eddisianc8639
      @eddisianc8639 2 роки тому +9

      @@bunk-o2495 same here! My mom called them night night cookies because you supposedly could ONLY make them overnight in a cooling oven... Was shocked when I learned you could make them in only a few hours!

    • @mikalamcgowan
      @mikalamcgowan 2 роки тому +13

      My mom always did them over Easter because of the religious analogy with leaving Jesus un the tomb. We called them Easter cookies.

    • @alexia3552
      @alexia3552 2 роки тому +2

      The true forgotten meringue cookies lmao

  • @bonniemechefske3838
    @bonniemechefske3838 2 роки тому +387

    Yep. Best "cooking show" ever. I always wondered why you alternated the milk and flour. Dude your approach is so refreshing, enjoyable, articulate and informative!! May all your toothpicks come out clean!

  • @smontone
    @smontone 2 роки тому +223

    Dylan, my mom made a cake for my sisters birthday and it didn’t rise very well. I told her “your floofers could be outdated.” You have made a new word my friend, thank you.

    • @TheElfiestElf
      @TheElfiestElf Рік тому +18

      Just make sure to always say floofer because fluffer is another profession -entirely.-

    • @lilsunflower2713
      @lilsunflower2713 Рік тому +3

      @@TheElfiestElf 😂😂

    • @frankzaffuto3670
      @frankzaffuto3670 Рік тому +1

      @@TheElfiestElf there's no accounting for taste 🤷‍♂️🤶

    • @meredithwatterson6471
      @meredithwatterson6471 Рік тому +1

      Hello, please, what is a floofer? I'm dying to know, if you don't mind telling me?

    • @TheElfiestElf
      @TheElfiestElf Рік тому +2

      @@meredithwatterson6471 the 'floofers' or 'floor powder' is baking powder.

  • @kellybedzz2618
    @kellybedzz2618 Рік тому +8

    These full episodes though! Sweetly surprised how different they are from the shorts I've been seeing. I just subscribed to Dylan and this is the first full episode I happened to watch as it was randomly top of my feed today. So delightful and unexpectedly different from his also delightful shorts.
    First of all Dylan as so adorable it's like watching a red panda baking or something. Except with cute fashion. I just can't.
    But then he swoops in with this charming history AND science double whammy insight on this recipe and I am absolutely smitten. So pleased to have found my next youtube obsession to binge.🤩

  • @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst
    @JaniceWithTheTarlovCyst 2 роки тому +214

    Dylan, I remember my Grandmother buying margarine in a bag: it came with some food colouring inside and one would have to knead the oleo (yep, that's what she called it) until the food colouring was dispersed throughout the bag, giving it a sickly yellow appearance that was supposed to mimic butter. When she got a new bag of oleo and I was visiting, it was my job to knead the bag of oleo. Fun times 😜

    • @BDylanHollis
      @BDylanHollis  2 роки тому +99

      That's hilarious! I knew there were laws requiring grocers to not sell margarine that looked like butter, but I didn't know this is how they got around it 😂

    • @RHTQ1
      @RHTQ1 2 роки тому +7

      Ah, yes, oleo. A needed vocab term for using my grandmother's old telephone company cookbooks XD

    • @elif6908
      @elif6908 2 роки тому +7

      That was the result of dairy industry opposition to margarine, the dairy industry lobbied and managed to pass some state and some federal laws regarding the colour of the margarine to make it seem unappealing to the customers. It’s fascinating actually, if I’m not wrong some Canadian providences only stopped enforcing those laws in the last ten years or so.

    • @chrthiel
      @chrthiel 2 роки тому +9

      @@BDylanHollis It gets better. In some areas it was coloured pink! 99% Invisible did an episode about it last year. Episode 462

    • @mielei16
      @mielei16 2 роки тому

      Yes! My mom reminisced about this all of the time - in fact my family uses the word oleo instead of margarine because of how those bags were marked.

  • @littlepretzel5114
    @littlepretzel5114 2 роки тому +152

    Everything in this makes me happy. Yes to your feelings on real community recipes (I collect these for this very reason) and yes to your reminding us we don’t need a $600 kitchenaid to bake. So much fun, thank you!

  • @tterabyte_exe
    @tterabyte_exe 2 роки тому +286

    The love this man has for the craft of baking is so admirable it makes me ENCHANTED and astonished. i love the talking, the cookbook and how he incorporated his little comments of what he is currently thinking (the metric system article) it makes the video feel like you're talking to a college teacher

    • @lindaheath784
      @lindaheath784 2 роки тому +5

      I get the impression that he is very intelligent.

  • @sundarion0913
    @sundarion0913 Рік тому +4

    So, I love your videos! This one in particular, I am a chef. The things you bring forward about everyday kitchens and not having gadgets and other points of this video are amazing. You almost give me "good eats vibes" explaining the small things. Your awsome keep it up I will keep watching!

  • @maryel5398
    @maryel5398 2 роки тому +243

    I have never made a pound cake that wasn’t a “cold oven pound cake.” Wouldn’t ever use coconut flavoring though. We would also use sodas to flavor them - Sundrop Pound Cake is incredible!

    • @idek7438
      @idek7438 2 роки тому +15

      I misread sodas as soaps and did a double take...

    • @jacquesdixon2480
      @jacquesdixon2480 2 роки тому +10

      My family likes to do a 7-Up pound cake, it’s truly divine!

    • @spokehedz
      @spokehedz 2 роки тому +5

      @@jacquesdixon2480 I was wondering where all these various flavored soda cakes suddenly appeared from. Hmm.

    • @ips7125
      @ips7125 2 роки тому +1

      Mt dew cake is good too

    • @robertperez2262
      @robertperez2262 2 роки тому

      Yeah I never preheat lol

  • @sherrisimmons6637
    @sherrisimmons6637 2 роки тому +331

    I absolutely love seeing this side of Dylan! Although the shorter faster moving videos are very entertaining, I love seeing the way that you break everything down. I look forward to seeing videos of both types. One of my mom's favorite go to cookbooks was from this publisher!

    • @e.graceoldstoneroses9947
      @e.graceoldstoneroses9947 2 роки тому +1

      Agreed! I thoroughly enjoyed this longer video!

    • @RJanke65
      @RJanke65 2 роки тому +2

      I like the little "historical sidenotes" too! And I like the posts where he plays piano. TikTok & Twitter have ruined younger people (I was born in 1965 😱)..... "If it takes longer than a minute, forget about it". I can only hope the human race doesn't die out! Some things do take longer than a minute (we should hope anyway!!) With the "TikTok generation" who knows? (Maybe that was China's intention when they came up with TikTok......birth control....sex takes too long so younger people lose interest? 🤔 If you can't go fast like a rabbit forget it.) 😬 (I know.... I talk to much....) 🙄😒

    • @e.graceoldstoneroses9947
      @e.graceoldstoneroses9947 2 роки тому

      @@RJanke65 I like your perspective. You bring up interesting points!

    • @leevons_home_vids
      @leevons_home_vids 2 роки тому

      I honestly didn't even know he had a youtube channel with more detailed videos until just now. I'm already loving it because now I can write down the recipes. Sometimes in his shorter ones he doesn't list the ingredients and I'm like "awww :( "

  • @turquoiseandcoral
    @turquoiseandcoral 10 місяців тому +5

    I liked what you said about choosing not to use stand mixers 😊 I love to bake, too, and so I love the process. It's a sort of meditation, also feeling the batter texture change to cream with patience. When I could afford a stand mixer I would look at it and walk away. I also think about bakers creating pastry and cakes in the 1800's all from scratch and if they can create those fluffy beauties w/o a stand mixer - well, I can try, too 🥰

  • @fireflyserenity31
    @fireflyserenity31 2 роки тому +418

    On what you said about recipe periodicals, there is a community of historians, cultural reenactors, and culinary anthropologists that 100% agree with you on this point. Particularly from periods where professional chefs and their recipes were not made for lower classes to prepare or consume, we have to consider the source when drawing conclusions based on recorded information. Recipes by an average person for the average person are invaluable.

    • @PeggyWebb
      @PeggyWebb 2 роки тому +22

      I remember 1976. We were still fighting an "energy crisis." The cold oven method would have been sold as "energy efficient," much like Jimmy Carter's encouragement to "wear a sweater" during winter. Love your handle, Browncoat.

    • @fireflyserenity31
      @fireflyserenity31 2 роки тому +1

      @@PeggyWebb By my pretty floral bonnet, someone got the reference 😁

    • @AvaFayIliza
      @AvaFayIliza 2 роки тому +13

      As a cultural anthropologist (in training), I 100% agree. What the average person was doing, versus the perceived "elites", is much better at informing us what the culture as a whole was doing.

    • @jonahkirkhartericson5387
      @jonahkirkhartericson5387 2 роки тому +6

      Had a recipe for cookies from the 60s or 70s published in "Grit Magazine" that was a guaranteed purple ribbon at the state fair every year. Even though the magazine was considered a pretty "hick" periodical.

    • @Striiiider
      @Striiiider 2 роки тому +2

      @@jonahkirkhartericson5387 Do you still have the recipe

  • @masterson2032
    @masterson2032 2 роки тому +189

    As a culinary school graduate with a degree in Pastry Arts I absolutely LOVE your channel. No matter the platform. You have a great talent for baking and it shows. Youre also a WONDERFUL instructor.

  • @mayafabiennefrey8623
    @mayafabiennefrey8623 2 роки тому +647

    I only ever watched Dylan on Tiktok and the content is just pure comedy goal that always brings a smile to my face but when I stumbled over his YT account I didn't expect to find a series of videos as comforting as these. It became on of my few comfort shows that always help me feel better and brighten my day so
    Thank you Dylan 😊

    • @kyleplusguitar
      @kyleplusguitar 2 роки тому +4

      This

    • @soohdooj
      @soohdooj 2 роки тому +11

      i was gonna type a comment that pretty much said the same, this video has such a calm and pleasant vibe i instantly subscribed even if i follow him already on tik tok. this is probably going to be one of my fave cooking channels from now on

    • @Beatngu23
      @Beatngu23 2 роки тому +4

      Gold

    • @lefty007700
      @lefty007700 2 роки тому +4

      Was really waiting for moo-juice

    • @nikanj2
      @nikanj2 2 роки тому +1

      Same! Dude has that Will Hunting vibe of being really smart, but also down-to-earth