Vanilla cake.
A cake that was broiled instead of baked - by accident one must assume - would need to be thrown out, because the top would be burned and the interior raw.
One name for an iced sponge cake is Baked Alaska.
The noun cake is a count noun; for example:My mom baked four cakes. One cake for me and three cakes for the bake sale.
Yes. The common safe time for frozen baked goods is one month.
Chocolate cake will be good for approximately one week when refrigerated.
There are a number of recipes for "Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends Cake" posted on the Internet. Most seem to be baked in special train-shaped cake molds (pans.) The best way to find the most suitable recipe would be to "Google" the words "thomas and friends cake".
Fudge is the number one dessert food in America. Chocolate cake and chocolate chip cookies are numbers two and three.
The answer is candy bar because it does not have to be baked
The terms are interchangeable. "Sheath" cake seems to be unique to Texas, whereas the rest of the country tends to use "sheet" cake. "Sheet" cake refers to the pan the cake is baked in; no one seems to know how the term "sheath" originated.
make one yourself.
One dessert with ice-cream in the middle named after a North American state would be Baked Alaska. Baked Alaska is a dessert with a sponge cake base topped with ice-cream and meringue that is quickly baked in the oven to brown the meringue.
I bake. To bake.Additional information:When the word is used as an adjective, describing a type of food, it is always in the past tense: Baked chicken, baked macaroni, baked apples.The word is in the past tense because the food being described was baked in the past - or possibly, it will have been baked. "We plan to have baked chicken for lunch tomorrow."The word generally is used in this way for foods that might be prepared in a number of different ways. Chicken might be stewed, roasted or baked. Apples might be raw, fried, candied or baked. One would not describe cake, cookies, pies or muffins with the adjective "baked," because those pastries have no other way of preparation. They are always baked, so the adjective is not needed.