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  2. Cookware and bakeware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cookware_and_bakeware

    Cake tins (or cake pans in the US) include square pans, round pans, and speciality pans such as angel food cake pans and springform pans often used for baking cheesecake. Another type of cake pan is a muffin tin, which can hold multiple smaller cakes. Sheet pans, cookie sheets, and Swiss roll tins are bakeware with large flat bottoms. Pie pans ...

  3. Springform pan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Springform_pan

    Close-up of spring Base and wall belt Pan with finished cheesecake Springform pan used to make a Deep-dish pizza crust. A springform pan is a type of bakeware that features sides that can be removed from the base.

  4. Muffin tin - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Muffin_tin

    A common muffin/cupcake tin. A muffin or cupcake tray is a mold in which muffins or cupcakes are baked. A single cup within a regular muffin tin is 100 millilitres (3.5 US fl oz) [citation needed] and most often has room for 12 muffins, although tins holding 6, 8, 11, 24, and 35 muffins do exist.

  5. Bundt cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bundt_cake

    Usually heating cores are recommended for even heat distribution in deep cake tins and standard cakes larger than 9 inches in diameter. To bake in standard sized tins, Bundt recipes need conversion. A standard 9-inch cake pan holds around six cups volume, so a 12-cup Bundt recipe will fill two standard cake pans, or one 13x9 sheet pan. [9]

  6. Sheet pan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheet_pan

    A baker places a hot sheet pan full of bread rolls onto a cooling rack.. A sheet pan, also referred to as baking tray, baking sheet, or baking pan, is a flat, rectangular metal pan placed in an oven and used for baking pastries such as bread rolls, cookies, sheet cakes, Swiss rolls, and pizzas.

  7. Chiffon cake - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chiffon_cake

    The recipe is credited to Harry Baker (1883–1974), a Californian insurance salesman turned caterer. Baker kept the recipe secret for 20 years until he sold it to General Mills, which spread the recipe through marketing materials in the 1940s and 1950s under the name "chiffon cake", and a set of 14 recipes and variations was released to the public in a Betty Crocker pamphlet published in 1948.

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