With the Hostess Twinkies gone from the grocery shelves, this is a good cake to make to bring back childhood memories of going to the store and buying a package of Twinkies. I liked the packages of Snowballs better than the Twinkies.
Twinkie Cake is a basic yellow cake baked in a 9x13-inch pan and then frosted with a wonderful fluffy marshmallow frosting. The base of the frosting dates back to World War II when sugar was rationed. Milk and flour are cooked together to form a paste and chilled. Butter and shortening are beaten together with the chilled paste added. The frosting becomes like thick and fluffy whipped cream flavored with vanilla and marshmallow cream. Without the marshmallow cream, this frosting was the traditional frosting put on a red velvet cake. It was not cream cheese frosting like is used now.
To make the frosting, the "Twinkie Filling," I use Baker's Sugar which is now available in the grocery stores. It is an ultra fine granulated sugar that dissolves faster when making this frosting. I like to make the frosting with my big stand mixer so I don't have to stand and hold my hand mixer while beating the mixture to make it light and fluffy.
Just two of the ingredients needed to make a Twinkie Cake, yellow cake mix and Marshmallow Creme.
1 (2 layer) yellow cake mix plus ingredients needed to bake the cake.
5 T flour
1 c milk
1 c fine granulated sugar
½ c shortening
½ c butter, softened
1 ½ t vanilla
½ t salt
½ c powdered sugar
½ c marshmallow crème
Bake cake according to package directions in a 9x13-inch
pan. Cool. Combine flour and milk in a small saucepan. Mix well.
Cook, over medium heat, stirring constantly until thick. Place a piece
of waxed paper or plastic wrap over the mixture to prevent a skin from forming
and chill in refrigerator. Meanwhile, in a large bowl, beat shortening, butter, vanilla and salt until light and fluffy. Add cooled milk mixture and granulated sugar, continue to beat
until very light, fluffy and the sugar crystals are dissolved and the mixture
is not grainy. Test by rubbing between
fingers or on tongue. Should not be able
to feel any grittiness. Beat in powdered
sugar and marshmallow crème until mixture is very, very light, fluffy and looks
like whipped cream. For Twinkie Bar
Cookies: Split cake lengthwise into
halves. Spread frosting on bottom layer
and top with second layer of split cake.
Cut into bars. For a Twinkie
Cake: Frost cake with frosting. Best stored in the refrigerator.
NOTE: To mix flour and milk without lumps, I use an old-fashioned two-cup gravy
shaker but a clean screw top jar, like a mayonnaise jar, works as well. Put cold milk in shaker or jar, measure in
flour, put on lid, and shake well.
Enjoy, enjoy, enjoy!!!!
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