
Expert Explains Cold-Oven Pound Cake Baking Method
There are few things more comforting or better with a cup of tea than a homemade pound cake — the kind of cake that doesn't need frosting or fancy fillings to be absolutely scrumdiddlyumptious. But there's one lesser-known technique that quietly separates bakers who consult cookbooks from those who learned at grandma's elbow: starting your pound cake in a cold oven.
At Tasty, we inherited a cold-oven pound cake recipe that's been a beloved mainstay at one family's gatherings for decades. 'This recipe is so popular in our family because it's so easy,' says Kemi, who baked the cake alongside her aunt in a recent video. 'It looks like it takes a lot of time, but it really doesn't — and it's kind of foolproof.'
The cake she's referring to is Aunt Gussie's Pound Cake — a buttery, lemon-vanilla loaf baked without preheating the oven. It's a technique many younger bakers are encountering for the first time, but for countless Southern families, it's simply tradition.
To learn more about the technique, we had to consult an expert. TikTok creator and pound cake expert Jaffry Ward, who's known for sharing soul-soothing bakes, says the cold-oven method absolutely works, as long as you're looking for a specific outcome.
'I do sometimes start my pound cake in a cold oven,' he told Tasty. 'The gradual heating helps the batter rise evenly and creates a tender crumb with a nice crust.'
Hey, you! Wanna cook thousands of recipes on your phone in step-by-step mode? Download the free Tasty app right now.
Now back to your regularly scheduled programming!
As the oven slowly comes to temperature, the cake rises gently as the exterior of the cake has time to bake into a golden, crackly shell (the kind you want to peel off and eat first).
Still, Jaffry notes that it's not always his go-to. 'Honestly, I've baked the majority of my pound cakes in a preheated oven, and they always come out perfect,' he said. 'In my experience, the cold-oven method can sometimes result in a slightly drier cake — especially if the recipe doesn't include extra fat, like sour cream or cream cheese.'
The acidity and fat in cultured dairy products, such as cream cheese and sour cream, help to tenderize and moisturize butter cakes like pound cake. Aunt Gussie's recipe uses standard whole milk, but if you want to follow Jaffry's suggestion, you can substitute half of the whole milk with sour cream, crème fraîche, or cream cheese; this swap will result in an extra moist cake with a slightly tangy flavor.
Even if you stick with plain old whole milk, Aunt Gussie's cake holds up beautifully (thanks to a bit of shortening in the butter base and a bunch of eggs). We find the texture stays moist even through the longer bake. 'You don't have to preheat the oven… it's the technique,' Kemi says — and it's one her family has trusted for generations.
More than just a method for better texture, cold-oven baking is, for many, a tradition wrapped in memory. 'When I make it, I think about my mother,' Kemi told Tasty. 'This recipe is keeping her alive — and the memory of her.'
So, is the cold-oven method the way to go? If you're after that signature crust, a gently risen crumb, and the kind of cake that comes with a story — it's absolutely worth a try.
As Jaffry says: 'I can't argue it gives you a great crust.' And that might be all the reason you need to bake it the way grandma — and Aunt Gussie — did.
To access our step-by-step video tutorial as well as the full grocery list for Aunt Gussie's Pound Cake, download the free Tasty app and search "pound cake." Happy Baking!

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Buzz Feed
11 hours ago
- Buzz Feed
Expert Explains Cold-Oven Pound Cake Baking Method
There are few things more comforting or better with a cup of tea than a homemade pound cake — the kind of cake that doesn't need frosting or fancy fillings to be absolutely scrumdiddlyumptious. But there's one lesser-known technique that quietly separates bakers who consult cookbooks from those who learned at grandma's elbow: starting your pound cake in a cold oven. At Tasty, we inherited a cold-oven pound cake recipe that's been a beloved mainstay at one family's gatherings for decades. 'This recipe is so popular in our family because it's so easy,' says Kemi, who baked the cake alongside her aunt in a recent video. 'It looks like it takes a lot of time, but it really doesn't — and it's kind of foolproof.' The cake she's referring to is Aunt Gussie's Pound Cake — a buttery, lemon-vanilla loaf baked without preheating the oven. It's a technique many younger bakers are encountering for the first time, but for countless Southern families, it's simply tradition. To learn more about the technique, we had to consult an expert. TikTok creator and pound cake expert Jaffry Ward, who's known for sharing soul-soothing bakes, says the cold-oven method absolutely works, as long as you're looking for a specific outcome. 'I do sometimes start my pound cake in a cold oven,' he told Tasty. 'The gradual heating helps the batter rise evenly and creates a tender crumb with a nice crust.' Hey, you! Wanna cook thousands of recipes on your phone in step-by-step mode? Download the free Tasty app right now. Now back to your regularly scheduled programming! As the oven slowly comes to temperature, the cake rises gently as the exterior of the cake has time to bake into a golden, crackly shell (the kind you want to peel off and eat first). Still, Jaffry notes that it's not always his go-to. 'Honestly, I've baked the majority of my pound cakes in a preheated oven, and they always come out perfect,' he said. 'In my experience, the cold-oven method can sometimes result in a slightly drier cake — especially if the recipe doesn't include extra fat, like sour cream or cream cheese.' The acidity and fat in cultured dairy products, such as cream cheese and sour cream, help to tenderize and moisturize butter cakes like pound cake. Aunt Gussie's recipe uses standard whole milk, but if you want to follow Jaffry's suggestion, you can substitute half of the whole milk with sour cream, crème fraîche, or cream cheese; this swap will result in an extra moist cake with a slightly tangy flavor. Even if you stick with plain old whole milk, Aunt Gussie's cake holds up beautifully (thanks to a bit of shortening in the butter base and a bunch of eggs). We find the texture stays moist even through the longer bake. 'You don't have to preheat the oven… it's the technique,' Kemi says — and it's one her family has trusted for generations. More than just a method for better texture, cold-oven baking is, for many, a tradition wrapped in memory. 'When I make it, I think about my mother,' Kemi told Tasty. 'This recipe is keeping her alive — and the memory of her.' So, is the cold-oven method the way to go? If you're after that signature crust, a gently risen crumb, and the kind of cake that comes with a story — it's absolutely worth a try. As Jaffry says: 'I can't argue it gives you a great crust.' And that might be all the reason you need to bake it the way grandma — and Aunt Gussie — did. To access our step-by-step video tutorial as well as the full grocery list for Aunt Gussie's Pound Cake, download the free Tasty app and search "pound cake." Happy Baking!


Chicago Tribune
15 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Chuka Emezue: Raising sons in the age of digital masculinity
Celebrating Father's Day in the U.S. evokes images of dads at grills, toddlers joyfully perched on shoulders and heartfelt tributes. Behind these cherished moments lies a silent crisis: boys and young men navigating a digital minefield where messaging around masculinity promotes dominance over empathy, toughness over vulnerability, and isolation over connection. All of it is shaping a generation at risk of mental health challenges, violence and despair. Caught in this cultural crossfire, young boys and men are flooded with social media content in which personal growth is packaged as a countercultural break from the mainstream. In truth, this type of messaging reinforces the norms it claims to reject. As a father, mentor and researcher working with young boys and men who survive, witness and use violence, I see how online spaces have become powerful in shaping their identity. A slew of online accounts now focuses on shaping how boys perceive strength, integrity and vulnerability in ways that have serious real-world consequences. When boys and men are socialized to fear vulnerability, equate power with aggression and distrust care, we cannot be surprised that many young men struggle with mental health, suicidal ideation and substance use; lash out; or avoid emotional intimacy. We live in an era in which perverse forms of masculinity are algorithmically promoted, politically exploited and culturally rebranded. In the wake of this gender reckoning, curious forms of masculinity have emerged online. The algorithm is flooding young boys and men with content from 'grindset' coaches or 'manfluencers' promising transformation through military-level self-discipline, and even self-mutilation, under the guise of self-improvement. A 2024 study from Dublin City University found that 62% of recommended videos on YouTube Shorts and TikTok for accounts set up as boys featured 'alpha male' or dominance-focused content disguised as self-help by adult manfluencers preying on their young and impressionable viewers. There is also a reemergence of artificially nostalgic versions of women with the rise of the 'tradwife' movement on TikTok, signaling a reactionary return to 'traditional' female roles framed as a remedy for declining male authority. Similarly, the newly popular 'clean girl' aesthetic is idealized by thin, white, porcelain-skinned and obediently minimalist women, offering a polished, passive image of femininity that complements these masculine masculinity redefines itself online, gaps in the real world continue to widen. Girls and women now outperform boys at nearly every educational level. Boys have lower reading and writing scores, are more likely to be suspended or diagnosed with learning and behavioral issues, and are less likely to graduate from high school or attend college. Traditional male roles, such as provider or protector, have been redefined by economic, social and technological changes in recent years. It is unsurprising that mental health crises among boys and young men are increasing. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, suicide rates among adolescent boys have increased by over 30% in the past decade. Likewise, opioid deaths and social isolation are higher among men, especially young and working-class males. This rise is paralleled by a concerning decline in those receiving mental health care, with only 34% of men seeking help compared with more than 50% of women. Rather than adapting, many boys and men are left confused, resentful and aimless. Fatherhood and positive male role modeling must offer a different path for young boys and men caught in this crisis of masculinity. This issue extends beyond the boys themselves, signifying a crisis in parenting and the systems that support parents. For those of us raising or mentoring sons, this issue warrants a re-evaluation of how we wished to be supported during our own upbringing. It is crucial to recognize that many parents grapple with their own trauma and mental health issues, which makes it difficult to provide what they themselves lack. Often, this trauma is passed down generationally, and now they face the challenge of raising both sons and daughters while managing this unaddressed trauma. This underscores the importance of parenting education and fatherhood programs. Equally vital are involved fathers, positive role modeling, mentoring and the presence of visible, engaged male educators, especially for boys growing up without male caregivers. Constructive, gender-specific interventions that help boys and men thrive without undermining gender equity are also crucial. Father's Day reminds us that while we cannot solve these issues overnight, we can work toward healing at home, in schools and online. We must nurture boys and men to fearlessly connect with their emotions, support their peers, play, enjoy peace and openly embrace empathy. We need boys who understand consent. Boys who value care over control. Boys who show vulnerability instead of 'manning up.' Boys who feel hopeful. Digital masculinity is not merely an abstract concept or a passing trend; it is actively shaping our children's perceptions of love, identity and self-worth. We cannot afford to remain passive observers while technology raises our children. Our boys are watching, and it is imperative that we take action to guide them through this transformative landscape of masculinity.


Buzz Feed
a day ago
- Buzz Feed
Turn Your Kid's Leftovers Into Dinner — Here's How
TikTok parents have a new 'hack' for dealing with the chaos that is toddler mealtime: Instead of tossing all the half-eaten chicken nuggets, squished fruit, and mutilated PB&Js, they're turning those leftovers into helpful food items, toddler lunches, and sometimes even full-blown adult meals, as evidenced by TikTok user @ delicious leftover-sourced snack platter. The idea is simple (and kind of genius?): Take the scraps your kid didn't touch and transform them into something you actually want to eat — all in the name of reducing food waste, saving time, and, let's be honest, maintaining your grip on reality. I'd bet every parent has felt the frustration of throwing away full plates of barely-eaten food. As a mom of two toddlers (yes, I survived the two under two club.. barely), I am equal parts intrigued and deeply skeptical. Can this actually work, or is it just one more unrealistic parenting fantasy brought to you by the internet? I decided to try it using my own kids' real dinner leftovers. Here's what happened. The "meal" I attempted to make? Turning leftover meatloaf into mini sliders. The Leftovers: The Upgrade: Hey, you! Wanna cook 7,500+ recipes in step-by-step mode (with helpful videos) right from your phone? Download the free Tasty app right now. The Verdict: Honestly? It was delicious. The meatloaf held up surprisingly well, and the extra ketchup totally brought it back to life. But — and this is a big but — it wasn't exactly effortless. I made this while my toddlers were at daycare and ate it in peace. The real work wasn't the cooking, it was the mental energy of figuring out how to reinvent a kid's half-eaten plate. Was it a fun little culinary challenge? Sure. Was it some life-changing mom hack? Absolutely not. Now, I did walk away from this experiment with a few useful takeaways. Thinking about my kids' leftovers differently — not as trash, but as potential ingredients — can actually lead to some smart, sustainable wins. For example: Small shifts like these make me feel a little less wasteful and a little more creative in the kitchen without all the pressure of a full-fledged meal! At the end of the day, the toddler leftovers trend is... a mixed bag. If you've got the time, energy, and mental space, it can be a fun way to reduce waste and flex some creative kitchen muscles. But if your kids are screaming, the sink is full, and you haven't sat down since breakfast? It's also completely OK to eat a half-eaten grilled cheese over the counter and call it a win. Would you try this trend with your own kids? If you want to (or already have!), let me know what you're thinking about making in the comments. And for good measure, here are my kids (sort of) eating their dinner. For hundreds of kid-friendly recipes, download the free Tasty app for iOS and Android!