The seventies have a lot to answer for, in terms of taste transgressions: shag-pile carpet, bell bottoms and jello salad, to name a few. But recent evidence suggests that the poke cake might have the power to redeem the decade.
What, pray tell, is a poke cake? In the seventies, for some reason, home bakers began poking their sheet cakes with a fork, and pouring jelly – of all things – into the holes. The result was an often-ghoulish red or green streaked vanilla cake.
But now, thanks largely to Instagram, the poke cake is having a revival – and everything from salted caramel to molten chocolate is being poured into the holes. If that doesn’t sound historically important to you, have a look at this catalogue of visual evidence we have compiled. Here’s why poke cakes are the future.
1. If you use a contrasting colour, you can create a beautiful marbled effect.
2. It’s also a great way to add more sucrose to a cake that you might, in a grave error, have made too low in sugar.
3. Making neat rows of holes in freshly baked cakes is incredibly therapeutic. It’s almost meditative.
4. They’re able to adapt to all manner of flavours – like lemon, for instance.
5. Or red velvet.
6. Or even Snickers…
7. Yes, they’re a little retro.
8. But there’s no reason you can’t bring them up to date with a little root beer.
9. Or with salted caramel, fudge sauce and mascarpone cream cheese.
10. The genius, really, is in a poke cake’s ability to turn a dry sponge into something with a magnificently succulent texture.
11. And in their ability to expose a greater surface area of cake to icing and caramel.
12. And to offer the cake slicer an opportunity to snap a pic.
13. Ah, poke cake: you are the future.