Wise journalists, students and trivia contestants know not to trust Wikipedia unthinkingly. There is no better support for this rule of thumb than the open-source encyclopedia’s entry for carrot cake, which currently begins:
“Carrot cake is a cake or pie which contains carrots mixed into the batter. The carrot softens in the cooking process, and the cake usually has a soft, dense texture. The carrots themselves do not enhance the flavor, texture and appearance of the cake.”
The misinformation contained in these three sentences boggles the mind. Carrot cake is self-evidently not a pie. Carrots absolutely enhance the flavor of carrot cake — it’s not like all their flavor compounds evaporate while the cake is baking. Furthermore, as sentence No. 2 of the above paragraph attests, they affect the texture, too, lending the batter moisture and body. Carrots also quite obviously enhance the appearance of cake, assuming you consider bright, cheerful orange specks to be a visual enhancement. (I do, and freckle fetishists the world over agree with me.) To assert that the “carrots themselves do not enhance the flavor, texture and appearance of the cake” is to inadvertently raise all sorts of troubling questions about the nature of perception and existence. (If a carrot falls into a cake batter and no one is around to taste it …)
Anyway, Wikipedia’s diligent volunteer editors are clearly mistaken about carrot cake, which is a great foodstuff, and which needs carrots the way Ben Folds Five needs Ben Folds.