I need to tell you something. It's this:
Here's the deal. When you are testing recipes, sometimes you end up with extra layers of cake. Even good, high-demand cakes, like red velvet.
I realize that having extra, leftover red velvet cake layers sounds like a luxury--nay, an impossibility. How could a red velvet cake layer be around the house and not be slathered in cream cheese and eaten?
But, well, it did happen. Maybe never again, but it did happen just this once. And I have come up with the most brilliant solution for using this cake.
It started with the idea that I would do a sort of twice-baked thing with the cake cubes: red velvet croutons! Why not--you could eat them like cookies, right?
So I put a bunch of red velvet cake cubes on a baking sheet, drizzled it with butter and confectioners' sugar, and put it in the oven until it was all nice and crispy.
Then I set to using the "croutons" in various ways, all of them pleasant...
An ice cream topping:
as simple sweet snacks (like cake chips):
but then, I realized that hey, I could probably put milk on these and eat them as cereal.
And after that moment, all other uses for these red velvet cubes of joy disappeared. Because clearly, red velvet cereal was the winner.
Not quite a believer yet? Well, let me try to sway your affections by telling you some of the distinct advantages of red velvet cereal.
If you'd like to make this magic happen at home, here's how you do it.
Makes many cubes of cereal
Procedure