Showing posts with label 8" round. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 8" round. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 7, 2010

Happy Birthday, Becca!

This was a fun cake to make because I got to decorate it with my sisters and my mom (plus a friend)! We took turns piping the border and we all made some flowers out of homemade white modeling chocolate. Ta-dah!



Becca made the biggest flower and I thought it turned out really pretty. Here it is!



STATS:

Sylvia Weinstock's Yellow Cake:
http://archives.cnn.com/2000/FOOD/news/02/09/sylvia.weinstock/yellow.cake.html

Raspberry Filling:
Heat jar of Polaner seedless raspberry jam in microwave for 15-30 seconds, until spreadable. Stir in packet of raspberry jello until jello is dissolved. That's it!

Modeling Chocolate:
Melt 10 ounces of any kind of chocolate you like in a microwave or in a double boiler. Stir in 1/3 of a cup of light corn syrup. Stir for a couple of minutes until well combined. Spread on waxed paper and allow to cool at room temperature for 2 hours. When cool, break large chunks off and knead until soft. Store in the refrigerator in a ziplock bag for up to a month. Break off small pieces and knead when you are ready to make something with your modeling chocolate. Return to refrigerator for 10-15 minutes if it starts to get too warm and sticky from the heat of your hands.

Have fun!

Friday, June 25, 2010

Happy Birthday, Aubrie!

I wanted the inside of the cake to have a rainbow of colors, so I divided the cake batter into five small bowls and added food coloring. Then, I just dropped spoonfuls of the batter into the cake pan.

This is how it looked baked.

I found an image of a hibiscus flower online and printed it out. Then I used the pin prick method to make an outline of the flower on my fondant-covered cake.

I used glace icing to make the large flower.
(1 cup powdered sugar: 1 Tbsp. milk: 1 Tbsp. corn syrup...add milk a small amount at a time to the desired consistency.)

I used homemade marshmallow fondant to cover the cake and to make the small flowers attached to the side of the cake. I used a small flower-shaped fondant cutter to cut out all of the tiny flowers. I used glace icing to attach them to the cake.

A tiny dot of glace icing was piped into the center of each flower to finish the cake.

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Winter Piano Recital Cake

To make the diamond pattern in the buttercream frosting, I waited a couple of hours for the buttercream to crust while cooling in the refrigerator. Using a ruler and a toothpick, I marked off one inch intervals along the top and bottom edges of the cake. Then, I used the back of a butter knife to match up the toothpick marks and create the lines for the diamonds. (It's strange because the diamonds didn't end up looking uniform in size even though I measured and marked off everything first. I think part of the problem is trying to use a straight edge to mark the curved surface of the cake.)



I think the white dots made the diamonds look a lot better. I used a #2 writing tip to pipe the dots in white buttercream. The dots had little peaks on them from lifting the piping tip away and I didn't like how that looked, so I dipped my finger in water and pressed the peaks down to make the dots nice and smooth.



I used the pin prick method and some free-handing to pipe the treble clef onto the top of the cake. There are a couple of different ways you can do the pin prick method.

1. Trace the image you want onto waxed paper, cut it out, then place the waxed paper image onto the cake. Use a sharp pin to prick through the paper into the frosting, so that when you lift it away, you will just need to pipe over the dots left in the icing (sort of like connect the dots).

2. Trace the image onto waxed paper and cut it out. BEFORE placing it on the cake, use a pin to prick through the paper (with a towel or styrofoam behind it). When you lift up the paper, you will see the bumps on the back of the paper left from the pin going through. Place this onto the crusted buttercream icing and gently rub over the image. This will leave the pattern on the frosting and you can pipe the design on top.

I used the first method for this cake. I had some problems with it, mostly because the paper kept pulling back up off the cake every time I lifted the pin. I'll try the second method next time.



I decorated the top and bottom edges with shell borders. The bottom edge just has a reverse shell border. I layered two borders on top of each other for the top edge. I used a regular shell border underneath a reverse shell border. Follow this link for instructions on how to make the reverse shell border: http://www.bakedecoratecelebrate.com/techniques/reverseshell.cfm
Here's the link for instructions on the regular shell border:
http://www.wilton.com/technique/Shell



I used a White Almond Sour Cream (WASC) recipe for the cake and a raspberry filling for the inside. The WASC is delicious and easy. You start out with a regular old cake mix, but add some yummy ingredients like sour cream and almond extract. Here's a link to the WASC cake recipe:
http://cakecentral.com/recipes/7445/the-original-wasc-cake-recipe It calls for a generous dash of salt, but I always leave that out. It tastes fine without it.

The filling is just as good and only has two ingredients: seedless raspberry jelly and raspberry jello.

-10 oz. jar of Polaner seedless raspberry jelly (I just used Polaner because that's the one that was listed on the original recipe, but I'm sure others would work just as well).

-4 oz. box of raspberry jello

Scoop out the entire jar of jelly into a microwave-safe bowl. Heat for 30-60 seconds until it's melted slightly and easy to stir. It should be the consistency of a pie filling and nice and smooth. Add the box of raspberry jello straight into the jelly and stir until the jello powder is dissolved. This is enough filling for an 8" torted cake (filling three layers).

Don't forget to make a frosting dam before you add the filling. The frosting dam is just a ring of thick frosting that you pipe around the edge of a layer before you add the filling. If you don't do this, the filling will leak out the sides of your cake, even after it's frosted. You don't want a bleeding cake!

Sunday, November 15, 2009

German Chocolate Cake

This was my first time applying simple syrup to a cake layer. (Simple syrup is just 1 cup of sugar boiled together with a cup of water until the sugar dissolves. For added flavor, you can add a little vanilla, almond, or orange extract to the syrup once it is cooled.) This will ensure the cake is nice and moist. For this size cake, you only need about 1/3 of the syrup mixture. I found out after I made the cake that once you apply the simple syrup, you should let it rest for a couple hours before frosting your cake. This will allow the syrup to evenly spread throughout the cake layer.


I decided to trim the edges off of the cake before I added the coconut pecan filling because I think I overbaked it a little (oops!).


Frosted and smoothed. Almost done!


And.....Tadah! The finished cake!


This was my first attempt at a reverse shell border. Here's a link to a tutorial for the border if you'd like to try your hand at it:
http://www.bakedecoratecelebrate.com/techniques/reverseshell.cfm