Sunday, December 13, 2009

Candyland Topsy Turvy Cake

This was so much fun to make... it is3 tiers, each tier having 3 layers.  The bottom tier is a 12"chocolate round, the middle tier is an 8" vanilla butter round and the top is a 6" strawberry round.  It is covered in marshmallow fondant, the borders around the  bottom of each tier are made of Skittles.  The Candyland path and flowers are mmf.  The suckers and swirly pops are hand made from mmf, as well.  I really hope the birthday girl loves it!

Friday, December 11, 2009

Superhero Cake

My boys haven't see this one, yet, but I am sure they will have a fit over it!  It is for a little boy's 2nd birthday party.  It was so fun to make!  Tried a couple of new things this time; 1- by using foam board as a base... I like it so far... much easier to cut to size than cardboard, and seems to hold it's shape well (not bend like cake boards), and 2-covered the cake board in a plastic tablecloth... simply b/c the base needed to be red and there were no other viable options locally.... this turned out to work perfectly, in my opinion.  The bottom tier is a 10-inch round in chocolate, the top tier is cut from a 9x13" sheet cake (cut in half, stacked then carved into the Superman logo shape).  It is covered and decorated in marshmallow fondant.  The spiderweb on the base is black buttercream icing.

Saturday, November 21, 2009

3-d elephant


This turned out so cute, but it was a big challenge!  It is made using the 3-d Cuddly Bear pan by Wilton.. cutting off the bear ears and added cardboard elephant ears and an icing trunk.  It is not an easy pan to bake or decorate, but the results are so cute!

NOTE:  if you use the 3-d bear pan, the directions call for 6 cups of batter in the bear and 2/3 cups batter in the heating core.... it actually took about 8 cups of batter in the bear, 2/3 in the core, otherwise it would not have filled up while baking ( I imagine this will vary depending on your recipe)...it should bake over and leak out a little during baking to ensure that it fills out completely.  Also... all you should have to do to ensure a firm cake for this pan is reduce the amount of oil you use by 1/2... this worked great for me, and I didn't have to use a different recipe at all.  Follow all the included directions for assembling the pan and cooling the cake, though... otherwise the cake will fall apart.

Thursday, November 19, 2009

New Moon Cake


I really enjoyed making this one!!  I am another Twilight fan, afterall!  This is an 8-inch round in vanilla butter, frosted in buttercream then covered in black fondant.  I added a red fondant ribbon around the bottom (there is a red bow at the back... not pictured... to hide the seam where the ribbon meets).  The orchid on top is made to look like the one on  the New Moon book cover.  I made it by first shaping a little white fondant to add dimension to the petals (like a rough flower-shaped blob, lol)... I then rolled and cut out the petals individually and gave shape to the edges using a spherical measuring spoon (pressing down along the edges to thin and shape the petal).  I added veins using a veining tool and painted the red on using a mixture of about 1/4 teaspoon vodka and 1/4 teaspoon red-red icing color (the vodka thins it just enough for painting with brush).  "And so the lion fell in love with the lamb..." is on top, "new moon" is on the front of the cake.  I hope the girls love it!

Friday, November 13, 2009

Big Ladybug Cake

I love all the girlie colors and the lime green paired with the pink on this cake!  This is a 14-inch round topped with a 10-inch round and a ladybug carved from 2 6-inch rounds.  They are frosted in buttercream with fondant dots and accents.

I get so many emails about this cake, that I have added a couple more photos of the ladybug portion that were taken from different angles. 

Wednesday, November 11, 2009

Halloween-Birthday Cake!

This was so fun to make.  I love the ghost on top!  It is an 8-inch round and a 6-inch round, both carved down slightly on the sides and tilted on top into a topsy turvy style cake.  It is covered in MMF.  The ghost on top is cake covered in white chocolate (to prevent it from collapsing under the weight of the fondant) then draped in 2 layers of MMF--the eyes and mouth are fondant.  The little ghosts visible on the right side of the picture are simply large marshmallows with a drop of white chocolate on top, then draped in MMF.  I used a food marker to draw on their eyes and mouths. 

Saturday, October 31, 2009

Oriental Temple with Panda

This cake was a fun challenge. It is a 10-inch round frosted with buttercream with a fondant ribbon and Korean characters on the bottom. The temple is carved from an 11x15 inch sheet cake, which I cut into squares and stacked. There are 3 layers in the temple itself, and the roof is 2 layers. The gold accents on the roof, the door and #1 and the panda are all fondant. It was for a boy's first birthday... I hope he had a wonderful day!

Friday, October 23, 2009

Stan & Wendy's Wedding Cake

This cake was designed by the bride and groom. The monkey's and bananas are hand-sculpted from marshmallow fondant. The cakes are torted to be 4 layers each and the flavor is white with raspberry filling. The tiers are covered in a basket-weave design done with tip #47 and the sizes are as follows: 11" sea-foam green square, 8" yellow round, 6" pink round. Congratulations Stan and Wendy!

Saturday, October 17, 2009

Horses!

I just love this cake! It is a 6-inch on an 8-inch, both tiers are 3 layers tall. It is covered in marshmallow fondant, with hand-sculpted horse's peeking over the fence, out of the barn and laying on top. The corn or hay stalks are mmf that has been pressed through a garlic press... a very easy way to achieve several strands at once, rather than hand rolling them individually. I hope the birthday girl likes her cake!










Sunday, October 11, 2009

Spongebob

This cake was so fun... I love all the bright colors! It is a 10-inch round with a an almost 5 inch pineapple. The leaves on the pineapple (and the stovepipe) are made of candy. Spongebob and Patrick are part of a cake kit I purchased at Ingles.

Sunday, September 20, 2009

Pig and Cow Print cake

This is so cute... cow print and a pink pig! I love the effect of the bandana covered board! I stapled the bandana to the board as neatly as possible, then covered it with clear cellophane (available at the Dollar Tree). I used cellophane to keep the bandana from staining or smearing with the icing. I was afraid the cellophane would not be food-safe, so I cut a circle of wax paper the same size as the cake and taped it down on top of the cellophane. It is frosted in butter cream with fondant ears and cow print.

Saturday, September 19, 2009

Barnyard Cake


This cake was so much fun to make! All the animals are hand-sculpted from marshmallow fondant. The sheet cake is an 11x15 inch chocolate cake. The barn, silo and haystack are carved from an 11x15 inch vanilla-butter cake. It is frosted entirely in butter cream. The cow and the chicken on the barn roof are my favorite parts! Hope the birthday girl likes it!

Wednesday, August 26, 2009

Ladybug

This was so much fun to make! It was done as a first birthday smash cake. It is a 6-inch round, with a 3-inch ball-shaped head. It is frosted in buttercream, but all the black elements (dots, eyes, antennae, etc...) are fondant.
Note: the photograph was taken by the birthday girl's mom, Amy. Check her out at www.murphys-memories.com

Alligator

This is becoming a popular cake! I used tip 21 pull-out stars on this one, and really like the effect better than tip 18. I used tip 12 to make the teeth and claws. I heated, stirred and poured the icing on to the cupcake-eyes to make them super smooth. the cake board was thinly "iced" with corn syrup (for sticking power!) and covered in graham cracker crumbs to look like sand. Note to self: writing in icing on "sand" is almost impossible! Everytime I picked up the icing tip at the end of a letter... the sand would lift off, bringing the letter with it... stick to writing on the cake or cake board! This cake is cut from 2 1/4-sheet cakes... it serves at least 30.... I need to work on scaling it down to one sheet cake to serve 10-15, I'm just not sure how.

Friday, August 14, 2009

Motorcycle


This groom's cake was a challenge, to say the least! It is cut from an 11x15" sheet cake and is made to look like the groom's own motorcycle. I hope they enjoy it!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Waterslide

This was a fun cake, and I love the summery colors. This is an 8-inch round on a 12-inch round, decorated entirely in marshmallow fondant, with buttercream "water" at the bottom of the slide. This cake was inspired by a picture found on cakecentral.com

Friday, July 31, 2009

Pirate Ship


This was SO much fun to make! My boys watched me go through every step and loved every minute of it (they are huge pirate fans!). My oldest son helped me tea-stain the paper to make the sails. This cake started as an 11x15 inch sheet cake. I cut it into 3 equal sections... roughly 11" x 5" each. I frosted the tops and stacked them together. I then carved it into the shape of a ship, using the section I cut out of the middle to raise up the back portion (behind the captain). I piped on chocolate frosting using 3 different size basket-weave tips, to add dimension. I used a stop-start-stop motion to try to acheive the look of wooden planks. I also tried to stack them like bricks to make it more apparent that they were wooden planks. The actual plank on the ship is made from chocolate. The masts are 1/4 " dowels. The sails, as mentioned, are made from tea-stained paper to make them look old. I also burned the edges lightly to add to that effect. The pirates are hand-sculpted from marshmallow fondant. I used images from Wilton.com and Cake Central.com as inspiration for the ship and the pirates.

Tuesday, July 14, 2009

Over the Hill Tombstone Cake

I hope the birthday girl doesn't mind too much!!
This is carved from a 1/4 sheet cake. The packages and "50" are cookies iced with cookie frosting (1 cup powdered sugar, 2 Tbsp corn syrup, 2 Tbsp milk, icing color).

Saturday, July 11, 2009

Zebra Print with Pink Flowers


This was a fun cake to make! Zebra print, pink flowers and pink pearls! This cake is covered in fondant with fondant pearls and silk gladiolas.

Thursday, June 25, 2009

Alligator Cake

This cake is cut from 2 quarter-sheet cakes. It is surrounded by graham cracker crumbs to look like sand. I piped tip 18 pull-out stars all over it. The eyes are from cupcakes that I carved to make rounder.


Saturday, June 20, 2009

Tinkerbell Tiered Cake

This is one of my new personal favorites! This is an 11x15 inch sheet cake, with an 8-inch (one layer) and a 6-inch (one layer) stacked on top of it. It is purple butter cream with a purple rosette bottom border with dot accents. The top border is of bright green leaves and light and dark pink drop flowers. I placed a Tinkerbell candle on top (currently available at Wal-Mart). I hope the birthday girl enjoys it!!



Friday, June 19, 2009

2-tier fondant covered cake and smash cakes

These are cakes I made for a little boy's first birthday. The 2-tier is covered in my mm fondant, with butter cream borders. The other cakes are frosted in butter cream.



Saturday, June 13, 2009


Well, here is the finished product based on my idea posted below... a hot pink and lime green birthday cake, complete with monogram (first letter of her first name). The monogram is made from baked salt dough, painted with lime green acrylic paint with pink glitter accents. I attempted to make the monogram out of fondant, so it would be edible, but unfortunately it broke. I need to get brave and attempt using gum paste sometime... I am told it holds up better than fondant when it is used for this type of application. I am happy with how it turned out, though... I hope the birthday girl likes it too!

Baby Shower Sheet Cake


This is an 11x15 inch sheet cake I made for a baby shower for my BIL and his girlfriend. They are having a boy! I pre-cut the slices using fishing line after frosting the top of the cake. I then used a large cake-icer tip to frost the sides of the cake and hide/seal the cuts in the cake. The cuts in the icing on top are hidden under the grid made with a basket-weave tip. I made a shell border on the top and bottom using tip #32, and also made a ruffle border on top using tip #104. The items on each square are made from candy.

Monday, June 8, 2009

Idea for cake this weekend


I have been given the task to create a lime green and hot pink cake for a woman's birthday. Here is my idea so far. I have never made a monogram to stand on a cake, but have found some great ideas online and hope to get started on it soon... in case it doesn't work for me, then I will still have time to do something different on top. I love these colors together! I am, right now, planning on a 10-inch and 6-inch... both in hot pink, with lime green decorations. The decorations on the top tier don't show up well in this picture for some reason, but it is a curvy "S" pattern.

Topsy Turvy Cake


This is my first ever topsy turvy cake. I followed the instructions in the youtube video posted on my site. The bright colors were so fun to work with! I have been very busy lately... and have neglected to take pictures of several of my cakes : ( so they won't be posted on my site. My most favorite not-pictured cake was a hot pink and zebra stripe cake I made for my son's teacher. I have a few coming up soon, and hope to remember to photograph them all and post them here! Above is an idea for a cake this weekend. I am still trying to nail down all the details... but this is my idea so far.

Thursday, April 9, 2009

Boot's Face Cake (from Dora the Explorer)



This is Boots from Dora the Explorer. I cut out the face and "hair" separately from an 11x15 inch sheet pan and assembled them on a cake board cut to match the cake-shape. The sides are iced smooth, the top is done in #16 star tip.

Wednesday, April 1, 2009


This is a Wii cake I made for someone's husband... he loves video games apparently! It was difficult to get the sides of the cake perfectly smooth.... I think the fondant stretched thin as I applied it... it was a tall cake.... the white wii portion was 5 layers high. It was based on a cake Martha Stewart made for Wired magazine... no one can compete with Martha!

Monday, March 30, 2009

This cake was for a little girl's first birthday. It is buttercream with fondant accents. The stars, dots, stripes, bow and border are all fondant. In the future, I will only use fondant accents on a fondant covered cake. I found it difficult for the decorations to stay in place on the buttercream. I loved making the stars on wires and the bow, though. I think they turned out well!


Friday, March 20, 2009

Zebra Print and Lime with Monkeys

This is a 6-inch on a 10-inch tiered cake. The bottom tier is orange flavored, the top is chocolate. It is covered in marshmallow fondant, with mm fondant monkeys and bananas. I hope the birthday girl loves it! (shhh... it's a surprise for her!).

Thursday, March 19, 2009




These were made for a little boy's 1st birthday. A large "Jack" and a small "Mel the dog" from Jack's Big Music Show (on Noggin).

Friday, March 13, 2009

Woody, Toy Story Cake


This is a 1/4 sheet cake decorated with Woody from Toy Story. I made the Woody image (as well as the entire white background on the top of the cake) as a frozen buttercream transfer. It was tedious due to all the fine details, but I love how he turned out.

Pretty in Pink 3-tier cake

This is a 12, 8 and 6-inch tiered cake. Each tier is 3 layers. It is decorated in marshmallow fondant.

Friday, March 6, 2009

Hannah Montana Guitar Cake

I made this cake for a little girl's 4th birthday party. It is based on a Hannah Montana guitar that she dearly loves.

Thursday, February 26, 2009

Purse Cake

My first purse cake! I made this cake by baking a 9x13 inch sheet cake and cutting it crosswise into 4 sections roughly 4", 3.5", 3" and 2.5". I stacked the sections largest to smallest, crumb-coated it and froze it for 1 hour to firm it up for carving. After an hour in the freezer, the cake was firm enough to be carved into a more purse-like shape. I added a layer of buttercream frosting and covered in pale green fondant. I then added bright pink fondant flowers and a silver handle. The handle was made by threading fondant beads onto 20 gauge wire and inserting the ends of the wire deep into the cake for support.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Pink Pirate Cake

I made this shocking pink and black pirate cake for a little girl's 5th birthday party. The top of the cake is a frozen butter cream transfer. I made it by printing the picture of the pirate as a mirror image and taping it to the back of a smooth glass cutting board. I then taped a piece of wax paper on the other side of the cutting board, so the image could be seen through the glass and the wax paper. I traced the details, beginning in the middle of the image with black icing, then filled in the other colors, starting with the smallest details first. I smoothed the icing as I went, then filled in the background color around the skull in a square exactly the same size as the top of the cake. I placed it in the freezer for over an hour to allow time for it to harden. I then carefully removed the wax paper from the cutting board and flipped the image over onto the cake, peeling off the wax paper afterwards. I had to trim some excess icing from the edges, and fill in the sides of the cake with icing... and voila... a smooth "copy" of the image on top of the cake. The little cross bones are made from marshmallow fondant.

Trivial Pursuit Game Piece Cake

This is an 8-inch 2-layer round cake decorated to look like a filled Trivial Pursuit game piece. I was asked to make this cake for a Trivial Pursuit game lover... she always uses the green game piece and wins fairly often. I made the game pieces as frozen butter cream transfers so they would be as smooth as possible on top.

Friday, February 6, 2009

FL Gator Cake

I made this one for a little boys birthday. Tebow is his favorite college football player. I used a #21 star tip for the green and pulled the stars out a little as I piped the icing to make them appear more like scales.

Thursday, February 5, 2009

Safari Cake

This is a cake I made for a baby shower. It's a 10-inch tier on top of a 12-inch tier (both are single layer 2-inch deep cakes). The animals are hand molded from marshmallow fondant, and were made over a week in advance to allow time to dry. The tiers are frosted with butter cream and covered with mm fondant. The pink border is butter cream.

Saturday, January 31, 2009

Treasure Chest Cake

I made this Treasure Chest for my son's 6th birthday. He wanted a pirate themed party, and this was the cake he chose. I made this cake by baking two 1/4 sheet cakes (one chocolate, one butter cake). I cut the sheet cakes in half down the middle, making each piece approximately 8x6. I stacked the chocolate cakes, frosted with chocolate icing, and covered in chocolate marshmallow fondant--- they make up the chest (bottom). I stacked the butter cakes on a board cut just large enough for the cake and carved the top into an arch for the lid. I then frosted it with chocolate icing, and covered in chocolate marshmallow fondant. I covered a wedge of cardboard with wax paper and placed it between the chest and the lid to prop the lid open. I used a chopstick to "carve" the wood-grain into the chocolate fondant. I trimmed the chest with "gold" MM fondant. I used plastic pirate coins, and to prevent them from actually touching the cake (for fear of lead... you just never know these days!), I cut a "U" shape piece of cardboard to fit around the wedge between the chest and lid, covered it with wax paper and hot-glued the coins to that. It slides in and out easily, making taking the cake apart for cutting/serving simple! I added some coins and brown sugar "sand" to the cake board for extra decoration.

My Icing Recipes

Buttercream Icing

1 cup softened unsalted butter
1 cup shortening
2 tsp vanilla (use clear vanilla for whiter icing)
2 pounds powdered sugar
1/4 cup milk

Thoroughly mix butter, shortening and vanilla on low speed, scraping down sides of bowl often. Stop mixer and add sugar 1-2 cups at a time mixing thoroughly on low speed, scraping down sides of bowl often. Add the milk with the last bit of sugar and mix well on low speed.

Makes 6 cups of icing

**NOTES**
1) Use a stand mixer... this icing is very thick and will break a handheld mixer (trust me, I know!)
2) You may add 1 to 2 tsp light corn syrup per cup of icing to thin it for frosting a cake. You may find this is not always necessary.
3) I recommend Wilton brand icing colors. They will not thin the icing like liquid food colors will.
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Chocolate Buttercream Icing

1/2 cup (one stick) softened unsalted butter
2 tsp vanilla
3 cups powdered sugar
2/3 cup cocoa
1/4 tsp salt
1/3 cup milk

Makes 3 cups of icing.

Add butter and cocoa to stand mixer and blend well on low speed, scraping down sides of bowl often. Add remaining ingredients to bowl and mix well on low speed until it is fluffy and well blended (about 3 minutes). Add more milk, 1 Tbsp at a time if it is too thick, add more sugar, 1 Tbsp at a time if it is too thin.
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Marshmallow Fondant

10 ounce bag of mini marshmallows (not Jet Puffed--- they tend to shrink back)

1 Tbsp water

*Approximately 5 cups of powdered sugar

Shortening


Makes enough to cover and decorate an 8-inch round cake.

Prepare a large area on your counter for kneading the fondant by thoroughly cleaning and sanitizing it, then grease the area with shortening and add a layer of powdered sugar to prevent sticking. Then pour about 4 to 5 cups of powdered sugar on the counter in a pile, make a shallow well in the pile. Mix the fondant as follows.

Add mini marshmallows and water to a large glass microwavable bowl. Microwave on high for 1 minute. Stir well, mixture should be soupy. Add desired icing color at this time (it can be kneaded in later, but it is easier to do it now). Stir in about 1 cup powdered sugar. Pour the mixture into the well of sugar on the counter. Gently knead in the sugar until the fondant is soft, pliable, but not sticky or dry. You may not use all the sugar in the pile...stop mixing when the fondant is the correct consistency (no longer sticky, but not dry). Wrap the fondant tightly in plastic wrap and/or place in a ziplock bag to prevent it from drying out until you are ready to use it. Be sure to wrap it and bag it well so it doesn't take on any flavors or odors from food in the fridge. I recommend refrigerating it at least overnight prior to using it. This allows it to settle and cool thoroughly. Allow it to return to room temperature before continuing. When ready to use the fondant, prepare your counter by greasing it with shortening and add a layer of powdered sugar to prevent sticking. Roll the fondant out to the correct size to cover the top and sides of your cake and about 1/8 inch thickness. Gently roll the fondant over your rolling pin and unroll over your cake. Smooth and stretch the fondant until the cake is well covered, being careful not to tear it with your fingernails. Work slowly... do not force it into place. Smooth smooth smooth it with greased hands or a fondant smoother. Trim the excess fondant from the bottom of the cake with a sharp knife or pizza cutter. To decorate your fondant covered cake with fondant decorations, simply "glue" them to the cake using a tiny bit of water. You may also decorate a fondant covered cake with buttercream icing borders, dots, writing, etc...

*NOTES*1) You may want to grease your hands and remove your rings before knead or working with fondant.
2) If you get air bubbles in the fondant, simply prick them with a pin and smooth the hole with a greased finger.
3) Remove excess powdered sugar from the fondant cake by brushing with a pastry brush.
4) To achieve an even sheen all over the cake, smooth a tiny bit of shortening all over the fondant.
5) When trimming the excess fondant from the bottom of the cake, be careful not to trim too closely to the cake, sometimes the fondant will shrink back leaving a gap showing.
6)I typically buy 2 bags of marshmallows and 1 2-lb bag of powdered sugar. Most of the time it is enough sugar to make 2 batches of fondant, but if the weather is rainy or humid, it sometimes takes more sugar.
7)I have bought 1 bag of sugar and 1 1-lb box of sugar... but the boxed sugar seems hard and full of lumps, whereas I rarely have that problem with the bagged variety.
8)I don't take the time to sift my sugar and usually have no problems with lumps... if you have the time and desire, by all means, sift the sugar before you use it. :)

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True Black Marshmallow Fondant

1 10-ounce bag mini marshmallows
3 Tablespoons water
6 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 to 2 teaspoons black gel coloring
1 2-lb bag confectioners sugar

Add marshmallows and water to a microwaveable bowl. Microwave on High for 1 minute, then stir well and microwave 1 additional minute. Marshmallows will be HOT when you remove them from the microwave (keep an eye on them as they cook the final few seconds as they puff up and may spill over!). Stir in chocolate chips until melted. Add Black icing color and stir until it is truly black through and through. Add 1 cup or so of confectioners sugar and stir. Add more sugar and stir then knead until you reach the right texture (no longer sticky, but not dry... it should still be soft). Allow to cool before covering a cake. Store tightly wrapped in plastic wrap and in an air-tight container for up to 1 month. PLEASE NOTE: the original recipe called for 1 lb. of sugar... it took me about 1 lb. plus 1 cup.... it will NOT take 2 full pounds of sugar, just add it and knead it in until you reach the right texture.

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White modeling chocolate:

12 ounces white chocolate almond bark (or a bag of white candy melts)

2 Tbsp corn syrup

*Melt white chocolate in microwave in a glass bowl, stir until smooth. Add corn syrup and stir (it will thicken quickly). Spread onto a cookie sheet lined with plastic wrap. Cover with plastic wrap and leave at room temp or in the fridge until cool. Remove from plastic wrap and knead thoroughly. You can use cornstarch if it sticks to your surface, but I kneaded it on a non-stick plastic cutting board and did not have any trouble with sticking.

Chocolate modeling chocolate:

1 bag light cocoa candy melts (milk chocolate)

1/3 cup corn syrup

*Melt cocoa melts in microwave in a glass bowl. Stir until smooth. Add corn syrup and stir (it will thicken quickly). Spread onto a cookie sheet lined with plastic wrap. Cover with plastic wrap and leave at room temp or in the fridge until cool. Remove from plastic wrap and knead thoroughly. You can use cocoa powder if it sticks to your surface, but I kneaded it on a non-stick plastic cutting board and did not have any trouble with sticking.

*Store wrapped in plastic wrap or in a Ziplock bag in the refrigerator for up to 1 month. Dried sculptures can be stored at room temperature for several months. Tastes sort of like Tootsie Rolls (similar consistency, too).

Note: do not use chocolate chips.. you have to really watch the temperature if you do, and not let it get over 100°. I prefer this method b/c it is easier.



My Favorite Baking and Decorating Hints!

I have collected hints and tips from all over the web and some have been so helpful to me, saving time and money... here are a few of my favorites:

My cake batter amounts and number of servings for 2-inch deep pans:
(cups of batter are per layer, and servings are based on a 2-layer cake, except for sheet cakes... sheet cake servings are based on 1-layer):

6-inch round = 2 cups batter, up to 12 servings
8-inch round = 3 1/2 cups batter, up to 24 servings
10-inch round = 6 cups batter, up to 28 servings
12-inch round = 7.5 cups batter, up to 40 servings
14-inch round = 10 cups batter, up to 63 servings
8-inch square = 4.5 cups batter, up to 24 servings
12-inch square = 11 cups batter, up to 48 servings
9-inch by 13-inch sheet = 8 cups batter, up to 24 servings
11-inch by 15-inch sheet = 12 cups batter, up to 35 servings


BAKING PERFECT 2-INCH (OR 3-INCH) DEEP CAKE LAYERS
I make sure my cake pans are filled 2/3 full before baking. I typically use a flower nail in the center of 8, 9 and 10 inch pans for heat distribution during baking. When the cake is done, remove from the oven and, using a clean oven mitt, gently press down on the "hump" that rises up in the center. Keep gently pressing until the cake is level. This method gives you a full pan of cake, with none wasted by having to cut off the hump to level it.

Achieving Smooth Buttercream on your cake
Use a Turntable when icing your cakes. It makes the process of smoothing the sides and top so much quicker and easier! I use a simple lazy-susan, although there are many professional cake decorating turntables available.

I usually apply my frosting using a large decorating bag and an icing tip (the BIG one by Wilton). I then use an angled spatula to smooth the icing as much as possible. Allow the icing to set, or crust over for 20 minutes or more. Then use a small piece of wax paper and a fondant roller (the small wooden one with a handle) to smooth over the cake, very, very gently. This helps hide lines from the spatula and give the cake a super smooth and shiny finish.

You can never have too much no-slip shelf liner!
I use no-slip shelf liner (the rubbery kind) on my turntable under the cake as I work, as well as in the box, under the cake for delivery, and under the box in the car to keep the cake from sliding around. It is a definite must-have!! I buy it in rolls at the Dollar Tree.

A great way to cut perfect individual size circles from a sheet cake is to use a round, deeply serrated cabbage chopper! This is how I cut the circles to stack and build the silo on the barn yard cake. It cuts perfect 3-inch circles... all you do is twist it gently back and forth while pushing it down into the cake. This would be a great way to make individual-sized cakes from a sheet cake!

A new way to cover a cake board, well, new to me, and one I hope to use again and again is shown on the Pig and Cow Print Cake. I covered a square board with bandana I purchased for $1 at Wal-mart. I stapled the bandana to the back of the board, then covered it with cellophane to keep the icing from staining the fabric (taping the cellophane to the back of the baord). I purchased the clear cellophane at the Dollar Tree. I then cut a piece of wax paper the same size as the cake and taped it to the center of the board, so the cake rested on the wax paper and not the cellophane (because I was unsure if the cellophane is food-safe). I love the effect, and you could use any kind of paper or fabric under the cellophane to acheive this appearance!

MORE TO COME!
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