Showing posts with label buttercream. Show all posts
Showing posts with label buttercream. Show all posts
Wednesday, January 11, 2012
A Little More Over-piping
I made a little cake for a tasting/ dinner party this past weekend. It felt good to be decorating again after a bit of a break over the holidays!
Anyway, I might have gotten a little over-excited (as is known to happen). And my mild obsession with old-school piping and Lambeth method might have reared its little head.
This whole cake is piped with swiss meringue buttercream and finished with little fondant flowers. The quadruple piped strings on the top sagged a little in transit, but it was in the car for a little while. In real life, I'd use royal or at least refrigerate longer before traveling.
I tried to come up with my own variant on Lambeth for a bottom border. It could still use some refining, but I like the vine and leaf organic movement coupled with the more traditional shell and overpiping.
The cake was butter cake with grand marnier syrup, fresh raspberry puree, and vanilla swiss meringue buttercream. It was super tasty!
Hope you enjoy!
I do have many projects in the works for this year, but I am also very busy trying to finish my PhD by May. So forgive me if my posts are a little spotty... ;) After I graduate, I've promised myself till the end of 2012 to a) relax and b) pursue cake and sugar endeavors! That's right, I'm gonna do some investigating...
Best to you all!
Sunday, October 2, 2011
Kickin' it Old School
This weekend I went to a dinner party and did a tasting for a wedding cake. God forbid any of my cakes should be under-dressed (they might take after me a little), I decided it was a good opportunity to practice some old school overpiping.
This cake is a lemon butter cake with a framboise flavor splash, a fresh raspberry puree, and a light lemon swiss meringue buttercream. With some minor adjustments, I'll be using these flavors for a wedding cake in a couple of weeks.
All the piping was done in the swiss meringue buttercream as well using PME tips 2,3 (round) and 6 (star). The top border was done with 6 as a base, followed by 3, followed by 2. I have this set of 20 PME supatubes-- they are seamless and I love them for detailed piping: PME 20 Piece Icing Tube Boxed Set
I also made a smaller version as a tasting cake:
I'm just fascinated by old school piping. I'm dying to take a Lambeth class with Kathleen Lange-- maybe next summer! :)
More cakes in the works...
Tuesday, February 2, 2010
Wilton Cake 1- Final Class Cake!
Tonight was my final class in the Wilton Cake 1 series. But don't fret! I start Cake 2 next week. :)
For tonight we had to bring an iced cake to class, plus all of our buttercream in appropriate consistencies, colored as desired, and loaded into our parchment/ pastry bags.
At the beginning of class, we went over the Wilton rose. We piped these onto wax paper squares on #7 flower nails, and let them dry till we were ready to decorate our cakes.
In this class, we also went over the sweet pea, the bow, and leaves.
After going over the techniques, we had the last ~25 mins to work on our cakes. For this cake, the roses were placed around a mound of buttercream to give them some height. By this point, the roses had dried some and could be lifted (carefully) with a flower lifter or scissors, and placed onto the cake.
After placing the cluster of roses, I filled in with some leaves and vines.
This cake has already been spoken for by one of my friends, who was celebrating his one year anniversary with his girlfriend. I piped the message with tip 3 after I finished the rose cluster and leaves.
I piped tip #21 shell borders on the bottom and top, and piped sweet peas all around the bottom border.
Finally I placed the fourth rose above the message, and finished the cake with a couple extra sweet peas on the top.
So I earned my official Wilton course completion certificate! Hopefully my friend is happy with this cake... :)
Now on to Course 2!
Tuesday, January 5, 2010
The Next Cake Adventure
Basket-weave Flowery Cake
This cake was my second adventure in cake decoration. This adventure had 3 parts:
1) Royal Icing Flowers
2) Painting the Flowers
3) Cake Assembly/ Piping/ Flower Application
This cake started because I wanted to try my hand at piping flowers. For this experiment, I decided to use royal icing rather than buttercream. While I believe many of these flowers could be created using buttercream, it can be finicky. I'll dedicate a whole post to buttercream and royal icing in the future, but royal icing is great for piping detail work for a variety of reasons. First, it's a simple recipe that can easily be whipped up in small batches (typically just egg white and powdered sugar, and maybe a touch of flavor extract) and it can be made very stiff or runny (by adding more or less powdered sugar). It dries quickly when in contact with the air and dries hard like cement. That means you can pipe onto parchment paper or wax paper, let your creations harden, and transfer them to your cake later with relative ease. Also, it won't break your jaw to eat it, and generally tastes sugary, like a heavier version of a meringue cookie.
Part I:
All of the flowers on my cake with the exception of the all over orange blossoms started off WHITE. They were all piped using Wilton petal tips in royal icing on parchment squares on a flower nail. It took some work to get the royal icing to the right consistency: at first it was too soft and the roses just kinda collapsed on themselves. If you're using a hand mixer, it will feel like you're mixing cement. Also, if you look in the bowl, see if and for how long the mix marks are retained after you turn off the mixer. For piping flowers, you want the icing to retain those features and stay rough looking. There are times you want it to be softer and self smoothing, but this is not one of them! The white blossoms were finished off with some orange royal icing dots using a round tip, and the orange flowers were finished with a white buttercream center using a #18 star tip after they were placed on the cake.
Part II:
The flowers were painted individually using gel food colors diluted with some lemon extract. Color dilution can also be done using vodka or vanilla extract-- anything with a high alcohol content. Painting can be done with any 'food-safe' paintbrushes, i.e. brushes you haven't actually used to paint.
Part III:
Once the flowers were all dried and painted (I gave them a full day to dry), I worked on assembling the cake.
The cake itself was made using the Classic Yellow Cake recipe from Sylvia Weinstock's Sweet Celebrations book. This cake smelled AMAZING while it was baking. It tasted pretty good too, but I think after smelling it for so long it wasn't as exciting as it might have been otherwise.
The buttercream is the Wilton recipe: http://www.wilton.com/recipe/Buttercream-Icing
Something interesting to note is that not all shortening is created equal. The first time I made buttercream, I purchased butter flavor Crisco, which is yellow colored! The icing came out tasting good, but was more of an ivory color:
The cake in this picture was more an extension of my first cake-- a way to use up the remaining ganache (on the top), and a way to test out some home made buttercream. You can see the ivory color due to the yellow crisco, but it still tasted good!
Beyond the butter flavor shortening, regular Crisco as well as certain store brands no longer contain trans fats. For whatever reason, this affects the consistency of the frosting. I found it was a little softer and less stable than I would have preferred. In the south, Kroger's store brand shortening still contains trans fats, so I prefer to use that or a half and half mixture of no trans/ trans fat shortenings.
Before I iced this cake, I made the decision to cover the cake round with aluminum foil to avoid the spreading of grease onto the cardboard. I don't really recommend this unless you buy the heavier/ bigger foil that is sold (quite expensively) at your cake supply stores. Since the foil had a seam (I needed to use two pieces) it was harder to ice on the turn table. My spatula kept getting caught on the foil seam.
Anyway, I filled this cake with butter cream, did a crumb coat, and then did a second smoother layer. For those who don't know, a crumb coat is a thin layer of buttercream that is applied to the cake and allowed to solidify. (I like to let it harden in the fridge for a few minutes). This layer traps any crumbs that stray from the cake. Then a second layer is applied more meticulously and smoothed to (near) perfection. Or so I try. :)
On this cake, I really wanted to try a basketweave. This technique can be done using a variety of different tip combinations, and instructions are readily available on Wilton's website: Basketweave
I then piped a basic rope border on the bottom using tip #18: Rope
(Note: this one I needed to practice on parchment a few times. I think the secret is to not really pipe a full 'S', but it's one of those things you should try before you just start on the cake.)
The top is a shell border using the same tip #18: Shell
Then, I simply stuck on my pre-made royal icing flowers. For some of them, I piped on more significant amounts of buttercream for them to rest on to make them stand up more or angle more or whatever. After putting the flowers where I wanted, I filled in the foliage with a leaf tip (e.g. #67) and some vines with a round tip, using green colored buttercream.
The idea was that I wanted the flowers and vines to escape the confines of the basket, so I chose to put some of the flowers and vines on the side to achieve that effect.
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