Posts Tagged ‘buttercream’

Spotlight on Cakes Unique by Amy

Saturday, November 7th, 2009

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Amy’s interest in cake decorating began three and a half years ago.  While planning her sister’s bridal shower, she went to a very high end, upscale custom cake store to order the cake.  While viewing their store portfolios for ideas, her mom kept nudging her saying, “I bet you could make this”, “Look at this one, that’s so you.”   Amy admits she has a natural inclination for anything and everything sweet and has always been referred to as an “arts and crafty” type person.   After ordering the bridal shower cake for 40 people for upwards of $300, she left the cake store and went straight to her local Michaels. 

She bought some fondant and flower cutters and tried her hand at baking and decorating a cake.   Needless to say her first cake was certainly one worthy of CakeWrecks!    That first cake hooked her though, and little by little she got better.  She ended up making a cake for her sister’s bridal shower and placed it with the mega-expensive one they had ordered.  At the end of the shower there wasn’t a crumb left of Amy’s cake and guests were asking for business cards.   It all just kind of snowballed from there!

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Amy is proud to say that she has never taken one cake decorating class.  She is completely self-taught.  There is such a huge wealth of information and support from fellow cake decorators on the Internet.   She admits she lived, breathed, ate, and slept on Cake Central for the longest time.   She learned a lot on that site through their forums and helpful tutorials.  She was inspired by photos in their galleries.  She experimented with recipes that were shared by other decorators on the site, and never once did anyone deny answering a question she might have had.   It really was like going to an online cake decorating school!

Amy makes approximately 80 to 100 pounds of buttercream frosting a week.  Working with that amount of buttercream has helped her become quite efficient at crumb coating and smoothly icing a cake.  Therefore, she’d have to say without a doubt that working with buttercream is her preferred medium.  

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All of her cakes have fondant accents on them and she does have clients that prefer a fondant finish, but the majority of her cakes are buttercream.  She is proud to say that people are always assuming her cakes are a fondant finish because they look so smooth!   That’s quite a compliment for a cake decorator.  It always makes her smile!   However, she admits that the most basic of lessons in buttercream, the standard buttercream rose, to this day is still beyond her capabilities.   Go figure!

The biggest mistake Amy has ever made while decorating a cake wasn’t in the design process at all.   She was making a full scale acoustic guitar birthday cake for a client.  When putting the finishing touches on the completed cake, a thought occurred to her.   She “thought” she might have filled the cake’s center with a cream cheese icing rather than the buttercream icing that the client had ordered.  

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Well, of course there was no way to be sure since the cake was pretty much completed. She was in angst over what she had possibly done.  She was thinking to herself, “Do I hack it open?  Do I find a precise spot that I can cut and then be able to patch up nice and neat if I didn’t make a mistake?  And OMG!  What if I did make a mistake?”   It would be cake carnage for sure and she knew she would have to start all over again.  Amy recalls cutting into the neck of the guitar and sure enough she had used cream cheese.   She ended up remaking the whole cake!   Thankfully she had the time to do it before the client was due for pickup.

A close second if not an even tie was one of the very first topsy turvy cakes she ever did. It was late the evening before the cake was due for delivery.   All day she had been repairing a spot on the bottom tier that looked as if it was going to give way and fall apart.  It was stuck with numerous skewers for support and just didn’t want to hold.  On a move from one counter to another it finally just let go and fell apart all over the kitchen floor.  

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Most of both tiers ended up on the floor in a heap of cake. It was bad!  She had no backup supplies and little time or energy to recoup.  She had to start all over, from baking, making icing, restacking, decorating, etc.  That night she was up until past 3 am. In the end the cake was remade and delivered on time. One of her most used lines even to this day is “It will get done, it always does!”

When asked which cake was her favorite, it was difficult for Amy to choose just one since she loves all of her cakes!  They are all great as a complete cake, in part because of color scheme, design technique, etc.  She approaches every cake with the same thought process…this has got to be a show stopper!   She asks herself, “How can I add that extra pizzazz to put it over the top?”   

Amy adds edible glitter to 99 out of 100 cakes she does.   It sends every one of them over the top especially children’s cakes.  If it’s a princess cake, the glitter screams glamorous.  If it’s a super hero cake, the glitter screams imagination!   Amy pours 110% effort into every cake.    She loves making cakes, decorating them, and then sending them off to be the center of attention for the occasion or event.  It’s insanely gratifying to be able to do something you love and make others happy in the process.   It keeps her going, and what could be better than that?

To view more of Amy’s gorgeous cake creations, please visit her flickr photo gallery or her website:

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Meet Cake Lady Tiff

Tuesday, June 23rd, 2009

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Tiff earned her degree in culinary arts…not pastry.  She loves to do absolutely anything in the kitchen.  She has a constant need to be creative, and once she learned every station in various restaurant kitchens, she began to gravitate toward the pastry end of things.   Tiff has never attended any cake decorating classes, however, she did work as a baker at a restaurant for three years, and at a bakery for three months. For the most part, she is self-taught. 

She has now been decorating cakes for about 15 years and officially started her business, Shortbread City, about two years ago.    Tiff’s cakes, cookies, and pastries are made to order.   One of her highest priced cakes was a custom chopper cake she did for a night club owner. It was in the $400.00 range.  She has also done wedding cakes, which of course, can get even pricier.  She does a lot of custom work. Examples of her work can be seen at her website.

The best tip she can offer a person just getting started in cake decorating is to take advantage of all of the shows that are on television now. When she started, there was no Ace of Cakes, Cake Boss, or Amazing Wedding Cakes. These shows really give you a sense of what the business is like. You get to see things from start to finish. It’s very difficult to learn without seeing things in their raw stages. There are also tons of resources on the internet where you can ask questions and look at tutorials. If necessary, take a class to sharpen your skills or learn something specific, like gum paste flowers. As long as you are already comfortable with the actual baking, you can teach yourself the majority of the decorating.

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Tiff uses different methods for different things.  She loves buttercream between layers of cake, and homemade marshmallow fondant to cover the entire tier. It provides a nice canvas for everything else, and the cake stays fresh. She makes figures from fondant, and uses royal icing to do fine decorations that have to be piped. She also does a lot of hand painting on her pastries.  

The biggest mistake she ever made while decorating a cake was probably not giving herself adequate time to stop and take a break!  If you are physically drained while being creative is not a good thing. You can be on autopilot when you do the prep, i.e. making buttercream and cake batter. Once you need to create, though, the gears in your head will screech to a halt. There is a very emotional side to working in a kitchen that a lot of people don’t know about.

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Even though it was difficult for Tiff to chose her favorite cake, she would have to say that her Princess cupcake tower holds a special place for her. It was the very first cupcake tower she had ever done. That’s where it all started.

Tiff specializes in custom cookie cakes.  Her cookie cakes are the reason she chose the name Shortbread City.

How To Make a Cookie Cake:  The cookies are created by piping dough freehand onto a cookie sheet. There is no raw egg in my dough, which means that she can work with it longer while still being safe. Then she shapes it by hand to give it more definition, and bakes it. If she needs sharp angles, she rolls out the dough and cuts it, then bakes it.  She mostly uses royal icing for the detail work on the cookie plaques. Her first cookie cake was for her son.  She had stopped a frame of the Spider-Man movie and copied what she saw.  She poured tinted carmelized sugar for the windows. The finished product looked like the Daily Bugle with Spider-Man swinging across it.

To view more of Tiff’s wonderful cakes, cookies and cupcakes, visit her website, Shortbread City, or her flickr photo gallery.

Related Links:
Spiderman Birthday Party Favors & Supplies
Spiderman Birthday Cake Photos, Recipes & Supplies
Princess Party Ideas & Supplies

Cakes by Andrea

Thursday, June 4th, 2009

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Andrea has been decorating cakes for a total of 12 years now.  She had taken her first Wilton cake decorating class when she was expecting her first child and instantly fell in love with it.  She finds cake decorating to be a very good stress release.   Her second child has some special needs, so it helped.   It also provided her with some extra income which is always nice.   So after her third child was born, she really got serious about cake decorating.   That was 7 years ago.   Andrea has also attended classes at her ICES (International Cake Exploration Societe) meetings. 

Andrea sells her cakes and her favorite cakes to make are children’s cakes.   First birthdays are always fun. She loves the Elmo and Abby Cadabby cake she recently did.  (pictured)   She created the figures out of Rice Krispie treats and fondant.  It was VERY over the top!

The best tip she would like to offer someone just getting into cake decorating is to buy an air brush and use it.  Don’t leave it in the box for years like she did.   Now, she uses this decorating tool daily. 

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Andrea prefers to ice most everything in buttercream and then use fondant  for accents.   Everyone loves buttercream and she can use the fondant to make the things she can’t make in buttercream. She  finds that most kids like buttercream.  She occasionally uses gumpaste as well.

If she were to pick her biggest cake decorating mistake, it would be using straws as dowel supports on a tiered cake. In the South in 100 degree heat after a rainstorm, humidity killed her AND the cake!

As with most of my interviews, choosing her favorite cake was difficult for Andrea.    However, she finally decided that her favorite was a cake she had done for a competition.   This cake took 3rd Place!   It was a topsy turvy cake with a fairy on top. (pictured)  It was very brightly colored.  Andrea feels that if she had a cake that described her the best,  it would be that cake.   Fun, bright and busy~ LOL!    The funny thing is every new cake is a new favorite.    She loves pushing herself to do more, to be better, to be over the top if she can.   Different is good.  People like the attention I give their cake.   They like the attention their cake gets when others see it.

To view more of Andrea’s gorgeous cake creations, please visit her flickr photo gallery!

About ICES:  The International Cake Exploration Societe was founded in 1976 in Monroe, Michigan.   Local Representatives are elected or appointed each year to help spread the SHARING and CARING of cake decorating around the world.  Meetings, get togethers, and “Days of Sharing” are held throughout the year.

Related Links:
Elmo Birthday Party Ideas & Supplies
Abby Cadabby Party Ideas & Supplies
Fairy Birthday Party Supplies

My Flour Garden

Saturday, April 11th, 2009

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Carrie is the owner of My Flour Garden.   When Carrie was in her teens and early 20′s, her family was in the bakery, deli, Filipino-American Restaurant business.

She spent many summers working in the family business.    While she did not appreciate it at the time, that work experience ended up playing an important role in her future.   As an adult, after feeling stuck working one job after another as a secretary, she decided she wanted to start her own business.  After doing a bit of sole searching, she decided to start a cake decorating business since she has always had a love for baking and cake decorating.   Carrie has now been professionally decorating cakes for five years. 

Carrie is a self-taught cake deocorator who is not afraid to challenge herself by reading instructional books on cake decorating and getting her hands on experience in the comfort of her own home.   There is lots of trial and error and figuring out what works, tastes good and looks great!   Looking back, though, she feels she should have gone to culinary school, but her head just wasn’t into it when she was younger.  She does, however, highly recommend those interested in cake decorating or in a career in baking to take some courses. 

masterblack-377x370Carrie sells her cake creations via her online bakery, My Flour Garden.   She recently sold a 4-tiered wedding cake (alternating layers of dark chocolate filled with vanilla cream and sliced strawberries) and classic filled with chocolate bavarian cream filling.  The entire cake is to be frosted in a stable non-dairy whip since it’s for a Summer wedding.  She charged the bride and groom $899, an average per slice cost of $5.50, including delivery and set-up fees.

Her biggest tip for anyone just getting started in cake decorating is to make sure you really love it.  Your passion will really come through in your work.  It’s almost like sculpting a piece of artwork – except your medium would be cake.  Also, practice, practice, practice.   Don’t be afraid of trying new cake and frosting recipes, airbrushing and piping techniques.  Get familiar with your cakes – so you can really “sell” them to your friends, family and customers. If they see your enthusiasm, it will be sure to come through in your cakes and in the quality and presentation of your baked goods.  Most importantly, have fun with it!  

Her biggest cake decorating mistake was not leveling her cakes.  If it’s not flat on top, your decorations will lean, look lopsided or simply slide off your cake.  Not good!  Another mistake was working with frosting that was too runny or soft.  Tip: Chill the frosting slightly to stabilize it and then frost and trim your cake.

Carrie loves working with classic buttercream the most.  It’s silky smooth and is the easiest frosting to smooth out and decorate with.  She has also recently started using fondant and loves it’s versatility and how it allows cakes to look as perfect as possible – especially wedding cakes and other special theme cakes.   However, fondant can be a bit challenging to use (i.e. tearing, drying, cracking, etc.), but it is a nice alternative once proficient in decorating cakes.

ava_three41Carrie has two all-time favorite cakes.  The first was a Baby Shower Bear Cake (pictured above).   It was her first attempt at carving a cake into any particular shape.  The delicious marble bear cake was filled with cookies and cream and was wearing his very own fondant onesie. The entire bear cake body was carved and frosted by hand (a bear head cake pan came in very handy for this project!).  His eyes and tongue were made of royal sugar.  From what she has heard, all the guests at the baby shower loved him and ate every bite!  He was alot of fun to make.
 
Her second favorite was a cake for her niece Ava’s 3rd Princess birthday.  It was a quarter sheet strawberry cake with strawberry slices and what else…strawberry frosting.  It was very pink and very pretty – just like the princess she is!

Related Links:
Birthday Princess Party Pack
Princess Birthday Party Ideas & Supplies
Bear Shaped Cake Pans

Linzi’s Cakes

Thursday, February 19th, 2009

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Lindsay always had an interest in crafts and baking.  While on maternity leave with her first baby in October 2007,  she decided to finally take a course and see what cake decorating was all about.  She quickly fell in love the with the art of decorating cakes. 

Lindsay has attended many ’The Wilton Method of Cake Decorating’ courses at her local Michael’s Craft Store including Courses 1-3, Fondant and Gum Paste, Gum Paste Flowers, and Victorian Fantasy Fondant.

Lindsay currently sells her cake creations.  All of her cakes are custom made to her customers requests.   The most someone has paid for one of her cakes was in the $300 range and it was a wedding cake

Lindsay likes to use fondant because it’s so versitle.  You can make decorations in advance and let them dry/harden to use on the cake.   She also uses buttercream on every cake that she makes.  It’s her favorite type of icing to ice a cake with and all of her customers have given her great feedback on the taste of her homemade buttercream.

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The biggest mistake she ever made was while decorating a 2-tier Tinkerbell birthday cake. When she went to put the top tier on the bottom tier the cake flipped upside down and landed on my counter.  Needless to say it had to be completely redone.  The best tip she would like to give anyone just starting in cake decorating is don’t give up and always remember to practice, practice, practice!    

Lindsay’s all time favorite cake was a 3D Towmater birthday cake for a 2 year old.  It was for a Disney Car’s birthday party.  She put so much time, effort and creativity into that cake.   She had an absolute blast making it and was thrilled with the results.   She was paid in the $100 range for that cake.

If you would like to view more of Lindsay’s gorgeous cake creations, you can visit her flickr photo gallery!

Related Links:
Disney’s Cars Birthday Box
Find Disney Cars Personalized Party Supplies on Ebay!
Tinker Bell Fairies Party Pack
Find Tinker Bell Personalized Party Supplies on Ebay!