Wednesday, July 17, 2013

Princess Birthday Cake

 
 
 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 


Chicago Bears Birthday Cake

 
 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 


Pink Penguin Birthday Cake

 
 

See The Inner Whimsy for tips, tricks and instructions.

Spooky Scooby Doo Cake

 
 


Fourth of July Cake with American Flag Inside

 
 
 
 


Fourth of July Birthday Cake

 
Instructions and Tip coming soon!
 
 


Monkey Baby Shower Cake - My Crowning Achievement

 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 



Women's Tea Cakes

 
 
 
 



Tinkerbell Birthday Cake

 

 

 
 Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 

 



Large Graduation Sheet Cake

 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 


Graduation Sheet Cake

 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 


Cookout Cake - First Experience with Fondant

Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 



Cookie Monster Baby Shower Cake

 
Instructions and Tips coming soon!
 
 



Saturday, July 13, 2013

Baseball Cupcake Cake

 Baseball Cupcake Cake

I made this cake for an 11 year old boy in my family.  I decided to try my hand at making a cupcake cake.  I have to say, it is not as easy as it seems, at least it wasn't for me on my first try.  The frosting kept sinking in between the cupcakes and it wouldn't spread right.  It could have been my frosting or the temperature of my house which was sweltering, at least it seemed that way to me.

So...if you were wondering about my technique, I basically made the cupcakes and placed them into a rectangular shape.  There were 35 cupcakes, which it didn't need to be this big but I had so many cupcakes that I didn't want to end up with a ton left at home that I would just toss out.  What a waste, right?  So I figured I would use as many as I could and whatever the family did with the uneaten cupcakes was up to them because they were not going home with me.



Instructions to come soon!



Barbie Mermaid Cake

Instructions and tips to come soon!




Batman Birthday Cake

 
Instructions and tips to come soon! 
 
 
 




Go, Diego, Go! Birthday Cake

 
 
 
 
 
December was another great cake experience.  This time I was asked to make a cake for my friend's second son and he wanted his theme to be Diego.  By this time I had nearly perfected the frozen transfer recipe and I was still in love with it.  Being able to create such detail and have it turn out was such a great feeling.  Unfortunately I do not have step by step photos of this project, or most of my projects honestly (something I will be working on in the future) but I think the finished product is all anyone really wants to see anyway.  I will though, rack my brain as much as possible to give you the tips that I used and the recipes so you can try to recreate or design something of your own using the same kind of tools.
 
THE CAKE
 
 
As a cake decorator, I am still in the process of working on the baking end of the cake business.  I have been trying to find recipes of homemade cakes and cupcakes that are to my liking before I will just whip something up and sell it or give it away.  The last impression, or the first, I don't want to be "Wow, this is really dense", or "this has no flavor", so at the time being I am still using boxed mixes.  But most of the time, anyway, it is about the look of the cake and the taste of the frosting that is really the focus.  I do make my own frostings, though.
 
Step #1:  So I started this cake out with baking two chocolate 9 x 13 inch rectangular cakes.  Letting them cool completely before assembling them.  Since I only had one 9 x 13 pan, I had to bake one cake, then the other.
 
Tip:  I found that when I would bake a cake, it would always get stuck and a piece would pull out from the bottom which I would have to patch back up with frosting or crumbled cake.  I found as a tip online that if you take some shortening and spread it on the bottom of the cake pan and nicely on the sides, then cut out a piece of parchment paper the size of the bottom of the pan, that the cake would come out perfectly each time.  Make sure that the parchment paper is at least the size of the bottom of the pan or slightly smaller, never bigger because of the puckering in the corners.  This will create a weird shape or a pocket of air.
 
Step #2:  My next step was to make the frosting while the cake was cooling.  I started using a Pure White Buttercream frosting that I absolutely love.  The only real drawback was how long it would take to actually make the frosting which is nearly 40 minutes for me due to sifting the powdered sugar into the bowl.  This frosting is pretty sweet but it is really nice because it is pure white and it is easy to color.
 
Tip:  This frosting gets pretty warm from the 20 minutes that it is supposed to mix in the standing mixer, so it works better for decorating purposes to cover it and place it in the refrigerator for a while to let it cool down and get a bit stiffer.  It also warms up pretty quickly in your hand while decorating and you can see that it is starting to separate.  So at that point you will want to put it in the refrigerator for about an hour or so.  When this happens, I just move on to a new color while the other sits in the fridge.
 
Step #3:  Once the cakes are cooled, take a cake leveler and slice off the top portion of the cake.  I use a wire cake leveler that I purchased at Wal-Mart and it works pretty well, though I am thinking about upgrading to another Wilton cake leveler.