Thursday, May 31, 2012

[Inez] Wedding cake: practice round (part 2)

Alrighty friends, so we've gotten through Day 1 and Day 2 of making a practice wedding cake. The cakes are baked and frosted in individual tiers, and they have just sat in the fridge overnight. Not too long before the wedding (or event in which you invite all your friends to eat the enormous amount of cake you just made), you want to assemble the cake and make it pretty. I say not too long before the eating event because I don't have a box or other container large enough to hold an entire wedding cake, so it's just going to be sitting in the fridge, and you don't want your frosting to dry out or anything.

The first step in assembling your tiered cake is to remove each tier from the fridge and inspect the frosting for any damage that may have been incurred by your totally homemade cake covering mechanism. I had some extra vanilla frosting, so I just went around and added a very thin layer of frosting  which I had softened up quite a bit so it was like the consistency of mayonnaise. Because the cake had just come out of the fridge, the existing frosting was very firm, so I was able to easily smooth out any imperfections without messing with the existing frosting job.


Then you need to add some dowels. You can get plastic ones that are sort of like strong straws, but they cost a lot more. These were pretty cheap. Insert a dowel into your cake and mark it where the frosting comes up to. Then cut it just a bit above that mark. Mark and cut all dowels for the layer so they're exactly the same height.

Colin was the master of dowel-cutting. He opted to use a vice grip for accuracy.


I stuck five dowels in the bottom (12 inch) tier, and three in the middle (9 inch) tier.


You can see there is a slight gap between each layer. That gap kept me from having a heart attack when I placed each tier on top of the one beneath it.

Then, make it pretty! I played around with a few different piping tips and methods.


The bottom one is pretty, but I didn't do it very evenly. I was figuring it out as I went. I'll be practicing that between now and wedding day.


Sometimes I felt like the gap made it difficult to pipe evenly and well, especially with the middle tier. It just didn't have enough to stick to. If I use the shell design (see the lower border in the picture below), I may put a small plain rope of piped icing that I can then build off of with a pretty border.



Now, for the actual wedding cake I'll be decorating with flowers. Of course, I don't have the flowers yet. The cake looked nice, but very plain. So at Colin's suggestion, I made some pretty little decorations with one of the piping tips I have. I really like this one, because you don't have to do anything except pipe on a little blob, and it comes out looking like a flower!


Then I added some little silver sugar balls.


And in the end it looked like a real wedding cake.





A couple of notes: In the picture below, you can see that the cake turned sort of blue on the bottom slice:


The bottom layer of filling has red food coloring and did not dye the cake. The middle and top layer of filling had jam next to the cake, with filling in between the layers of jam -- and it dyed the cake. So I'll not be using jam, and will be using food coloring.

Another note: I used a vanilla bean in the plain frosting, and you can see vanilla bean specks in the frosting covering the cake. I won't be doing that for the real deal, just for a more uniform look.


Wednesday, May 30, 2012

[Inez] Wedding cake: practice round (part 1)

I know I just posted about a cake I made a week ago... but I made an even more exciting cake last weekend. Hope you're cool with that.

This does not include the ingredients I already had in the house.

So first, to review. I'm making a wedding cake for my dear friend Steph, who was my freshman roommate, my sophomore roommate, my junior roommate, and would have probably been my senior roommate if I hadn't done Quaker house. As it was, I spent about as much time at Steph's apartment as my own, senior year. See there's this funny thing where if you're a senior trying to write your thesis and you live with a bunch of sophomores, they JUST DON'T UNDERSTAND THE VALUE OF QUIET. I mean, glad you had fun, people. And glad I had another living room I could go write in.

Um, anyway. Steph. Wedding cake. Oh yes, review: 12 inch tier = hazelnut cake with chocolate filling, 9 inch  tier = vanilla cake with raspberry filling, 6 inch tier (plus additional sheet cake to feed the masses) = chocolate with orange filling. I'm flying out to California in 15 days to make this happen.

Day One: bake six layers of cake. Each tier will have two layers, and each layer will be torted for greater height and a more exciting cake-to-frosting ratio. I didn't take pictures of the baking process because how many pictures of flour can I really expect you to appreciate? Here's my fridge after all the cakes were baked:


Eat food, watch Dr. Who, sleep.

Day Two: Make four kinds of cream cheese frosting (fillings detailed above, plus vanilla cream cheese frosting to cover the outside of the cake).

Here's my Cream Cheese Frosting Recipe.
  • 2 pkg cc
  • 1 stick butter
  • 1 t vanilla and/or 1 vanilla bean
  • ~1 c confectioners suger (to taste... I usually do a bit less than a cup)
  • ~1-1.5 c whipping cream 
Cream the butter first before anything because otherwise sometimes you may end up with little butter bits that don't mix in all the way if the butter isn't quite soft. Then add the cc, vanilla, confectioners sugar, and beat until fully combined. Whip the cream and fold in.

Before adding whipped cream.


Raspberry: Measure out about 1 cup of raspberries, strain slightly to remove some of the liquid. Add to butter/cc mix before folding in the whipped cream.

Chocolate: Melt 4 oz semi-sweet baker's chocolate, let cool somewhat. Add to butter/cc mix before folding in the whipped cream. Reduce confectioners sugar to about 1/2 cup.

Orange: Add the zest of one orange, 1 T orange juice, and a scant 1/4 t orange extract to butter/cc mix before folding in the whipped cream. Add more of anything to taste -- but go easy on the orange extract; it can easily overpower the frosting.

Fold in the whipped cream with a gentle touch. These are clouds, baby, you don't want to crush them.

The frosting will about double in size when you add the whipped cream. Awesome.

When you've got all the frostings made up, fill and frost each individual layer as if it were its own cake. Do it right. Make it pretty. Don't worry too much about the bottom edge.


Now here's the deal. If you've refrigerated the frosting, you have to let it sit out for a while before frosting. If it's still cold, there will be lots of air bubbles that get in the way of smoothing it out. You can fold the frosting again to encourage it to soften up. It may lose some of its fluffiness, but it's worth it if you don't have the time/patience to let it sit out.

Put these bad boys in the fridge. Cover them up. Don't worry too much if you bang them a tiny bit getting them in or out, you can fix them tomorrow. Go to the pizza place down the street with your friends, have some dinner. Have a beer. Go to sleep.

Coming soon: see Part 2 for assembly and decoration)

[Inez] Vanilla cake with raspberry filling

I finally found a vanilla cake recipe to use for the wedding cake. I made this one two weekends ago to test the recipe, and took it in to work with me because I don't want my housemates to get sick of cake. That would be sad.

For the practice cake I used a recipe from Joy the Baker for Vanilla Butter Cake. Her recipe is for 12 cupcakes; I multiplied the recipe by three and divided it between two 9 inch round pans.


I picked this one to try because it follows a similar process as the coconut cake I love so much. You add butter to flour, sugar, and other dry ingredients and then beat it until it becomes sandy. This recipe then has you add half of the milk and beat it just until incorporated.


Mix the rest of the wet ingredients, and finish adding to the dry mixture.


I'm pretty sure I've talked about torting before. Torting is where you take a layer of cake and cut it in half so that it forms two thin layers of cake. I did that. Then I got fancy. If you have a colorful filling and a white frosting, you don't really want the filling to show between the layers when you get it all frosted up. So I piped a ring of plain vanilla cream cheese frosting around the outside of each layer...


...before adding the raspberry cream cheese filling.




See? You can't tell there's raspberry anywhere in there.


Ta da!



Side note: I used royal icing for the piped decorations here. #1 It's a totally different color white. #2 It's extremely sensitive to humidity (hello, I live in Washington, DC, built on a swamp - it's humid here) and grease (such as, for example, the grease of a butter-cream cheese-whipped cream frosting). So it had melted by the next morning. Scrap that idea.

Wednesday, May 16, 2012

[Inez] Wedding Cupcakes

The trial portion of the wedding cake preparation continues. I am still tweaking my hazelnut cake recipe, and still looking for the perfect vanilla cake recipe. I will probably have to make two more cakes this weekend. In the mean time, I made some hazelnut cupcakes over the weekend to test for flavor. I busted out the piping tips to get a bit more familiar with the mechanics of piping before I have to make pretty borders between the tiers of the wedding cake.

I don't really have a whole lot of commentary for this post. I watched some videos on piping and I'll be watching them again. In the mean time, learning the feel of it and what works and what doesn't is helpful.


I used a marbled frosting (chocolate and vanilla cream cheese) because that's what will be on the cake (chocolate between layers, vanilla cream cheese frosting on the outside of the cake).