Buttercream Icing was the basis for a cake decorating lesson. Actually, it was my final exam in the cake decorating class I’ve been taking. We were to bake two layers, stack and frost them before class. We could make flowers ahead of time and let them dry. In class we had to write a word on the cake and do the border, then complete the cake. I knew right away I wanted Tiffany blue as the base with white decorations. We hadn’t had instructions on how to make the flowers I wanted to use, but I read the book and watched a couple of videos. And created them anyway!
The meringue powder in the recipe helps the frosting form a firm crust that allows decorations to hold their shape. Still the larger flowers, the teacher said, would need about three days to dry enough to completely hold their shape while being set on the cake and transported. Meringue powder also allows the cake icing to crust just enough, creating a firmer base on which to build the decorations. I wanted to allow enough time for that to happen before class.
I baked the cake Saturday. After it cooled, I leveled the layers by cutting off the rounded tops. A layer of frosting on the bottom one and I set the top one in place upside down. This let the 90 degree edge created by the cake pan form the top edge of the cake. Then I frosted with a “crumb coat” of icing – just enough to keep crumbs from breaking loose and ruining the look of the icing. (And, lesson learned, I didn’t bake a chocolate cake this time!) After several hours, I went back and gave the cake a thin coat of the Tiffany blue, partly to create a smooth base for the last layer and partly to “practice” the icing techniques. (I made an entire recipe of Tiffany blue to do the cake as teacher warned it is impossible to match the new batch to the old, should you run out!) Sunday morning, I put on the last layer of icing. I remember it turned out gorgeous, smooth with a sharp edge at the top. And then I reached up for something and bumped the cake, lifting off a four inch strip of frosting – and cake!- all along one edge.
There went perfection – as I choose to remember anyway! Nothing to do but try to patch it back together. Remember that waxed paper trick I talked about here? It works quite nicely. Amazingly well, in fact considering the gash that needed repair. 🙂
In class, we first had a lesson in ribbon roses and writing. Writing was by far the hardest thing ever! Teacher had me thin my icing – twice – which really helped. But my lines still curlicued, broke, twisted and refused to go where my brain shouted directions! And I was only doing a three letter word! After picking letters off several times with a toothpick (yes, you can do that!), the last two finally came out okay. The “J” I finally let dry for a few minutes and then I shoved it into its real shape with a toothpick.
I have profound respect for Niece who was a cake decorator in a store bakery!!!! And for sisters in law who have actually made wedding and other celebration cakes (plural) for other people! Excuse me. I have some a lot of practice to do!!!
- 1 cup solid white vegetable shortening
- 1 teaspoon flavoring (vanilla, almond or butter)
- 7-8 teaspoons milk or water
- 1 pound confectioners’ sugar
- 1 tablespoon Wilton Meringue powder
- For chocolate, add
- ¾ cup cocoa OR 3 1 oz unsweetened chocolate squares, melted
- 1 – 2 teaspoons water or milk
- Cream shortening, flavoring and water/milk until well mixed.
- Add confectioner’s sugar and meringue powder and mix at low speed until well mixed.
- Blend for an additional minute until creamy.
- Makes 2 ½ cups stiff consistency frosting. (See Notes below.)
- Keeps a week in the refrigerator and freezes well.
- _Stiff consistency is used for decorations that will be upright, like roses.
- Medium consistency is used for stars, borders, and flat petalled flowers. Add 1 tsp of water or milk per cup of stiff icing.
- Thin consistency is used for icing, writing and making leaves. Add 2 tsp water or milk per cup of stiff icing. For writing, Wilton recommends that you also add ½ teaspoon of piping gel per cup of thin icing, to help the icing “stretch” and not break as you write.
- Frosted cakes will stay fresh in freezer up to six months. Defrost a frozen cake unwrapped to prevent condensation forming on the frosting and ruining it.
- This recipe and directions are from Wilton Cake Decorating instruction manuals. For more information, visit their website. _
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