I'm having issues with my picture program this morning, but here's at least a first look at the wedding cake from yesterday. The cake is white almond sour cream, frosted with almond buttercream, and covered in fondant. The bride's gown was white with champagne lace appliques and little tiny buttons down the back, thus the second layer down from the top -- champagne cornelli lace and ivory pearl buttons. Her attendants' dresses were that beautiful deep blue teal color. And their invitation featured the Celtic knot on the fourth layer.
Wish you could see the cake in the context of the reception hall. The bride found beautiful teal sparkly fabric to run down the center of each table, and the florist did magnificent calla lily centerpieces, again incorporating the colors of white and champagne. It was a beautiful venue. Right down to the teal and white M&M's !
Just a little place for me to publish pictures of my latest creatively crazy cake endeavors.
Sunday, December 31, 2006
The Chocolate Fondant Road of Life - Groom's Cake
The groom had precious memories of playing with all these metal figurines from his childhood. When his dad died, he found them in his effects, and wanted to somehow incorporate them into his groom's cake. There was a bride and groom, a police officer, two young boys, an elderly couple, and 3 cars. As we sat here at their initial consultation, we brainstormed on how to go about creating a cool groom's cake with these wonderful figurines. The bride and groom would go on top, with the first car, next to the beginning of the chocolate fondant road of life. Turns out, the groom's uncle was a police officer in New York, so he could greet them as they embarked on their journey (he's on the bottom layer, to the left of the red car). The two young boys (to the right of the road) could obviously be their possible future children as they continued through their life travels. But the bride and I were both puzzled about what to do with the elderly couple, and where would we fit them into the picture? The groom immediately declared, "That's us, in our old age."
Is that not the coolest story you've ever heard for the creation of a groom's cake?
Is that not the coolest story you've ever heard for the creation of a groom's cake?
Sunday, December 17, 2006
Birthday Barnyard Party
This cake was crafted for two 5-year-old friends who are having their joint birthday celebration at a fun restaurant where the kids can feed the horses, pet the sheep and goats, and play in a giant sandbox. The design of the cake was taken directly from the custom invitation that the parents had created. I take no credit for how cute the animals and the barn and silo are -- all I did was copy their incredibly adorable invitation!
Half the cake is white, half is chocolate, iced in buttercream. The barn and silo are made of Rice Krispie treats which I shaped and formed, then covered in fondant. All the animals are fondant-on-a-stick.
Yee-haw and giddy-up, y'all!
Thursday, December 14, 2006
Magna Cum Laude
No, not the cake -- our daughter.
Forgive me for bragging, but we're very proud parents. She's graduating a semester early, with high honors, tomorrow. I hope this cake lives up to the occasion.
She 'ordered' a multi-layered chocolate extravaganza for her celebration ---- so I always do what I'm told by my children ;-) Chocolate cake, iced in chocolate buttercream, wrapped in chocolate swaths highlighted with white and red chocolate swirly-gigs. I added the red-and-white stuff because those are the colors of her almost-alma mater.
I can't believe I'm done with it and taking pictures, more than 24 hours before the party begins. This is a record, and I definitely think I deserve a short nap now.
Forgive me for bragging, but we're very proud parents. She's graduating a semester early, with high honors, tomorrow. I hope this cake lives up to the occasion.
She 'ordered' a multi-layered chocolate extravaganza for her celebration ---- so I always do what I'm told by my children ;-) Chocolate cake, iced in chocolate buttercream, wrapped in chocolate swaths highlighted with white and red chocolate swirly-gigs. I added the red-and-white stuff because those are the colors of her almost-alma mater.
I can't believe I'm done with it and taking pictures, more than 24 hours before the party begins. This is a record, and I definitely think I deserve a short nap now.
Winter Wonderland
I made this one for youngest daughter to take to work for the their teachers-and-staff holiday party. I LOVE making cakes for teachers -- they are always my most appreciative fans. Didn't get the camera angle quite right on this one, but those are clear plastic snowflake ornaments, and light blue "candy" ornaments hanging from silver swirly wires, popping out of a pile of snowballs at the center of the cake. All sprinkled with sugar-snow, with silver dragees added for a bit of bling, and a snowball border around the base.
See that odd black squiggle on the right side of the plate? It's a "W" written on a piece of tape, to mark where the white-cake half begins. I did this one half chocolate, half white, so people could get their favorite flavor.
Didn't get a picture of the sugar cookies before they went out the door, darn it! But the graduation cake is in process, so check back later (very late, probably) tonight.
See that odd black squiggle on the right side of the plate? It's a "W" written on a piece of tape, to mark where the white-cake half begins. I did this one half chocolate, half white, so people could get their favorite flavor.
Didn't get a picture of the sugar cookies before they went out the door, darn it! But the graduation cake is in process, so check back later (very late, probably) tonight.
Tuesday, December 12, 2006
Merry Christmas!
A white chocolate almond cake, iced in buttercream, adorned with fondant poinsettia and holly berries, buttercream holly leaves, and some sparkling sugar-ice sprinkled over all.
Another holiday cake tomorrow, and maybe some pics of Christmas cookies (you can see a hint of them in the background), and middle-daughter's college graduation cake by Friday, and a fun barnyard birthday cake for two 5-year-olds by Sunday.
Stay tuned!
Another holiday cake tomorrow, and maybe some pics of Christmas cookies (you can see a hint of them in the background), and middle-daughter's college graduation cake by Friday, and a fun barnyard birthday cake for two 5-year-olds by Sunday.
Stay tuned!
Saturday, December 02, 2006
Princess Cake
A sparkly, girly, pink-and-purply cake for a tiny princess. Chocolate cake, buttercream icing, covered in fondant with fondant decor. Plus my favorite silver dragees. The tiara is purchased. This one was great fun to make. I think if I'd gotten a cake like this when I was four years old I'd have had a heart attack from sheer joy!
Thursday, November 30, 2006
Masculine Birthday Cake
These are always a challenge. Not sure why. Perhaps cakes and frostings just naturally lend themselves to pretty, fluffy, pink frilly girly stuff. In any case, this was a birthday cake for a woman to give her husband. Chocolate cake, chocolate frosting, slabs of chocolate all 'round, tied with olive and red ribbons, and bits of fractured chocolate piled on top. Sure looks good to me!
Saturday, November 25, 2006
Twins Turn Five
Two cakes for darling boy-and-girl twins who are turning five. The girl loves penguins. The boy loves bugs. Turns out, he loves turtles more, but bless his heart, he was very gracious about having lady bugs on this cake ... so he gets a tiny little turtle cake next week along with his big brother's baseball cake. (It's a secret though, so don't tell him.) Check back in here Tuesday for pics of the tiny turtle cake.
One cake vanilla, one cake chocolate. I'm going to try to post a bunch of views of both cakes here so you can get an idea of the whole thing. Blogger drives me crazy with their picture placement stuff ... who knows what this will turn out looking like.
I didn't have time to do the white-background version of the pics, but Kate graciously took pictures right on the kitchen table, even after they arrived to pick up the cakes ... so you see them in their raw splendor, and not 'artfully posed'. No doubt you will also notice the sterile cotton balls still holding open the package bows on top of the cakes -- holding them open 'til they dry sufficiently to not collapse in on themselves ... the cotton balls DO get removed before cake presentation.
Thursday, November 23, 2006
Victorian
A pretty little cake, ordered by a daughter for her mother's 50th birthday ... all she said was she wanted it to be chocolate cake, and Victorian in style. So here's my version of Victorian. Let's hope she likes it. The puffy heart-shaped chocolate cake is frosted in white buttercream, then covered with a soft peachy-pink fondant. The lace doily and all other fancy frou-frou touches were done with royal icing. And those silver dragees are my second favorite thing to use on cakes, after gold and silver luster dust ;-)
Mod Girl
Another little cake for a 20-something cool chick. This one is a carrot cake with plenty of buttercream icing. Stripes and flowers and polka dots are fondant. This one and the one above are due today, Thanksgiving Day, and I have two more due by noon Saturday, and another one due Sunday morning. Plus Thanksgiving dinner for 19 by 5:00 this afternoon!
I need to get busy ...
Sunday, November 19, 2006
The new little sheriff's cake
For a baby shower for 50 people. Chocolate cakes, buttercream icing, covered in denim-blue fondant. All the little pockets and bandannas, teddy bears, rope and blankies, are made of fondant. I hit everything with a tiny bit of silver to echo the shiny sheriff's badge theme. Loved making those tiny teddy bears.
Thursday, November 16, 2006
Sheriff's Badge
I'm prepping for the baby shower cake due this coming Sunday. The shower theme is "There's a New Sheriff in Town." How cute is that? So this is the Sheriff's Badge that will stand at the top of the cake, with the little Buckaroo's name inscribed on it. The badge is made from gum paste, which dries a whole lot faster and more dependably than fondant does, down here in humid ol' Houston. Still totally edible, just not very tasty. Kind of a flat, overly sweet taste. Probably better as a keepsake. I think it would last forever.
And for those of you who check this blog daily -- I spent yesterday working on my soap blog, so haven't posted anything here for TWO days now! I hope the multiple posts to my other blog count for my one-post-a-day commitment. Check out Urban Suds at http://urbansuds.blogspot.com any time you're frustrated with a lack of posts on this blog ;-)
And for those of you who check this blog daily -- I spent yesterday working on my soap blog, so haven't posted anything here for TWO days now! I hope the multiple posts to my other blog count for my one-post-a-day commitment. Check out Urban Suds at http://urbansuds.blogspot.com any time you're frustrated with a lack of posts on this blog ;-)
Monday, November 13, 2006
More Bailey
As I experiment with pictures ... trying for two at a time in this post. Placement of the pics (my original complaint with the original Blogger) isn't looking too promising.
Okay, well ... it's not all that bad. But what shows up out here vs. what shows up on the page where I create this stuff is totally different. Whatever. The pink number on top happens to be her double-lined flannel jammies. And I'm sure you'll recognize the purple/gold/sage/orange outfit as her "fall costume." Her previous dresses were either pink and white or a Shabby Chic pink and pale green -- and we all know not to wear those colors after Labor Day.
P.S. You can certainly tell Bailey's mother is a professional photographer ... have you ever SEEN a dog pose this nicely during a 30-minute photoshoot? And she doesn't even look too chagrined at being forced to wear outfits. Does she?
Bailey
I know. This isn't cake-related. But it IS another of my creations. The dog's dress, I mean, not the dog. Eldest photog daughter acquired this little pipsqueak a few months ago. She bought one dress for her at the mall and I had a fit when I saw the price tag -- so I was immediately enlisted (not really - I volunteered) to be her wardrobe creator. Bailey now has more outfits than I do. I'm not kidding.
This is her Thanksgiving dress-up dress. You can't tell, but the print ruffles are of pilgrims and turkeys and corn and pumpkins and Indians. The black ruffles are a black crushed velvet that I cut off the bottom of one of the girl's too-long witch costumes a couple of Halloweens ago.
Another reason for this post -- I've finally discovered where the German gremlins were hiding in here, and have restored my end of things to the English language. Thank heavens. I just wasn't learning German all that well. (See my "Totally Weird" post in the October 2006 archive if you're wondering what the heck I'm talking about.) Also -- I've upgraded to the new beta version of blogger as of 20 minutes ago, so I'm testing out all their promised features. Supposedly it's easier and faster to upload pictures. We shall see. A couple more doggie dresses to come.
This is her Thanksgiving dress-up dress. You can't tell, but the print ruffles are of pilgrims and turkeys and corn and pumpkins and Indians. The black ruffles are a black crushed velvet that I cut off the bottom of one of the girl's too-long witch costumes a couple of Halloweens ago.
Another reason for this post -- I've finally discovered where the German gremlins were hiding in here, and have restored my end of things to the English language. Thank heavens. I just wasn't learning German all that well. (See my "Totally Weird" post in the October 2006 archive if you're wondering what the heck I'm talking about.) Also -- I've upgraded to the new beta version of blogger as of 20 minutes ago, so I'm testing out all their promised features. Supposedly it's easier and faster to upload pictures. We shall see. A couple more doggie dresses to come.
Saturday, November 11, 2006
Fall Wedding - Finis!
Ta da! Here it is in all its glory - Chris & Lewis's wedding cake! It was a big hit, looked absolutely gorgeous in the reception hall, and many people commented on how incredibly light and delicious it was. I loved how the miniature fruits turned out, and I'm glad I tinted the icing ivory. It looked like it was made specifically for that reception hall, with their wall color and trim color and all the chair covers and table coverings. Erin will probably have some better pictures of it later in the week -- I may post another one.
I've been up since 4:30 stressing on making this one perfect -- I think I'll go take a nap now.
I've been up since 4:30 stressing on making this one perfect -- I think I'll go take a nap now.
Friday, November 10, 2006
Gilding the ..... nuts?
Gilded pineapples and mixed nuts -- part of the cake's fall themed decor. Cake topper will be a miniature gilded pineapple nestled together with a tiny crab apple, a miniature bosc pear, and a few gilded nuts.
I've sliced the other mini-pines in half, so that they'll fit on the sides of the cake, along with the other mini-fruits. I have them sitting out on several layers of paper towels overnight so they don't leak their juice all over the icing and ruin the cake tomorrow.
Of course -- it's been in the 80's today with high humidity levels, and now we've got a lovely thunderstorm happening ... so keep your fingers crossed that this icing doesn't slide off the sides of the cake by tomorrow morning. If the promised cold front actually follows this storm, we should be all right.
Off to the engineering portions of this creation now.
I've sliced the other mini-pines in half, so that they'll fit on the sides of the cake, along with the other mini-fruits. I have them sitting out on several layers of paper towels overnight so they don't leak their juice all over the icing and ruin the cake tomorrow.
Of course -- it's been in the 80's today with high humidity levels, and now we've got a lovely thunderstorm happening ... so keep your fingers crossed that this icing doesn't slide off the sides of the cake by tomorrow morning. If the promised cold front actually follows this storm, we should be all right.
Off to the engineering portions of this creation now.
Crumb-coated
The three tiers are now filled and crumb-coated. Awaiting final icing coat, stacking (aka engineering) and decorations. 3 layers in each tier, of vanilla spice cake and ivory-tinted buttercream icing.
Oh my gosh it's delish! (I baked an extra layer just in case I needed it -- but have only had to use it for sampling purposes, since the chef needs to KNOW that it tastes fabulous before ultimate presentation. Right?)
The bride saw it a few minutes ago, even in its unfinished state -- and pronouced it beautiful and delicious -- so I think we're good to go.
Oh my gosh it's delish! (I baked an extra layer just in case I needed it -- but have only had to use it for sampling purposes, since the chef needs to KNOW that it tastes fabulous before ultimate presentation. Right?)
The bride saw it a few minutes ago, even in its unfinished state -- and pronouced it beautiful and delicious -- so I think we're good to go.
For those of you who like to lick the screen ...
Cake-in-Waiting
Wednesday, November 08, 2006
T-ball
A celebration cake for the end-of-season party for a local T-Ball team named The Astros. Chocolate cake, buttercream icing, fondant bats, balls and bases. Paper and drinking straw flags. I'll paint the red stitches on the balls tomorrow morning. And add the "T" at home plate. Baseball cakes are fun!
And did I mention that our dishwasher has had a fried motherboard for the past two weeks? Who ever came up with the bright idea to even PUT motherboards into dishwashers, anyway? My hands are scalded red from the superhot water I've used to wash and rinse the dishes BY HAND for over 14 days in a row now. Thankfully, the backordered part has finally arrived, and the dude will be here tomorrow to free me from dishwater-hands hell. Or so he says.
Too bad you're not here to enjoy the aroma of spice cake layers baking up in the oven. The wedding cake for Saturday is a vanilla spice with ivory buttercream icing. Yum!
Tuesday, November 07, 2006
Sunday, November 05, 2006
Wedding Cake Week
I have a cake due this week for an 11:00 am Saturday wedding. Woo-hoo! I'm so excited about it. Just got back from shopping for all the ingredients, and thought it might be fun to document at least some of the creative process as the week proceeds. To the right you will see revealed SOME of the secret ingredients that go into my confections. And to the right of the massive pile of butter, sugar, flour, eggs, milk, pudding and sour cream, you'll see my trusty alchemist, "Big Red Machine".
Stay tuned for updates this week as these pedestrian raw materials are transformed into an elegant, contemporary, sophisticated Fall Wedding cake. I just adore the creative process.
Funny how the "Jell-O" brand name pops out more than anything else in this picture, isn't it? They've got some real advertising geniuses over at Kraft Foods.
Saturday, November 04, 2006
Mod Birthday
Almost forgot to post this today. This was a last-minute request for a quick birthday cake for a young woman turning 23 who isn't into either pink or girly. So she gets a mod-funky-uptown cool chick cake!
Chocolate fudge cake, chocolate fudge icing, marshmallow fondant accents. The fondant balls spiraling out of the top are stuck onto lengths of jewelry wire twisted into funky shapes, and stuck down into a straw that I poked down into the top of the cake. That way, the wires don't cut through the cake itself, the straw holds everything upright, and the wire never touches the cake. (Jewelry wire is not officially considered "Food-Safe" by the FDA, so it needs to be either wrapped in self-stick saran or stuck down inside a straw. Those little coffee swizzle sticks are perfect for single wires ... but I drink my coffee black so I never have any on hand.)
Friday, November 03, 2006
Baby Nurse
Our youngest is in her first year of college, working her way toward eventually becoming a Neonatal Nurse Practitioner. She came home today with her very first, super-duper, official ID swipe card that allows her access to the newborn nursery at the nearby Level I Trauma Hospital. She is absolutely walking on air and can't wait 'til 9:00 tomorrow morning when she starts her volunteer work, holding and rocking and feeding all those teeny tiny precious little babies.
While trying to figure out a way to tie this post into cake-making, I realized I'm a far bigger cake nerd than I thought. I didn't take my first (and only) Wilton class until a few months after youngest daughter was born. But by golly, I had a two-layer, 9x13, homemade carrot cake frosted in cream cheese icing, decorated with pink-and-blue buttercream blocks spelling out "Welcome Baby", finished and wrapped and waiting nicely in the freezer, two weeks before her due date.
The minute I went into labor, I started obsessing about getting that cake out of the freezer so it could thaw out and we could eat it in celebration, immediately after she was born.
She was born at home, and her daddy delivered her, because my labor went so fast that the midwife didn't have time to get there. I had also invited our chiropractor to attend the birth, and he arrived after the event, as well. But he had a HUGE laugh over the giant, lavishly decorated, Welcome-Baby cake sitting proudly on the dining room table. Said he'd never seen anything like it before.
Even HE knew I was a cake-nerd. Way back then.
While trying to figure out a way to tie this post into cake-making, I realized I'm a far bigger cake nerd than I thought. I didn't take my first (and only) Wilton class until a few months after youngest daughter was born. But by golly, I had a two-layer, 9x13, homemade carrot cake frosted in cream cheese icing, decorated with pink-and-blue buttercream blocks spelling out "Welcome Baby", finished and wrapped and waiting nicely in the freezer, two weeks before her due date.
The minute I went into labor, I started obsessing about getting that cake out of the freezer so it could thaw out and we could eat it in celebration, immediately after she was born.
She was born at home, and her daddy delivered her, because my labor went so fast that the midwife didn't have time to get there. I had also invited our chiropractor to attend the birth, and he arrived after the event, as well. But he had a HUGE laugh over the giant, lavishly decorated, Welcome-Baby cake sitting proudly on the dining room table. Said he'd never seen anything like it before.
Even HE knew I was a cake-nerd. Way back then.
Thursday, November 02, 2006
Carving Contest
My official November 2 entry in the November NaBloPoMo thing.
One of our family traditions over the past few years has been to host a pumpkin-carving contest. It has proven to provide much fun and entertainment, not only for the participants, but for all the trick-or-treaters and their parents who come our way. This year's entrants are arrayed on the steps leading up to our front door.
Problem is, we live in Houston. Sea level. Tropical weather. 2,000% humidity levels. Rampant mold growth.
The minute you stick a knife into a future Jack-O-Lantern down here, it begins to melt, mold, morph and mildew.
We did this gig on Sunday evening, and everything managed to stay relatively intact through Tuesday night.
But next year -- I'm not sure what we're going to do. Carved pumpkins can't stay intact for more than two days down here, and we're all too old and tired to host a carving contest on a week night.
Maybe we should investigate the powers of dry ice .......
One of our family traditions over the past few years has been to host a pumpkin-carving contest. It has proven to provide much fun and entertainment, not only for the participants, but for all the trick-or-treaters and their parents who come our way. This year's entrants are arrayed on the steps leading up to our front door.
Problem is, we live in Houston. Sea level. Tropical weather. 2,000% humidity levels. Rampant mold growth.
The minute you stick a knife into a future Jack-O-Lantern down here, it begins to melt, mold, morph and mildew.
We did this gig on Sunday evening, and everything managed to stay relatively intact through Tuesday night.
But next year -- I'm not sure what we're going to do. Carved pumpkins can't stay intact for more than two days down here, and we're all too old and tired to host a carving contest on a week night.
Maybe we should investigate the powers of dry ice .......
It's official. I'm a Nerd.
Remember those fabulous fall cookies below that I spent multiple hours on, in order to donate to youngest daughter's employer-school's Bake Sale? Well. I was SURE the bake sale was scheduled for Halloween. So I had them done and ready for daughter to take them to work on October 30.
I was a week early.
Bake Sale is scheduled for November 7. It is spelled out, clear as day, on the school's flyer. Why I didn't read the date right, I have no idea. Menopause, maybe?
The ladies in the office were gracious enough to take them anyway, and set them out to sell as a "Bake Sale Preview Special."
Daughter told the story to one of her college friends, who said, "Your mom is such a nerd!"
Little did he know -- he was exactly right. I AM a nerd. Always have been, always will be. And oddly proud of it. I just didn't realize that my nerdness had flowed over into my cake/cookie creations yet. Happy to know it has ;-)
I was a week early.
Bake Sale is scheduled for November 7. It is spelled out, clear as day, on the school's flyer. Why I didn't read the date right, I have no idea. Menopause, maybe?
The ladies in the office were gracious enough to take them anyway, and set them out to sell as a "Bake Sale Preview Special."
Daughter told the story to one of her college friends, who said, "Your mom is such a nerd!"
Little did he know -- he was exactly right. I AM a nerd. Always have been, always will be. And oddly proud of it. I just didn't realize that my nerdness had flowed over into my cake/cookie creations yet. Happy to know it has ;-)
Oh, the pressure!
I've decided to post some little tidbit every day on this blog, during the month of November, in honor of NaBloPoMo (click on this link to find out more about this challenge). Every post won't be a picture of a delicious cake that you can lick off the screen, since my entire life doesn't revolve simply around cakes, but every post will probably reveal a bit more of me and mine, and all (scratch that -- SOME) of what happens inside my head-and-life each day. And lucky you -- November is shaping up to be a very exciting month around here!
So, since this announcement of the fact that I've taken on this challenge will probably not be considered my first post, since it's not really a post, I shall soon post what should have been yesterday's post, then will go on to today's.
So, since this announcement of the fact that I've taken on this challenge will probably not be considered my first post, since it's not really a post, I shall soon post what should have been yesterday's post, then will go on to today's.
Monday, October 30, 2006
PTO Bake Sale
It's been many a year since I participated in one of these. Youngest daughter now works at an elementary school, and their "fall fundraiser" is upcoming. I was happy to have an excuse to try my hand at decorated sugar cookies, as opposed to cakes. Love the fall leaves and acorn cookie cutters.
I made 6 dozen, and 4 dozen managed to make it to school in those fancy packages. I hope they make a bunch of money off of them. The school's mascot is an owl, thus the package labels.
Saturday, October 28, 2006
Baseball!
Created for a little boy's birthday. Vanilla cake with vanilla buttercream. Flags in the outfield are paper (I love my PrintShop) taped to straws. Bases, balls, bats and on-deck circles are fondant. Dirt is crushed gingersnaps. The hot dog, Coke, glove and peanuts are Wilton candles. How clever that they packaged them in a foursome, perfect for a four-year-old!
I had to draw heavily on Uncle Ron's baseball wisdom for this one. And even DR had to remind me that the pitcher's mound is gingersnap dirt, NOT grass. Duh.
And no, NOTHING herein is to scale. But then, no one has ever accused me of being an architect.
Wednesday, October 25, 2006
Another pretty little present cake
Thursday, October 19, 2006
My own birthday cake ...
I admit it. I love Fall the best. As an October-baby, I love anything pumpkin-y, apple-ish, golden, orange, crimson, spicy, crisp and cool. So I decided to make a pumpkin cake for my birthday. This one features alternating layers of caramel-spice and vanilla-caramel cakes, iced in buttercream and covered in pumpkin-colored fondant. Add a stem of brown fondant, a few leaves and twiny vines of avocado fondant, and a fall celebration cake is born. My favorite part was painting the finished pumpkin with an amazing mixture of vodka, terra cotta, gold and soft brown food colors, plus the always exciting golden luster dust. I swear, this cake looked like it was a lovingly hand-crafted ceramic cookie jar!
A little BlueBell Cinnamon ice cream seemed to be the perfect accompaniment.
And yes, it was finally cool and dry here today. Halleluljah.
... and her little brother
I made a smaller version of my pumpkin cake for daughter's boss's birthday, which is close to mine. His cake is 3 layers of chocolate fudge, covered with the same buttercream and fondant.
These were the most amazingly fun cakes to make, and I was astonished at how beautiful they turned out to be ... if I do say so, myself!
These were the most amazingly fun cakes to make, and I was astonished at how beautiful they turned out to be ... if I do say so, myself!
Dirty Martini
A last-minute cake made for daughter's girlfriend who turned 25 yesterday. Guess what the birthday girl's favorite drink is? My favorite part of the cake is the fondant olives. I put them on a wooden skewer, only later realizing it could have been even more exciting to thread them onto either a super-tall birthday candle or a sparkler. Oh well. There's always next time.
A group of them met for dinner at a local Mexican restaurant, and daughter snuck the cake into the restaurant's cooler before the birthday girl arrived. The restaurant was more than accommodating of their celebration, and much of the cake was shared with the waiters.
This is another chocolate fudge cake, two layers all around, baked in a 10" square pan and a 6" square pan. I cut diagonally across the squares to make 2 triangles from each; stacked the triangles on top of each other with chocolate fudge frosting slathered in between; then cut a 2" vertical slice out of the middle of the larger martini "cup" to form the stem of the glass. Plastered some more chocolate fudge icing between the two halves of the top triangle, shoved them together, then frosted it all with vanilla buttercream and decorated with 'dirty-martini-pale-green' royal icing.
Normally I would cover a cake like this in fondant, because it's so much more finished and elegant looking. But I had both time constraints and humidity issues with this one. It's hard enough to craft a decent buttercream-iced cake when the temp is 88 and the humidity is 8,000%, but it's nearly impossible to pull off a fondant-covered cake under those conditions.
Sugar is hygroscopic, meaning it literally pulls moisture out of the air, into and onto itself. The marshmallow fondant that I make is nearly 100% sugar, with a little gelatin (talk about hygroscopic!) and cornstarch thrown in for good measure. Thus, it gets all swollen and bloated and ornery whenever it's rainy and humid outside. Even our wonderful Trane air conditioner running at top speed can't adequately handle the bloated beast that is fondant on a hot, humid, rainy Houston day.
The weatherman tells us there's a cold/dry front moving through here tonight. He'd better be right. Because I'm making my own birthday cake tomorrow and I darn well want to use fondant!
A group of them met for dinner at a local Mexican restaurant, and daughter snuck the cake into the restaurant's cooler before the birthday girl arrived. The restaurant was more than accommodating of their celebration, and much of the cake was shared with the waiters.
This is another chocolate fudge cake, two layers all around, baked in a 10" square pan and a 6" square pan. I cut diagonally across the squares to make 2 triangles from each; stacked the triangles on top of each other with chocolate fudge frosting slathered in between; then cut a 2" vertical slice out of the middle of the larger martini "cup" to form the stem of the glass. Plastered some more chocolate fudge icing between the two halves of the top triangle, shoved them together, then frosted it all with vanilla buttercream and decorated with 'dirty-martini-pale-green' royal icing.
Normally I would cover a cake like this in fondant, because it's so much more finished and elegant looking. But I had both time constraints and humidity issues with this one. It's hard enough to craft a decent buttercream-iced cake when the temp is 88 and the humidity is 8,000%, but it's nearly impossible to pull off a fondant-covered cake under those conditions.
Sugar is hygroscopic, meaning it literally pulls moisture out of the air, into and onto itself. The marshmallow fondant that I make is nearly 100% sugar, with a little gelatin (talk about hygroscopic!) and cornstarch thrown in for good measure. Thus, it gets all swollen and bloated and ornery whenever it's rainy and humid outside. Even our wonderful Trane air conditioner running at top speed can't adequately handle the bloated beast that is fondant on a hot, humid, rainy Houston day.
The weatherman tells us there's a cold/dry front moving through here tonight. He'd better be right. Because I'm making my own birthday cake tomorrow and I darn well want to use fondant!
Tuesday, October 17, 2006
Totally Weird
I don't know if this is something hinky within Blogger.com, or something I did unwittingly on my own, but suddenly the comments portion of this blog, AND the part where I post things and do stuff and manage the darn thing, are all written in GERMAN!
What in the world.....?
What you guys (and I) write still shows up in English, but everything around it is in German from my end. Does it show up in German on your end of things? Please let me know. I know no German. Thus, I can't figure out how to get this German language thingy off of my site.
What in the world.....?
What you guys (and I) write still shows up in English, but everything around it is in German from my end. Does it show up in German on your end of things? Please let me know. I know no German. Thus, I can't figure out how to get this German language thingy off of my site.
Monday, October 16, 2006
Happy Birthday
A pretty little "present" cake ordered by a husband, for his wife who likes chocolate and the color lavender. I hope she likes it, and I hope it gets where it's going okay. We've had 89 zillion inches of rain today (okay- I exaggerate) and for a while I thought I might have to launch it off in a canoe.
For those of you who like to hear all the details (i.e., lick the screen), it's a two-layer chocolate fudge cake, iced in chocolate buttercream, with chocolate cornelli-lace decorating the gift box. The lavender ribbons-and-roses and the green leaves are all fondant, painted with a bit of silver luster-dust for a pretty sheen.
Monday, October 02, 2006
Saturday, September 30, 2006
Baby Boy
Thursday, September 28, 2006
Blondie's Birthday Cake
Saturday, September 23, 2006
Twenty Five Years!
Our wedding cake never arrived on that gorgeous September day back in 1981. The bakery had the date wrong. So two friends raced to the grocery store during the ceremony, bought two decorated birthday cakes, took them back to the reception hall, plopped them on top of one another, and voila, instant wedding cake! No one seemed to notice or care that it wasn't the super-healthy no-sugar whole wheat carrot cake with cream cheese frosting that we had ordered. Imagine that.
Our girls are putting on a big shindig for us in celebration of the past 25 years, so you KNOW I just had to make our first-ever official Wedding Cake for the party. I can't even remember what our original cake was supposed to look like -- but I'm sure this one is way prettier.
That's my giant "diamond ring" pin on top. Kind of an inside joke.
Sunday, September 17, 2006
Chocolate-and-Flowers
A birthday cake for Annie's mommy (see Annie's cake here)
Daddy brought the flowers, Annie and I made the cake. I'm totally frustrated by my lack of photography skills. This cake is so much more impressive than this picture portrays. Where's my photog-daughter when I need her? Anyway ... it's a German Chocolate cake, iced in chocolate buttercream, with decorated chocolate-slabs stacked around the edge to simulate a 2-level chocolate vase. Enough to make a chocoholic swoon!
Daddy brought the flowers, Annie and I made the cake. I'm totally frustrated by my lack of photography skills. This cake is so much more impressive than this picture portrays. Where's my photog-daughter when I need her? Anyway ... it's a German Chocolate cake, iced in chocolate buttercream, with decorated chocolate-slabs stacked around the edge to simulate a 2-level chocolate vase. Enough to make a chocoholic swoon!
Saturday, September 16, 2006
Ladies' Luncheon
This cake was made for the Ladies' Altar Guild of a nearby church. They're having a luncheon today to thank all current members and to hopefully recruit new members. Their fall-colored theme for the luncheon is "Hats off to YOU!", with all attendees required to sport a festive hat for the occasion. I thought it might be fun to do a Hat Cake for their dessert, and here's what I came up with. The ladies provided the awesome cake stand.
Monday, September 11, 2006
A friend's birthday cake
Sadly enough, our friend's birthday happens to be 9/11. I made this tiny little personal cake for her. Tried to lift her spirits a bit with a take-off on the classic Victoria's Secret goodie-box. No sexy lingerie inside, just chocolate cake.
Will deliver it to her as soon as (and if) this delicious and very welcome rain lets up ...
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