Saturday, September 25, 2010

Hello Kitty!

The cake is 2-10" rounds tiered together with vanilla buttercream filling and frosting.  The kitty is made out of fondant, the flowers on the top are made out of fondant, but the flowers on the sides are made out of gumpaste.  The ribbon is simply food safe ribbon.
I am pooped.  This week has been so full, with my kiddo getting sick in the beginning of the week and myself not feeling too hot for a couple of days.  I knew I had to muscle through it, though, so I pulled myself up by the bootstraps and got down to it.  There's not much to tell, this cake was pretty routine, but I did stay up until 1:30 in the morning to finish it so that my nieces could come over this morning and we all could hang out, have a picnic, etc.  It was fun!  The client loved the cake and the kids in her car seemed overjoyed, so I'm happy!

Going Bananas and I Love It!


The cake itself is vanilla pound cake with chocolate butter filling and vanilla butter frosting.  I say butter instead of buttercream because this cake was made without hydrogenated oils per the client's request.  Many of the ingredients were organic as well.  I didn't have a recipe I could depend on for this cake, so I had to test out a bit and I wasted 3 entire 10" rounds to testing.  ACK!  Now I have it, though, for future reference.
The frosting was made without shortening, and I wasn't sure how it would behave, but it came out great.  The only difference was that once it crusted, it crusted a little harder than I was used to and was not very malleable.  I loved the blue color of the background.
The decorations on this cake are MMF.  The monkey is sitting on top of an inverted cupcake.  He was very fun to put together, and is made out of chocolate MMF.  I just need to take a second here to reiterate how much I love moulding fondant.  It is super fun, like playing with playdoh.  Speaking of, when my son is around and I need to work on cakes, I let him play with playdoh while I play with fondant.  HA!
The bananas were labor intensive but also a blast.  They're little crescents, each hand shaped and painted, then piled up on top of each other.  There's something like 60 bananas on this cake.  The "peels" are my favorite.  You just take the crescent shape, slice one end into four parts lengthwise, then flatten them out, paint them, and plop them on.  Easy peasy and oh so fun.
I have been using the hot knife technique combined with the paper towel technique recently.  I first pipe in the filling, hot knife it smooth, plop the top layer on, pipe a large, very close spiral on the top layer all the way out to over the edges, hot knife that, then go around the cake sides with a #12 tip to distribute the frosting evenly, filling in any weird gaps.  Then I hot knife that ONCE or TWICE maybe around.  If you take off too much frosting, then you're going to spend hours adding more frosting.  NOT fun.  Then I let it crust, use the paper towel trick, and continue decorating.
That was a long winded paragraph.  I'm done now!  I really enjoyed making this cake and it was fun to do a different sort of monkey cake.

Friday, September 10, 2010

Frog and Monkey Girls

This cake took two cakes and smooshed them together into one cute little (or should I say large) cake.  The cake is yellow cake with vanilla buttercream filling and frosting.  The animals are made of Rice Krispie Treats (RKT from now on, readers) and fondant.  The bottom tier is 2-12" cakes and the top tier is 2-6" cakes.
The frog(ette)'s body is made of RKT covered in MMF (marshmallow fondant).  It was a fun little piece.  The lily pad is just fondant rolled thin and frilled about the edges.  Isn't her bow just the cutest thing?  I used shimmer dust for her cheeks, as this little frog knows how to apply her blush just so.  The fly is made out of gumpaste.  The wings were pretty tricky to attach, since using the gumpaste glue made the very thin things flop over, but I persevered and was able to make it all work out.  The spring is just wire wrapped around a pen and pulled a bit.
The little monkey is made of RKT.  The body, head, ans ears were made separately and fitted together with toothpicks.  I cut out the pale fondant for the face and the belly and "glued" them to the RKT using just a little water.  I piped some chocolate buttercream on the side of the monkey closest to the 6" tier so that I wouldn't risk screwing up the BC (buttercream from here-on-out).  Side note here, I haven't learned how to make a good rich chocolate color without using cocoa.  I tried, goodness, I tried, but in the end, good ol' cocoa won over.  I shoved a dowel into the underside of the monkey and used that to hold the weight of the RKT.  I have learned in the past year how important it is to support your basic cake structure.  Anyway :) I piped in the rest of the BC with tip #17 and placed the arms, legs, and tail.  Looking back, it would have been easier to put the tail on before putting the BC on the monkey, but it came off without a hitch.  Then I drew on the face and there ya go! 
  Both bows were made out of fondant.  If you look at the frog in the monkey closeup, you can see her blush.  She really is too dang cute.
  Instead of doing the dots out of fondant, I did buttercream.  They don't look as polished as I would have liked, but I think they look okay too.  I very much enjoyed this cake.  I find that I love moulding fondant ever so much.  It really is my favorite thing about cakes.
All in all, this was a really fun cake and I look forward to the next challenge this amazing and consuming activity brings me.