A birthday to me is never complete without a Cake. Maybe because that’s how I grew up celebrating my birthdays and there was always cake. Last year for my lil’Appu’s b’day I made my first two tier cake with Fondant decorations. As the party was a Rainbow theme I wanted to make the popular seven colored rainbow Cake. But I refused to bake a cake filled with so much artificial color for a baby’s birthday! So finally baked up my most favorite Chocolate Banana cake with Chocolate buttercream and it was a huge hit!!
But I have always wanted to try a colorful layer cake…so
this time with the help and tips from few blogger friends, I decided to go for
an Ombre cake – shades from dark tone to lighter tone of the same color. And I
convinced myself that it was only a little bit of artificial color in each
layer :-)
Also I decided against doing a Tiered/ Fondant cake this time…Single tier cakes can look just as pretty and elegant and did you know, Buttercream is the new Fondant! :-P
Also I decided against doing a Tiered/ Fondant cake this time…Single tier cakes can look just as pretty and elegant and did you know, Buttercream is the new Fondant! :-P
Appu’s Second birthday was a Bubble theme, so I went for a Blue-White Ombre effect. For the cake
flavor I decided to try a White Cake recipe I found at Epicurious. I had initially planned to
make Three 10” layers. But I felt for a 10” inch cake, the batter was less to
be divided into three, so I double the cake batter recipe and divided them
equally into four cake pans - to obtain three shades of blue and one white layer .
The blue
colors were obtained by using Wilton’s Royal Blue icing gel mixed with the cake
batter in different quantities. The White layer is the actual White cake itself and trust me it
definitely does look White…
Now coming to the decoration, this is where I get all
excited and a zillion ideas float through my head. A bubble themed party needed
a bubble effect on the cake, right!! I had anyway decided to go for buttercream
decoration and was still making up my mind on the pattern when I thought it
would be nice to make Gelatin bubbles as toppers.
My initial plan was to make few Blue, White and Golden
shaded balls in different sizes and keep them all around and on top of the cake
(like floating bubbles) , but did I tell you I had cooked the entire dinner for
the party myself (with parents to help ofcourse). So after a whole day of
cooking, I was terribly exhausted and had almost
dropped my plans of making these. But not willing to quit, after everyone went
to bed (almost midnight), I decided to try to make a few gelatin balls atleast
in one color and made these Blue ones in different sizes - I added a tiny bit
of ‘Blue Luster Dust’ to the gelatin-water mix to get the blue balls.
The technique calls for blowing up small balloons (water
balloons are best) in different sizes. The balloons are greased and then dipped
in slightly bloomed, melted and colored gelatin until it coats the balloon
nicely and left overnight to dry. Once hardened, just burst the balloon slowly from
the end and you get nice colored gelatin bubbles. Sounds easy? But it was a
hell of a task (mayb coz my brain was so dead tired) and I would say I somehow
managed to hold my patience together :-)
The original technique called for propping up the gelatin
coated balloons on lollipop sticks to dry, but I had cake pops planned for my
lollipop sticks ;-), so I just waited for the gelatin to dry up a bit and tied
up the balloon end on a string loop and hung them down my kitchen
cupboard knobs overnight to harden ;-) !
Here’s a link to theoriginal technique if you ever wanna try. (These almost feel like plastic once hardened and it’s not edible, just so you know)
Here’s a link to theoriginal technique if you ever wanna try. (These almost feel like plastic once hardened and it’s not edible, just so you know)
Next came the buttercream decoration. I wasn’t sure what to do for a bubble effect
and also to impart the ombre effect. I have loved the petal or fish scale like
design that you’ll find all over the internet on many cakes. But I wanted it be
different. So instead of buying a round tip, I bought a start tip (Wilton Tip# 199) to make the pattern around the cake, and it almost resembled Shells, so I’m
calling it Shell pattern!
Getting the Shell Pattern is really so easy. I have
explained it here in the easiest way that I can think of. ( I took random pics while frosting late at night, so the pics may not be the best but understandable nevertheless )
Yes, it’s a bit time taking, but the end result is fabulous and I guess this cake almost has more than a 100 shells around it, don’t you think? ;-)
How to obtain Shell Pattern with Buttercream using Wilton Tip # 199
The first and foremost step is to make a good pipeable consistency Buttercream Frosting (neither too thick nor too thin).
I've used my Vanilla Buttercream recipe and made 3 batches of it (1 batch for filling and crumb coating the cake, next 2 batches for final shell decoration)
Next important step after filling the layers with frosting and crumb
coating the cake is to Refrigerate for 30mins.
Then decorate as follows -
Step 1 : Add Frosting/Icing of desired color to piping
bag(s) and attach the star tip securely.
Step 2 : Take the piping bag with Icing of desired color and
apply gentle pressure to release a drop (of required size) of the icing on the
side of the cake.
Step 3 : Using a thin metal spatula or butter knife, gently
wipe the frosting horizontally creating a depression in the centre and a tail
of buttercream to the right. Clean the butterknife on a papertowel after each shell is made.
Step 4 : Again add a drop of the icing on the tail portion
but close to the center depression(as shown in pic at Step 2) and continue by wiping it horizontally until
you finish the entire cake.
(Remember to Clean the butterknife/spatula on a papertowel after each shell is made)
If using different shades of icing, change
the Icing colors as desired for your decoration.
If you feel the buttercream frosting is getting thinner due to heat from our hands, refrigerate for 10 mins and continue.
Yes, it’s a bit time taking, but the end result is fabulous and I guess this cake almost has more than a 100 shells around it, don’t you think? ;-)
Here’s me doing the shell pattern :-) Pic taken by daddy and no matter how tired I am, I always have the
patience and presence of mind to decorate a cake…It’s my absolute favorite part
of any cake making!!
Before I stop rambling let me tell you, this White Cake
recipe is a stunner. The flavor is huge and the texture is just perfect and
color is very much WHITE. And I’m glad I decided to give it a try.
The only things that bothered me was it uses only egg whites, 6 of them (what am I supposed to do with the leftover 6 egg yolks? ) and as I had doubled the cake recipe, I was left with 12 egg yolks *SIGH* !! We finally made scrambled egg yolks the next day to finish them off…Lol!
The only things that bothered me was it uses only egg whites, 6 of them (what am I supposed to do with the leftover 6 egg yolks? ) and as I had doubled the cake recipe, I was left with 12 egg yolks *SIGH* !! We finally made scrambled egg yolks the next day to finish them off…Lol!
I was very adamant that everyone should get all
the four ombre layers, so instead of cutting into wedges I cut the cake into thin slices so that it wasn’t too big to fill one’s tummy, but enough
to enjoy a full slice with all 4 layers ;-)
‘White
Cake’
Recipe
source: Epicurious (taken from Cook’s Illutsrated)
You’ll
need
Cake
Flour- 2 ¼ cups
Milk
(at room temperature) - 1 cup
Egg
whites (at room temperature) - 6
Almond
extract - 2 tsp
Vanilla
extract - 1 tsp
Granulated
Sugar - 1 ¾ cups
Baking
powder - 4 tsp
Unsalted
Butter (softened but still cool) - 1½ sticks
Salt
- 1 tsp
Directions
1.
Pre-heat oven to 350F. Grease with
butter and dust with flour two 9-inch cake pans.
2.
Make sure milk and eggs are room
temperature.
3.
Pour milk, egg whites, and extracts into
medium bowl and mix with fork until blended.
4.
Mix cake flour, sugar, baking powder,
and salt in bowl of electric mixer at slow speed.
5.
Cut butter into small cubes and add.
Continue beating on low for about 1-2 minutes.
6.
Add all but 1/2 cup of milk mixture to
flour mixture and beat at medium speed for 1 1/2 minutes. Add remaining 1/2 cup
of milk mixture and beat for another 1 minute.
7. Pour batter evenly between the two prepared cake
pans.
8. Bake until toothpick inserted in the center
comes out clean, 23 to 25 minutes.
9. Allow cake to cool to room temperature and
invert to a cooling rack until it reaches room tempertaure.
10. Frost and decorate as desired
Modifications
I made:
1.
I used 10-inch cakes pans. I had doubled the cake recipe, and distributed the
batter evenly into 4 cake pans.
2.
My baking time for each cake layer was reduced to 21-23 minutes.
3.
I used 2 tsp vanilla extract + 1 tsp milk (to replace the 2tsp almond extract +
1tsp vanilla extract) - too much vanilla extract will reduce the White color for
the cake, so use less or use colorless Vanilla extract.
4.
I always add only a pinch of salt in all my cakes – I hate salty cakes, even
the slightest hint!
Lil’Appu now thinks any cake in front of him is meant to be
cut by singing ‘Happy U uuuuu’ and as you see here, he again cuts his cake
slice the next day and ate the whole thing too ;-)
I try to keep my posts short but I have so much to share…Lol! And I don't know if I've missed out on anything, so if you have any questions feel free to Contact Me or come over to my Facebook page.
Up next on MED will be the gorgeous Cake Pops I made. So come back soon…
Up next on MED will be the gorgeous Cake Pops I made. So come back soon…
-Manju