Crystallised pear slices cake decoration

This cake turned out brilliantly well at every stage. It’s a stack of 3 x 6″ chocolate sponge cakes, sandwiched with fresh buttercream flavoured and coloured with raspberry compote or goo.

Standard sponge ingredients: 8oz flour, butter and sugar with 2oz cocoa powder and a little coffee with sour cream to lift it up.

I used cake strips round the edges of the tins to prevent caramelisation of the sides and help to level the cakes.

The buttercream is a rich vibrant berry pink flecked with tiny traces of raspberry skin. I crumb-coated and put the cake in the fridge overnight then covered it with plain buttercream all around this morning.

Remember the crystallised pear slices I made a few weeks ago? It was time to use them. They went all round the cake with a few beautifully curled pear slices on top. Really loved the colours.

I flicked some gold lustre dust and fine edible glitter over everything. Finally, I picked out a few highlights by hand painting some edible gold (Pixie Dust brand) paint here and there.

Finally, the picture. My second go at Dark Photography.

Mr Bee cut a side side off an old printer box, lined it with black foam board and pinned the construction together with T-pins, leaving a vertical gap to create a chink of light between boards on the open side. I placed a diffuser-covered light to the open sideand mounted my camera on a tripod facing and cake for a head on shot with a 50mm lens.

I like the shot. I love the vibrancy of the colour of the pear slices in the light and the otherwise dark, atmospheric nature generally.

Possibly a little too dark…. here it is slightly lightened up:

Slightly less dark still?

Want to see the cake in full light?

Fruity cakes

This cake was inspired by a Preppy Kitchen recipe. It was so light and lemony – just lovely to make. It was odd making a sponge without egg yolks but did make for a very white, fresh looking cake. Mine is layered with blueberry buttercream, crumb-coated with the same then finished with a rustic coating of lemon buttercream, stained with streaks of blueberry juice.

The freezer was getting a bit full so I defrosted a batch of cupcakes made a couple of weeks ago and covered them in raspberry buttercream. I like to buy packs of frozen fruits – they have to be fresh to be frozen so you know you’re getting fruit picked at their best. I use these to make fruit compote or fruit goo at a moment’s notice.

I pour about 150g into a saucepan and heat them to a simmer with maybe a TBS of sugar. Simmer and stir till the juice evaporates and the fruit reduces to a thickish goo. Sieve (a muddler is a great tool to help grind the goo through the sieve) making sure you scrape the underside of the sieve to catch every last bit into a jug. There you have it.  Goo.Let it cool and it’s ready to use. Use an apple corer to core a little chunk of your cupcake out and fill it with the goo. Makes a delicious filling.

Finally, made a swirl of piped buttercream (isn’t the colour intense and yet it’s totally natural!) and sprinkled hundreds and thousands over the top. Homely, informal tasty, fresh cupcakes.

Cherry Sponge Cake

Mr B is just better at some jobs than me. Fact. Otherwise I would do them. He can be, by nature, a difficult person to nudge along, though and he will very frequently  frequently often sometimes leave things n-e-a-r-l-y done.

We’ve recently had a new fitted kitchen and Mr B has done a lot of finishing and decorating. He’s worked really hard and the kitchen has been a PITA at times but  it’s looking so clean and bright that I love it already. He’s done a fantastic job, good man. I don’t want him to collapse in a heap getting it finished but it’s frustratingly nearly done.

To take my mind off things, I made this cake yesterday.  It’s an almond sponge layered with cherry buttercream (cherry compote or ‘goo’ with more cherries roughly whizzed in the blender and sieved a little to get rid of excess juice, all mixed into some buttercream). It’s topped off with chocolate gananche and a bunch of fresh cherries, ripe and sweet.

The cake was amazingly fresh, light and tasty. Took two slices round to my neighbour – she rang me some 30 mins later to tell me it was the best cake I’d made – EVER! Made my halo a bit heavy, I can tell you but what a lovely compliment.

Also had a go at dark photography.  It’s sometimes called ‘Mystic Light’, or Chiaroscuro (an Italian term pinched from the art world to describe a technique that emphasises the the contrast between shadow and light in an image.

I extended my kitchen table full length, made an enclosure out of black foam board held together with T-pins (the very same as used for blocking crochet) and lined the bottom with an A2 length of black mount board. I left a slit between two sheets of foamboard to let in a ‘sliver’ of light.

My  tripod faced the scene and lowered for a head on shot. The opening between the foamboard was covered with a diffuser (the light from the window was streaming in).

The shot above has been enhanced with various Photoshop filters increasing shadow, contrast, blacks, reducing whites and highlights, masking a couple of highlights and using Curves to dampen them a little, etc.

I’m following The Bite Shot on You Tube for tips and techniques https://thebiteshot.com/

Finally got round to making a tray of meringues using a Sultane nozzle.

xoxoxo

Fondant flowers with sugar paste

I’ve been keeping occupied with all sorts of little cakey things like these fondant flowers. I added a tsp of Tylo powder to 250g of shop-bought fondant, kneaded them together, then wrapped it in cling film for a day. This mixture makes a reasonable sugar paste.

Sugar paste has greater pliability and strength than plain fondant though not as strong as pastillage. Instead of Tylo, if you wanted to make your own flower paste, you could add gum tragacanth or CMC (carboxymethyl cellulose) to the fondant.

The flowers were molded in a set of Katy Sue designs (and other molds). I dusted them with pearl and lustre dust afterwards.

Edible cake decorations: pineapple flowers

These ‘flowers’ are actually slices of dried pineapple. They’re chewy, sweet and tasty and decorate rustic-type cakes beautifully.

To make pineapple flowers:

  1. Slice the top and bottom off a fresh pineapple.
  2. Remove the outer skin or peel.
  3. Use a melon baller or similar to dig out the ‘eye’s – when you have removed the outer peel, you’ll see what I mean.
  4. With a thin, sharp knife or mandolin, cut the pineapple into almost translucent slices. Take care to keep your fingers out of the way!
  5. Place the slices on kitchen roll and blot each one to remove the excess pineapple juice.
  6. Place on baking parchment or a silicone sheet and bake on a low setting – between 70 and 80º – for approximately 4 hours. Check them regularly and when they are almost dry and still have some flexibility, take each one and place inside a yorkshire pudding tray, muffin tray or similar. This will let them dry with a flower-like curl.
  7. Bake for another 30 mins or so.
  8. Remove from the oven and let them cool.
  9. Place them in an airtight container layered with kitchen roll. They will keep for about a month in a cool, dry cupboard or pantry.
  10. Use them to decorate rustic cakes or cupcakes.

It’s all gone pear shaped!

No happy baking days this week. I don’t have a working kitchen. It’s being fitted tomorrow but there won’t be any mains water until Friday. But did manage one little oven treat! Pear slices.

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I cut them thinly then steeped them overnight in a pot of hot water, sugar and food colouring. The next day I baked them in a very low oven to dry them slowly. They become translucent, look like stained glass and are still edible and an unusual decoration for cakes. 🙂

The Little Princess Cake

This is a big little cake, not really a contradiction of terms, really! It’s about 6″ high with a diameter of about 4″ so not cup-cakey size. It’s a substantial little cake. It’s a white sponge (no egg yolk in the cake batter)  layered with swiss meringue buttercream flavoured with home-made raspberry pureé, covered in white marzipan and fondant flowers.

Top

This is a top-view  showing the big daisy topped with a Jelly Tot.

xoxox

Lemon and poppyseed cupcakes

What could be better than having the oven on for a day’s baking session when the temperature outside is -2?

I made 24 lovely little lemon and poppyseed cupcakes. I also made a jar of lemon curd and used some as a filling for the cupcakes.

I used an apple corer to remove a little core of the cupcake and squeeze in a nice dollop of lemon curd.

The icing was a blend of buttercream with mascarpone, tiny shreds of lemon zest and topped off with a sprinkle of poppy seeds.

The cupcake box was 99p from Dealz. I boxed six cakes as a little present. They looked well in it. 🙂