Monday 14 June 2010

sugar art

Here it is, the first step-by-step blog post!

For two friends' birthday I decided to make a cake using techniques I picked up at the Sugar Art Show last month. The cake itself was a deliciously moist carrot cake, the recipe was a combination of a recipe found in the Hummingbird Bakery Cookbook and my own mummy's recipe. If you want the recipe, let me know, I'd be more than happy to share (or make you one ;) ).

Anyway, though the cake was scrumptious, it was still relatively simple, because I wanted to focus on the decoration. As carrot cake isn't carrot cake with cream cheese icing, I did not use fondant icing this time. Instead, I decorated the cake with my very own sugar art! At the Sugar art show I picked all the essentials to make my own "christmas roses". Here is my working table:


What I needed: Mexican paste (the sugar paste), Crisco, brushes, colouring powder/glitter (all edible), shape cutters, water, small containers for shaping (ie. egg cups etc), non-stick surface (I used a pastry mat I have, rub some Crisco on it before rolling out the paste).




Time to get to work. The paste was fairly easy to roll out and using the "christmas rose" shapes I cut out the main flower and let it dry/harden in an egg-cup - this gave the flower a nice shape.

Then on to the stamen: cutting out 2 brush like strips, I stuck a little ball of green paste (coloured with some coloured powder) on a toothpick and wrapped the strips around this. With a brush I then separated the stamen a little, with a brush and water I made the tips a little wet and then brushed mimosa coloured powder on them, to create the inside of the flower.





Next I coloured the flower petals. Again with a wet brush and brushed just lightly the edges of the petals, and using pink sparkly powder I brushed the colour inwards, creating a dark rim and just a light colouring inwards. Pretty flower!!


Even though the flowers had hardened, it was fairly easy to stick the stamen and the petals together (after learning the hard way that they are fairly fragile T_T). As the paste is basically sugar, despite hardening you can easily create a sticky spot with some water. This is what I did in the center of the flower, added a bit of un-hardened paste, made that wet as well, and stuck the stamen in the center, and let the whole lot dry/harden again. And then, tadaaa, the end result!!!

Using various other cookie cutters and fondant cutters I made and coloured some more (less complicated) flowers. My friend (and biggest fan? hehe) Roxy also came to play/help: her signature on the cake, a glitter octopus ^_^ And yes, this is alllll edible, though maybe not appetizing XD







And so having assembled flowers, leaves and other decoration, I started decorating the cake using a simple design I made earlier:









And the happy recipients :)














xoxo Jennifer

3 comments:

Anonymous said...

my dear cake.. what a beautiful cake it was.. D: and then people ATE IT TT____________TT

everything about that cake was the bomb, the flavor, the flowers, and the octopus! heheheh

Jennemeiske said...

Yeah, I can't believer people ate it. Why would they do that!?!? :P

But no worries, we made cupcakes to make up for it right? :P

X Jenn

Anonymous said...

It was soooo beautiful (T_T) And yummy :3 It's nice to read about the whole process of creating the flowers, they were amazing (^_^)

Nan