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March 27, 2012

Make a wedding cake!


And that I did -- but not without a lot of planning and using many many MANY online resources. My 20 year plus career in the consumer research industry has proven useful in more ways that i could imagine...I found that when making a wedding cake for the VERY first time, research was a must!

As my sweet niece was growing up I often made her a special birthday cake...and just recently had the honor of being asked to make her wedding cake. Of course -- I would love to sweet wonderful girl! So the quest began, primarily How In The World Do You Stack a Wedding Cake without it tumbling down? Oh and to make it look pretty and taste delish too?! There the mission began...

But let's start at the ending, my favorite part....


White almond sour cream cake ~ Mocha mousse filling ~ Buttercream frosting

So there you go, the final result. :) The smile on their faces was so rewarding. And....along the way in the process of getting to this point I learned so much.

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Now for those interested in how it was done, here's a peek into the "making" and some of what I learned...

PS Because I learned how to make cakes for my family from the cake decorating world online, this is my way of passing it forward. Enjoy my friends!

My go to white cake recipe for many years for birthday cakes has been the White Almond Sour Cream Cake. I don't remember where I first ran across it, but Yum! Here's the recipe:

White Almond Sour Cream Cake (WASC)by Rebecca Sutterby

2 boxes white cake mix
2 cups all-purpose flour
2 cups granulated sugar
1 ½ tsp salt

2 2/3 cups water
1/4 cup vegetable oil (= 4 Tblsp)
2 tsp real vanilla
2 tsp almond extract
2 cups (16 oz) sour cream
8 large egg whites

Place all dry ingredients in a large mixing bowl and stir together with a wire whisk. Add the remaining ingredients and beat on a low speed for 2 minutes. Bake at 325 degrees until cake tests done.

This recipe makes:
One 14” round and one 6” round or
One 16” round or
One 12” round and one 10” round or
One 12 X 18” sheet cake or
One 12” round and one 8” round and one 6” round or
Two 9" squares

The cake I made was:  14", 10", 6"

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And some tips for baking the cake to help make it level, moist and evenly baked:

* I use Bake Even strips to ensure my cake is level  and it  helps to bake it evenly as well so that you don't have dry edges-  you can find these in the cake decorating section of craft stores or online. BUT here's a secret, I have also used paper towels for this for my cakes and it works great! Pull off enough paper towels to wrap around the circumference of the cake with a little extra for overlapping the ends -- be sure to keep them all connected to each other. Then fold them all together into a long thick strip -  wet carefully with water by placing under the faucet. You don't want it to be dripping wet, but do want it full of water. Place the strip around the outside of the cake pan and overlap the ends so that they stick to each other. That's it. You'll see, works wonders. Of course your discretion on whether or not you want paper towels in your oven or not. And if not, the Bake Even strips are great!

* Be sure to bake at 325 degrees, not just this recipe, but most cakes benefit from slightly lower temperature for added moistness.

* The cake is most often done just when it starts to pull away from the sides. Be sure to test with a toothpick near the center.  I also used an upside down "flower nail" on the middle of the 14" cake pan for the bottom tier of this wedding cake. I used it instead of a "heating core".  I put it right in the middle on top of the parchment paper, greased and floured with the point sticking up. Then carefully poured in the batter. Dont' forget it's there when you turn over your cake; I turned it over on a metal cooling rack and made sure the tip was placed where it would go through a hole in the cooling rack when I flipped it out of the pan  

* When right out of the oven, if there is any unevenness or rounding in the middle of the cake, I do this: Wet a clean kitchen cloth to dampen it and place it entirely on the top of the cake while the cake is still in the pan. Put another thick towel on top of that because so not to get hands to get burned. Now press lightly with hands onto the warm cake with the wet towel to flatten the higher areas. Be careful not to press too hard so as not to crack it. This levels the cake, eliminating the need to level the cake by cutting off the mound off the top.

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My favorite, not too sweet, slightly crusting frosting recipe has been what I call Jeff's Buttercream. When I first ventured into "teaching myself" online" how to make cakes over 10 years ago, Jeff was a cake decorator on one of the cake forums I used to venture onto in order to soak up their expertise so that I could make wonderful cakes for my family. I wish I had a link to give him credit.  But I do have the 10 year old recipe card I jotted this down on. Here's the recipe..I get so many compliments about the flavor and it is so easy to decorate with and make smooth:

"Jeff's Buttercream"
By Jeff  :)

1 c melted butter
2 c shortening
2 pounds powdered sugar (sifted)
1 T vanilla
1/2 to 1 teaspoon almond extract (this cuts the sweetness a bit)
1-3 T boiling hot water

In mixer, blend melted butter and shortening well. Add the extracts and blend well. Add powdered sugar a little at a time and mix on LOW to avoid air bubbles. Heat the water in the microwave until very hot and add a tablespoon at a time until the texture you want (I often only need 2). Blend well on low. When done, be sure to keep this covered, as it does crust after some time where air hits it.

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The bride asked for Mocha Filling, so I used my usual mousse recipe and modified it to be chocolate/coffee flavored. Yummo! Thumbs up from my chef too :)

Mocha Mousse Filling

 1 pint heavy whipping cream
1 small box INSTANT pudding mix (chocolate)
1-2 teaspoons instant coffee granules (decaf)

Add the coffee granules to the heavy whipping cream and allow to dissolve, blend well. Add the pudding mix and whip until you have mousse. Really that's it, easy. Just don't over whip or you will make butter. This recipe of course was not enough to fill the entire cake, but would be enough to fill one tier for a 10-12 cake.


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And some things I did that were sooo helpful. Tips:

  • To cut a layer into two for filling, used unflavored dental floss and pulled it through evenly. Good to have an assistant for this to hold the layer steady, and for the cake to be cold or very slightly frozen.
  • Created dams for the filling with frosting
  • Used the viva paper towel trick to smooth the buttercream
  • Boba straws for support under each tier! I stacked the cake on site, but boxed each tier with the boba straws in place. Be sure to bring pliers to remove them when it is time to cut the cake
  • For the ribbon, placed on the cake AFTER stacked. Sprayed the ribbon with PAM before placing around the cake so no intermittent oil spots. Used piping gel (same color as ribbon) to "glue" the ends of the ribbon together.  
  • Placed a small circle of parchment under the flowers on the top layer so the blue orchids would not bleed onto the frosting. 
  • Had an assistant for cutting the cake.
  • One thing I would do different is to put FROSTING in as one of the filling layers before frosting it, so it would be cake, mocha filling, cake, frosting, cake mocha filling, cake -- instead of mocha filling in all three layers. The reason is that unless someone got an end peice (most do not) they did not get much frosting, and that buttercream frosting is too good to miss out on. 
Enjoy!

4 comments:

  1. hi, how many batches of cake did you bake? since the cake is pretty thick... is that about 4in thick? or the recipe calls for the whole cake that you made? and why did you just use egg white? does the came.come out like chiffon cake, is it soongy? lastly, can I add kahlua to the cake batter for a coffee taste? thank you!

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  2. sorry for the typos.... did the cake come out spongy?

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  3. “And that I did -- but not without a lot of planning and using many many MANY online resources.” – I bet you did. The wedding cake is just as important as finding the perfect dress, so research is totally a must. Now looking at the end result of your culinary project, it’s undeniably amazing!
    Jason Underwood @ La Patisserie

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks you very much for sharing these links. Will definitely check this out.. alabama football wedding cakes

    ReplyDelete