All-in-One Guide to Cake Decorating - Janice Murfitt - E-Book

All-in-One Guide to Cake Decorating E-Book

Janice Murfitt

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Beschreibung

This comprehensive and accessible guide to cake decorating teaches all of the techniques and tricks that aspiring sugarcrafters need to create stunning and impressive cakes. Everyone will think these amazing cakes came from the best bakery in town! First Steps in Cake Decorating reveals dozens of expert cake decorating ideas that are simple to achieve yet look stunning. All the most popular methods of icing and decoration are covered, including buttercream, sugarpaste, chocolate, marzipan and flower paste. Detailed, easy-to-follow instructions explain the basics of preparing and using different types of icing, illustrated with step-by-step color photographs. There is a delicious array of fantastic cakes here to suit adults and children alike. Beginners will pick up the basics fast, and even experienced cake decorators will find inspirational new ideas. About All-in-One Guide to Cake Decorating: A complete, structured course in the beautiful art of cake decorating from first steps to expert skills. Teaches techniques that can be used to decorate all kinds of cake from a novelty birthday cake to a memorable wedding cake. Over 300 instructional step-by-step color photographs show how to decorate more than 50 finished cakes. Clearly written, straightforward text covers every aspect of sugarcrafting skill. Includes covering cakes, filling and layering, icings, chocolate, sugarpaste, marzipan, piping, flower paste, and quick and easy decoration ideas. ""A 'must have' for anyone with the slightest interest in cake decorating"" -- Publishers Weekly

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All-in-One Guide to Cake Decorating

CompanionHouse Books™ is an imprint of Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd.

Project Team

Editorial Director: Christopher Reggio

Editor: Amy Deputato

Technical Editor: Dolores York

Copy Editor: Laura Taylor

Design: Mary Ann Kahn

Index: Elizabeth Walker

Copyright © 2017 by IMM Lifestyle Books

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Fox Chapel Publishers, except for the inclusion of brief quotations in an acknowledged review.

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

Names: Murfitt, Janice, author.

Title: All-in-one guide to cake decorating : over 100 step-by-step cake decorating techniques and recipes / Janice Murfitt.

Description: Mount Joy, PA : Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd., 2017. | Includes index.

Identifiers: LCCN 2017027305 | ISBN 9781620082409 (softcover) | ISBN 9781620082416 (eISBN)

Subjects: LCSH: Cake decorating. | LCGFT: Cookbooks.

Classification: LCC TX771.2 .M868 2017 | DDC 641.86/539--dc23

LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2017027305

This book has been published with the intent to provide accurate and authoritative information in regard to the subject matter within. While every precaution has been taken in the preparation of this book, the author and publisher expressly disclaim any responsibility for any errors, omissions, or adverse effects arising from the use or application of the information contained herein.

Fox Chapel Publishing

903 Square Street

Mount Joy, PA 17552

Fox Chapel Publishers International Ltd.

7 Danefield Road, Selsey (Chichester)

West Sussex PO20 9DA, U.K.

www.facebook.com/companionhousebooks

Printed and bound in China

20 19 18 17    2 4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3 1

Contents

Introduction

1 Getting Started

2 Shaping, Filling, and Simple Icings

3 Perfect Cake Coverings

4 Using Food Coloring

5 Instant Decorations

6 Decorating with Chocolate

7 Decorating with Fondant and Marzipan

8 Piping Techniques

9 Working with Gum Paste

10 Basic Recipes and Helpful Hints

Index

Photo Credits

About the Author

Introduction

The first steps in cake decorating are always the most important. Once you’ve perfected the basics, they will give you not only a good foundation of skills but also the confidence and experience to master the more advanced techniques of this craft.

With clear techniques to follow, this book teaches cake making, icing, and decorating so it’s fun to do and learn. The fully illustrated chapters take you through the basic techniques step by step and include choosing the right equipment, planning cake designs, and making templates.

Creating cakes that are worthy of decoration is as important as the icing and decorating. A chapter is devoted to the simple steps for shaping and cutting, filling, and layering, which gives you a wide variety of cakes to choose from. This leads to a chapter on more complex special occasion cakes that details how to cover cakes with marzipan, fondant, and royal icing for a professional finish. Methods for round, square, and unusually shaped cakes with various finishes are also presented.

You’ll learn how to choose and use different kinds of food coloring with a variety of icing types. By carefully selecting the right ingredients, you can create amazing effects.

No cake-decorating book would be complete without a chapter on chocolate! Who can resist the smooth, velvety finish of a cake covered with chocolate curls, chocolate leaves, or chocolate-dipped fruit?

Other sections of the book cover more advanced work, such as using fondant for frills, cutouts, and extension pieces as well as modeling decorative objects and figures. We’ll discuss the many different ways that you can decorate cakes with piped designs, including delicate line work, runouts, embroidery, flowers, and motifs. Gum paste is a wonderful icing medium for making all types of simple flowers, molded flowers, cutouts, and wired flower sprays. With care and practice, you’ll be able to use these methods to reproduce flowers with stunning and realistic results.

The recipes at the end of the book have been tested and are proven to give consistently good results. You’ll also find helpful cake-making and icing tips throughout the book.

I hope this book gives you much enjoyment and inspires you with many ideas for creative and delicious cakes. By following the steps presented herein, you will perfect the techniques and achieve the attractive and professional-looking results that every cake decorator desires.

Getting Started

Chapter 1

With any craft, cake decorating included, there are basic principles that will help ensure successful results every time. First, using good-quality equipment and materials is a must, and here you will find sound advice for choosing and buying the essentials. In addition, a beautiful cake doesn’t just materialize; for the best results, you will need to plan your cake designs in detail from the cake base to the most subtle of decorative touches. This chapter will serve as a useful starting point to help you plan a cake that will perfectly suit the person or occasion for which you are making it.

Cake-Icing Equipment

For the very best results when icing cakes, you must have the right tools. Although a vast selection of equipment is available from various outlets, it is best to purchase from specialty cake-decorating retailers. You may pay more for the professional equipment sold by such stores, but the higher quality will help you produce the results you desire. The best equipment, carefully used and stored, will last for a very long time and may never need to be replaced, thus paying for itself several times over in its lifetime.

Although there are many companies that sell cake-decorating equipment online, beginners should look at tools in person before actually buying them. Start with the following essentials:

acrylic board

acrylic rolling pin

crimpers

icing smoother

icing spatula

icing tubes (a small selection)

patterned side scraper

straight side scraper

turntable

Did You Know?

Use either imperial or metric weights—one or the other—in a given recipe. Do not mix the two because conversions are only approximate, and even small differences could ruin a recipe.

These items will enable you to use royal icing or fondant and crimp or pipe a design. As your cake-icing skills improve, you can purchase more equipment as you need it and quickly build up a good “toolbox.”

You must always use, wash, and store your cake-icing equipment very carefully to avoid damage and to ensure that it lasts. Keep all of your implements together in a spotlessly clean, dry place away from any cold or damp areas. Store icing tubes in a box specially designed to keep them upright; this will prevent the ends from being damaged (it will also allow you to easily find the one you need at a glance). Always clean the tubes with a tube brush specially designed to clean the pointed ends without damaging them. Thoroughly dry all equipment—tubes, crimpers, cutters, pans, and anything else made of metal—to prevent rust and discoloration that, in turn, can stain future icing or sugar work. Here are more useful tips:

Store acrylic or plastic boards flat in a dry place to prevent them from warping or being scratched. Scratched acrylic or plastic surfaces harbor dirt and may impart impurities to your sugar work.

Wash and dry canvas piping bags thoroughly. Damp items will encourage discoloration and the growth of mold.

Store straight edges and side scrapers carefully to prevent any damage to their surfaces; otherwise, this will affect the smoothness of the icing.

Have your scale checked and serviced regularly to ensure that it accurately measures ingredients.

Special Equipment for Icing

Acrylic rolling pin and board

These tools may be expensive, but they provide nonstick surfaces and are easy to clean, practical to use, and available in a variety of sizes. Use them for rolling out small pieces of fondant or marzipan for decorations.

Acrylic skewers

Skewers support the tiers of fondant-covered cakes. They clean up easily and can be cut to size before being covered with the cake pillars.

Brushes

Fine artists’ brushes, available in different sizes, have many uses for painting flowers and sugar plaques with food coloring; they are also useful when making icing run-outs.

Cake board

Often made of corrugated cardboard or another stiff material, cake boards serve as a base on which cakes are decorated, lifted, stacked, and transported.

Cake pillars

Plastic pillars may be round, square, or octagonal and usually have a hole through the center so you can place them over acrylic skewers to support tiered cakes (for example, fondant-covered wedding cakes).

Cheesecloth

Cheesecloth is used for covering royal icing to prevent a skin from forming; because cheesecloth is white, it will not discolor the icing. Keep the cheesecloth clean and dry while in storage.

Crimpers

Crimpers come in a variety of shapes and sizes and offer many different patterns. You may purchase them in sets or individually.

Dowels

Dowels in different thicknesses are useful for holding drying leaves and petals to give them more realistic, curved shapes.

Floral tape

Tape, often seen in shades of green, used by florists to tape stems together or cover floral wire.

Floral wire

Wire comes in various gauges and colors for wiring sugar flowers onto stems and for making floral sprays.

Flower nail

You can make your own with a wine cork and a large nail or you can buy one from a kitchen store or cake-decorating specialist. Flower nails are invaluable when piping flowers.

Icing smoother

Use this essential tool to smooth fondant to a flawless, glossy finish.

Icing syringe

Ideal for simple piping, icing syringes usually come with a selection of tubes.

Icing-tube brush

A necessary tool for cleaning icing tubes without bending or distorting the ends.

Icing tubes

Straight-sided metal tubes are the best because they produce clean, sharp results and they fit into parchment-paper piping bags. They are available in a range of different designs and sizes and are ideal for piping cream, meringues, and buttercream frosting.

Piping bags

Piping bags are made in a variety of materials. Nylon piping bags are soft and flexible, making them suitable for cream, meringue, and icing. Buy small, medium, and large piping bags. You can also make your own from parchment paper and a variety of straight-sided tubes or even without a tube.

Side scrapers

Side scrapers are made from plastic or stainless steel and are used for smoothing icing on the sides of a cake. The plastic versions are more flexible and easier to use. Patterned side scrapers come in a variety of designs and are ideal for finishing the sides of a cake with different designs.

Small cutters

These are used for cutting out various shapes, numbers, and letters in fondant, marzipan, chocolate, or fruit zest to use as decorations. Tiny specialty cutters are available for making cutout flowers from fondant and marzipan.

Stamens

Stamens come in different colors and finishes from cake-decorating retailers and are used in the center of molded and cutout sugar flowers.

Straight edge

A good straight edge is rigid and will not scratch or bend when used on top of a cake to obtain flat, smooth icing. Straight edges are available in various lengths; as a general rule, a 12-inch (30-cm) straight edge is easier to handle on cakes up to 10 inches (25 cm) in size. Those made from stainless steel are best.

Turntable

This is the most essential piece of equipment for easy movement of cakes while icing and decorating. Check that the turntable is stable and make sure it revolves smoothly. Buy the best quality you can afford.

Tweezers

Tweezers with rounded ends are indispensable for delicate work.

Cake-Icing Equipment: 1. Acrylic rolling pin, 2. Acrylic board, 3. Icing smoother, 4. Floral wires in various gauges and colors, 5. Patterned and plain side scrapers in plastic and stainless steel, 6. Icing-tube brush, 7. Fine straight-sided metal tubes in a variety of sizes and designs, 8. Parchment-paper piping bags, 9. Floral tape, 10. Stamens, 11. Turntable, 12. Garret frill cutter, 13. Fluted cutter, 14. Cutting knife, 15. Rounded-end tweezers, 16. Crimpers, 17. Small scissors, 18. Scribing tool, 19. Modeling tools, 20. Acrylic skewers, 21. Flower nail, 22. Flower cutters, 23. Artists’ brushes, 24. Stainless-steel straight edge, 25. Small cutters, 26. Large piping tubes, 27. Nylon piping bag

Initial Planning

Before starting to make a cake for a special occasion, think through the whole idea and plan every detail carefully. Don’t rush into it with little thought of the final shape, size, or finish. There are many factors to consider in the planning stages, before you even buy the ingredients.

The occasion for which you are making the cake, such as a birthday, wedding, baptism, or anniversary. This plays a big role in the type of cake you will make.

The person for whom you’re making the cake. Consider the recipient’s age and sex as well as any particular interests, skills, or hobbies that can influence the design and theme of the cake.

The required ingredients to make the cake. Chocolate or vanilla? A light sponge cake or a rich fruit cake? There are many options.

The shape and size of the cake. Round, square, oval, horseshoe, heart, flower…the list goes on. You may need specially shaped pans, which you can buy or possibly even rent from a supplier or bakery. You’ll need cake boards of the corresponding shapes and sizes, too.

The design of the cake. The design is always a personal aspect of cake decorating, and we all know our strong points and favorite techniques. It’s not sensible to attempt aspects of sugarcraft in which you are not experienced.

How much time you have available to make and decorate the cake. The time factor can also affect your choice of design. If you are short on time, it’s better to make a simple, well-finished cake rather than an intricate cake that may be ruined by rushing at the last minute.

The color scheme and type of icing required. Does the event already have a color scheme? If possible, try to acquire samples of the fabric, flowers, or ribbons to use as a guide when choosing icing colors as well as colors for the cake’s decorations.

The cake’s final destination and how you will transport it if necessary. Avoid fragile decorations, like extension work, for a cake that has to travel a long distance because any breakage will spoil the design.

Once you have considered all of these factors, you can confidently begin to create detailed plans for your cake.

Cake Designing

A cake designed for a special event is often the centerpiece of the occasion. Prominently displayed, it will be viewed from all angles, so you must plan the design and decorations with this in mind.

Once you’ve decided on the shape and size of the cake, you can plan your design. The base color of the cake has a strong impact on the finished design. White, champagne, or pastel shades are the safest colors to choose for special-occasion cakes, but bolder colors may be appropriate for children’s cakes or novelty designs.

When it comes to the base covering, there are three main choices: (1) the clean, sharp, classic lines of royal icing; (2) the rounded, smooth finish of fondant; or (3) the softer effect of a buttercream-frosted finish. The covering dramatically affects the appearance of the cake as well as your decoration choices. Run-outs, also known as floodwork, look wonderful on a royal-iced cake, just as frills and flounces look perfect on a fondant cake, and instant decorations, such as crushed nuts, candied fruit, and sugar-frosted flowers, complement frosted creations.

Cake Designing

The inspiration for this cake design was a remnant of upholstery fabric. The fabric design was simplified to make the pieces easier to cut out of fondant. The design was drawn on tracing paper to provide a template and then each piece of the design was cut out separately and applied to the dry fondant cake. To ensure an accurate fit of all the pieces, they were arranged while still pliable and then pressed lightly into position.

Design Inspiration

Each of the items shown here has a design, pattern, or print that you could use when planning a cake design. Lace designs may be used to make piped lace pieces; pieces of embroidery or embroidery transfer designs can form the basis of a piped design. Designs on china can inspire border piping or eyelet-lace work. Fabrics, wallpapers, and greetings cards offer bold prints that you may adapt for run-outs, cutouts, or motifs for sugar plaques or food-coloring pen designs.

If you need some inspiration for the design, look at fabric and wallpaper books, china or ceramic pieces, or embroidery patterns for designs that you can re-create in icing. Look at photographs of cakes to find appealing designs to which you can add your own personal touches. Don’t be afraid to mix and match ideas and techniques. Simple methods presented in this book include ribbons, embossing, and crimping. As your skills improve, you can move on to run-out motifs and letters, ribbon insertion, collars and corner pieces, and piped work, all of which require precise templates before embarking on the design. You’ll need to employ a bit of math along with careful measuring and cutting; accuracy is the most important factor.

Making and Using Templates

Templates are very useful for inscribing shapes and designs on the tops and sides of cakes. Always keep the templates that you make. Label them with the cake size so you can reuse them; you may even be able to adapt round templates for square cakes. Following are some examples of how you can make your own templates. For ready-made templates that you can adapt for your own use, see pages 213-217.

Top Templates

To make a top template for a circular cake, trace a paper circle that is the same size as the cake’s diameter and then cut away about 1 inch (2.5 cm) all around the circle. Fold the circle in half and then in half twice more to make eight sections. Alternatively, fold the circle in half and then fold this semicircle in three to make six sections. Either way, you will always end up with a cone shape.

To make a scalloped template, place a suitable round object at the base of the cone, draw a pencil line around the shape, and carefully cut it out. When you open up the template, the edge will be scalloped. To adapt this design, place the round object halfway over the end of the cone shape and draw around the shape, rounding the curve inward instead of outward. You may also apply this technique to a square template.

To use the template, hold it gently on top of the cake and draw around it with a scribing tool. You can then pipe over the outline and fill in the shape with trellis or cornelli work (see pages 149 and 150).

How to Make a Top Template

1. Cut out a circle of paper to the diameter of the cake, then trim about 1 inch (2.5 cm) all around.

2. Fold the circle to make eight sections and then position a round object, such as a cup, so that the rim touches the base of the cone. Draw around the cup to form a curve.

3. Cut out the round outline to form a scalloped template. Alternatively, draw and cut out an inverted curve on the base of the cone using a small plate or saucer.

4. To transfer the design to the top of the cake, center the template on the cake and draw around it with a scribing tool.

Side Templates

To make a side template, cut a piece of parchment paper to the exact height and circumference of the cake. Make sure that the strip of paper fits accurately around the cake before you begin making the template. If you are making frills to decorate the cake’s sides, you will need a template to determine exactly where you will apply the frills. Fold the side template into as many sections as there are to be frills around the cake. Place a round object halfway over the base of the folded template and draw around it with a pencil to make a scalloped edge. Cut the template out, affix to the cake, and scribe the scalloped drops to make the frill spacing or to use as a guide for piping dropped-loop thread work.

How to Make a Side Template

1. Cut a paper template to the exact height and circumference of the cake. To form a scalloped side template for spacing frills or for a scalloped piping design, fold the strip into as many sections as you need.

2. Draw around a cup or other suitable round object to form an inverted curve and cut carefully around the outline.

3. Fix the template to the cake and follow the scalloped outline with a scribing tool. You can use the marked “drops” for positioning fondant frills or as a guide for piping work.

Other Templates

Run-out templates: Because cakes vary in size, sometimes even just slightly, you will have to design a new run-out collar template for each cake you are decorating. First, measure the top of the cake and replicate it on a paper template. Add the collar design to the template, allowing 2 inches (5 cm) all around the template to incorporate the design. Popular designs include inward and outward scallops and hexagonal, round, and square shapes.

Ribbon-insertion templates: For ribbon insertion, the template must fit the top and sides of the cake. Accurately draw two lines the width of the ribbon and mark the spaces where you will insert the ribbon. You can use straight or curved lines, but make sure that the lines are evenly spaced; otherwise, when you transfer the design to the cake, the ribbon pieces will look uneven.

Shaping, Filling, and Simple Icings

Chapter 2

With a little imagination and a few simple techniques, you can completely transform everyday cakes. If you cannot find a cake pan in the shape you want, you can cut and shape a cake to form simple geometric and curved shapes or more ambitious novelty designs. There are also different methods for slicing and layering cakes together with a variety of delicious fillings to produce attractive effects once the cake is cut. Finally, there are many types of icings and frostings to produce smooth finishes or patterned effects.

Shaping Cakes

With some careful cutting and shaping, you can make many shapes from simple round or square cakes: animals, numbers, flowers, cars, and many others. Sometimes you will need to cut several required shapes out of a larger cake, or you can bake and shape several cakes and assemble them to create the desired end result. Most types of cake can be shaped, but a cake made from a cake mix, any flavor or color, is the most reliable.

When you are ready to shape the cake(s), figure out exactly how you need to cut to form the desired shape(s). Measurements can be crucial to the end result, so measure and mark the cake(s) and then cut the pieces carefully with a sharp, straight-bladed knife to make clean cuts. You can also use cookie cutters as needed because they also make good, clean shapes, which will make assembling the pieces easier.

“Crumb-coat” your cake by spreading a thin layer of frosting on all pieces or brushing all pieces lightly with apricot glaze (see page 205) and letting them dry. This crumb coat will catch any crumbs from the cut sides of the cake, thus preventing them from getting into the outer layer of icing.

Assemble the pieces using apricot glaze, icing, or frosting to help you form the pieces into the intended shape. Once assembled, place the cake on a cake board so that you do not have to handle it any more than is necessary.

At this stage, you are ready to cover the cake with fondant, marzipan, icing, or buttercream frosting. Pay attention to maintaining the proper shape throughout the finishing process.

Did You Know?

Cutting and shaping is always easier on a cake that has been given ample time to settle, about two or three days.

Simple Shaping

Simply cutting round or square cakes can create a wide variety of shapes. For example, by cutting a square cake in half diagonally and placing the resulting triangles back to back, you have a diamond-shaped cake. Here are some other ideas.

How to Make the Letter Z

1. Cut a square cake in half diagonally to form two triangles. Slide one half down along the cut until it touches the other half for only about 4 inches (10 cm), producing a Z shape.

2. Crumb-coat the two pieces and brush the joint with apricot glaze (see page 205), frosting, or icing to assemble.

3. For a quick and easy finish, cover the cake with a flavored buttercream frosting or other icing and decorate as desired.

How to Make the Letter S

1. Cut a round cake in half and slide one half down along the cut until it resembles an S shape.

2. Crumb-coat the two pieces and brush the joint with apricot glaze, frosting, or icing to assemble.

3. When smoothly coated with fondant, this makes an attractive and ideal special-occasion cake for someone whose name begins with “S.”

How to Cut Slab Cakes into Shapes