Archives for

Maple Bacon Buttercream

I was a vegetarian for many years. It was bacon that did me in. Here, the salty bacon is offset perfectly by the maple syrup. The buttercream is made with real butter, making it velvety smooth and melt-in-your mouth delicious. This buttercream (used as a filling in our Edbile Brooch Wedding Cake) is great on cupcakes, cakes, or a spoon. It’s far from vegetarian, but very close to perfect. Enjoy.

Classic French Buttercream
1 cup (8 oz) sugar
1/2 cup (4 oz) water
6 larg egg yolks
1 lb butter, room temperature, cut into small pieces
pinch salt

Beat egg yolks until thick and very light in color. (This takes about 5-10 minutes in a KitchenAid.) They will no longer even look like egg yolks:

Meanwhile, in a heavy-bottomed saucepan, bring the sugar and water to a boil, stirring occasionally (and very carefully so that none of the sugar sticks to the side of the pot). When the sugar reaches the softball stage (235-240 degrees), immediately remove from heat.

With mixer turned off, add about an ounce of the mixture to the yolks. Beat at medium speed for five seconds. (I sometimes drape a towel over the mixer to prevent splattering.) Add remaining sugar/water mixture and beat on high. Continue to beat until yolks are completely cooled. Mixture will be light and thick. Add butter and beat until smooth.

If mixture curdles, butter is too cold. Continue to beat until mixture smooths out. If mixture looks soupy, butter is too warm. Refrigerate for ten minutes and rebeat. If proper consistency is not achieved, refrigerate at ten minute intervals and beat until smooth.

Recipe yields enough to fill an ice one 8″ round, 2 layer cake.

I played around with the addition of the syrup and the bacon, and got some pretty interesting results. Adding two tablespoons of syrup and crumbled bacon yielded layered flavors: first the taste of the buttercream, followed by the maple syrup, then finally the bacon. (I should warn you that I am morally opposed to subtle flavors. I want to know exactly what I’m tasting when I taste it. I’m not into a “hint” of this or a “whisper” of that. Also, it’s ironic that I bake, since I’m definitely not into precision. The recipe below can and should be adapted to your taste.) I was looking for more even flavoring, so I came up with this:

Maple Bacon Buttercream
8 strips bacon
1/2 cup 100% Pure Maple Syrup
1 recipe Classic French Buttercream

Cook bacon until cooked but not crunchy. Remove from pan. When cool enough to touch, cut or crumble into small pieces. Strain bacon fat into heat-proof container.

In a heavy bottom saucepan, reduce syrup on medium heat to 1/4 cup.

Both bacon fat and syrup should be liquid enough to pour. (Bacon fat and syrup will be warm enough to melt buttercream.) Begin by adding 1 tablespoon bacon fat and 2 tablespoons maple syrup reduction to buttercream. Beat on high until fully mixed. Add more to taste. (Remember, I like strong flavors, but you might not.) Refrigerate for 10 minutes and beat, repeating until desired consistency is achieved. Lastly, mix in crumbled bacon.

Because of the bits of bacon, Maple Bacon Buttercream is best used as a filling rather than an icing.

Read More

Edible Brooch Cake

This three tier cake was for a wedding on The Queen Mary in Long Beach. The bride wore a simple gown bedecked with a colorful brooch. The bridesmaids also wore brooches similar to the ones on the cake. Below, the cake and some closeups of the brooches. The best part? The brooches were completely edible and the cake was filled with a maple bacon buttercream. Check back later this week for the recipe!


Read More

Is He Right for You?

Forget the questions to ask your baker. Here’s the most important question to ask yourself before you walk down the aisle.

You know those weddings where everyone’s taking side bets on how long the marriage will last? That could have been me. I was once engaged to a very nice guy who couldn’t have been more wrong for me. I knew he’d be a great husband and a great father, but as hard as I tried, I just wasn’t in love with him. When he asked me to marry him, I said yes because I didn’t know how to say no.

I almost went through with it, but I somehow found the strength to break it off. I was afraid my family and friends would be disappointed or angry. Instead, they were happy for me. It turned out I wasn’t the only one who knew it wasn’t right: everyone else knew it too.

“When it’s right, you’ll just know,” my good friend Ann told me.

I didn’t believe her. I’d dated plenty, but nothing ever felt “right.”

“I’ll never ‘just know’,” I thought. “There will always be that nagging voice inside telling me something is wrong.”

When I met my husband, I knew Ann was right. I was 35. He was 25 and didn’t meet any of my criteria, but it all just clicked. I walked down the aisle madly in love and without a hint of that tiny voice I’d expected. I couldn’t be happier today.

Many of our friends tell us that ours was the best wedding they’ve ever been to. Sure, the open bar helped. But the fact that it was so right–and everyone knew it–was what really made the difference.

Before you take the plunge, ask yourself if it’s right. If not, you’re not fooling anyone. Your friends and family all know it too. Find the strength to call it off. Good friends and family will support you. And remember, when it’s right, you’ll just know.

Read More

Stained Glass Cookies

This is one of those family traditions that you continue just because, well, it’s a family tradition. My sister and I loved making these cookies as kids, even though they look a lot better than they taste. I can still see my mom’s recipe, stained and torn over the years, that she’d sent away for with a stamped, self-addressed envelope. This was before the invention of the silicone baking mat, and the cookies stuck so mercilessly that each bite contained a bit of waxed paper that inevitably became a chewy wad in your mouth. Now, with the internet and Silpats, I reprint the recipe every year and the cookies don’t stick, but they still look way better than they taste, and so, the tradition lives on. I’ve adapted the recipe here.

Stained Glass Cookies  

Ingredients
1/2 cup (1 stick) butter
1/2 cup sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 tablespoon corn syrup
1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 egg
2 cups flour
1/4 teaspoon salt
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
30-40 hard candies (such as Life Savers), preferably in several flavors/colors

Method
1. Pre-heat oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with a Silpat.
2. In a large bowl, using an electric mixer, cream together butter and sugars until fluffy, about 2 minutes. Add corn syrup and vanilla extract, mixing until incorporated. Add egg and mix until light and smooth, about 1 minute on medium speed.
3. Sift together flour, salt, and baking powder. Fold dry ingredients into wet mixture. Use electric mixer to blend just until flour is incorporated. Divide dough in half and flatten into two disks. Wrap disks in plastic wrap and refrigerate at least an hour and up to 2 days.
4. Remove any wrappers on candies and separate them by color.

5. Put candies into plastic bags. Use a mallet to crush candies.

6. Roll to 1/4-inch thickness on floured board. Use cookie cutters to cut dough into desired shapes.

7. Transfer cookies to prepared baking sheets, about 1 inch apart. Using a smaller cookie cutter or a knife, cut shapes into centers of cookies, reserving these center bits to add into extra dough.
8. Sprinkle the crushed candy into the hollowed-out centers of the cookies, filling to the edges. Try to keep the candy within the centers. Any candy specks that fall on the cookie will color the cookie.

9. If cookies will be hung as ornaments or decorations, poke a small hole in the top of each cookie before baking.
10. Bake 9 to 10 minutes. The candy should be melted and bubbling and the cookies just barely beginning to brown. Remove baking sheets from oven and place on wire racks to cool. Allow cookies to cool on pans at least 10 minutes; otherwise, the candy centers may separate from the dough. When cookies are completely cooled, remove and store in an airtight container. String with ribbon if you want to hang as an ornament.



Read More

Are You Cut Out for Cake?

Ready to quit your job to pursue a career in cake? Take our quiz to find out if you have what it takes to be a full-time cake designer. For each question, answer true or false:


1/ I enjoy being covered in cake batter.

2/ I am willing to pull an all-nighter to finish a cake.

3/ Stress only makes me stronger.

4/ Weekends? Never heard of ‘em.

5/ I am an artist, damn it!

6/ I fully subscribe to Murphy’s Law.

7/ Red (or blue, or green, or yellow) food coloring-stained hands are cool.

8/ I see no point in having a party if there is no cake.

9/ I relish the thought of fully surrendering artistic control.

10/ My Christmas Wish List: spatulas

If you answered true to all ten questions, you’re making the right move. Any less than that, you might want to rethink your decision. Just like any job, cake design can be stressful and feel more like work than play. It is a great medium, though, and a wonderful creative outlet. And when it comes down to it, I love what I do, any way you (ahem) slice it.

 

Read More

Fontest Winner!

We randomly selected Beth S. from Colonial Heights, VA, as the winner of our fondant contest. Beth wrote: “I love Satin Ice fondant. It is consistently easy to work with, has great flavor, and doesn’t dry out easily.” Beth won five pounds of fondant for her submission.

Read More

Fondant + Contest = Fontest!

Yup, we’re having a fontest. And we have five pounds of fondant to give away to boot. We are in the process of testing four major brands of fondant to determine which tastes and performs best. Before we post our results, we want to hear from you. Anyone who works with fondant–from passionate beginners to seasoned professionals–is welcome to weigh in. Simply let us know your favorite brand of fondant and why you prefer it over the others by Friday, November 6th. We will randomly select one entry to win five pounds of fondant.

Read More

Questions People Ask Me

As a cake designer, I constantly meet with new clients to taste, plan, and design their perfect wedding cake. There are a few questions that people always ask, so I thought I’d set the record straight by answering them here for all to see.

Question 1/ How do you stay so thin?
At least I used to get asked this one a lot, before my beautiful baby Mia (below) was born last February. My answer is this: The bride doesn’t usually like it if I show up with a big slice missing from the wedding cake, so I don’t actually get to eat a lot of cake.


Question 2/ How long have you been making cakes?
Good one. I took a very inexpensive cake design class about 15 years ago and loved it. I started making cakes for friends and family. Somewhere along the line a family friend trusted me to do her wedding cake, and Erica OBrien Cake Design was born. [More about this in a future post.]

Question 3/ What’s your favorite cake design?
Oooh. Tough one. My taste and style are constantly evolving, so right now it’s this one, but next week it might be another.

I remember really liking the cake below when I first did it, circa 1996–before digital cameras! I guess my taste has changed a bit–okay a lot–since then. In fact, this cake is pretty funny to me now, but at the time I thought it was beautiful.


Question 4/ Do you watch “Ace of Cakes”?
Of course! But not religiously. I’ll watch it if it’s on. I’ve even learned a few good tips from Duff, such as using vodka to clean up mistakes on fondant. And I have to credit the show for increasing people’s understanding of cake as art.

Question 5/ Are you a graphic designer?
No, but I want to be! I’ve looked into taking graphic design cources at UCLA. I never really knew what graphic design was until pretty recently. I think I would love it, but you never know.

Read More

How To Green Your Wedding Cake

Weddings aren’t necessarily the most earth-friendly affairs. Here are six ways you can at least make your wedding cake a little greener.

1/ Forget the faux. Some couples, in an effort to cut costs, opt to display a decorated fake cake, or cake dummy, and serve a sheet cake that’s been hidden out of guests’ view. While this might be more cost effective, the cake dummies are made from styrofoam, which can’t be recycled and doesn’t biodegrade, so consider the cost to the planet.

2/ While you’re at it, forget the fondant. Although fondant remains my icing of choice for its aesthetic value, it’s less eco-friendly than buttercream. First, most bakeries don’t make their own fondant in-house. (It’s the only thing I don’t make from scratch.) Instead, fondant is generally ordered from one of the major fondant suppliers and shipped long distances to get to your baker. Second, fondant contains gelatin, an animal-based substance derived from the bones of cattle, pigs, and horses. It’s not vegetarian, and it’s not eco-friendly: Raising animals for food wastes massive amounts of land, food, energy, and water. (To learn more, go to goveg.com.)

3/ Go organic. Most, if not all, of the ingredients that go into a cake have a readily available organic counterpart. Ask your baker if he can create an organic cake. Although you can expect to pay more, your conscious, your planet, and hopefully your guests will thank you.

4/ Buy your cake locally. Thinking about having your cake shipped to you by a nationally-renowned cake designer? Consider the impact that has on the environment. Instead, find a local baker who can replicate that cake you saw on Ace of Cakes.

5/ Use found objects. There are many realistic alternatives to purchasing a brand new cake plate or cake topper. Try: borrowing from someone you know, raiding your grandma’s kitchen cabinets, scouring your local Goodwill, or hitting garage sales. A search for “cake plate” on Craigslist turned up the gem on the left. Look around. Chances are, you’ll find a cake plate or cake topper you love–and probably a bunch of other stuff you didn’t even know you needed. Be sure to ask your baker how big your largest tier will be so you know it will fit.

6/ Recycle as much as possible. Okay, so you can’t recycle your cake, but your baker may be able to reuse any plastic dowels or separator plates (used to support the tiers). You can also pass on your cake topper and cake plate to a friend or consignment shop, or donate it to a thrift store. Either way, ensuring it gets reused means it doesn’t end up in a land fill.

For other great ways to green your wedding, be sure to check out Bash Eco Events as well as Earth Friendly Weddings and Eco-Chic Weddings.

Read More

Tricks of the Trade: Toba Garrett’s Cake Spackle

The background: Fondant originated in Europe where it was used to cover fruitcakes to keep them fresh for shipping to the New World.

The difference: Fruitcakes are not torted (cut horizontally) or filled with anything. Also, fruitcakes are traditionally covered with a 1/4″ layer of marzipan and then covered in fondant.

The result: Perfectly smooth and gorgeous fondant.

The problem: American cakes are torted, filled, iced, and then covered with fondant. Often, the filling softens, and the weight of the fondant causes it to smoosh out. (If you’ve ever had this happen, you know that “smoosh” is the only applicable description.) Maybe your crumb coat wasn’t thick enough, or the cake wasn’t leveled evenly, or you didn’t refrigerate it long enough. Your cake, which started off looking beautifully smooth, ends up looking unprofessional, like the cake below created by some anonymous cake designer. (Okay, it was me. But it was like a really long time ago.)


The solution: Cake spackle! Toba Garrett, a master cake decorator (you should see her string work!) and instructor at The Institute for Culinary Education developed this technique, which gives the cake “more stability and structure” so that layers are not visible through the fondant. I found it in her book, The Well Decorated Cake, and have been using it for years.

First, level your cake. Save the domed portion that you leveled off and usually throw away for the next step!

Fill the cake–but don’t crumb coat–and refrigerate until firm.


Take the domed portion and crumble it up. (I use my hands, but a food processor would work too.)


Mix the cake crumbs with buttercream and some filling until it is thick and pasty. (I would recommend about a 3:1 ratio of cake crumbs to buttercream.) This is your cake spackle!


Now ice your cake with the spackle and refrigerate until firm. If the spackle is too thick to spread, +–some more buttercream.


Once firm, ice over the spackle with a thin layer of buttercream and refrigerate until firm. Now you’ve got a smooth, stable surface to cover with fondant. Perfect!

Read More
Page 15 of 16« First...10«1213141516»