for the baker

Brides: What Does Your Wedding Cake Tasting Say About You?

Watching couples interact at their wedding cake tasting fascinates me, and I’ve always thought their behavior reveals a lot about the dynamics of their relationship. Here, in absolutely no scientific terms, I’ve identified five types of couples based on my casual observations. Which couple are you?
{1} Romantic. This mushy-gushy couple feeds each other cake and icing. Their wedding cake tasting is like a romantic date just for two, and it doesn’t matter who else is present. They might even kiss midway through their tasting. They are very much in love, and don’t hesitate to show the world.
If this describes you, here’s the best part: It’s wonderful! You should be romantic at every opportunity, and you take full advantage of it. You’re deeply and truly in love.

But keep in mind: Your intimacy can make others feel uncomfortable or left out. Try to be aware of how your behavior might make outsiders feel.

{2} Egalitarian. Everything is discussed, every aspect of the wedding agreed upon. For the tasting, this couple confers on which flavor to try first, second, and so on. (Because tastings at Erica OBrien Cake Design are deconstructed–un-iced cakes with icing on the side, as in the photo to the right–there is a lot to agree on.) For the egalitarian couple, nothing is done without consulting the other party and coming to a consensus.

If this describes you, here’s the best part: You probably eliminate a lot of potential areas for resentment. Your relationship is mature and based on mutual respect.

But keep in mind: It’s okay to step into traditional gender roles once in a while. It can be nice when someone opens the door for you, and it’s okay to cook dinner for your husband sometimes just because you love him.

{3} The man’s man. This couple has to schedule their cake tasting on a Saturday because his Sundays are all booked up with football. He considers cake the fifth food group, and you can tell by the way he powers through all the samples. Luckily, she finds it irresistibly charming and endearing.

If this describes you, here’s the best part: He’ll be happy to fix stuff around the house and assume responsibility for all the traditional male chores. Plus, he’s happy to let you do all the decorating. He’s likely to be a wonderful and protective father.

But keep in mind: When it comes to other aspects of the wedding planning process, he might be less than interested, and he might see nothing wrong with displaying his signed baseball collection in the living room.

{4} The mama’s girl. She shows up to her wedding cake tasting with her future husband and her mom. She relies heavily on her mom’s input, and allows her to make some of the major wedding decisions. She might value her mother’s opinion more highly than her fiancé’s 

If this describes you, here’s the best part: You’re probably very close with your family and have an excellent relationship with your parents. You’ll make a loving, nurturing mother.

But keep in mind: A marriage is between two people first and their families second. Don’t let your close relationship with your family come between you and your husband.

{5} All business. Don’t get me wrong, wedding cake is serious business, but your tasting should also be fun. This couple approaches their wedding cake like they would any business transaction, weighing the pros and cons, considering all their options, and carefully adhering to their budget. They don’t allow their emotions (or taste buds) to get the better of them.

If this describes you, here’s the best part: You’re probably excellent with money and will enjoy a comfortable life and retirement together.

But keep in mind:  Planning your wedding–or for that matter, your life–should be a fun adventure. Remember to enjoy the process.

Did we miss anyone? If you think you fit a category not described above, please let us know.

Gratitude and thanks to my friend and colleague Charla Brummel of Charla Blue Photography for the photo above.

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Five to Try

When it comes to cake design, there’s no shortage of gizmos, gadgets, tools, and techniques. Here are five I’d like to try. If you’ve already had the pleasure, please let me and my readers know what you think by leaving a comment.

1. Fondant strip applicator by Ateco. Vertical fondant stripes are hard. Horizontal fondant stripes are even harder. This applicator claims to make the job much easier, but even watching this tutorial didn’t convince me. I generally like Ateco products, so I think I’ll have to try this one myself.

2. The Cricut Cake Cutter. Let’s face it: the Cricut can do a lot of things I can do but a whole lot better. From what I understand, it has its limitations, but as far as I’m concerned the design possibilities are endless. The Cricut debate may rage on, but when I see a cake as beautiful as this one by Elizabeth Hodes, it sure takes a lot of steam out of the argument.

3. Agbay cake leveler. I generally torte my cakes with a serrated edge knife, but this apparatus looks so daunting I figure it must do a good job.

4. Rubber stamps. My friend Andrea of Superfine Bakery is known for this cake. The beautiful dandelion embellishment was done with a rubber stamp. Like many tools originally used for other purposes (think stencils), there’s no limit to what you can create with rubber stamps. It’s a technique I’ve yet to use, but because they’re so accessible and inexpensive, this one is a must-try. I really like the ginko leaf stamp below by Nature Watch.

5. Scalpels. I use X-acto knives a lot for hand cutting, and used them a lot more during my applique phase, but Elisa Strauss, owner of Confetti Cakes and author of The Confetti Cakes Cookbook, uses scalpels. According to Elisa, whose father is a surgeon, “[s]calpels have the finest, sharpest blades you can find…They are disposable, so after a few uses you can throw them away.” I know once I use one, I’ll never go back to X-actos again. You can buy them here.

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Images for Inspiration

I have a file on my desktop entitled “Images for Inspiration”, a collection of random images I find on my forays around the internet. I thought I’d share just a few of them here. Don’t be surprised if you see one of these translated into cake sometime soon.

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Mushroom Cake

Joy Thigpen is a creative director and stylist for events, interiors, editorials, and personal expression. (She also has a really cool logo.) She asked me to create a cake based on this photograph:

So I did:

Mushroom cake
Styling: Joy Thigpen
Production: Once Wed
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Eight Things I Learned the Hard Way

I’ve been decorating cakes for 15 years now and I’ve learned a lot along the way. Here are a few things I wish someone had told me so I didn’t have to find out on my own.

1/ No cake is perfect. I’ve spent countless hours over the years admiring other peoples’ work and wishing mine could be equally perfect. In fact, I once emailed Ron Ben-Isreal, a major celebrity in my world, to tell him how much I admired his flawless work. I was shocked that he wrote back, but even more shocked to learn that he saw many a flaw in his own cakes. The truth is, you can probably spot a flaw if you look closely enough at any cake, and I’d bet the designer could spot many more. Instead of focusing on the flaws, I now try to be objective about my work and view it the way other people would.

2/ Fondant CAN be refrigerated. This was a big one for me. I took my first fondant class at a small cake decorating store in Jackson Heights, NY, in 1999. We were taught that fondant should never ever be refrigerated. One summer several years ago, I drove a cake all the way up to Malibu in the heat. When I got there, the buttercream filling had softened and tried to escape, leaving unsightly horizontal ridges, and allowing the cake to compress, all of which caused the fondant to buckle. It was my first and only complaint from a bride, but I was devastated. I called my friend Melody from Sweet and Saucy Shop to lament my misfortune. It was she who told me that fondant can in fact be refrigerated. I now always refrigerate my cakes, transport them in a commercial cooloer, and have not had a problem since. (Note: Set your fridge to the warmest possible temperature so that the difference between the air temp and fridge temp is reduced. Depending on the weather, your cake might form condensation when you take it out. Be sure to allow time for the condensation to evaporate, and don’t touch it during this time as the fondant is very sticky.)

3/ It’s important to invest in your craft and in yourself. Quality tools make a huge difference and save you a lot of time. Although it may seem like a big investment at the outset, if you calculate all the time you waste with cheap materials, you’ll find that the investment actually saves you money in the long run. I once bought inexpensive fondant that dried out very quickly, spent countless hours trying to work with it, and in the end had to purchase the other, more expensive fondant. I spent more money and wasted more time than I would have had I bought the better fondant right off the bat.

4/ No one knows what the cake looks like in your imagination. In your mind, the cake for your daughter’s third birthday is perfect: the pink a lovely rosey shade, the vertical stripes exactly 1″ wide. When all is said and done, the pink is more like a fuchsia, and you didn’t have time for the stripes. All your guests can see is a beautiful cake with pretty pink roses. They can’t read your mind, so to them, it looks exactly as it was supposed to.

5/ Make every cake like someone is going to see it. Regrettably, I don’t have time to read many blogs, but one day I found myself reading a post on wedding photographer Jasmine Star’s blog. I don’t know if this is what she meant, but this is what I got from it, and it stuck with me: Don’t ever shortchange yourself or your clients. Give them what you would want and expect for yourself. Strive to do your best. Everything you put out there represents you. Make it count.

6/ Use a ribbon cutter for vertical stripes. An inexpensive and indispensable tool that I somehow didn’t know about until two or three years ago. Although there are others on the market, I have found that the FMM Multi-Ribbon Cutter is the best.

7/ You’ll find your style. When I taught high school, by the end of the semester I could identify the handwriting of each of my 150 students. Cake design is like that: everyone has his or her own individual “handwriting”. Early in my career, I tried to emulate every cake artist whose work I admired, but like trying to forge your mom’s signature, it never quite worked. Eventually, I found myself using techniques over and over and applying them in new ways that I had developed, and using colors that I’ve liked since I was a kid. I stopped thinking so much about defining myself as an artist and just sort of let my own style emerge.

8/ Keep learning. All professionals, from doctors to teachers, are expected to stay current with new developments and practices in their field. Jacqueline Butler, of Petalsweet in San Diego, told me that she tries to take a class every year with someone whose work she likes. Classes are a wonderful way to stay current with new trends, learn new techniques, grow as a professional, and meet fellow cake designers. Thanks to Jacqueline, now I too try to take at least one class every year.

Because I am still learning and evolving as an artist, this list is in no way comprehensive. I hope to revisit this list and add to it in the future, but for now, I hope you can benefit from my experiences and mistakes. I have truly grown from them.

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Two Cakes

I considered entitling this post “Two Cakes I Love”, but thought better of it for fear of sounding boastful. I am extremely critical of my work (and, I like to think, quite humble), so it’s rare for me to say I love one of my cakes, let alone two. Truth be told, however, I love both of these cakes. There. I said it.

Both were inspired by invitations found on Wedding Paper Divas, and photographed by Ashleigh Taylor of Ashleigh Taylor Photography.

For the first cake, based on the Floral Ring invite (below), I cut fondant into the same shapes found on the invitation (roses, leaves, and a large circle for the monogram) and dried them overnight. I used a black food coloring pen to outline each shape, to draw the veins on the leaves, and to write the initials on the monogram. The roses are colored with a mix of food coloring paste and powder. I also added some detail directly onto the cake using food coloring pens. The cutouts are adhered to the cake using edible glue (a mix of gum tragacanth and water).

I used the same fondant cutout technique for the second cake (below), based on the Artistic Maple: Autumn Orange invitation.

Gratitude to Ashleigh Taylor, who knows just what I like in a photograph, and to Wedding Paper Divas, who always have plenty of inspiration to share.
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A Tribute to April Reed

When I took my first cake design class in 1996, I was taught that wedding cake tiers must increase in diameter by 4″ increments. A 6″ cake must sit atop a 10″ cake on top of a 14″ cake, etc. Of course, being the consummate rule follower, I adhered strictly to these guidelines, straying only occasionally into 3″ increments (6″ on 9″ on 12″), but never, EVER, less than 3″. Frankly, it never occurred to me that it could be done any other way. Height? A standard 4″. Always. And wedding cake color? Duh.

That all changed for me in 2005 when I discovered the work of April Reed. She was new to the scene from what I could tell, but her work was so different, so avant garde, and she was so clearly NOT a rule follower, that I was smitten (and, I’ll admit, jealous) immediately. I had never even seen cakes that increased by only 1-inch in diameter, like this one:

I had never even considered that cakes could have varying heights, like this one:

Or this one:

Or this one:

A black cake? The thought never entered my mind.

And a cake covered in truffles? Really?

I remember staring at her website for hours, drooling over her designs, and lusting over her creativity. And I wasn’t the only one who noticed. In 2009, Abby Larson, editor of the popular wedding blog Style Me Pretty, called April Reed the “queen of all things gorgeous” and credited her for being “the cake designer that has inspired SO many trends, SO many different cake styles.” According to Ms. Larson, April Reed “literally redefined what a wedding cake should look like.” I completely agree. In a very short time, April Reed was tremendously influential. I’m sure you can see the influence she had on me here:

And here:

Not to mention here:

And, of course, here:

I recently described what April Reed had done for the cake industry to Monica Majors, my friend and colleague of Paper Cut Industries, and how she had broken every rule. Monica wondered whether Ms. Reed simply hadn’t been taught the “correct” way to size cake tiers or whether she was intentionally defying convention. It’s an interesting question, and one I would love to ask her. Unfortunately, when I went to her website, as I often do, I was disappointed to find that it had been taken down.

Whether her style was derived from a lack of professional training or a keen design sensibility makes no difference. Ultimately, April Reed changed the game, and had an enormous influence on me and countless others. Thank you, Ms. Reed, from the bottom of my heart, for your ingenuity, inspiration, and fearless disregard for convention. Wherever you are, I hope that you are well.

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Much Ado About Bunting

I’ve been going a little (okay, a lot) crazy with cake bunting lately. I first saw it on Etsy, when Charla, my friend and colleague, requested it for her daughter Brooklyn’s second birthday party cake. It seems that now there’s been a proliferation of cake bunting on Etsy, but this artist remains my favorite. This one is particularly cute:

I also stumbled across this fiesta bunting one day on Eat Drink Pretty.

Anyway, when I saw that cake bunting I loved it–loved it!–and decided to make my own. The only difference is that I make mine out of fondant. I use two lollipop sticks and tie the ribbon to each. Fondant does not like to stick to ribbon, so now when I make cake bunting I actually back each fondant piece with a smaller piece of fondant, wet them both with water or egg white so they adhere, and sandwich the ribbon in between. Here are some of my recent cakes with fondant bunting.

For a baby shower:

50th Birthday with Fiesta Theme:

50th birthday cake by Erica OBrien Cake Design

Second Birthday Party:

Halloween:

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New Tier I: Introduction to Cake Design Classes

We just scheduled our first Tier I: Introduction to Cake Design class for 2011. The class will begin on Saturday, January 8 and runs four consecutive weeks {1/8/11, 1/15/11, 1/22/11, and 1/29/11} from 11am to 2pm. For more information, or to register for one of our classes, please visit our website: http://ericaobrien.com/classes.html. Our classes make great gifts, so please let us know if you need a gift certificate.

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The Wedding Cake: Big Dreams on a Small Budget {Part II}

I wrote this article for Nick and Aleah Valley of Valley and Co., a wedding and event planning company in San Diego. While they were vacationing in New York, they posted it on their blog. Here I’m calling it Part II, because the first installment of “The Wedding Cake: Big Dreams on a Small Budget” appeared here back in April.

In today’s tough economy, many couples understandably look to save on the cost of their wedding cake. Savvy brides and grooms know that the more detail and labor the cake design requires, the more expensive the cake will be. Eliminating or changing design elements can significantly reduce the cost, but you might be surprised to learn which details take the longest. Try to identify the most labor intensive element of each cake below. Then scroll down to check your answers.

Cake 1: Winter white houndstooth pattern


Cake 2: Square off-set with succulents


Cake 3: Sugarpaste flower

Cake 4: Fondant fruits with Envelopments graphics
Cake 5: Lotus flower
Cake 6: Sugared hearts

Did you guess correctly? Read below to find out the most time-consuming elements of each cake.
Cake 1: Star ornament. The houndstooth pattern looks deceptively intricate, but it’s actually a stencil and is quite simple to reproduce. The hand-cut star ornament, on the other hand, requires precise cuts and lots of time. Eliminate the ornament and you’ve significantly reduced the cost of your cake without sacrificing design.
Cake 2: Fondant succulents. At first glance the off-set tiers might look like an architectural nightmare, but stacking the tiers is relatively simple compared to the succulents. This wedding cake was originally designed by the groom (husband to Carissa of JL Designs) and made by Vanilla Bake Shop. The only thing that makes our cake different from the original is that we made all the succulents out of edible gumpaste, a very labor intensive process. The expense of this cake could easily be reduced by swapping the edible succulents for inexpensive real ones.
Cake 3: Custom leaf work. Sugarpaste flowers are undeniably time consuming, but each petal is cut using a purchased cutter, saving the designer time. The leaves on this cake, created to match an invitation from Wedding Paper Divas, had to be cut by hand, which takes a lot longer. Replace the hand-cut leaves with fondant leaves cut with a cutter and you’ve saved your baker a lot of time, saving you money in turn.
Cake 4: Fondant fruits. Although the subtle sutra pattern (from Envelopments) that surrounds each tier would take endless amounts of time to create by hand, here they are done on an edible ink printer. The edible fruits are the most labor intensive element of this cake. Use real fruits to decrease the time spent, thereby decreasing your cake’s price tag.
Cake 5: Olive colored fondant. Yes, the lotus flower was cut by hand, and yes the teardrops had to be hand appliquéd, but coloring large quantities of fondant–especially to match a specific color–takes time. Fondant can be purchased pre-colored, but it’s more expensive than white. To save money, opt for white fondant and introduce pops of color.
Cake 6: Square shape. Icing a cake so that the edges and corners are perfectly square takes years of practice and a lot of time. Some bakers even charge more for square cakes. To cut costs on your cake, you’ll want to literally cut corners and go for a round cake.
Remember, there are many cost effective ways to simplify your wedding cake without sacrificing design. So, before you replace the sugar flowers with real ones, consider the other ways to save your baker time–and save your budget.
Photo Credits. Cake 1: Ashleigh Taylor; Cake 2: Jordana Hazel; Cake 3, 5, and 6: Cory OBrien; Cake 4: Henry Chen

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