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Record, Star and Music Note Cookies

Last year was my first year performing with the Becket Players.  Actually it was my first time performing on stage since college, roughly 18 years prior.  :O  In addition to being one of the actors (the performers are divided between singers, dancers and actors) I also made most of the props for the show.  I ended up making some really cool things for us to use, and I’ll be posting tutorials for all of it over the coming months.  I’m part of the show again this year, and tonight is our first prop/set design meeting, so I figured it was as good a day as any to post these cookies I’d made last year and never showed.

Last April the cast got together for a costume parade at one of our homes… to eat, drink and try on all the costumes for every song, skit and dance number, take pics and see how everything looked cohesively, what worked and what needed last minute changes.  Everyone was asked to bring a little something to eat, and I decided to make these cookies.

2015-04-11 record star music note cookies 01

I made my standard vanilla plain/shortbread recipe and rolled the dough pretty thick, as I wanted them to remain somewhat moist in the center.  I cut the shapes from star, music note and circle cookie cutters and then after they were baked I left them to cool overnight. 2015-04-11 record star music note cookies 02

The next day I used the same cookie cutters to cut out some thinly-rolled fondant, yellow for the stars and black for the music notes.  I moistened the top of each cookie slightly with water and then smoothed the fondant down over the cookie, making sure the edges were well stuck.  The records were done the same way, only I used 2 sizes of smaller cutters than the base cookie, and a straw for the tiny center dot.  If I were to redo these I’d actually cut the black circle with the smaller cutter and inset the yellow label into it, and do the same for the black center, as that would be more accurate… but for a quick design, the layered version works too.
2015-04-11 record star music note cookies 03

The final touch was to write on the labels with my black edible ink marker.  The theme of our show last year was Legends, Fads & One-Hit Wonders and I wrote all the names of the songs we did in the show on individual record cookies.  I’d say they were a hit… but they already are! 😀


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The Wiggles cake

Continuing to add Henri’s backdated birthday cakes as we count down to this year’s party, here’s the cake I made for his 2nd birthday, which had a The Wiggles theme.

I’ve posted about the party before, but sorta glossed over the cake, so here are some more details.

the wiggles big red car cake

The first thing I did was to cut out a LOT of man-shaped cookies.  Each invitee was going to receive their own set of Wiggles characters in their lootbags, and I needed to have extra for the cake, and in case of breakage.  Once the cookies had baked and cooled I tinted up some homemade royal icing and got to work.the wiggles cookies

A little while later I had these guys.  (The black icing marker details were added a few days later, to make sure the icing had dried enough).

the wiggles cookie lootbags

Once thoroughly dry, the cookies were packaged up and attached to assorted coloring books to be given out after the party.

Then I was on to the cake.  I had rented a Wilton 3D Cruiser cake pan from our local cake supply store.  I baked the car-shaped cake out of chocolate cake mix, and for the base I baked a 9 x 13 sheet cake out of vanilla cake mix, as I wasn’t sure the car cake pan itself wouldn’t be enough to feed everyone.  It took 1.75 boxes of cake mix, but it’s an odd shape, so I couldn’t guarantee it would be cut in a way that would give enough slices.  It took me about 3-4 hours to make my own buttercream icing, tint the colors I needed, crumb-coat and then decorate the cake.

the wiggles big red car cake 01

The cake as baked wasn’t a convertible, so I used a knife and carefully cut it into a more appropriate shape for what I was trying to duplicate.the wiggles big red car cake 02

I remember being panicked that I wouldn’t be able to ice the cake smoothly, which is why I’d ended up filling it all in with a star-tip in my piping bag.  the wiggles big red car cake 03

I copied the Big Red Car’s colors off a DVD case we had at home, and used leftover of the 4 main icing colors to cover the sides of the base cake.the wiggles big red car cake 05

The logo and the front windshield were the only two spots I dared attempt to smooth over.  After the basic shape was down, I piped the letters with a narrow round icing tip.the wiggles big red car cake 04

I waited until right before serving to add the 4 cookies I’d reserved, as I was afraid they would absorb moisture from the cake and crumble or break at the attachment points.  So I brought them to the party in a flat tupperware and stuck them in at dessert time.the wiggles big red car cake 06

I let Murray have a chance to drive. 🙂

the wiggles big red car cake 07

Henri’s other birthday treats


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Henri’s Football Cake

Henri turned 7 last week.

I know, I don’t know where the time went either.

One minute he born, the next he’s this: Photo 2016-01-08, 7 11 31 AM

…this super-cool, chapter-book reading, rational-thinking, butt-shaking, quote-spewing funny, loving, sweet, creative, hysterical wise old soul.

His party is coming up and it got me thinking that I’ve never gotten around to posting all his cakes from prior years, so I’m going to amend that.  First up: his first birthday.

When Henri turned one Yannick suggested a football theme, as the Superbowl was coming up and his favorite team at the time, the Indianapolis Colts, were playing.  Using Yannick’s hat and jersey I set little Henri up for a photoshoot and got this pic:IMG_0248

Then, using the front and back of a Colts trading card for reference, I made up this invitation:Photo 2016-01-15, 2 36 58 PM

Love his stats 😀

The cake was only my second or third attempt at using fondant, so looking back on it now, I cringe, but at the time I was pretty proud.  I’d tinted white fondant to as close a match to Colts blue as I could and then cut a huge cake into roughly a jersey shape.  White fondant was used for the accents.  I remember being afraid to trim the edges and have cake show through underneath so I’d left them look ‘messy’, hoping it would appear like rumpled fabric.  Heh.Photo 2014-01-17, 6 57 19 PM

I shaped one of the cut out cake sections into a football which I covered with fondant I’d tinted brown.hfootball01

The smaller cake not only provided a place to put his name without messing up the look of the jersey, but it also was a perfect ‘smash’ cake to give him, so he could get his first taste of sugar and try to feed himself.

It was a hit 🙂

Henri’s other birthday treats


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Decoration Station

A little while ago I finished a long-visualized project to organize my cluttered, messy dining room desk/hutch/thing into something functional for more than merely depositing random stuff into piles.

This past week I had some cake-related projects to complete, and it was the first chance I had to test out whether having everything set up in a clear, organized way would actually make my process smoother and faster than having things a bit all over the place (though I knew where everything was).  (Spoiler alert- it did).  😛

desk after

As a reminder, here’s the new after.  The right side holds assorted kid crafts and home stuff, like batteries and a few tools we use often.  The drawers on that side are Yannick’s, and the middle of the desk holds a caddy with all the kids’ coloring books and drawing papers and markers and pencils and the like.  The rest?  Mine… all mine!  😀

The first thing I did was organize the drawers, because they had been crammed full of the small toys and things the kids get in loot bags, assorted scraps of paper, and other randomness.  Now they’re organized.  The long drawer holds the battery chargers, my tape gun, and little trays with pens and pencils.  The side drawers are organized with the kids’ school papers and saved art, plus a drawer for me to keep some craft stuff upstairs but out of sight.

I forgot to take a pic of the inside of the top middle section, but it’s mainly storage.  I keep the foam trays that veggies come on and use them as palettes, so I’ve got assorted sizes stacked up there, along with a few cookie cutter sets that were too big to fit in my box down below.

Now, onto the rest: the cake decorating supplies!

desk after detail01

Now, I’m a home baker.  I don’t do this professionally, it’s a sweet hobby (ha!) so I can get away with not having a whole kitchen’s worth of supplies.  Most items I’ll replace when they run out, vs keeping extra on-hand, so this amount of space works for me, and I still have room to grow.

I mean… *technically* I can take over the ENTIRE hutch… but let’s not think of that (and worry my husband) right now.

🙂

desk after detail04

The top shelf is where I keep my fondant.  I have, and do, make and use my own MMF, but I also have no problems with store-bought.  I like the taste, myself (except Wilton’s), and I very rarely use it to cover kids’ cakes, because kids don’t really like it, so I use icing for them.  On adult cakes I find that most adults peel the fondant off anyways so the taste isn’t an issue regardless of the brand.  I’ve always got white fondant on-hand, and red and black are the only colors I’d buy pre-mixed, because of the taste and pain in getting those myself.  So on the left is a tub each of black and red.  I’ve never compared, but haven’t noted a taste or texture difference between Satin Ice or Virgin, so I use whichever one is sold where ever I happen to be when I run out.  🙂

I ALWAYS keep the leftovers after I color fondant.  Even the tiniest of scraps can become pupils for eyes or detail on something or other, and even if you think it’s hardened beyond use it’s amazing what 15 seconds in the microwave can do.  The blue-lidded tub holds colored fondant, wrapped up airtight in ziplocks and saran wrap and there’s even another container inside that one holding what’s left of my last batch of MMF.

Finally, the red-lidded container on the very top has a small palette of silver dust, for decorative work.  I hydrate the dust with vodka or vanilla to use it as paint, and then when the alcohol evaporates there’s still dust residue left on the small cup I use.  Rather than waste it I let it dry fully then store, re-wetting with more liquid next time I need it.

The second shelf has my white fondant (and, yes, a small box of Wilton white because I was stranded without access to anything else).  The fondant tub with the post-it label is full of sugar pearls and candy beads and dragees, I’d found a sale at Michael’s and bought assorted colors.  Next to that are a bunch of containers I salvaged by washing out the icing tubs after making cakes in the past.  The top row are from dollar store icing, and are opaque white.  The red-lidded Betty Crocker ones are semi-translucent and the covers seal nicely and they make great food-safe containers.  I wouldn’t quite trust them with my lunch, I’m not sure how well the cover would stay on when tossed in a bag, but definitely reuse them for something!  I used them to sort my small bits that were previously in ziplocks and shoved loose into my toolbox.  They hold things like toothpics, q-tips, the levels for my fondant rolling pins, icing tips, small sets of mini fondant push-cutters, etc.  The 4 at the back are empty, waiting until I need them.desk after detail05

The next shelf down has all my ‘stuff’, the things I use most often when actually *making*.  Okay, I lie.  The purple flower-print box in the center has everything I use most often.  But the rest is stored here too.  🙂  The lower box on the left holds icing tubes.  I make my own icing usually, but I like the premade gel kinds for simulating water (you’ll see that soon in the water mixing cups for a Paint Nite cake I made recently) and I use black gel icing as a transfer medium.  The bin above it has tools like a Wilton fondant cutter and ribbon rollers and cake level markers…

You know, I’ll be honest – I never use that stuff.  Like, ever.  I bought it, so I have it, in case one day… but for anyone starting out decorating, DON’T spend the money on that kind of stuff.  The ribbon rollers… meh.  A cake leveler?  Garbage.  There are a few things I’ve found worth the money, like a fondant roller.  Moving from working on my table with a rolling pin to a gridded mat with a fondant roller was a revelation in ease and speed, and the rolling pin levels (differing thicknesses of elastic bands) are very practical.  But until you see what you need for the kinds of things you’ll be making, don’t bother.  You can cut ribbon shapes with a knife.  I used my kitchen knives for almost everything, from leveling cakes to icing them to cutting out fondant, and only just switched to using a smaller cutter because it came in a set with another tool I needed.

The red flower box has things that didn’t really fit anywhere else at the back, like cupcake stencils, and at the front has some items I reach for regularly, like a measuring tape, dressmaker’s pins, and a pen.

The green box has my icing bottles in assorted sizes, and my caulk-style icing guns.

The purple box… that’s where the good stuff is.  🙂

Oh- and those boxes by the way?  More repurposed items.  They’re tissue boxes with the tops cut off, and then I used additional cardboard and paper rolls to sort like items together.  Super easy, super cheap (free!) caddy.

desk after detail02

So what’s in this one?  At the back are my brushes, the ones strictly kept for food projects.  I have assorted sizes for everything from broad to detail work.  In the middle is a foam mat for fondant/gumpaste work and a set of food markers (I love these!).  Then there’s a small size fondant roller and a bunch of fondant/gumpaste shaping tools.  These are a recent purchase, most from the dollar store (except the 2 taller ones) and I’m not sure yet how helpful they will be, seeing as I’ve managed the last 8 years without them.  That said, I used to do scuplting with clay, and I know the right tools can make a big difference, so I wanted to give them a try, and the price was great.  The two taller ones are Wilton and were more expensive, I think they were on sale at $6 for the two, but I’ve found them to be a valuable addition.  The wheel has 2 sizes pinwheels for docking and fabric looks (though I achieved the same look recently using a sewing pin) and the capped tool has a needle on one end and a knife at the other, and I found it came in very handy (pun intended) this past weekend when doing some fine letter work with fondant.  The rainbow-lined packs are more food markers, thick ones mostly left for the kids to use, then a 2 pack of my preferred brand in black, and then a bottle of Wilton White icing whitener which I use CONSTANTLY when making my icing ‘paints’.

My favorite kinds of cake toppers are when I can sit down and ‘paint’ something fun, and this caddy will allow me to pull down the one box, and my icing colors, and get to work.  desk after detail03

The lowest shelf isn’t really a shelf, it’s the tablet of the desk itself.  I keep these things here right now, but I might reorganize one day if the kids get more nosy, as the idea of them having free access to the dyes and sharp tools above isn’t one I’m crazy about.  In the meantime, though, the lower tablet has the red-topped pencil case that holds my food-coloring dyes and Wilton pots of icing gels, and in front of them are the box of AmeriColor ones.  Love.  Love love love my icing dyes.

The blue-lidded box holds straws and bamboo skewers for cake support as well as icing/piping bags.  The two jars to the side hold mini and large cupcake liners, and the photo album has all the cakes and cookies I’ve made, a sort of gallery of foodstuffs made for when I visited a local cake guild one night.

Finally, for real this time, the storage bin on the floor under the table holds all my cookie cutters, sorted by shape and theme.

There are a few things not stored here, mainly due to size… my large fondant roller, the cutting mat, my turntables… plus other things I find indispensable for cake decorating, like my dollar store thin mats and saran wrap and parchment paper and scissors.  But the bulk of the stuff is here, and easy to access and find, and I’m really happy having a functional item of furniture.

(I’m also really happy to note that it’s been about 3 weeks since the cleanup was done and the desktop is STILL spotless!)

Who’da thunk?

This post may contain affiliate links. This means I might make a small commission on purchases made through the links, at no cost to you.


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challenge complete

I managed to finish my dining room desk overhaul and whoa what a difference it makes!  A main benefit is supposed to be when I work on my next project… having all my supplies organized and at-hand… but an important EXTRA benefit is that now the desk is clean… which means Yannick no longer tries to avoid looking in the dining room’s general direction.  😉

The before can be seen in my previous post…and here’s the after:

desk after

What a difference, no?  All that space… just waiting for me to pile stuff on it… hehehe


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self-imposed challenge, accepted

So many blog drafts, so little time.  😦 I have so much I want to share and yet keep finding my nights kept busy by more projects that require my hands… which means they can’t be on the keyboard, editing pics and writing up posts.  However, one project is trumping all the others today.

I recently tackled cleaning my office, and have been greatly enjoying the convenience of being able to walk in, immediately grab what I need from it’s appropriate, labeled container, and then leave, without having to trip over supplies or dig through stacks.  Craft stuff lives (mostly) downstairs, but cake stuff hangs out in assorted places in the kitchen and dining room.  When I first started, 7 years ago, a small tupperware sufficed.  Two years ago that tupperware grew into a toolbox, but now, sadly (?) I’ve outgrown that as well.

I always decorate cakes and cookies in my dining room, and quite a few times I’ve looked up at the hutch right in front of me and thought how great it would be to transform it into some kind of giant decorating center.  It’s a convenient space and Yannick and I each have our own ‘sides’, plus it’s where we keep drawing and craft materials for the kids, so converting my side into something useful would make sense.  Plus, until recently, my side was crammed full of books, old magazines and photo albums, none of which had been touched in at least 5 years.

The books were moved somewhere more appropriate and the magazines donated, and the craft supplies that should be moved down to my office were tucked into a Costco box with the intent to (eventually) bring them downstairs.  Since then, with each new food project, I’ve slowly moved assorted containers and supplies up into the now-empty shelves.

Not organized, of course.  THAT would have been to easy.

Well, that’s my plan for today.

messy desk dining room

Organize this space.

And drink coffee.  Lots of coffee.


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Throwing A Minecraft Birthday Party

First came the Minecraft lootbags, then the Minecraft fondant toppers, and then the Minecraft cake.  Now’s where it all came together – the final Minecraft birthday party.mc party collage

Once again, this was Henri’s 6th birthday party, from back in January.  Jakob just had his own Minecraft party but I didn’t change much except for the cake, and that will get its own post shortly.

There are a lot of ways you can incorporate Minecraft ‘foods’ into your own party.  A quick look through Google images or Pinterest will show idea after idea, I pulled some of them out and added my own to get what worked for the small group of kids we had.  If you’re having a larger party, or its for a gaggle of teens, you can really go all out with some creative food arrangements.  I’ve seen everything from pretzel-grid trap doors to a soda maker doubling as a brewing station!

mc party dinnerI didn’t go quite so elaborate.  Only 10 kids, a few lingering adults, and I knew the children would be rushing through the food to get back to playing video games (we were at an arcade).  The place provided pizza, so I added a quick veggie side dish to the table.

mc party dinner carrot

Clear enough?  🙂

mc party dessert

I had a little more fun preparing the dessert table…mc party dessert 02

Regular and Golden Apples…mc party water buckets 01

…Water Buckets… (blue raspberry Jell-O… would have been cuter in plastic shot glasses if I’d thought about buying some in time)…mc party tnt

…and TNT  (red licorice bundles with black licorice whip wicks).

Combine these with the Minecraft lootbags the kids got when they left, and it made for a party they could all dig.  (Get it?)  😉

Can I just say that I love the dollar store square dishes and platters?  Love them.

mc party cake closeupHenri really enjoyed his 6th birthday party, and I had a lot of fun putting everything together for it.

You can download and print the images below to make your own Minecraft party.  I copy/pasted a bunch onto an Excel spreadsheet so I could fit as many to a page as I needed.  The TNT strips were sized at 3″ tall by 5″ wide (the block of 10 strips), the water bucket graphic is 1.75″ wide by 2″ high, and the apples and carrots were 2.25″ by 3″.tnt 3inby5in water bucket 2inby175inred apple 3inby225in golden apple 3inby225in carrot 3inby225in

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More Minecraft fun:

How to make Minecraft Steve and Creeper heads


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How to Make a Minecraft Cake

From the lootbags to the toppers, next up in the Minecraft-themed birthday party is the yummiest part… the cake!minecraft cake

Jakob turned 8 over the weekend.jk8

I know.  I don’t know where the time went.  I’ve been blogging since before he was born, and now he’s 8 and such a good kid.  Of course he wants a Minecraft-themed party too, but, um, I haven’t begun to do anything for it yet, so instead I’ll finish showing you what I’d done for Henri’s Minecraft party, back in January.

mc cake front

To be honest, it’s not my favorite-looking cake.  I’m a lot prouder of the loot bags and the toppers than I am of how the cake turned out.  But- and here’s the important part- HE loved it.  (And it was delicious).

I started out by baking 2 9×11 chocolate cakes.  My kids prefer vanilla but going for the ‘dirt’ look I knew it would be easier on me to have a chocolate base in case the chocolate icing didn’t fully cover everything.  I also filled an 8×8 greased dish with blue Jell-O prepared as Jigglers, and set that to chill.

When I sat down to work on it I didn’t have a plan.  I knew I’d baked enough cake to stack layers, similar to the grass in the forest biomes.  (Yes, I play LOL).  I knew I had enough chocolate icing to slap it all together.  I knew I had a finite amount of “water cubes”, so I started with that.

mc cake back

I turned the Jell-O out onto a mat and squared the edges, then cut it into 2″ sections.  Then, after leveling the cakes, I used toothpicks to divide the cakes into 2″ sections as well.  Then I began to cut.  I held my platter over the cake to figure out how much to cut off to make it fit along at least 2 sides, and then cut away enough of the ‘front’ to fit the water ‘cubes’.  Then I cut the upper layers, holding and testing until I had something that had as little waste as possible while still looking as ‘unboring’ as I could manage.  (Technical term).

I stuck the upper layers down with icing then dirty iced the whole thing before sticking it in the fridge a few minutes to set up.  Then I gave all the sides a thicker coating of chocolate icing.  The ‘grass’ was piped with a star tip and not-completely-mixed vanilla icing and green icing gels, so there’s a slight variation in the color.  I was hoping that the shading, along with the star tip, would help it look ‘pixellated’ like the game.  I also piped some areas, leaving others blank, so as I ran low on icing and mixed in more, the colors would be different even within those areas.  (Best seen in the overhead view, above).

mc cake good

I placed the Jell-O in only AFTER the cake had chilled for a few hours.  I was afraid one would leech water out of the other and that I’d end up with a gooey, dissolving mess.  Then, at the party, I stuck the figures on just before serving, including tucking Mr. Squid under a few water cubes.

Even though I wasn’t as crazy about it, the kids loved it, the birthday boy loved it, and there were enough fondant figures so everyone who wanted one got one to eat.  (Apologies to their parents for any resulting sugar-rush).mc cake 01The great thing about Minecraft is that it’s SUPPOSED to look boxy – it’s all squares!  So whether it’s by shaping a cake, cutting rice krispy treats into cubes, or cutting brownie squares and topping them with green-tinted shredded coconut, there are a ton of ways you can make an easily-recognizable Minecraft cake.

Up next- putting it all together for the party!

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Henri’s other birthday treats

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More Minecraft fun:

How to make Minecraft lootbags

How to make Minecraft Steve and Creeper heads

How to make a Minecraft Enderman head (with bonus diamond block)

DIY Checkerboard Minecraft Creeper Cake


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Hockey Goalie cake

Coming off the Montreal Canadiens’ win last night, I figured the timing was good to post another cake I’d never posted at the time.  The closest I’ve come to HABs cakes have been the 2 hockey goalie cakes I made for my cousin’s son Sean’s last two birthdays, and this is the first one, from back in January 2014.

2014-01-11 hockey goalie cake title

 

This cake started, like a lot of them do, with a fondant topper.  I sketched up the design using clip art, coloring books and player images (for the uniform details) and worked up an image I liked.  Then I traced the outside edge onto some ivory fondant with a knife, cutting away the excess.

2014-01-09 hockey goalie cake plaque step 1

I don’t have better pics of the next step, but it’s one of the methods I use when transferring images.  Sometimes I use push pins to poke holes where my lines need to go, in this case I needed a more accurate, detailed transfer.  First I held my image up to a window and traced it on the back of the paper, so I had a reverse copy.  Then, using black gel icing and a toothpick, I lightly traced over those lines.  When I was done I carefully turned the image right-side up, and set it down carefully onto my fondant, basically using the original sketch as a stamp, and stamped the gel-drawn image onto the fondant.

2014-01-09 hockey goalie cake plaque step 2

That left me with a pretty good outline of what I wanted to paint.  Next was to start painting.  I also didn’t take many progress shots back then, but you can see how I worked upwards.  First I did a base layer of the different colors, then a second layer to create the shaping/dimensions.  For example: the red outline of the goal has only one layer (it looks lighter and flatter) but the uniform/helmet already had 2 coats.2014-01-09 hockey goalie cake plaque step 3

The finished plaque.  I’ve added a second coat to all areas and worked the outlines with an edible ink marker.  Once the whole thing had dried for a day, I added the “CH” logo.  All the painting was done with a small paintbrush and a toothpick.

2014-01-10 hockey goalie cake plaque final

The finished cake.  A simple layer of vanilla icing (over a chocolate 2-layer 9×11 cake), trimmed with blue and red Smarties, and the birthday boy’s name.  I lightly dabbed the plaque with a bit of water on a Q-Tip to moisten the 4 corners, so it would stick well, as the icing had already crusted over.  I didn’t want to attach it while the icing was still damp because I was afraid the colors along the edges would bleed into the cake, so I made sure it was really, really dry first.

2014-01-11 hockey goalie cake 01


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Charlie and Lola cake

Instead of cakes, or knitting, the projects I’ve been working on lately have been for the upcoming show I’m a part of.  I’ve joined the Becket Players this year, and we are getting right down to the crunch before the show starts.  (Literally… “Hell Week” starts tonight).

Actually, come to think of it I did make cookies, and knit something for the show, but that’s not the point.  I’ve been taking step-by-step pics of the props so I can make tutorial posts, but I want to wait to post them after the show has finished the run.  Not for EVERY prop I made, however… today I made some fake money for one scene and somehow I don’t think it’s a good idea to post a tutorial on “How To Print Money” 😛

So since I can’t show you that stuff yet, I’m going to continue posting cakes and projects from the past.  Today it’s the Charlie and Lola cake.charlie_and_lola_cake_title

When I was asked to make this cake for Quentin’s birthday, all the way back in November 2013, I had no idea who Charlie and Lola were.  Actually, I still don’t, beyond that link.  So I went online and found this image to use as a reference:

Charlie_and_lola_orig

charlie_and_lola_cake_04

Nailed it! 😀

About a week before the cake was due I cut out the letters for the name from yellow fondant, and set them aside to dry.  I also cut out the figures from ivory fondant, tracing the images I’d printed off the internet, as I discuss here.  I also set those aside to dry, and discovered that larger shapes take longer to dry.  I knew that already with sculpted pieces, but was surprised that after 2 days of sitting out at room temperature these figures were still floppy.  I tried moving them downstairs and had them spend the night on the washing machine, in front of the dehumidifier, but they still slowly sagged when I held only one end.  Shoot.

A baker friend suggested submerging them in a bed of cornstarch to draw out moisture.  Great- except I had none.  So I set them for 24 hours in a bed of icing sugar instead.  They weren’t as dry as I’d like, nowhere near the “ready-to-snap” aridity of the Jake figures, but dry enough to risk painting.

Overall, I’m happy with how these came out…mostly.  I think they look like who they’re supposed to be, but there are some flaws that bug me when I look closely.

charlie_and_lola_cake_charlie

Not bad, right? Good from far but…

So much bothers me with this technique, and is the reason why I’ve switched to painting with icing instead of straight gels.  The visible “skin tone” of the figures is the ivory fondant.  The “paint” used was Wilton gel colors thinned with water, and a drop of Wilton White White to help it be opaque.  On very small items, like the Jake figures, it covered well, dried fast, and was manageable.  But these figures were almost the size of a 9×11″ cake, and it took a lot more “paint” to cover them.

charlie_and_lola_cake_charlie_closeupThe first day, as I painted, they looked good.  The yellow hair was brighter, and the white shirt seemed solid.  The next day is when the flaws started to come out.  The hair dried patchy, in some of the spots the gel color almost seemed to separate from the water.  The painted areas were still glossy and tacky 2 days later, the longest I could wait to do the outlining and details, as it was the day of the party.  As you can see, especially on the right eye and the shirt, the white was still not dry enough in the centers, and cracked and bled when I drew on it with my edible ink pen.

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I was MUCH happier with the lower half.  For his jeans, I painted the pants first with blue, then pounced/dry brushed blue, blue/black mix and straight black icing gels.  The cuffs were scribbled just like the source drawing, and I really like the way they, the shoes and pants came out.

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I had the same issues with Lola.  I was quite happy with how her dress came out, not as much with the hair/eyes, mainly because of the color drying/bleeding.charlie_and_lola_cake_lola_closeup

The dress was a lot of fun to do.  I put a base layer of white, then took advantage of the bleeding attributes to dot in the flowers (groupings of 4 or 5 dots).  Once they’d had a chance to set up a bit I added the flower centers, and finally the leaves.  If I’d been painting with real paint, or working with icing, I’d have started with the leaves, and built up, but that wouldn’t have worked here.

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A little outlining at the end gave the finishing touch.

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The cake itself was a chocolate 2-layer cake, iced and filled with vanilla icing.  While the icing was still wet I put a row of purple Smarties around the base.  The day of the party I attached the figures to the top with a little bit of icing, and added the name.

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