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Engagement Cake!

March 18, 2011 by Jenn

Congratulations Christy and Jude!!

My great friends, have decided to take the plunge and tie the knot.  Anyone who knows them is not surprised in the slightest.  We all knew it was just a matter of time.

Mexico + All Inclusive Resort = Wedding Engagement!

(I’m not sure exactly how that adds up, but that’s what happened!  Hmm, maybe a little tequila was involved?  Just Kidding!)

What a beautiful spot to do propose . . . what could be better than during a trip to Mexico!

A special congratulations has to go out to Jude who managed to hide the ring from Christy for an entire week . . . as well as keep it from being stolen!  I’m sure that was a stressful week for Jude.

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Filed Under: Cakes Tagged With: cake, congratulations, engagement cake

Valentine’s Day Cake

February 22, 2011 by Jenn

Yes, Valentine’s day was last week, but I have been so busy with the early success of Jenn’s Custom Cakery.  A new website, with a photo gallery, order form, product listing, and of course a link back here to my blog is in the works.  I can’t wait!

On to the post . . . and away from the excuses!

My parent’s have been married for 33 years!  Their anniversary falls on February 1st . . . every year . . . duh.  The funny thing about this is that the only person who remembered was my younger brother!  Normally, he forgets everything and it’s me reminding him to call home.  Kudos Steve 🙂

To make it up to them, (even though they both forgot too, I felt guilty) I made them a Valentine’s Day Cake.  I’ve been dying to make a Tuxedo Cake, from a blog I follow (Annie Eat’s).

To give you a good idea of what goes into this chocolate, whipping cream and more chocolate creation, I have a step by step tutorial for you!   I used 3 heart shaped cakes, which proved to be WAY too small for the amount of batter the original recipe calls for (3- 9″ layer cake pans).  The math conversion proved to be too much work as well.

Tuxedo Cake

(from Annie’s Eats)

Ingredients:
For the cake:
1 cup unsalted butter
2 cups water
1 cup canola oil
4 cups sugar
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
4 cups all-purpose flour
4 large eggs
1 cup buttermilk
1 tbsp. baking soda
½ tsp. salt
1 tbsp. vanilla extract

See the big crater? That's why you use flour on your pans! I managed to make up for the mistake, and fill it in with frosting.

Directions:
To make the cake layers, preheat the oven to 350˚ F.  Line three 9-inch round cake pans (or two 10-inch round cake pans) with parchment paper.  Butter and flour the inside edges of the pan, shaking out the excess flour.  (I did not do the flour step

In a saucepan over medium heat, combine the butter, water and canola oil; heat until the butter is melted.  In a large mixing bowl, combine the sugar, cocoa powder, and flour; whisk to blend.  Pour the melted butter mixture into the dry ingredients and whisk until smooth.  Whisk in the eggs one at a time, then whisk in the buttermilk.  Add the baking soda, salt and vanilla to the bowl and whisk just until incorporated.  Divide the batter evenly between the prepared pans.  Bake for 35-40 minutes or until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.

Let cool in the pans for 15 minutes.  Run a knife around the edge of each cake layer and invert onto a wire cooling rack.  Allow the cake layers to cool completely before frosting, at least 2 hours.

For the frosting:
4 cups chilled heavy whipping cream
1¼ cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted

To make the frosting, add the heavy cream to the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with a whisk attachment.  Whip on medium-high speed until soft peaks form.  Add the powdered sugar and continue to whip until thoroughly combined and stiff peaks form.

Here is where you cover up the “oops”.

To assemble the cake, place one cake layer on a cake platter and spread a layer of the whipped cream frosting over the top.  Top with a second cake layer, more frosting (and the third cake layer, if using).  Frost the top and sides of the assembled cake.  Refrigerate until the frosting has stabilized, at least 1 hour.

Slap that cream on, spread it out!

And again!

Until you get this!  YUM!  You could stop there, but don’t!  The best is yet to come.

For the chocolate topping:

4 oz. bittersweet chocolate, finely chopped
½ cup heavy whipping cream
¼ cup light corn syrup
2 tsp. vanilla extract

To make the chocolate glaze, place the chocolate in a medium bowl.  Heat the cream in a small saucepan over medium heat until simmering.  Pour the hot cream over the chocolate and let sit 1-2 minutes.  Whisk until the mixture is smooth and homogenous.  Blend in the corn syrup and vanilla.  Pour the glaze into a pitcher or measuring cup and let cool for 10 minutes.  (Do not let the glaze cool longer or it may become difficult to pour over the cake.)  Slowly pour the glaze over the cake, ensuring that the top is covered and the glaze drips over the sides.

There is an important lesson to be learned at this stage!  Just because chocolate is a food group reserved for greatness, does not mean that you should go overboard pouring it on this cake.  Don’t make the same mistake that this chocoholic did!  I used ALL of the ganache that the much bigger than needed recipe called for.  I left it ended up without the beauty that you can see in the original post  . . . dark on white . . . hence the tuxedo effect!

Refrigerate the cake until the glaze is set and the whipped cream frosting is firm, at least 1 hour.  Slice with a long, sharp knife, wiping the blade clean between slices.

I should have stopped here!

Add some sugar roses . . .

And some sugar lilies . . .

And some sugar petunias!

Thank you Annie for making such a delicious cake and providing me with the inspiration to treat my parents!  My dad who “doesn’t like sweets” (H. E. L. L. O! how am I his child?) phoned me the next day to say it was “to die for”.  If you know my dad and his issues with “sweets” you know what high praise that is!

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Filed Under: Cakes Tagged With: cake, chocolate, chocolate cake, chocolate ganache, valentine's day

Hockey, Eh? Root Beer Cake!

February 14, 2011 by Jenn

Many like to think that hockey is Canada’s unofficial national sport.

There once was a time when I lived in rinks, and watched hours, upon hours of my brother’s hockey games.  All of my teenage girl crushes were on the local hockey players.  I used to cut their pictures out of the papers!  Hello, stalker!  I’m sorry if you were one of those boys 😉  I don’t do that anymore.  It wouldn’t really fly with Paul.

When my brother left home to continue his hockey career, I listened to hours of internet radio broadcasts, and drove to every one of his games that was within three hours!  Surprisingly, there was limited webcasts at that time (and it was only about 10 years ago).  After he finished playing in the States, he went abroad, and I was hooped.  There was no way (that I discovered) to get to watch or listen to him.

My love for hockey (and hockey players) stayed strong despite the fact that I no longer had a family member on the ice to root for.  Let me tell you, it’s much more relaxing to watch a game when you’re not glued to one particular person the whole time.  Every hit meant a grimace, every touch of the puck meant a cheer!

In 2003, I moved to London for a year to teach abroad and travel.  Hockey?  What is hockey? At the time, they had a London hockey team, but if you know anything about England, you know it’s FOOTBALL (soccer) all the way!  So what did I, the dedicated hockey fan that I was, do?  I paid 16 GBP to have the one and only channel that played Hockey Night in Canada!  At 3 in the morning!  It was live in Canada, but not so much in London.  One night, I was so desperate to watch it “live” that I stayed up!  Oh, the dedication . . . and amount of time on my hands I had then.

I’m telling you this story because I think that it is funny that something I spent hours upon hours doing, I no longer even think about now.  I used to have the Vancouver Canucks schedule memorized, and now, I can’t even tell you what their logo looks like.

I’m also giving you this trip down memory lane, and what things used to be like, so I could tell you that I was super excited to get to make a hockey cake!   It was for Jackson’s Birthday . . . a “Montreal Canadiens root beer cake”.  Your wish is my command sir.

Rootbeer Cake

Cake:

1 cup butter

2 cups granulated sugar

3 cups cake flour

1 1/2 tablespoons baking powder

1/2 teaspoon salt

3 1/2 teaspoons water

4 eggs

1 tablespoon root beer extract

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 cup milk

Directions:

Make the Cake: Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease and flour 2 (9-inch) cake pans and line the bottoms with parchment paper.

In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter; then add the sugar and continue mixing until light and fluffy.

Meanwhile, sift together the cake flour, baking powder, and salt.

With the mixer on low speed, gradually add the water and eggs to the butter mixture until blended. Mix in the root beer extract and vanilla. Alternately add the flour mixture and milk to form a smooth batter.

Pour the batter into the prepared pans and bake until just set, about 30 to 40 minutes. Let cool in pans for 5 minutes, and then invert onto cooling racks to cool completely before frosting.

Root Beer Frosting

1/2 cup unsalted butter, at room temperature

4 cups icing sugar

3 tbsp milk

2 tsp root beer extract

In a large bowl using an electric mixer, or a food processor fitted with the paddle attachment, beat butter until very pale and soft, about 2–3 minutes. Gradually add icing sugar, beating on medium speed, until it is fully incorporated. (The icing will seem very thick at this point, but that’s OK.) Beat in milk, 1 tbsp (15 mL) at a time. Beat in root beer. If you feel the icing is still too thick, add an additional 1 tbsp (15 mL) milk.

How to decorate this cake:

1. Bake the cake and freeze when fully cooled.

2. Base coat cake in root beer icing.

3.  Prepare a new batch of white buttercream (which means you need to leave out the root beer extract as it makes the icing a shade of brown).  It is possible to use clear extract, but then you are adding an extra flavour to the cake.  I recommend that you use this recipe for the icing decorating.

4. Tint one cup blue, one cup red and leave 3 cups of the icing white.

5. I started with a gel transfer of the logo (remember to trace it with your piping gel onto a backwards image, so it transfers the correct direction onto the cake).

6.  I piped,with star tip 16, the white of the logo first, as I thought that it set the image in my mind, and it seemed the easiest place to start.

7. I used star tip 18 to complete the white part of the cake, as it took less time than 16.  I continued to use 16 for the red and blue sections.

Making this cake didn’t remind me to watch hockey, but it made me study the logos of the NHL more closely!

Go Canucks go!  Maybe I still have it in me.

I’m ready to make more hockey cakes people, bring them on!

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Filed Under: Cakes Tagged With: cake, hockey cake, montreal canadiens, rootbeer cake, rootbeer icing

Valentine’s Cake!

February 12, 2011 by Jenn

Sugar Lilies and Petunias

 

Royal Icing Flowers

 

Sugar Lilies and Petunias

This week in my cake decorating classes, we were to finish a cake!  I had an order for a Montreal Canadiens birthday cake which was perfect for my Beginner class, and I wanted to make Paul something special for Valentine’s Day for my flower class.  Both of the cakes turned out beautifully, and I’m really  happy with what I have learned in my courses.  Next week, I start a fondant and gum paste flower class, so I’m looking forward to that too!

Buckeye Valentine's Cake

Using the flowers and techniques that I learned in my course, I made a Buckeye (chocolate and peanut butter) Valentine’s Cake!  The cake itself is delicious . . . we broke into it early 🙂  The bottom layer is a heavy chewy brownie like cake, middle layer is smooth peanut butter cream, and it’s topped off with a chocolate ganache!  Yum!

Buckeye Cake
(adapted from amandeleine)
 
Cake
• 2 large eggs
• 1 1/4 cups granulated sugar
• 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
• 6 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
• 3 oz. unsweetened chocolate, melted
• 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
• 1/8 teaspoon salt
 
Peanut Butter Layer
• 3/4 cup creamy peanut butter
• 1/4 cup unsalted butter, softened
• 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract
• 3/4 cup powdered sugar
 
Ganache
• 1 cup heavy whipping cream
• 2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
• 1/3 cup peanut butter chips
 
Directions
1. Preheat oven to 350º F. Grease 9-inch-round cake pan. Line bottom of pan with parchment paper; grease.
2. Cake: Combine eggs and sugar in large bowl. Stir in flour, melted butter, melted chocolate, vanilla extract and salt until smooth. Pour into prepared pan.
3. Bake for 25 minutes or until a wooden pick inserted in the middle comes out clean. Cool on wire rack for 5 minutes. Run knife around edge of cake; cool for an additional 10 minutes. Invert cake onto serving platter. Remove pan and parchment; cool completely.
4. Peanut Butter Layer: Beat peanut butter, butter and vanilla extract in medium mixer bowl until combined. Gradually beat in powdered sugar. Spread mixture on cake. Refrigerate for 30 minutes.
5. Ganache: Heat cream in small saucepan to boiling; remove from heat. Add semi-sweet morsels; let stand 5 minutes. Stir; refrigerate for 30 minutes or until mixture is spreadable. Spread chocolate on top and sides of cake.
6. This step I did not do, as I was decorating my cake with my sugar flowers, but I’ve included it for you to enjoy! Melt peanut butter chips in resealable plastic bag on MEDIUM-HIGH (70%) power for 30 seconds. Knead bag to mix. If necessary, microwave at additional 10- to 15-second intervals until melted. Cut a small hole from corner of bag; squeeze to drizzle over cake. Store in refrigerator. Let stand for 30 minutes before serving.

What are YOU doing for Valentine’s Day?

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Filed Under: Cakes, Randomness Tagged With: cake, chocolate, peanut butter, valentine's day

Wilton Cake Courses- Week One, Class One

January 26, 2011 by Jenn

I signed up three cake classes that are being offered by Cranbrook’s Parks and Recreation group.

The first course (Class One) is teaching basic decorating skills.

Our job this week was to come back to my Wednesday night class with a baked cake, iced with Wilton Icing, and extra cup of Icing to learn how to pipe flowers etc.  I decided that since I know what a cake is (that was seriously one of the steps of the first class), I would teach myself how to do something . . . and I double “torted” the cake.  Basically that just means that I cut my 10″ cake into three layers.

Step One: Lemon Raspberry Torte Cake

I used a cake leveller and this step was crazy simple!  You just change the height of your leveller and you come out with a smooth, even cake layer!

I put a layer of Raspberry Icing on the bottom layer, as this is what I had left over from the Giant Cupcake from yesterday.  I didn’t need to put a layer of icing around the outside as this raspberry icing is very thick….so thick I couldn’t spread it without the cake crumbling underneath it.

For the next layer, I used a lemon spread.  As this lemon spread was thinner than the raspberry icing, so I was worried about it spilling out of the sides, so I used the thicker raspberry icing to edge the cake.  Yup, it’s messy!  That stuff was THICK!

Torted cake!

All it needs now is the base coat, and it’s ready for Wednesday’s class.

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Filed Under: Cakes Tagged With: cake, lemon, raspberry, torte, wilton cake class
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