Hi! Welcome to the online home of the future "The Little Blue Teapot" I'm currently studying to be a teacher (teaching English as a foreign language) but deep down I've always wanted to bake. But not only that I wanted to be a cake decorator, so rather than drop everything at the drop of a hat (especially considering Uni fee rates!!) I decided to learn it on the side, in the hope that that one day , when I'm older I'll be able to do something with it. So here you are, tracking my progress from the person who is obsessed with all things Buddy Valastro (Cake Boss) with a side order of Duff (Ace of Cakes) to someone who could be classed as an accomplished decorator. I know for a fact it will be full of disasters....


Sunday, 2 January 2011

The christmas Cake Disaster

Before coming home for the holidays from university mum asked me to make a Boxing day cake, my first thought? YES!!! I have a reason to make a decorated cake! Second thought? Where the hell do I begin?

So I wanted a big elaborate cake with figurines and a rainbow of colours....Buuuuuuuutt, Alex forgot to send off for my colours (you know the little coloured gelled which dye the fondant) in time so anything I had to make had to be white, white and ...more white. I decided on a simple chocolate cake (with what little ingredients I had, not even any bicarb or baking powder!) But the measure converter I used was obviously not the norm as the cake mix was super runny, nevertheless I baked it anyway in the hopes that it would still be okay....or at least rise. I’m pretty sure 80g of S.flour is not anywhere near enough for cake. And 45 minutes later I unfortunately proved the theory right. It was still flat as a pancake and tasted like wet gooey brownie....Not exactly what I was going for eh?

By this point I was pretty tired because I had been at work for ten hours and for once was ready to stop baking. Lobbing three times the amount in a bowl (omitting the milk...I mean come on! no wonder it was soggy there was125 ml of milk in there!)  My family didn't have any greaseproof/baking paper so I settled for some Teflon. Somehow it worked but it took about an hour and a half because of the sheer size of it. Also, because there was such a vast amount of mixture it didn’t cook as evenly as I would have like and so bubbled on the top. But I left it covered on the side to cool over night as I had work at 6. zzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzzz

The next morning when I got back from work at 4 with only two hours to decorate and lo and behold another disaster!! :( The whole top had caved in...FABULOUS!! So all is going well in the kitchen! I didn't have time to bake another, let it cool and cover it in such a short space of time. So I used my new shiny cake slicer, courtesy of my sister, cut it in half with the intention of filling it with butter cream to fill up the gap. After cutting it the gap turned into a whole and there wasn't a large enough knife available so everything was a bit wonky. Juuuusst Great! So I improvised and used the pieces I had cut off to fill in the gaps, in theory this should have been a stroke of genius. In real life, things don't always look like what you had pictured in your head.

From watching programmes and reading books it seems you have to let the cake cool, refrigerate it for a day then cut it when it is firm, buuuuuutt I forgot! O_o so the dirty icing part was a bit of a disaster (noticing a pattern yet?) I love butter cream icing and on day found that if you also had strawberry flavouring it tastes really yummy, buuuuuutt I was a bit tired and added too much butter and so it was a bit sweet. Oh well, almost there! I only had a small packet of fondant and dusted my sides down with corn flour BUUUUUTTTT my mum didn't have a rolling pin”WHO DOESNT HAVE A ROLLING PIN!?!" Grrrrrr. Nevertheless I rummaged through the cupboards and found a small flask.
Again, this did not turned out as I hope as it was too small and I couldn't stretch it well enough, so after covering the cake.....well it didn't really cover the cake :( There was about an inch around the bottom on two sides (HOW?) that were left exposed to terribly crummy poorly iced cake.

Luckily I had previously bought a silver snowflake border and so covered my mistakes and much as I possibly could. The problem then became the fact that my crystal white fondant was not so snowy white anymore, and when trying to smooth down the level I accidently tore it a little.
Mum was being super nice and said it looked lovely. But that’s really what you say to your five year old who things their paint splattered piece of paper it supposed to be a portrait of mum. “awww thanks baby, its amaaaazzing!” Really mum? Give me a break, it’s hideous!
I did by this point want to give up, which is what I never ever want to do! But noticing I had some icing left (after tearing out all the little bit of cholcate) I used the star cutter and coated the top in little star, but as always I still wasn't satisfied. But my sister bought me a bunch of baking things, including luser dust. (P.S this was THE best christmas ever!)  She has also bought me paintbrushes so i tried to lightly coat the stars in yellow...suprise suprise another disaster. The paintbrushes (bless her) were quite cheap and the hairs came off and started sticking in the icing. It took ages to pick out but I topped the whole thing off by sprinling it with icing sugar.

 Overall the cake actually looked quite nice , and people were either being nice or they actually enjoyed it. Admittedly the butter icing sugar was too sweet, but for my first time I thought it wasn't too bad! Untill yesterday when my mum told me the fondan I had bought tasted really fatty like lard but she was too nice to tell me (parents ey?) Oh and she butchered it and divided it up between all eight of us before I could take a picture. It's probably for the best anyway. (none of these are my pictures, but you get the idea)
So I may not have been the van gogh of the cake world but the process made me realise that everyone has to start somewhere. Until the next disaster.......Meg x


No comments:

Post a Comment