Tag Archives: fondant icing

Year of the Cake Part Nineteen: SH! IT’S A SECRET!


That was my Brian Blessed voice, in typing form.

I’m pretty much exhausted from making this cake, and there’s a lot to it, so all I’m going to do now is tell you what it all is and set up a slideshow to give you a sort of walkthrough of it.

The G man asked for a dinosaur cake again this year – not so much asked as said that he wouldn’t *mind* if I wanted to make him one, put it that way. I wasn’t really sure what I could do that would work. I didn’t want to do a 2D one after last year’s 3D stegosaurus, and also the stegosaurus is probably the only dino shape I can do without a special cake tin – a half sphere would be handy for a lot of things, a dino is one of them. I had a cast around online and found some very cute fondant dinosaur cupcakes – this, I thought, was the way forward. I wanted to do a full cake though, rather than cupcakes, so I thought I’d just make a few little dino guys to use as cake toppers, and while I was about it I thought that I may as well go for a three tier number, get a bit of practise in.

Two of the G man’s favourite flavours are coconut and marzipan, so my first port of call was to look for a coconut and marzipan cake recipe. I found one really easily, and that really set the tone for this whole experience; it’s gone so smoothly from start to finish. The cake itself isn’t perfect by any means, but I think that’s just inexperience showing itself – there was no stress, no upset, not even any late hours when I should have been in bed. I’ve loved it. To get back to the point, I got the recipe for the sponge that I wanted to make, and thought I’d like to make my own marzipan for the cake and to model the dinos from, so I looked that up. I then wanted to make a rolled fondant icing, instead of buying one, and looked up a recipe for *that*, too. Finally, I decided that I’d make a creamy coconut filling and covering for the sponge, before the fondant went on. I freestyled that part, you may or may not be glad to hear.

So, the result was: Coconut-marzipan sponge, layered with coconut-cream cheese-butter icing and finished with a rolled fondant with a hint of Amaretto. Oh, and a marzipan diplodocus (he took shape so naturally that I felt OK about him being the only one, instead of making a few as I’d planned). Once again, a bit of a mouthful.

Recipe links:

Quick and easy fondant icing

Marzipan

I added an extra capful of almond essence to the marzipan for a stronger taste.

Marzipan and coconut cake

Predictably I altered the cake recipe – instead of using the coconut only on the outside, I put half a cup right into the sponge, since I was icing it so there wasn’t any point having the outside coated in coconut that I was only going to knock off again. I also added two extra capfuls of almond essence, and even at that the marzipan flavour was quite subtle in the finished result. Oh, I also didn’t have any coconut extract so I missed that out. Method-wise, I don’t have a food processor, so I had to do it all using a hand held mixer. Learning to break eggs with one hand was fun, if a bit shell-heavy at first.

Here’s the slideshow of various pics from the process.


Year of the Cake Part Twenty Four: The Birthday Double


Well, where to begin? I suppose with relieving my camera of the dozens of photos it’s been holding on to over the last few weeks; I did that before coming here to start this post, and found myself quite overwhelmed by the number of photos and the task of sorting through them to delete the rubbish ones and name the decent ones so I can find and share them as I go along. I was surprised as well by the number of different occasions I had been cooking and baking for – though now that I think about it, it’s mainly just been one occasion dragged out to last forever, in the best tradition of these things. It was Miss J’s birthday, so we had dinner at home with the folks (Chinese food, as previously mentioned) and a little cake to share between us, then there was our girls night which required a minor batch of baking, but not a proper cake, and then there was the big party night, for which you might say I ‘pulled out all the stops’, except that I didn’t, really. The thing is, I don’t have that many stops in the first place so it’s difficult for me to know what is enough, what is too much, and what is the Goldilocks amount. I made a four-tier, three flavoured cake, with three different flavours of buttercream and hand-made fondant icing. Too much? Not content with this, I also did a batch of cheddar-jalapeno cornbread muffins and a batch of cheese pretzel bites. Sadly, the whole cake and most of the other snacks came back home with us, to be eaten the day after the party as part of a day of group binge eating. Interestingly, I suffered more mightily for that day of snacking than I had for the consumption of an unspecified (and unrecorded) boozes at the party itself.

I think maybe I’ll do one post on the birthday cakes, then one on the birthday savoury goods. We’ll see how far the subject of the cakes takes me, I suppose. Let’s kick off with a nice picture:

I tried to make a red velvet cake, but had to half the recipe (which can be found here) and that definitely affected things a lot. For one thing, the icing didn’t develop a removable skin so much as turn into a mostly solid mass in the pot – but it tasted good for all that, kind of like the stuff you get in the middle of a swiss roll. The cake itself was on the dry side, and quite crumbly when I took it out of the oven, though the icing glued it together nicely and it sliced well once finished. It was also not really red, per se – once again, I think that this is down to the dubious quality of food dye I’m using. Still though, it was a nice dark chocolate colour at least in parts, and it did taste good and was polished off without too much hesitation, so musn’t grumble.

Here is a picture of the inside – you can see the odd way that the colour took, in that the edges of each layer are chocolate-coloured but the inside is a sort of peculiar burgandy. Burgandy velvet cake doesn’t have quite the same ring to it. Plus the texture wasn’t really velvety, so it’d be a burgandy… I’m struggling to find ‘le mot juste’. Burgandy cake cake just about covers it. I am also annoyed about the uneven-ness of the icing inside but I guess that’s a matter of practise. It’s too thick on that top layer, though, there’s no denying it. Well, I *could* deny it, but it’d be the wrong thing to do. One of these days I’ll get round to picking up some good gel food dye and then I’ll make red velvet cake so beautifully red that it’ll stop traffic, and I’ll have to make a sign that says ‘keep going, it’s not a red light, it’s just a cake, and no you can’t have any’.

So that was the first cake, and straightforward it was too, though not the ‘quick something’ I’d initially planned on making, as I baked the three layers separately in just one pan, meaning the baking time was tripled. Originally the G man was going to buy a cake, but I felt too guilty. This is an interesting (for a given value of the word interesting) development I’ve noticed of late; I feel obliged to cook and bake for people, even though I’m sure nobody would expect me to… For a given value of ‘sure’… Still, since I love to be in the kitchen, and love to eat home cooking and baking, it’s mostly a win-win situation. It has lead to some busy kitchen times of late, and some late nights, and a lot of clean-up time that I could have done without. Am considering a table-top dishwasher to help with this, and also to help me meet the environmental health criteria for supplying the public with much-needed cakes, bakes and other treats. Two birds with one stone, and all that.

So, from one three-layered burgandy cake cake to a four-tiered, three flavoured number. I asked Miss J what kinds of cake she liked, and black forest came up. Now, I’m also a great fan of the black forest cake, but I know that not everyone is. I also knew that some people who would be at the birthday party can’t have gluten, so I wanted to try and accommodate them. These things led to me wanting to make a ‘deconstructed’ version of black forest gateau, and I wanted to fondant ice it so I could further develop my fondant icing skills. I knew it would take a lot of work but it was part of my present, and besides anything I was excited about trying something this involved. I made a Plan. Oh yes, Plan with a capital P. I decided that the biggest layer would be chocolate and cherry, with cherry jam and the same vanilla icing that I’d used for the red velvet cake. I also wanted to cover the cake with buttercream before applying the fondant, but I decided that a dark chocolate buttercream was a better option than the vanilla because it would be less cloying; I know fondant can be too sweet in itself so I didn’t want to add to that. I also landed on the idea of making a version of the chocolate coffee bourbon cake that I cut up to make Boozy Brownies before, swapping cherry brandy for the bourbon (and decaf coffee for regular as Miss J can’t go the proper stuff, it allegedly makes her crazy, though how she measures the difference I’m not sure…). I thought that this would be easer than making a sponge then drizzling with the cherry booze, as I’d done last time I made black forest gateau. I was extremely happy with the result; it stayed really moist and flavoursome, although I did have to leave some of the fondant icing off – it was too much after a whole day of eating snack food, my face couldn’t stand any more sugar.

For the gluten free layer, which was to be the next biggest, I decided to make almost the same recipe as the white chocolate and raspberry heart-shaped rainbow cake I’d made for another Miss J’s birthday, but change the flour for rice flour and xanthan gum, and use cherries instead of raspberries to make a soft buttercream icing. I also used cherry jam to fill this one – if cherries weren’t so gosh-darned cotton-pickin’ expensive I’d have had a go at making this myself, too (you see what I mean about not really knowing when to stop? I felt like I was cheating, using shop-bought jam. How odd.). One undesirable effect of the cherries in the buttercream was that after resting a few days between being made and sliced, the cake turned an odd colour, as you can almost see right in the centre of the cake in this picture.  There was a definite blue-ness about the sponge where a particularly large bit of cherry had been spared by the hand blender. I’ve just realise that hand blender sounds like a machine for blending hands, rather than one held by hands. I mean, of course, a hand-held blender, or whisk. Ew. Moving on from that, the white chocolate and cherry cake was good but, I felt, dry by the time it was served. I’d made it on Thursday for eating on Saturday, but it was Sunday night before it was sliced, and with it being wheat-free it was far more inclined to dry out that the other cakes. It still tasted fine, though, and again I don’t think anyone turned it down even two days later; there’s no accounting for taste. The outside of the cake was covered in cherry buttercream before being topped with fondant.

The next layer was just a plain, old-fashioned chocolate cake. I used a recipe form a book for this one, though I’d probably have been better off freestyling it as the recipe has so much sugar in it, on top of the melted chocolate, that the finished cake was really solid throughout and not soft and rich as I’d been hoping for. This cake was filled with chocolate and vanilla buttercreams, covered with chocolate buttercream and, of course, finished with fondant icing. As you can see, the vanilla filling pooled somewhat in the centre – this is because the cake sank when it came out of the oven, so it was difficult to spread the icing out flat when there was a great yawning chasm in the middle, eating up all the icing like an over-zealous toddler who will inevitably feel sick and cry later on. Of all three flavours of cake, this one gave me by far the most trouble, which was unexpected to say the least. It would probably have made more sense to make it to the same recipe as the black forest layer but without the cherry brandy, now that I think about it. That’s hindsight for you, always ruddy smug.It’s not the prettiest cake, this one. It’s got a hint of the car crash about it. That should be cake-crash, probably. If this cake was a person it’d be the kind of person you wouldn’t pick a fight with, that’s for sure. It’d probably have an eyepatch and a mean look in its one remaining eye.

The tiny top layer was another black forest one, and the picture up there is of the tiny layer as the big, base layer was somewhat squashed, having had the weight of all the other layers on it for ages. Poor, long-suffering cake. It was a kindness to eat it, really, and put it out of its misery. The fondant icing over all the layers went better than it had on the G man’s dino cake, but still was far from perfect. I think it’s just difficult to do – I also think I need to get an icing smoother, and pay more attention to the shape of the cakes before the fondant goes on. In this case at least one was a bit lopsided, because my oven is hotter on one side than the other, so I should have trimmed it down before applying the buttercream and then fondant. I stuck with the coconut oil and waxed paper technique, which served me well this time as it had last time. A couple of things I did differently this time were to let the buttercream covering set overnight before applying the fondant, which did help to get a more even surface and removed some of the risk of getting smudges of chocolate icing mixed up with the fondant. I also elevated the cake I was working on while I covered it, making it easier to gently stretch out the covering and trim it off at the base. I just did this by putting each cake on its own base board (made of cardboard and tinfoil) then setting it on top of two soup cans while I worked on it. Top tip I found online somewhere, and I’m sorry not to remember where. Still, though, the finish isn’t that smooth. There as still an issue with the recipe for rolled fondant icing – I used this one, though I did mess it up a bit so it wasn’t exact. It turned out fairly well, considering that was the case. I switched about half of the liquid glucose for golden syrup, which gave a nice ivory colour to the icing. It was certainly pretty pliable and easy to work with. Still though, best keep it out of a really hot kitchen, as I found out the hard way (hence the ribbon applied to the bottom of the cake, there. It’s hiding some sins. Sins, I tell you!

It’s still nowhere near professional quality, I’m sad to report, but the flavour is OK and it gave a nice uniformity of colour to all the different layers. I made a royal icing (recipe here) to pipe over the joins between the cakes, too, adding a little cocoa powder to give the colour I wanted. I kind of rushed the piping, so it wasn’t as even as I’d have liked; I’m never happy, me. Here’s a close up of the cake topper, with which I *am* happy, at least. It’s made of those great craft components, cardboard, tinfoil, toothpicks, silver ribbon and gold paint, with the addition of some pretty stars I picked up a long while ago; if I remember rightly they were part of a necklace, which shows that it’s worth picking up cheap, plastic jewellery for crafting purposes if not for a night on the town.

Bit of an epic post – I’ve been saving it up, evidently. I’ve been missing my blog, it feels nice to be back, though it was difficult to get started today. I’ll aim for at least one other post this week but I have material for two or three, possibly, and more photos to share, too. Is that a collective cheer I hear? I dare say it is.


Some Thoughts on Fondant Icing


Just a few quick things to note, as much for myself as anyone else, on my experience yesterday of working with fondant icing. Firstly, I used a really simple recipe that I loved. I intend, when I have time, to get up a link to all the various recipes for the cake components – I did the sensible thing and printed them off so I could find them again, and also so that my laptop wouldn’t end up with a lovely but impractical coating of icing itself. Unfortunately I can’t find it right now – it’s extremely difficult to find a recipe for rolled fondant icing that doesn’t involve gelatine, corn syrup and various other ingredients including shortening. I still have that half tub of vegetable shortening in my fridge. I fear that one day it will break out and choke my in my sleep, or that it’s creeping out night after night and feeding me up while I’m unaware, until one day I’ll wake up and realise that I’ve put on three stone and it happened so gradually that I didn’t notice… Creepy shortening…

Here is a photo of my homemade fondant icing. I have nothing much to say about it – it’s not much to look at, either… Still, nice to get a bit of colour about the place in the form of photographs. It was either this or the creepy shortening, and nobody needs that.

Anyway, the icing recipe required a bit of tweaking – possibly because I used a large egg rather than a medium, the recipe didn’t specify - and resisted any and all attempts to make it Amaretto flavoured (the ‘hint’ of Amaretto was me saying there was Amaretto in it, it wasn’t there in the taste so I figured that the power of suggestion might do the trick) but it was easy to make and worked just as well as the last fondant cake covering I made (recipe in my Still Married Cake post). It took some getting used to though, and several attempts at rolling out then covering the cake as it kept tearing. The suggested thing to do is to powder the worksurface with icing sugar, which is what I did when I was making the white chocolate cake covering for the Still Married cake. However, as I had to use a *lot* of the icing sugar to keep the icing from sticking, it ended up being unbearably sweet. Now, I have a sweet tooth, but even I had to leave the icing on my plate. It was like a picture of a basket of kittens wrapped up in a fleecy blanket with rainbows on it and being held up by a freckle-nosed, gingham clad girl scout; sickeningly sweet.

This time, to avoid that, I used coconut oil to grease the worksurface and rolling pin. This worked out really well because the oil is solid at room temperature in the Scottish climate, but melts with the heat of your hands so I could just rub it over the surfaces and it melted without a whisper of complaint. I was extremely proud of myself for this bit of brilliance. I further impressed myself when I decided that rolling the icing out on a swatch of coconut-oiled greaseproof paper was an even better idea, so that once it was the right size I could just flip it upside down over the cake and peel the paper off, to reveal a smooth, clean surface of icing without trying to drape it over both hands *and* the rolling pin so as not to stretch and break it. Truly, I felt like a fondant icing genius.

Another top tip is this: clean your surfaces. In fact, clean your surfaces, hands, face, hair, apron (or clothes), cooker, sink, bedroom… Cake crumbs have a way of hiding until you’re rolling out the fondant icing, then sneaking in under your rolling pin so that you roll them right in and have to dig them back out again and leave a crater. Then, if you don’t take this one excavated crumb very carefully outside of the house to dispose of, as you might an unwanted spider, it will do the same thing again. And again. And again. Get rid of the crumbs, people. They are your enemy. I was lucky in that the cake recipe I used was very firm and moist, and held together really well (it sliced like a dream, too). However, it did contain both ground almonds and coconut, things which take the potential loose crumb count practically to infinity.

I did find with the first two cakes that I had to set the fondant icing aside once it had been rolled, to cool down. The kitchen was pretty warm, and I don’t mind telling you that so was I, because it was important to me to get the icing right, especially after making such a big deal to myself about making the fondant by hand and not buying it ready-made. The heat from the surroundings and from my hands made the icing a lot more liable to tear, so once I had rolled it I set it aside, out of the kitchen, to cool off and become a bit firmer. If I’d left it too long it would have dried out, though, and then been too brittle to cover the cakes, so a word of caution there. By the time I was covering the third cake I was much more confident, and the kitchen had cooled down a lot, plus I had developed my soon-to-be-patented coconut oil and greaseproof paper method of applying the fondant, so it went a lot more smoothly.

The appearance of the cake was still a lot less professional than I wanted – something I’ll have to sort out if I really want to take this up seriously and expect people to pay me money for my cakes. I can’t decide if this un-smoothness was due to a lack of firmness when applying it, or if the icing was too thin, or if I should have applied two thin coats instead of one. I think the Still Married cake might have had two coats, actually, now that I come to think about it. That still looked pretty bumpy though so it can’t all be down to that. I suspect that I was too cautious with the icing, scared of tearing it and having to patch it – which I did a couple of times, though having an almost-white buttercream on and around the sponge helped to disguise this. I noticed a lot of air bubbles in the end result, and also a definite bulge around the sponge and a dip where the sandwiched layers came together. I think it mainly comes down to practise, though, and perhaps some kind of smoothing tool might be available? I know you can buy one for royal icing, but I’m not sure if the same thing would work on fondant. I also wondered about using a knife dipped in very hot water – this works on a poured fondant or a normal white icing, but I didn’t want to risk turning what was a decent enough finish into a ruined, melted mess.

Finally, and unrelated to fondant icing, is the recipe I threw together for the coconut cream cheese buttercream, which was the big success of the whole cake, I think, bar the ever so cute dinosaur on the top. That was:

  • 150g butter, at room temperature
  • 150g cream cheese
  • 400g icing sugar
  • 100g flakes, sweetened coconut

Method:

  • Use hand mixer to combine butter and cream cheese until totally smooth
  • Mix icing sugar and coconut and add a bit at a time, whisking through until completely incorporated each time

That’s it. It is so easy, but so delicious. I love cream cheese icing now, the cream cheese stops it from being *too* sweet, which worked really well with this cake because of the threat of excessive sweetness from the fondant icing. That said, using to coconut oil to avoid sticking really helped with that, but it was still a pretty close-run thing. I think just butter would have tipped the cake right over into ‘too sweet’ and spoiled it. I do find that cream cheese icing is softer than buttercream, but in this case it set nicely, not squidging out from between the layers of cake despite humid, icing-ruining weather. Huzzah! This photo doesn’t do it justice, really.

Tunes: The first song to come to mind is clearly Lime in the Coconut – and may the deity of your choice bless YouTube for providing me with this incredibly great version by Kermit and associated others – seriously, not only hilarious muppet dancing, but what a great arrangement. Lime in the Coconut is one of those songs that goes on forever, and I’ve never actually had a clue what it was about, but I have a great fondness for it regardless.

Viewing: On this occasion, nothing was viewed while eating the cake. Mainly we ate the cake, then went to the pub. Soooo… have a night off the telly, go out and have a beverage. It’ll do you good. Honest.


Year of the Cake Part Nineteen: SH! IT’S A SECRET!


That was my Brian Blessed voice, in typing form.

I’m pretty much exhausted from making this cake, and there’s a lot to it, so all I’m going to do now is tell you what it all is and set up a slideshow to give you a sort of walkthrough of it.

The G man asked for a dinosaur cake again this year – not so much asked as said that he wouldn’t *mind* if I wanted to make him one, put it that way. I wasn’t really sure what I could do that would work. I didn’t want to do a 2D one after last year’s 3D stegosaurus, and also the stegosaurus is probably the only dino shape I can do without a special cake tin – a half sphere would be handy for a lot of things, a dino is one of them. I had a cast around online and found some very cute fondant dinosaur cupcakes – this, I thought, was the way forward. I wanted to do a full cake though, rather than cupcakes, so I thought I’d just make a few little dino guys to use as cake toppers, and while I was about it I thought that I may as well go for a three tier number, get a bit of practise in.

Two of the G man’s favourite flavours are coconut and marzipan, so my first port of call was to look for a coconut and marzipan cake recipe. I found one really easily, and that really set the tone for this whole experience; it’s gone so smoothly from start to finish. The cake itself isn’t perfect by any means, but I think that’s just inexperience showing itself – there was no stress, no upset, not even any late hours when I should have been in bed. I’ve loved it. To get back to the point, I got the recipe for the sponge that I wanted to make, and thought I’d like to make my own marzipan for the cake and to model the dinos from, so I looked that up. I then wanted to make a rolled fondant icing, instead of buying one, and looked up a recipe for *that*, too. Finally, I decided that I’d make a creamy coconut filling and covering for the sponge, before the fondant went on. I freestyled that part, you may or may not be glad to hear.

So, the result was: Coconut-marzipan sponge, layered with coconut-cream cheese-butter icing and finished with a rolled fondant with a hint of Amaretto. Oh, and a marzipan diplodocus (he took shape so naturally that I felt OK about him being the only one, instead of making a few as I’d planned). Once again, a bit of a mouthful.

Recipe links:

Quick and easy fondant icing

Marzipan

I added an extra capful of almond essence to the marzipan for a stronger taste.

Marzipan and coconut cake

Predictably I altered the cake recipe – instead of using the coconut only on the outside, I put half a cup right into the sponge, since I was icing it so there wasn’t any point having the outside coated in coconut that I was only going to knock off again. I also added two extra capfuls of almond essence, and even at that the marzipan flavour was quite subtle in the finished result. Oh, I also didn’t have any coconut extract so I missed that out. Method-wise, I don’t have a food processor, so I had to do it all using a hand held mixer. Learning to break eggs with one hand was fun, if a bit shell-heavy at first.

Here’s the slideshow of various pics from the process.

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Year of the Cake Part Four: Raspberry Joy Bars and Mister Rabbit


This weekend held our long overdue Secret Santa girls’ night. I think that sentence throws up a lot of questions, so I’ll try to clear them up now. I’ll start with the concept of girls’ night, which I usually abbreviate to GN because I’m not comfortable with that apostrophe - it *is* a night for girls, lots of us, so I guess it belongs to us, but it’s also a night *of* girls, so maybe it doesn’t need one at all… Anyway, the weekly night of girls started long ago, and I think it has its beginnings in the founders getting together to watch e.r. on the TV, and sigh over George Clooney. It evolved from there into bad film night, then grew in numbers, until it reached its current form. The nature of the night is thus: most Thursdays, someone’s living room (or bedroom, in the case of some tiny flats I’ve lived in) becomes a temporary home for as many girls as can make it along that week. Some weeks it’s three or four and some weeks it’s everyone, although this is sadly a rarity. We get together and eat our own body weight in cheese, crisps, chocolate, cake, nuts, sweets, crackers, wasabi peas, cheese straws, strawberries, biscuits and generally anything that takes our fancy or gets in the way. In amongst the eating, we tell each other our ups and downs, cheer for each other’s good news and swear at the bad (sorry mum), sing show tunes, watch edited highlights of The Rocky Horror Picture Show, dance, drink and do our very best to be merry to varying levels of excess. Another thing that happens, more often than not, is that we give presents. It’s an integral and wonderful part of GN, the present giving. Almost every week someone gets something – due to the nature of the night, you can find yourself not seeing someone for weeks on end if you each miss a few nights for whatever reason, and this means that birthday presents can go unopened for a long while after the event. There’s nothing quite like getting a birthday present six months on, long after what you thought was the last one was opened and marvelled over and you thought you had another year to go before the next day that was all about you, unless you could somehow have a fake wedding just to get the attention and gifts but without all the expenditure and paperwork, and husband finding… Presents are also given for new jobs, new homes and sometimes just because something has leaped from a shelf on a mission to find itself a more caring home with one of the ladies. The best thing, though, isn’t the present itself. Oh no. The best thing is opening your present to a chorus of cheering and ‘ooooh’-ing, and then sharing your present with everyone before wrapping it back up safely to take home. Especially if you get candles – candles or other items of a scented nature must be passed round each and every person without fail. That is the law.

It’s difficult to convey the meaning and the joy of GN without drumming up images of saccharin sweet, rose-tinted conversations about kittens – we are girls, and we are proud of it, but by all that is feminine we are not saps. It’s kind of hard to get across how great it is. I won’t try any further – if you’ve been, you know what it’s like. If you haven’t, and you don’t have something similar, you have my condolences. For those who have been and cannot return due to geographical issues – come and visit, and soon.

The Secret Santa night is really the epitome of the GN present giving. We hold it in February most years, because that’s usually around the time that everyone’s schedules are getting back to normal after Christmas and New Year. It’s organised a long while ahead of time to get a night that suits everyone, and we draw names from a bowl, box, hat or other handy receptacle to choose who we’re buying for. It stays a secret until the night when you hand over the present and, all being well, get one handed to you by someone else so that everyone has something to open. We opened them one at a time this year and there was much hilarity and rowdiness for quite some time, what with there being ten of us to take a turn. Good times.

However, the point of this post is not so much to discuss the present giving as the inordinate amount of baking that we churned out between us. Six people had made one or two items each, and our delightful and generous host Miss Prim had lad out a vast spread including a cheeseboard that I was considering marrying, and the most important element of any buffet: cocktail sausages. The table was already groaning when we arrived. This is a dining table, mind, and not a coffee table. It was full of savoury goods of a pleasing nature to begin with, then we cleared a lot of that despite several replenishing trips to the kitchen by Miss Prim, and they were replaced with sweet items of an equally pleasing nature (although the cheeseboard stayed put, possibly due to me clinging to it and wailing as if it was being sent off to war and not just taken into the next room). You’ve never seen anything like this amount of food, unless you’ve watched You Are What You Eat – it was like three or four of those ‘bad’ tables put together, and it was oh so good. Look, there is ONE of the two tables. Picture is courtesy of my lovely lady wife, to whom I am not married in any legal or romantic sense – we’re just wives. Mind-reading, sentence finishing, unspoken sentence understanding wives.

I had brought three things with me to share. Two were recipes I’d been wanting to try for a while and thought that this was an excellent time to do so. If I’m going to bake things to take along to girls night I like to do something savoury as well as or instead of something sweet, not least because my talents as a cake baker are quite, quite overshadowed by some of the other ladies! So I went for some little pretzel bites, as you can see artfully arranged in a tin I purloined from work at Christmas time (after the chocolates had been eaten, of course). I had intended to make actual pretzels, but by the time I was ready to shape and bake them I had run a bit short on time and, if I’m honest, was ready for a sit down. I baked for about four hours on Saturday and enjoyed myself thoroughly, but I always like to have time for a wee rest before I get ready to go out anywhere. So, instead of abandoning the pretzels, especially after spending time making the dough and letting it rise, I rolled the dough into little rounds instead and baked them that way. They made excellent mini cheese sandwiches. The recipe for the dough is here with the lovely folks at Leite’s Culinaria: http://leitesculinaria.com/21126/recipes-fresh-baked-pretzels.html

The second thing I made was this recipe for what I insist on calling Raspberry Joy Bars, because it’s easier to remember and sums them up pretty well: http://leitesculinaria.com/17667/recipes-raspberry-truffle-brownie-bars.html. Mine don’t look as fancy as the ones in the picture, but then I’m not a professional baker so I feel OK about that. I did tinker with this recipe quite a lot, mainly to suit what I had in the cupboard. I replaced the raspberry liqueur with cherry, for one thing. Where the recipe called for semisweet chocolate I used milk, and for unsweetened chocolate I used plain, but it was probably only about 50% cocoa solids because it was a generic brand as opposed to a more expensive, higher quality brand. I think next time I will use a darker chocolate and get a raspberry liqueur - the Joy Bars were lovely and received a lot of very generous compliments, but I think a darker chocolate would make them more luxurious and grown-up. If you are only going to try one thing from this page, make it the marbling decoration on the top of the cake. You can try it on anything you happen to be baking, it’d work with icing as well as a ganache. It’s easy and you wouldn’t believe how many people said they loved how it looked.

The last thing I made was a special and very late birthday cake for one of the ladies, Miss E. Her birthday was in December, and I’d wanted to make her a cake then but never seemed to be able to get it together enough to make the kind of thing I wanted to. Having GN at the weekend solved this problem as it gave me all day to bake before I went out, and I certainly feel like I made the most of the time. Miss E likes rabbits - they’re *her* spirit guide. I therefore wanted to make a rabbit cake, and had been thinking for a long while about how best to make that happen. I’d done the obligatory Google search to check out designs that other people had come up with and came across several cake rabbits coming out of cake hats. while I had originally been thinking of a swiss roll affair, possibly with a muffin for a head and a tiny wee fairy cake for a tail, the rabbit in a hat idea seemed more achievable with my as-yet less than professional skills. I opted for a cake hat and a fondant icing rabbit, and here he is!

The hat’s a bit faded and battered looking, and the poor wee guy did get quite melty and lose an ear in the heat of the kitchen, but he started off very cute, and kept himself together admirably long enough for me to hand him over. Miss E says she’s not going to eat him, which is saying a lot as she’s the same person who took an unceremonious bite right out of my sister’s frog cake’s head… The hat is a chocolate cake which I baked in a ramekin, then trimmed to give the flat, wide top and thinner stem, and then I sandwiched it up with another, smaller cake to give it height. The recipe I used was equal amounts of plain flour, caster sugar and margarine – about two ounces of each - along with one egg, a tablespoon of cocoa powder and a teaspoon of baking powder. That was enough for one ramekin and two cups of a muffin tray, which was more than enough for the size of cake that I was making, but I wanted to have a bit extra to work with in case anything went wrong. It’s coated with ready to roll white icing (cheating!) which I failed to dye black, and the rabbit himself is all just fondant with writing icing applied to give the details. Maybe not as delicious as the Raspberry Joy Bars, but almost certainly the cutest cake I’ve ever made. Happy belated birthday, Miss E!

Tunes: Among other things, I listened to The Presidents of the USA’s self titled album while I was doing all my baking. This is one of my favourite tunes on the album, mainly for the line ‘Put some clothes on and call me’. Full of excellent tunes to rock out to, check them out. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4FWIQ8erv-0

Movie: I had no time to sit down and watch anything after my marathon of baking, but my Secret Santa present was a copy of the excellent The Ref, otherwise known as Hostile Hostages. An odd film from Simpson and Bruckheimer, featuring no explosions and a very angry Denis Leary, this is my second favourite Christmas film, second only to The Muppets Christmas Carol. Includes the classic line ‘Your husband ain’t dead, lady. He’s hiding.’ Can’t find any clips, or an official trailer, but You Tube makes all things possible… http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=th9YhAva0Ss


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