Tea Rose Fondant Cake … and a floral giveaway

“Just living is not enough. One must have sunshine, freedom, and a little flower.”
Hans Christian Andersen

 Tea Rose Fondant CakeA Tea Rose Fondant Cake … inspired completely by Peggy Porschens ‘Pretty Party Cakes’. I have had this stunning book by this very talented sugar craft artisit for years. It sits by my bedside and provides infinite hours of eye candy. I didn’t once think I could attempt her beautiful work; until yesterday …

I have long delayed making sugar paste at home. LONG! The one day I saw a fondant cake at The Great Cookaroo, sometime late last year, and I knew she had beaten me to it. Bah humbug! It still seemed pretty formidable to me, even though Ruchira convinced me it was quite easy. She made her fondant out of marshmallows.

Sugar Paste icing is a very sweet edible sugar dough usually made from sugar and glucose. It is sometimes referred to as fondant or sugar gum or gum paste. It can be used to cover cakes, mould features and create decorations for cakes and many other uses.

Then a few days ago I met a very talented Amrita at I Bake who commercially does cakes with fondant. She convinced me it was really easy to make at home. The sweet girl even offered to send a batch home for me to work with. Enough! It was time to give fondant from scratch a shot, and was promptly entered as a new year resolution; rather an update of one which has been long postponed.

Seems like flowers are ‘in season’!! A few days ago, I was asked if I’d like to host a floral giveaway for readers of PAB from the beautiful Serenata Flowers in the UK. Serenata Flowers is a gift shop where other then flowers, you can find chocolates and wine too. They are hosting a giveaway well in time for Valentines day.

 

The prize is a £30 voucher at Serenata Flowers, that should give the winner the chance to choose a nice gift. Delivery would only be to an address in mainland UK , the winner may live outside UK though. All you need to do is visit the site and leave a comment saying which bouquet you like best. The contest is on until the 31st of Jan, 2013, and the winner will be announced thereafter.

It was time to pair real flowers with edible ones, and also time to ‘fondant or sugar paste’! This was my first attempt at working with fondant and I have to say I loved it! The end result wasn’t perfect, creases that peeped through, yet it took me back many years. Back to those play dough times, flowers, leaves, roses …

I loved using the leftover bits to cut out ribbons etc. Later thought I could have done bees and butterflies too. Maybe the next time I feel so inspired, now that I can ‘do it’!! Fondant is therapeutic; makes you rediscover the inner child in you!

See the ‘cake’ platter? I have to confess that it’s actually a salad plate from Urban Dazzle. It’s a classic white, round platter. The interesting bit is the offset centre which gives you a slight forward tilt. It’s a great aesthetic platter to have, and happily one that doubled up as a cake plate as in this case.

Cookies, finger foods, cupcakes, fruit, candy seem like some other fun uses. Until I do salads in it, I’m enjoying its versatility! This Tea Rose Fondant Cake was the best baking beginning to my new year. I love you fondant!!

I learnt something else. Kids never grow up! You should have seen their eyes light up when they saw all that sugary sweet prettiness! I thought they were both way beyond it. Pictures of the cake furiously ‘WhatsApped‘, the urgency to have dinner done, the impatience to cut a slice, the happiness at devouring the cake {the vanilla buttermilk pound  cake is wonderful on it’s own}… so worth the effort!

If you don’t want too much sugar overload you could always just do a 1 egg mini cake. The little one came away neatly and looked sweet on it’s own. The fondant recipe is minimally adapted from ‘Essential Guide to Cake Decorating’ by Alex Barker, which the kids gave me us on our anniversary 4 years ago. This was my first foray into the book … and I loved it!

So go on guys. Spread out some fondant if you are so inclined. Otherwise send someone you love a beautiful bunch of flowers from Serenata Flowers. Share some joy!!

[print_this]Recipe: Sugar Paste / Fondant

Summary: A simple fondant recipe that was silky smooth and fun to use. minimally adapted from ‘Essential Guide to Cake Decorating’ by Alex Barker

Prep Time: 5 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes
Ingredients:

  • 3 tbsp liquid glucose, warmed {I used Solar, an Indian brand}
  • 1 egg white {or 20g egg white powder reconstituted according to maunfacturer instructions}
  • 400g icing sugar

Method:

  1. Place egg white in a large bowl, whip lightly with fork and then then stir in the liquid glucose. {It tends to harden very fast in winter}
  2. Add the icing sugar bit by bit and gradually work in with a wooden spoon until it begins to form a paste. Gently knead into a ball.
  3. On a very clean surface, knead it until smooth and pliable. Wrap with cling-wrap if not using immediately.
  4. To colour, take small portions, or as required, ans knead in a few drops of the colour as desired. Keep the remaining fondant wrapped in clingwrap at all times.
  5. On a very clean surface dusted with icing sugar, roll out the fondant quite thin. Then cut into shapes with plunger cutters or hand make roses.
  6. I fastened the flowers etc with egg white, though the book says to use royal icing.

Recipe: Vanilla Bean Buttermilk Pound Cake with Vanilla Buttercream


Summary
: A lighter version of the classic pound cake, the Tea Rose Fondant Cake is  sandwiched with a light confetti buttercream, and makes a delicious base for the fondant art.

Prep Time: 15 minutes
Total Time: 2 hours, 30 minutes {including cooling time, and time to make fondant decorations etc} 
Ingredients:

  • Vanilla Pound Cake
  • 240g plain flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 150g unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 275g vanilla sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 130ml buttermilk {or substitute recipe below}
  • 1/2 vanilla bean, scraped
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • To make buttermilk substitute 
  • Take 130ml milk at room temp; add 1 tsp white vinegar. Let it stand 5-10 minutes. When it curdles, it’s ready.
  • Vanilla buttercream
  • 100g unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 225g icing sugar
  • 50g low fat cream
  • 1/2 vanilla bean, scraped
  • 2 tbsp rainbow confetti {optional}
  • Royal icing or egg white to secure fondant flowers etc onto cake.

Method:

  1. Vanilla Buttermilk Pound Cake
  2. Grease and flour the sides of a 7″ ring tin, or a 4″ round tin. Line the bottoms and sides with parchment paper.
  3. Preheat the oven to 170C.
  4. Sift the flour with the baking powder, baking soda and salt. Reserve.
  5. Cream the butter and sugar. Beat in eggs one at a time, followed by the vanilla extract and scraped vanilla bean.
  6. With beater on low add the flour and buttermilk alternately in three lots.
  7. Divide the batter between the two tins.
  8. Bake for 50-60 minutes till golden brown on top, and the tester comes out clean. {The smaller cake will get baked in 35-40 minutes}
  9. Cool completely, then slice into two horizontally.
  10. Vanilla butter-cream
  11. Beat the butter, vanilla bean and icing sugar until smooth and fluffy.
  12. Gradually add the low fat cream and whip to desired consistency.
  13. You can add more {or less} depending on how stiff you want the butter-cream.
  14. Assembling
  15. Sandwich the cakes with a light spread of butter-cream with the confetti stirred in.
  16. Give both cakes a thin coat of butter-cream to provide a base for the fondant.
  17. Note: Use squeaky clean hands, counter, rolling pin etc when handling sugar paste/fondant as it is white and shows impurities very easily. 
  18. Take about 1/3rd of the fondant {If it is too hard, then briefly, heat it in the microwave wrapped in cling-wrap  for 10 seconds. {Keep the remaining fondant well wrapped else it will dry out.}
  19. Sprinkle the work surface with icing sugar, and roll the fondant out thin. {I kept it quite thin to keep the sugar intake a little lower}.
  20. Gently transfer it onto the 7″ cake and press into place. I got a few creases but covered most up with flowers and leaves. Handle gently or it will tear. Trim the edges around the base.
  21. Take 1/2 the remaining fondant and repeat with the smaller cake.
  22. Place the smaller cake on top of the bigger one.
  23. Take bits of fondant, one bit at a time, and colour them with liquid colour as desired. Using plunger cutters or your hands, make flowers, leaves, roses etc as desired.
  24. Roll any remaining scraps and using a fluted or plain pastry cutter cut out ribbons to cover up the bottoms edges.
  25. Use either royal icing or egg white to stick the sugar paste flowers, leaves or ribbons onto the cake.
  26. Note: I used the microwave {10 seconds, high} quite often as the fondant kept getting hard as the weather was freezing cold at 6C. 

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{Daring Bakers} Decorated Sugar Cookies … these ones are for Rosie!

“Each day is a new canvas to paint upon. Make sure your picture is full of life and happiness, and at the end of the day you don’t look at it and wish you had painted something different.”
Author Unknown

In Mandy’s words … “For you, it may be back to school; the start of Spring or Autumn/Fall depending where you are in the world; September could also be someone special’s birthday or even the beginning of your favourite sporting season. Whatever happens in your life in September, that’s what I’d like your cookies to be about.”

 
The September 2010 Daring Bakers’ challenge was hosted by Mandy of “What the Fruitcake?!” Mandy challenged everyone to make Decorated Sugar Cookies based on recipes from Peggy Porschen and The Joy of Baking.

My cookies are for Rosie, and inspired by her. Did you know Rosie? She was a sweet and popular blogger from the UK, who used to blog at Peace of Cake. I think a few of us, some of us who’ve been around for 3 years, might have known her. At the time, blogging and bloggers were a small, tight knit community of few, and we more or less knew each other. It Rosie was who introduced me to royal icing on cookies.

She was one of the more active UK bloggers at the time, and then one day, all of a sudden, I received a mail to say Rosie had passed away! That hit me like a bolt out of the blue. No, not Rosie. The warm hearted and caring girl who used to love baking cakes, who was very talented, and one who put me onto the trail of icing cookies with royal icing one Easter. But life is unpredictable, and sometimes cruel; I,m glad I met her.  
These cookies are inspired by Rosie, and a tribute to her!
 

I find nature and it’s colours very inspiring, and it often reflects in my posts. With the weather changing here in North India, the days are full of colourful dragon flies and butterflies chasing each other in the sun tirelessly. If  not in the kitchen, then you can find me sitting in the garden for hours together, chasing these intriguing creatures, watching the busy bees in their hive, or chasing the chameleon for a close up. Just what I like to do!

This red dragon fly had us fascinated when the son found it resting in the leaves of the palm after sun down one evening. The two of us spent over an hour taking pictures of this rather obliging creature that just hung there forever.

The challenge was great, more so because I’ve had Peggy Porschen’s book on my shelf for over 2 years, and have always wanted to make something from it. It’s a stunning book, from an immensely talented lady, eye candy all the way. I was so glad to grab the opportunity to open the book and bake! I added a scraped vanilla bean to the cookie dough, and they were lovely to eat sans the icing! I made the butter for the cookies at home, something I’ve been doing for ages. I always have about half a kilo of butter in the freezer.

The cookies were a breeze to make,  the icing a bit painstaking at times and messy too, but loads of  FUN all the way. I’ve collected SO MANY cookie cutters over the years that I had a tough time deciding which to use, and which not too! The cookies once iced were rather sweet, but the kids loved them, and so did their friends. We had a lot of sugar high kids for a few days, but HAPPY ones!

I used to ice cookies against orders many years ago, and this was a very popular cookie. Many years later, I still get the odd call requesting me to bake them for birthdays etc, but I gave it up because it took the creative joy out of my life. Often the stress would get to me, and how! I still remember making 50 dozen cookies for a baby shower, and 40 dozen for a bake sale at an embassy fund raiser. Thereafter I decided enough was enough, and decided I’d rather pursue baking as a passion rather than a commercial venture.

Getting back to making these precious cookies after a gap of almost four years had me deeply nostalgic. It almost nudged me back into baking as a vocation rather than a hobby … almost! It was a challenge I enjoyed immensely, and it brought me a deep self of satisfaction knowing I’d re-lived the memory of Rosie and all those she had touched. Such is the power of blogging!

Thank you Mandy for the beautiful challenge, and thank you as always Lisa of La Mia Cucina and Ivonne of Cream Puffs in Venice for hosting this fab kitchen!!

Basic Sugar Cookies:
Based on recipes from Peggy Porschen and The Joy of Baking
Makes Approximately 36x 10cm / 4″ Cookies
200g  unsalted butter, at room temperature
400g plain flour
200g Caster Sugar / Superfine Sugar
1 large egg, lightly beaten
Seeds from 1 vanilla bean
Method
• Cream together the butter, sugar and any flavourings you’re using. Beat until just becoming
creamy in texture.
Tip: Don’t over mix otherwise you’ll incorporate too much air and the cookies will spread during
baking, losing their shape.

• Beat in the egg until well combined, make sure to scrape down the sides of the bowl.
Add the sifted flour and mix on low until a non sticky dough forms.
• Knead into a ball and divide into 2 or 3 pieces.
• Roll out each portion between parchment paper to a thickness of about 5mm/1/5 inch (0.2 inch)
• Refrigerate for a minimum of 30mins.
• Once chilled, peel off parchment and place dough on a lightly floured surface.
• Cut out shapes with cookie cutters or a sharp knife.
• Arrange shapes on parchment lined baking sheets and refrigerate for another 30mins to an hour.
Tip: It’s very important you chill them again otherwise they’ll spread while baking.
• Re-roll scraps and follow the above process until all scraps are used up.
• Preheat oven to 180°C (160°C Fan Assisted).
• Bake until golden around the edges, about 8-15mins depending on the size of the cookies.
• Leave to cool on cooling racks.
• Once completely cooled, decorate as desired.
Tip: If wrapped in tinfoil/cling wrap or kept in airtight containers in a cool place, un-decorated
cookies can last up to a month.

Royal Icing:
315g Icing / Confectioner’s / Powdered Sugar, unsifted
2 Large Egg Whites
2 tsp Lemon Juice
Directions
• Beat egg whites with lemon juice until combined.
Tip: It’s important that the bowls/spoons/spatulas and beaters you use are thoroughly cleaned and
grease free.

• Sift the icing sugar to remove lumps and add it to the egg whites.
Tip: I’ve listed 2 amounts of icing sugar, the lesser amount is good for a flooding consistency, and the larger amount is for outlining, but you can add even more for a much thicker consistency good for writing. If you add too much icing sugar or would like to make a thinner consistency, add very small amounts of water, a few drops at a time, until you reach the consistency you need.
• Beat on low until combined and smooth.
• Use immediately or keep in an airtight container.
Tip: Royal Icing starts to harden as soon as it’s in contact with air so make sure to cover containers with plastic wrap while not in use.

Decorating Your Cookies: Flooding
“Flooding” a cookie is a technique used when covering a cookie with Royal Icing.
1. You outline the area you want to flood which helps create a dam
2. Then fill or flood inside the area you’ve outlined
Decorating Your Cookies: Royal Icing
The most important thing when it comes to decorating with Royal Icing is the consistency.
There are two ways of flooding your cookies. Some like to do the outline with a thicker icing and then flood with a thinner icing. Some like to use the same icing to do both which saves time and you don’t have to have two different piping bags for each colour you’re using.
The Same Consistency Method
Consistency:
• Mix your royal icing according to the recipe/instructions
• Drag a knife through the surface of the Royal Icing and count to 10
• If the surface becomes smooth between 5 & 10 seconds, the icing is at the correct consistency
Tip: If your icing is too thick, thin it by adding a few drops of water. Mix, do the 10 second test, then if it’s still too thick, add a few more drops of water, repeat, etc.
Tip: To thicken your icing, add small amounts of icing sugar until thick enough for the 10 second test
Two Different Consistencies Method
Consistency:
• Mix your royal icing according to the recipe/instructions.
• Separate into 2 different bowls, one lot of icing for outlining, the other for flooding.
• For the outlining icing, drag a knife through the surface of the Royal Icing.
• If the surface becomes smooth at around 10 seconds, the icing is at the correct consistency.
Tip: If your icing is too thick, thin it by adding a few drops of water. Mix, count to 10 seconds, then if it’s still too thick, add a few more drops of water, repeat, etc.
Tip: To thicken your icing, add small amounts of icing sugar until thick enough for the 10 second test.
• For the flooding/filling icing, drag a knife through the surface of the Royal Icing.
• If the surface becomes smooth at around 3-4 seconds, the icing is at the correct consistency.
Tip: If your icing is too thick, thin it by adding a few drops of water. Mix, count to 3-4 seconds, then if it’s still too thick, add a few more drops of water, repeat, etc.
Tip: To thicken your icing, add small amounts of icing sugar until thick enough for the 3-4 second test.
Packaging and Storing
• Once fully decorated, allow cookies to dry for 24 hours in a cool and dry area.
• Stack cookies in an airtight container, from largest cookies at the bottom, to smallest and more intricate at the top, with parchment or wax free paper in between the layers.
• Store in a cool and dry area with the container’s lid firmly sealed.
• Will last for about a month if stored this way.

 ♥ Thank you for stopping by ♥
Do stop by HERE and take a look at the beautiful cookies the talented Daring Bakers have decorated this month.

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Also find me on The Rabid Baker, The Times of India

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