From Dress to Cake :: Pink Frills
October 26th, 2012 by Carrie Sellman | 4 Comments

We’re going pink for a few days, in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month.  And today’s cake is all about the pinkness… from head to toe!  Literally.  Today’s feature is another incredible example of fashion inspired cake designs.  A fabulous pink Chanel gown inspires a fabulous pink cake!  Charlotte Tyson, owner of Sugar Ruffles, translates this remarkable dress into a gorgeous wedding cake.  Created for a feature in Cake Central Magazine, this design is overflowing with frills and ruffles and delicate flowers.  Creating one soft, romantic and incredibly lovely cake.  Prepare to go From Dress to Cake with today’s Pink Frills Cake!

Oh be still my pink-loving heart!  Swirling branches, blooming flowers and oodles of ruffles and frills… all in shades of pink!  What’s not to love about that?!  Let’s see more, shall we?

Charlotte of Sugar Ruffles gives us the scoop on her design:

“I wanted the design of this cake to reflect the romantic fairy tale feel of the inspiration dress, incorporating the delicate branches and beautiful flowers as well as representing the fabric and frills of the dress.

I love to use fashion as inspiration my cakes.  In fact my business name ‘Sugar Ruffles’ came from my love of creating cakes with ruffled icing to replicate the ruffles and draped fabrics of beautiful wedding gowns.”

A big thank you to Charlotte of Sugar Ruffles for sending over her amazingly gorgeous Chanel-inspired design.  You have us giddy with its pretty pinkness!

VENDORS & CREDITS
Cake :  Sugar Ruffles
Photography : Powder & Paint
Inspiration Dress : Chanel

DIY : Pink Ribbon Cake
October 25th, 2012 by Miso | 3 Comments

Our contributor, Miso Bakes, is sharing a new DIY in honor of Breast Cancer Awareness Month …

This cake is dedicated to all the fighters.

This cake is dedicated to all the survivors.

This cake is dedicated to those who have succumbed to their battle.

This cake was created with much hope that we will soon find a cure to breast cancer. As many of you know, October is Breast Cancer Awareness month and I wanted to play a very small part in helping raise awareness by creating this cake.

PINK RIBBON CAKE
a DIY by Miso Bakes

Supplies

  • Cake(s)
  • White fondant
  • Petal dust in shades of pink
  • Vodka or clear extract (lemon, vanilla, etc)
  • Small, clean paint brush

STEP 1 :  Cover cake(s) in white fondant. Let it sit overnight or a few hours until the fondant firms up slightly.

STEP 2 :  In a small cup, mix a few drops of vodka (or extract) into a small sprinkling of petal dust. Stir with paintbrush. You want this to be a liquid paint-like consistency. If too thick, add more vodka.  If too thin, add more petal dust.  It is easier to to correct paint that is too thick than it is to correct paint that is too thin. So go easy with the liquid!

STEP 3 :  Paint circles onto cake, grouping to form the shape of the ribbon. Vary the size and color of each circle. Paint the largest circles first, adding in smaller circles to fill in the gaps.

STEP 4 :  Let dry.  Serve and enjoy!

TIP :  Mix your paint in small resealable cups.  Any leftovers will dry out, as the vodka evaporates.  Leaving behind a cup of petal dust.  Put the lid on and save for your next project.  When ready to use again, simply add more liquid.  Stir.  And paint.

To join the fight against breast cancer and learn more about early detection and screenings, please visit Susan G. Koman For the Cure.

Miso of Miso Bakes Miso Bakes
Miso is a monthly contributor for The Cake Blog. She is a talented pastry chef with a big passion for cakes. Read more about Miso on her bio page.
DIY : Marshmallow Cobweb Cake
October 19th, 2012 by Carrie Sellman | 50 Comments

We’ve come to the end of our new cake series, EEEK It’s Halloween Week!  A week full of innovative Halloween cakes, like none we had seen before.  A huge thank you to the the five bakeries who participated in this special week of Halloween inspiration!  Each is immensely talented and created such incredible designs.  I am thrilled to have featured them all!  If you missed any of them, you can find them all HERE.

So now that we’re officially in the Halloween spirit and inspired to bake, here is a super easy DIY for you to try at home.  There’s no piping, no painting and no wrong way to do it!  You just need marshmallows, two hands and some imagination!  It’s a creepy, crawly Marshmallow Cobweb Cake!  And I have a simple tutorial to show you how to do it!

You know how marshmallows get stringy when melted?  Well that makes for super sticky, super easy spiderweb!

I think this cake would be a fun project, no matter your experience or skill level.  If you’re a medium to advanced baker, this cake will seem super easy and you’ll be finished in no time flat.  Beginners…. your end result will look more challenging than it actually was.  Bonus for you!  And you certainly don’t have to tell anyone how easy it was.  And if you really just don’t bake at all, why not try out the marshmallow technique on a plain white cake from the market.  It could be a fun way to get your hands a little sticky and surprise everyone, including yourself.  There’s really no right or wrong way for a spiderweb to look… so just go for it!

MARSHMALLOW COBWEB CAKE
a DIY by Carrie Sellman

Supplies

  • Cake
  • White Fondant
  • Marshmallows (8 oz)

STEP 1 : Cover your cake(s) in white fondant.

STEP 2 : Place marshmallows into a microwave-safe bowl.  Heat for 30 seconds.

STEP 3 : Stir marshmallows.  {Warning.  Hot marshmallows will burn.  And it hurts!}

STEP 4 : Keep stirring.

STEP 5 : Stir, stir, stir some more!  Stir until marshmallows are cool enough to touch.

STEP 6 :  This is where it gets messy.  Or fun, depending on how you look at things.  Using both hands, stretch a small glob of marshmallow out into a long, thin, stringy strand.  Way, way longer and thinner than what is shown above (it was hard to get a picture of this exactly… especially with marshmallow covered hands).

STEP 7 :  Start wrapping the stringy marshmallow around your cake.  Go up, down, around and around.  Diagonal.  Every which way.  There is no right or wrong way for a spider web to look.  Just start wrapping.  Go light at first until you get the hang of it.  Less is more!  And thinner strands look better in the end.

STEP 8 :  Continue to pull, stretch and drape marshmallow strings.  Going every direction way you possibly can.

STEP 9:   Cover second tier in marshmallow strings.  Stack both tiers together.

STEP 10 : Add additional marshmallow strings to both tiers, draping some from one tier to the next.  Add a spider with long, spindly legs.  And you’re done!

BAKERS NOTE : I should have taken pictures while making the spider.  My bad.  But he’s made of fondant and very straightforward.  One oval for his body.  A smaller circle for his head.  And eight very long, exaggerated legs to make him extra creepy!  Hey, a big spider had to be responsible for such a crazy cobweb!

ADDITIONAL NOTE :  I realize I could have written this tutorial with much fewer steps.  But I was having fun with sticky marshmallows and my new chalkboard backdrop!  What to do you think?  Do you like it?  Want to see more of it in future posts?

I hope you’ve enjoyed Halloween Week here on the blog!  And I hope you give my creepy, crawly Marshmallow Cobweb Cake a try!  I think even the kiddos would enjoy this tutorial.  Just make sure the marshmallow is cool enough for them to handle safely and be prepared to clean up some sticky hands.  And faces.  And tables.  You get the idea!

Happy Weekend!

Carrie Sellman Carrie Sellman is the Founder & Editor of The Cake Blog. Her work has been published in BRIDES Magazine, The Bride and Bloom, on DIYnetwork.com, TLC’s Parentables and more. Read more about Carrie on her bio page.
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