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Sunday, 12 November 2017

How to design cake

Method:Decorating with Icing


  1.  Make the icing.Buttercream frosting is an excellent choice for standard cake decorations, including writing and flowers. Royal icing will dry hard to make a longer-lasting decoration, but must be applied right after you make it.You can try a different recipe if you have a favorite, but some icings are too runny to use as decoration.

  • Buttercream or royal icing can easily be stiffened by mixing in sugar, or made runnier by adding a drop or two of water. Slightly soft mixtures are best for the first, smooth layer, and stiffer mixtures are best for the decorations on top.



     2.  Add color. Mix in food coloring to the frosting a drop at a time until you get the color              you want. Keep in mind that colors will deepen over a couple hours time when added            to buttercream, but fade when added to royal icing, or when any icing is exposed to              bright light.

  • Divide the icing into batches and use several colors for more options.
  • Alternatively, sugar icing or royal icing can be added to the cake plain, then have food color painted on them in fine designs using a small paintbrush, barely dampened in food coloring.

     3. Add the smooth layer of icing. Start with a thin "crumb coat" to lock the crumbs                 under the icing, then spread a large amount of icing onto the cake's top and sides, so           you can spread it using a flat spatula without scraping the cake. Try to get it as                       smooth as you can, then use one of these two methods to perfect it:
  • For white icing, use a pastry scraper or other wide, flat edge to scrape off the excess icing to a flat surface. Between each scrape, wipe off the scraper's edge on the icing bowl, then with a paper towel.
  • Colored icing can look spotted after being scraped, so it's best to use a bit less icing so there's less to remove after spreading. To smooth it out, wait until it is dry to the touch, then place a paper towel over the cake, rub it gently back and forth for thirty seconds, then repeat along the side. Note that most paper towels are textured, which will add a pleasing pattern.


     4. Gather piping supplies. The classic swirls and flowers on bakery cakes are made by           piping icing through a pastry bag – which you can make at home – with a metal tip at             the end. There are many different types and sizes of decorating tips, but three of them           will get you started on most common decorating techniques:

  • Use a simple round tip for dots and writing.
  • A star tip can make rosettes with a short squeeze, or classic swirls if you move as you squeeze the bag. A "closed star" tip will give the swirl more pronounced ridges.
  • A petal tip is used for making ruffles, ribbons, scallops, or flowers.

   5.  Pipe on decorations. Once the tip is attached to the pastry bag, spoon in some icing           and push it down to the bottom of the bag. Twist the top closed, then manipulate the             bag to separate the icing into two lumps, with one fist-sized handful down at the                     bottom.  Use one hand to squeeze this handful through the tip, and the other hand to             guide the pastry bag's movement, holding either the tip or your other hand. Keep these         tips in mind, and consider practicing on a plate first:

  • For most purposes, hold the pastry bag tip at a 90º angle to the surface you're decorating, and about 1/2 inch (2.5 cm) above it.
  • Try to squeeze the bag as evenly as possible, and move the bag at a constant rate, or the decoration will have uneven width.
  • When you are finished with a swirl, line, or other decoration, stop squeezing, then lift the pastry bag straight upward to prevent smearing.



    6. Pipe flower designs. Icing flowers are more complicated to create than most             other designs, but turn out great once you have some practice. You'll need a                 petal piping tip on your pastry bag for this step:
  • Hold the tip at a 45º angle just above the surface, with the thin end of the petal tip pointing upward.
  • Squeeze briefly while moving the tip in a tiny circle, to form a cylinder.
  • Squeeze again, this time moving the tip quickly in a teardrop or U shape, starting and ending against the edge of the cylinder. Move the tip up as you reach the bend of the U and down again when you return to the cylinder. This makes a single petal.
  • Repeat around the cylinder, then add additional layers of petals until your flower is complete.