This cake was a quickie, but filled with love and gratitude for my colleagues at work who did so much to get a big book shifting project complete way ahead of our scheduled deadline. I'm so lucky to have a great bunch of people working with me!
The cake is banana and the frosting was made with two sticks of butter, 2 lbs of confectioners sugar, and half a can of full fat coconut milk. Scrumtrulescent!
Thursday, December 8, 2011
Sunday, December 4, 2011
Monkey Cake
Monkey cake was a 1st birthday cake for a cute little baby girl. I worked on it all day Saturday and delivered it this morning to her family. Hope they enjoyed it!
The design was based on an image I found of Hello Kitty dressed up in a monkey costume. I just left out the whiskers and the bow. It kind of looks like a monkey, right? A really cute anime monkey?
It was a two-layer fudge marble cake with a butter cream coating and outer coating of chocolate fondant. The belly face, hands, and feet were vanilla marshmallow fondant. The pink ears were strawberry fondant.
I ended up giving Monkey a teeny chocolate belly button, which is unfortunately not pictured here. I think the belly button made the cake over-the-top cute.
Happy Birthday, little cutie!
The design was based on an image I found of Hello Kitty dressed up in a monkey costume. I just left out the whiskers and the bow. It kind of looks like a monkey, right? A really cute anime monkey?
It was a two-layer fudge marble cake with a butter cream coating and outer coating of chocolate fondant. The belly face, hands, and feet were vanilla marshmallow fondant. The pink ears were strawberry fondant.
I ended up giving Monkey a teeny chocolate belly button, which is unfortunately not pictured here. I think the belly button made the cake over-the-top cute.
Happy Birthday, little cutie!
Monday, October 17, 2011
Two October Cakes
For Michael and I, October is a month full of memories and birthdays. We were married in a simple ceremony in late October. My parents were married in October as well. Our mothers were both born in October. I love to make these wonderful ladies a special cake--a tradition I started last year and which I hope to continue for many many years to come.
First, my mother's birthday on the 10th.
(Sorry about the bad lighting.) She requested a carrot cake with cream cheese frosting and I gladly obliged with a 3 layer carrot cake. I used Paula Deen's grandmother's cake recipe--which turned out moist and just as carrot cake should taste. I however omitted the walnuts and raisins because that's what mom wanted. I piped giant rosettes of cream cheese frosting onto the top for a little visual interest. Cream cheese frosted cakes with those little carrots on top bore me, and I saw these rosettes somewhere (though I can't find the site anymore).
Next came Michael's mother's cake on the 16th. She loves dense fruity cakes and requested a blackberry walnut Bundt cake. And of course, I obliged.
This cake was absolutely loaded--blackberry jam, walnuts, raisins, butter, buttermilk, brown sugar, and way more cinnamon and nutmeg than I would have thought prudent. I can't say that this type of cake is my cup of tea, but it was exactly what she wanted and I like to please my birthday girls.
First, my mother's birthday on the 10th.
(Sorry about the bad lighting.) She requested a carrot cake with cream cheese frosting and I gladly obliged with a 3 layer carrot cake. I used Paula Deen's grandmother's cake recipe--which turned out moist and just as carrot cake should taste. I however omitted the walnuts and raisins because that's what mom wanted. I piped giant rosettes of cream cheese frosting onto the top for a little visual interest. Cream cheese frosted cakes with those little carrots on top bore me, and I saw these rosettes somewhere (though I can't find the site anymore).
Next came Michael's mother's cake on the 16th. She loves dense fruity cakes and requested a blackberry walnut Bundt cake. And of course, I obliged.
This cake was absolutely loaded--blackberry jam, walnuts, raisins, butter, buttermilk, brown sugar, and way more cinnamon and nutmeg than I would have thought prudent. I can't say that this type of cake is my cup of tea, but it was exactly what she wanted and I like to please my birthday girls.
Saturday, September 3, 2011
Kicked-Up Healthy Banana Muffins
I've tinkered around with banana muffins for years. This is my current favorite.
Banana muffins
dry team:
1 cup whole wheat white flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1 tsp baking soda
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp clove
1/4 tsp all-spice
1/4 tsp cardamom
wet team:
3-4 mashed ripe bananas
1/3 cup plain Greek yogurt (vegans can use soy yogurt)
1 egg, beaten (can be replaced by 1/4 cup applesauce)
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup walnut pieces
1/4 cup raisins, soaked in hot water, drained
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Once you've assembled the dry and the wet teams in two separate mixing bowls, combine them and pour into 12 greased (can use either ghee, butter, or veg shortening) muffin cups. These will bake for about 15-18 minutes until golden brown and a toothpick inserted comes out clean. Spicy!
Banana muffins
dry team:
1 cup whole wheat white flour
1/2 cup whole wheat flour
1 tsp baking soda
pinch of salt
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp clove
1/4 tsp all-spice
1/4 tsp cardamom
wet team:
3-4 mashed ripe bananas
1/3 cup plain Greek yogurt (vegans can use soy yogurt)
1 egg, beaten (can be replaced by 1/4 cup applesauce)
3/4 cup sugar
1/4 cup walnut pieces
1/4 cup raisins, soaked in hot water, drained
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Once you've assembled the dry and the wet teams in two separate mixing bowls, combine them and pour into 12 greased (can use either ghee, butter, or veg shortening) muffin cups. These will bake for about 15-18 minutes until golden brown and a toothpick inserted comes out clean. Spicy!
Sunday, August 28, 2011
Dr. Cake
Let me just begin by saying, cake is not the most structurally sound material in the world. Given that, I'm sure most will cut me some slack on my wobbly TARDIS. For though it is wobbly, it is also edible.
TARDIS? What's a TARDIS, you ask? Why, a time machine, of course! Don't feel bad if you're not a British Sci-fi nerd. We understand. Louis, however, is our family's huge Dr. Who fan, and the Doctor is the guy who tools around in the TARDIS, while trampling all over any preconceived notions about time and space. Lately, Dr. Who has seen a resurgence in interest with several new seasons on BBC. I have to admit, the show is pretty fun and the production budget is a bit better than the shows I watched with my mom in the 70's. (The aliens frequently looked like they'd just raided the local hardware store for their outfits and the special effects were always so very not-special)
Louis' birthday called for a Dr. Who themed cake, and I figured the TARDIS would be the most recognizable structural object from the series. Oddly enough, the TARDIS looks like an old Police Box--the early British version of 911.
Here are some photos of cake construction.
Rainbow cake is really the most appropriate choice, and it can be appropriate for so many other fun applications as well! Aleta Meadowlark of Omnomicon explains thoroughly at her blog. We did a little rainbow cake dance when this came out of the oven. You just can't help but smile when you see cake that looks like a rainbow!
The rainbow is a bit in the shadow, but take my word for it, the color was so lovely and so fun to cut into! I'm not sure why, but Louis wanted a street scene. I suppose because so many Dr. Who episodes take place in London. Though the cake is only part of what goes into one of our kids birthdays, I always go all out. I want them to feel special. I hope Louis felt special. Turning 14 is not for the faint of heart. I know I never want to go through any year that has a -teen appended to it ever again. I have my own worries with 40 just around the corner!
TARDIS? What's a TARDIS, you ask? Why, a time machine, of course! Don't feel bad if you're not a British Sci-fi nerd. We understand. Louis, however, is our family's huge Dr. Who fan, and the Doctor is the guy who tools around in the TARDIS, while trampling all over any preconceived notions about time and space. Lately, Dr. Who has seen a resurgence in interest with several new seasons on BBC. I have to admit, the show is pretty fun and the production budget is a bit better than the shows I watched with my mom in the 70's. (The aliens frequently looked like they'd just raided the local hardware store for their outfits and the special effects were always so very not-special)
Louis' birthday called for a Dr. Who themed cake, and I figured the TARDIS would be the most recognizable structural object from the series. Oddly enough, the TARDIS looks like an old Police Box--the early British version of 911.
Here are some photos of cake construction.
Rainbow cake is really the most appropriate choice, and it can be appropriate for so many other fun applications as well! Aleta Meadowlark of Omnomicon explains thoroughly at her blog. We did a little rainbow cake dance when this came out of the oven. You just can't help but smile when you see cake that looks like a rainbow!
Construction. |
Aflame. |
Deconstruction. |
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