Monday, April 23, 2012

New Make Bake 31 - Mr Happy Birthday Cake

Ages ago I was asked my make mine and M's nephew's 2nd Birthday cake and last week the text came asking if I still was ok to make something. The request came in as Mr Happy themed so after a quick Google looking for inspiration, I send them a choice of possible cakes which I thought were within my limits.

The choice they picked was this one. Possibly the most ambitious of the selection but also the most forgiving if anything went wrong!

I started by making a 9" Madeira Sponge cake. I wrapped the cake in parchment paper and a carrier bag to keep the cake lovely moist and left to cool. I then sliced it into three and filled it with strawberry jam in one layer and buttercream in next . I then crumb coated the cake - this is when you cover a cake with a thin layer of buttercream to provide sugarpaste a base to stick too. For my buttercream I decided to try slightly salted butter as I had read online that it meant the buttercream was less sickly. M LOVES buttercream and I'll admit that I am rather partial to it but I do find it quite sweet and it can give me a headache if I eat too much. I didn't tell M that I had made a change and allowed him to sample some of the left overs which he pronounced as "yummy". Personally I preferred it with the salted butter, it wasn't quite so overpoweringly sweet and I couldn't taste the salt at all.

Whilst the crumb coat dried, I covered my cake board. It's something which I've only started doing recently but I think it makes such a difference and makes cakes look so much more professional. The cake was then covered with chocolate brown (and chocolate flavoured!) sugarpaste and left to dry for 24 hrs to ensure it was a bit more sturdy when I came to adding the details.

To make the Mr Happy model I couldn't use sugarpaste for modelling as it just isn't sturdy or strong enough to hold it's shape on it's on and Mr Happy would not have been very happy for long! You can add powders to sugarpaste (like CMC or gum tragacanth) but as I was on a short time scale I cheated and mixed my yellow sugar paste with Mexican modelling paste as that would enable it to dry hard and quickly. He took me three attempts (the black sugapaste I used left black marks on the yellow - grrr) so I had to learn to handle it quickly and carefully!

The rest of the cake was covered with various sized circles of sugarpaste in green, blue and yellow. This was great as it enabled me to hide any cracks (still haven't perfected that part yet) and made it look lovely and colourful.

The final part was a star-burst of sugarpaste balloons. Typically I didn't plan this bit properly and I bought the wrong thickness of florist wire (I wrongly assumed that the higher the number, the thicker the wire - it's not!) so I had to change my plan quickly. I made small circles and thin 2's in green, blue and yellow sugarpaste (also mixed with Mexican paste so they were keep their shape) to match the cake. I then carefully threaded the wire through the middle and then left them to dry for 24hrs. I wish I'd started them before as the weren't quite set when I picked them up, so quite a few broke which meant I didn't have as many as I planned.

Even with my lesson's learnt, I was actually very pleased with the result and even better was the fact that the birthday boy was just as happy as his cake!




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