Showing posts with label what to do with cake disasters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label what to do with cake disasters. Show all posts

Wednesday 9 November 2011

Bunches of flowers (Made of cake)

In going to a party on the weekend, I wanted to bring something for my lovely hostess Katherine, and what could be better than a little bunch of flowers. The only difference being that I wanted the flowers to be edible.










These cakepops have a centre of chocolate mud cake, crumbled and mixed with dark chocolate ganache.











Cake pops are a lengthy process when you have to make the cake and the ganache (or filling) from scratch. However, when you have ready-made supplies of both (see pic on left) it's a lot more straightforward.

Cake and ganache both freeze beautifully so whenever I have any extra left from a project I sock it away in the freezer. Just call me Martha Stewart. At some stage I will get around to putting up the chocolate mud cake recipe I use but you can use any type of cake.





The cake needed to be crumbled into small pieces, then mixed with enough ganache to make it 'ball' against the sides of the bowl.













The aim is to get a smooth(ish) ball of cakepop 'pastry' that might be a bit sticky but hangs together really well.

Because I wanted to roll it out and stamp some cutter shapes from it, I flattened it into a rough circle by hand, wrapped it in clingfilm and put it in the freezer for 10 minutes to get it to firm up a bit.









To roll it out, a sheet of clingfilm over the top of the mixture as well as underneath is heaps easier. What I mean is, you unwrap the mixture and leave the clingfilm sitting underneath, then put a fresh piece of clingfilm in between the mix and the rolling pin. This means you can roll out the mix without it sticking to the rolling pin.

Then I used a flower cutter to get my shapes. I had to re-roll the mixture a couple of times to get all my flowers.








I then had a brilliant idea which turned out to be a massive mistake. I tried to introduce a bit of three dimensionality into the flat shapes by pressing a ball tool into the centre to make a dip, which I would then fill, after the flower was coated, with a mini M&M.

What I found out when I started dipping the shapes was that the coating mixture didn't like these little depressions in the middle of an otherwise flat shape, the coating didn't work smoothly. It was either too thin on the 'petal' bits or so thick on the centre that you couldn't tell there was a dip at all. So my advice is, don't try to be too fancy.





While the coating was melting (for detailed instructions, see here) I put the flowers back in the fridge to firm up again. It's really important to keep them very cold and hard because when they get dipped into a hot coating they are liable to soften up or get a bit melty.

Firstly you dip just the top of the stick into the coating, then you stick it into one of your shapes. It was a bit tricky to do this because I had made the flowers quite thin front to back, about 2cm, and I needed to put the stick through this narrow edge. Remember I also made a dip in the middle of the flower? Yeah - that didn't go well either.




This is what it looks like when it goes right. The coating is covering the pop evenly, the extra coating is dripping off the other side whn the stick is tapped gently against the bowl.














... And this is what it looks like when it goes wrong.















... As you see, when it goes wrong, it's hard to even get it out of the bowl. What happened here is that the stick was a bit crooked when I stuck it into the narrow edge of the flower. When I dipped it, the extra weight of the melt mixture pulled the flower downwards while I was pulling upward with the stick, and the stick broke through the flower and came out - leaving a trail of dark cake crumbs through my melt mixture, which was a problem for the whole rest of the dipping session.








Anyway - back to the nicer looking ones (thank god).

When they come out of the mix, straightaway decorate them with mini M&Ms, cachous or whatever works best. I found that one M&M in the centre and a selection of metallic-coloured cachous one the petals worked quite well.











Now to show you what happens when cake pops go bad!

Yes, apart from the disaster above which didn't get as far as being decorated, I had a few really horrible cake pops:

Why are my cake pops spiky?
Spiky mounds of melt mixture (left) happen when you don't tap the extra melt mixture off fast enough, or only get one side smooth and neglect to turn the pop over to check the other side is smooth too.







Why are my cake pops rough and swirly?
This happens (right) when (a) you don't have enough mixture in the bowl, so instead of slowly lowering it vertically and covering any gaps with a spatula, you swish it around the bottom of the bowl and coat it unevenly; and (b) the melt mix is starting to cool too much.










Why do my cake pops look so WRONG?

This one at the left should never have got to decorating stage. You can see how the melt mixture was very uneven and seemed to have divided into two layers. Why bother trying to fix it with cachous... when you know it's going to have to go in the bin!










Why are my cake pop decorations uneven?

Well... possibly because you're not very good at sprinkling tiny objects onto a rapidly-drying melt surface so that they are evenly spaced! These little tiny flower shapes are pretty but beware, they are very difficult to handle well. I should have used tweezers to pick them up and place them accurately. The melt mixture dries very quickly too, so if you drop one in the wrong place, it's difficult to remove without leaving a mark on the surface. Needless to say this one got the flick as well.





Having got the ugly, yucky ones out of the way here's a reminder of what they SHOULD look like!

Once I had a decent quantity of these, I began to investigate packing options.












They were quite pretty wrapped individually in cello bags with a ribbon tie. This had the added benefit of providing a bit of protection and sealing, as it's a difficult shape to fit in a gift box.













This was the final presentation of my bunch of flowers for my hostess. I have to admit I would have liked to use fancier paper and nicer ribbons, like that swanky thick textured Japanese paper you get around expensive bunches of real flowers... but I had to make do with what was in the house already... some of Mr Cupcake's fancy printer paper.










And the great thing was that there were plenty left over to reach a wider audience. Miss Lucy Tomlin was apparently pretty happy to see a cake pop carefully taken home for her by her daddy.













That's it for flower pops... in summary, they were fun, reasonably simple, but a few traps for young players with putting sticks into relatively narrow edges. These were harder (quite a bit harder) than cake pop chicks (here) or even the strawberries (here), but definitely worth a go for a flowery bouquet of edible goodness!

Monday 22 August 2011

Whoopie pies.... with a black forest theme

I had never heard of whoopie pies before this year. They are a traditional American sweet, a cross between a soft cookie and a cake, and originated with the Amish, who made them to use up little bits of leftover cake batter.













Amish farmers apparently used to find them in their lunchboxes occasionally and got so excited they would shout 'Whoopie!" You have to love that degree of excitement over baked goods.

Mr Cupcake asked the interwebs about them and then informed me that whoopie pies are the 'State Treat' of Maine, USA - not to be confused with the official Maine State Dessert which is apparently blueberry pie. I love that someone in Maine wanted to give State status to both a dessert AND a treat.

These whoopie pies are a red velvet mixture with a mascarpone and cream cheese filling flavoured with cassis liqueur and studded with cherries soaked in cassis, and a dark chocolate topping. They are very rich and decadent (those guys in Maine must be on the chubby side).
Disaster 1 - the baking tray batch
My first attempt to make whoopie pies, the day before these, was a complete disaster.

I read that I could cook them by piping circles of cake batter onto baking trays, or using whoopie pie tins, which are like cupcake tins, but the holes are larger and much flatter (cookie shaped rather than cake shaped). As I didn't have any whoopie pie tins I decided to make two batches, the first piping circles onto flat trays, the second using a cupcake tin but only filling the holes a quarter full - I reasoned I would get small whoopie pies that way, and larger ones on the tray.





Disaster 2: the cupcake tin batch

Except. Except I didn't. I got a tray full of completely joined-up batter about a centimetre thick (which I tried to turn into a swiss roll, but even that didn't work) and about 8 full size cupcakes - they rose and rose, the little buggers.













But the good thing about whoopie pies that look like cupcakes is that you can pretend you set out to make cupcakes.... so these were my first 'whoopie pies' ... vanilla cupcakes.... :-)














So-called 'muffin top' tins
So on my second attempt I zoomed out to Woolworths in Newtown - a truly excellent facility - and bought a couple of five-buck 'Muffin Top' tins. After having a giggle at the name I decided that these tins were actually whoopie pie tins and were essential for the job.













The actual recipe for my second batch was a red velvet whoopie pie recipe from a new English book called Whoopie Pies, by Hannah Miles (the first, failed batch was a vanilla recipe from the same book). It produced a very nice, light cake with a fine crumb, which turned out of the tins beautifully, without cracking or flaking. It was almost like a butter cake recipe but with a hefty amount of buttermilk and some water added, which I guess helped with the lightness.









With the right equipment, my second batch worked much better. This time I got cookie-shaped rounds of cake, with a fine texture and a good shape, if a little thin (my high-rise cupcake experience of the day before had made me scared to fill the tins up).












They turned out of the tins really well and I was able to fill them and top them with chocolate.















Going from the general look and feel of the fillings in the book, I made up my own 'black forest' filling. This consisted of halved cherries macerated in Cassis liqueur (I would have used Kirsch but I didn't have any)...












...Mixed with a creamy filling which was roughly equal portions of mascarpone, spreadable cream cheese, icing sugar and a splash of cassis. I put this in a disposable piping bag and piped it out onto half of the whoopie pies, studding it with a few cherries, and then sandwiched it with another whoopie pie on top.












I tried some different piping patterns (both with a star nozzle). That's why one of the whoopie pies in this picture looks a bit messy.













To decorate the top (because it seems like whoopie pies are often iced as well as filled) I melted some dark chocolate with my trusty home made double boiler arrangement - a china bowl precariously balanced on a tiny saucepan full of boiling water.













Then I spooned it on the top of the whoopie pies and finished with a cherry half on top.

Now, I was pretty happy with the way this picture turned out - they look so luscious and glossy and all - but I have a confession to make. These were a bit TOO RICH for Dr Cupcake! Yes indeed. There was an awful lot of filling in proportion to the cakey part, and the filling was pure dairy goodness - so much of it that I felt like I was becoming more lactose intolerant with every mouthful. I think next time a whipped cream filling, moderate in quantity, could work as it would be a lot lighter.




Recipe for cake batter:
125g unsalted butter or margarine (apparently they are traditionally made with vegetable shortening)
200g caster sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp vanilla extract
300g self raising flour
20g cocoa powder
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
250ml buttermilk (or plain yoghurt)
2 tsp red food colouring
100ml hot (not boiling) water

Set oven to 180C (350F) and grease and flour the tins. Cream the butter and sugar together until light and well combined. Add the eggs and vanilla extract and beat again. Sift all the dry ingredients in and mix again, then add the buttermilk, colouring and the hot water. You should end up with a sloppy but not liquid mixture which can be spooned (messily) into the pans. Let the mixture sit in the pans for 10 minutes, then pop into the over for 10-12 minutes. When you take them from the oven, run a metal spatula carefully around the edges to release the pies and cool them on a rack before filling and icing them.
Keep in a sealed container in the fridge - these are best eaten the same day but can keep for several days, depending on the filling.