Easy Solutions To Common Cake Decorating Mistakes
Saturday, December 27th, 2008    Subscribe To Our FeedTerrific New eBook On How To Broil Delicious Foods Below are the most common cake decorating mistakes and easy ways to rectify them. Anyone who has ever frosted a cake knows there are times when the icing will pull apart the top of the cake and cake crumbs get will into the frosting. To stop this from occurring, you should start with a crumb coat. This is the same icing that you are using to frost the cake, but it has been thinned down a bit. That way it’ll give you a base over which you can put a normal coat of icing and you’ll cover parts of the cake that might crumb with a thin icing layer. Take care that you do not make the icing too thin. It should be thinned down just enough to cover the cake without tearing it and picking up crumbs. Before you apply the rest of the icing, let the cake set for 2 hours or more after the crumb coating has been applied. In fact it should rest in the refrigerator, and can be kept there overnight before you need to add more icing. It is okay if you see crumbs in the crumb coat, they will be stuck in this first layer of icing and will not effect the next layer of icing. The cold will set the icing and it will be a cinch to ice after that. There can be a problem with fillings spilling out the sides of the cake. There are ways to stop this from happening when your cake decorating involves a filled middle. 1. Bake your cake the day before you are planning to fill it. This will make the cake firmer and will give it time to settle. A freshly baked cake will be unstable and will not hold fillings as well as when they are settled. 2. You could also stop the filling from spilling out by using icing to make a dam. You can then frost the whole cake with a crumb coating once the dam has been made. The cake should be set in the refrigerator for 2 to 3 hours, or overnight, this will firm up the icing and will keep the filling from oozing out the sides. The dams made of icing will firm up and keep the filling in. If you’re busy and don’t have time to bake and decorate the cake at the same time, then simply pop the cake in the freezer once you’ve baked it. A cake can be kept in the freezer a couple of weeks before it needs to be used. You must prepare the cake for freezing by wrapping three layers of strong cling wrap around the cake, followed by one layer of aluminum foil just prior to freezing. If you do not follow this procedure, your cake will dry out and crumble. Also, before attempting to ice the cake, make sure it is completely thawed out. You will need to allow the cake to defrost slowly, at room temperature, for one or two days until it has defrosted. Icing a cake before it has thawed will make the icing sweat and become mushy, this will ruin your cake decorating, and all your hard work will be for nothing.
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