Tags:
Hi Tracy. imo -
Can I add it on top of marzipan? - Yes
Can I add decoration on top - Yes
Recipe - cheat. You can buy ready to make fondant icing powder from Silver Spoon - it's delicious. Just make it up to the consistency you want, pour it over, smooth it like you would royal icing and leave it to set. You can add colour, flavour as you would any other icing. You'll almost certainly have to trim the edges from the bottom of the cake as it will run down and 'glob up' a bit - do that when it's set. When it's set, it will form a slight crust and you can add your decs then. Be gentle when doing that as the icing will tend to crack slightly on the crust.
Hope this helps (I can't believe I am giving advice to Superwoman, wow). Good luck.
xx
Yikes Tracy, I wouldn't presume....... It won't go wrong, you can ace it standing on your head, I suspect. (Not that I'm advocating that as the best way to do it)
One other thing, set the cake on like a baking rack or something when you pour it. That way it will drip off the bottom then put it on the cake board. That way trimming it off the bottom will be easy. I haven't don't it with fondant, I did cover a cake with chocolate ganache and poured it on.
katy is that powder something you find on the internet. I will have to find it, I would love to try to do a poured fondant cake one day.
Thanks Gretchen - I'll keep that in mind :) x
Good point from Gretchen. You will have to be very very careful when you move it on to the board though. The slightest movement and your icing surface may well crack a little. If it does, dip a spatula in hot water, shake off the excess and smooth the crack over, then leave it to dry again.
Gretchen - I don't know about your part of the world, but the icing is something that is readily available in most supermarkets in the UK in the baking section. Here's a pic of what it looks like -
hi Tracy I've never tried it as my cakes having to having something a bit more solid to support the weight of the flowers i make but i was just reading the self same thing in a magazine so hope this helps.
500g Fondant icing sugar (see Katy above)
50ml water
2 tablespoons sugar syrup
2 teaspoons liquid glucose
measure fondant sugar ino a large bowl
add the water (boiled first and then cooled)
mix to a stiff dough
put bowl into microwave and heat for 1- 2 mins but dont overheat
once softened to icing consistenct stir in sugar syrup and mix well
stir in liquid glucose until the icing looks shiny and glossy and flows smoothly from a spoon.
the sugar syrup and liquid glucose will help to ensure that you get even coverage
for best results use whilst still warm.
Easiest way put cake on a cake card or board and as Gretchen said pour your icing over with the cake on a grid over greeseproof paper (it makes clearinf up a lot easier!!)
slide a large patllet knife or cake lifter under the board to lift onto your display board or serving plate.
Oh this was certainly helpful ladies as I was just looking into poured fondant for a cake end of August. the problem being they don't like the cake very sweet with BC (my usual choice) it does get a bit sweet. In order to make it pretty and smooth I was thinking of poured fondant. Thanks for all the tips. Katy, i don't think we have fondant icing powder in Toronto, would u know of an alternative?
mmmmmmmmmmmmm, now this is very interesting. I did my pastry training 32 years ago in the UK and we used runny fondant for petite fours and exhibition cakes. Shaped sponge was covered in apricot jam and then covered in fondant. The fondant is made from boiling sugar and corn syrup to soft boil stage, taken off the heat and stired for a while making it cloudy, cool and then you can store it for a few weeks.
So eventually when fondant from the US started to emerge I was very confused and still can't call it fondant!!!! I call it sugar paste.
© 2024 Created by Theresa Happe. Powered by