Cake Decorating Community - Cakes We Bake

Hi everyone,

I know I don't belong in this group, but I had to stop by because I see some mystery going on with regards to some American products and terms. I figured I'd shed some light:

Fondant and sugar paste are the same thing. We just call it fondant here.

The reason many of us make marshmallow fondant is because it tastes much better than traditional fondant. I would say it resembles cotton candy. It's also inexpensive to make yourself. The store bought fondant here tastes awful.

I personally am not crazy about cake mixes and have never used one to make a WASC cake. I had never even heard of WASC cake before! I do have mixes in the house so if the kids want to make a cake, they can. They're fast and easy but the flavor is definitely different. They're not bad...just different than homemade.

If there are any other terms you are unfamiliar with, please let me know.


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Replies to This Discussion

Thanks fror this Theresa. Do you have a recipe for marshmallow fondant by any chance please?
Hi Terri, thanks for your comments I'm sure they will be very useful to the English cake makers.......I'm learning too.
Hi ladies, what is the weight of the marshmallow bags sold in stores near you? How about the powdered sugar? It doesn't make sense for me to just convert the measurements of an American recipe if you have to use odd measurements, so I want to try to give you a recipe that makes sense.
Sugar is most commonly sold in either 500g or 1kg boxes here. Marshmallows are normally in 200g packs but they're usually a mix of pink and white so you might get 100g of white - will be much easier if you don't mind pale pink fondant!

What's a WASC cake? Can usually figure these things out but it's been a long day!

Theresa Happe said:
Hi ladies, what is the weight of the marshmallow bags sold in stores near you? How about the powdered sugar? It doesn't make sense for me to just convert the measurements of an American recipe if you have to use odd measurements, so I want to try to give you a recipe that makes sense.
Our measurements are usually in grams, though my scales convert to ounces. I have the various cup sizes but struggle for some reason!

Theresa Happe said:
Hi ladies, what is the weight of the marshmallow bags sold in stores near you? How about the powdered sugar? It doesn't make sense for me to just convert the measurements of an American recipe if you have to use odd measurements, so I want to try to give you a recipe that makes sense.
Lilly, Did you get an answer about WASC? If not it's White Almond Sour Cream. It's a popular dense sponge. There are both "doctored" recipes that start with a cake mix and scratch recipes.

Lilly Manning said:
Sugar is most commonly sold in either 500g or 1kg boxes here. Marshmallows are normally in 200g packs but they're usually a mix of pink and white so you might get 100g of white - will be much easier if you don't mind pale pink fondant!

What's a WASC cake? Can usually figure these things out but it's been a long day!

Theresa Happe said:
Hi ladies, what is the weight of the marshmallow bags sold in stores near you? How about the powdered sugar? It doesn't make sense for me to just convert the measurements of an American recipe if you have to use odd measurements, so I want to try to give you a recipe that makes sense.
Thanks Ann, I wouldn't have worked that out. Sounds lovely, I've only tried a couple of recipes that use sour cream but they come out wonderfully moist. Unfortunately with four kids who won't even eat chocolate spread if it has hazelnut in, I don't think I'm going to get an excuse to try a nut flavoured cake any time soon!

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