Cake Decorating Community - Cakes We Bake

I have been making cakes for YEARS and cannot seem to figure out what I'm doing wrong on buttercream stacked cakes. . . no matter what I try, the icing buldges from between the layers.  

What am I doing wrong??   How do I do it right??

It's so frustrating!

ANY & ALL comments/suggestions are greatly appreciated!!!!!!!

 

Thanks so much!

Becca

Views: 601

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Hi

 I have read in an American book once that you make a crumb base for the cake. That is some soft cake crumbs and butter cream mixed to have the consistency of cream. I always cover my cakes with this and let it go hard before I cover it with sugar paste Hope it will help

Yes, it is called "cake spackle". I use Toba Garretts recipe. I only use this when my cakes are uneven. Makes it easier to cover with fondant.  I used it once as a crumb coat, and to me it was way to messy.

I have similar bulging problems sometimes.  And its because I do not do the dam, because i'm just not too familiar with it.

If i am doing a chocolate filling, what icing do I use for the dam?  Because it has to be stiffer consistency right?

Meera, I make my dam from the same BC I cover the cake with.  Set a small amount aside and add PS to it until you can pick it up with your fingers and doesn't make a mess.  I pipe it by putting it in a piping bag with a coupler but no tip.  Normally 1 layer around the cake is enough but if you add TONS of filling you may need 2 layers (stacked).  You just need to make sure your filling doesn't go over the dam. 

Is PS = powdered sugar?

I suppose it is good to put a dam so atleast u know how much filling to put.  Sometimes I just dont know what is enough!!

Sorry - PS is powdered sugar

 

I mix royal icing with my buttercream when I make my dam. Gives strength, and dries hard.  But the 50/50 buttercream/royal icing allows icing not to become to hard, but just right.

Reply to Discussion

RSS

© 2024   Created by Theresa Happe.   Powered by

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service