I'm reaching out to all my Texas cake buddies. I would like to hear what you huys do to maintain the intregrity of butter cream (alone and under fondant) from shop to event center. I'm too new, too small, and too poor to afford a refrigerated truck just yet so I've done everything I possibly could think of but my butter cream still suffers.
I keep my kitchen really cool, refrigerate my cakes and icings until ready to use. After I apply the fondant I do not put the cake back in the cooler because of condensation I get when I take them out again, but I crank the air conditioning down until my fingers freeze! I transport my cakes stacked in a insulated box I designed and made. I always get the truck really cold, pull it up within steps of my door, and transfer the cake as fast as is safe. I stress multiple times to the brides the importance of having the venue very cool.
Is there anything else I should be doing? Does anyone have a neat trick they would share? Several people have suggested that I either decrease or eliminate the butter, opting for more stable shortening, but my customers LOVE my husband's real butter cream.
I took a class with Mike McCarey at Cake Camp and was surprised to learn he uses Better Cream non dairy topping most of the time, even under fondant. I wonder how that would hold up here in Texas? Has anyone tried it?
All replies would be greatly appreciated!
Rosemary Galpin
Memory Makers Cakes
Luling, Texas
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Rosemary, I do pretty much what you do. I have read alot on the Wilton forums that you can use the Hi ratio shortening for high humidity and heat like Texas. I also cover or sort of wrap my fondant covered cakes with Saran wrap around them before refrigerating. I have never had a problem with condensation. Where exactly is Luling, Texas? I am in Tyler which is south of Dallas about two hours.
Hello Karena,
My nephew and his family live in Tyler so I am familiar with your area. I am about an hour out of Austin and San Antonio on I-10 and the humidity is horrible! I always used high ratio shortening. It's absolutely the ONLY way to go for grit free icing. I use 50/50 HR shortening and real butter and reduce the liquid to almost nothing in the hot months. I have not tried the saran wrap. Does this cause the condensation to build up on the outside of it instead of the cake?
I am in College Station and totally a hobby baker, but I have done several cakes for outdoor weddings in the summer. I am a BUTTERcream person, but I tell them that there will not be any butter in the icing if the cake is going to be outside. I add Dream Whip to my all shortening icings (http://cakecentral.com/recipes/6992/indydebis-crisco-based-buttercr...) and have never had a complaint. I had one wedding cake sit out (in the shade, but still high 90's) for several hours and it looked great in the pictures when it was cut.
I have used Bettercream, but only on cupcakes. I haven't tried to smooth it on a cake and I can't imagine that it would last any time at all in the heat. You wouldn't have water coming out of it like you do from the butter, but it is a whipped topping. I would have sworn Mike McCarey gave us his buttercream recipe ... I know he did because I was shocked at the butter to sugar ratio - it was almost all butter. Maybe he has switched to Bettercream. It has been about a year and a half since I took his class. Aren't his classes great! :)
Thanks Julie! I'll try the corn syrup. May I ask how much you use in a double batch?
Hi Rosemary,
I'm located SE of Houston and humidity is horrible here. Haven't done any outdoor cakes yet but the buttercream recipe I use has a combination of hi-ratio shortening and butter so it's not quite as fragile as an all butter recipe. I do put my fondant covered cakes back in the fridge after completion (if it will fit) but I wrap it very loosely with plastic wrap first and I have found that really cuts down on the condensation (and keeps the cake from having anything accidently drip on it - ask how I found that one out!). Also, the condensation won't hurt the cake as long as it has time to evaporate before anyone touches the cake. My favorite is to use ganache under my fondant because it is such a stable foundation for the fondant (not to mention tastes fabulous).
Also, when I transport a cake I usually start my car a few minutes before loading the cake and crank my AC to its lowest setting. I place my cake on the floor board of my car and point the vents in the direction of the cake.
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