Skip to main content

Learning fondant the hard way


As a mere amateur cake decorator, I am still navigating the highs and lows of rolled fondant.

A few weeks ago I completed my second-ever fondant covered cake. It was an order and I wanted it to be perfect with a capital P.

The occasion was little Alice Rose’s first birthday party. I made her christening cupcakes and knew the crowd would be expecting something di-licious.

The cake itself was simple enough – vanilla butter cake filled with raspberry buttercream. I’d made the fondant roses, leaves, letters and heart ahead of time. I just had to cover the cake (cue imminent danger music).

Fondant is finicky and it can sense your fear. But sometimes you have to face near catastrophe in order to get the job done.

Here’s what I learnt the hard way:

Less really is more. Colour more fondant than you think you’ll really need but once rolled out, estimate the size of your cake and sides and trim away the excess before lifting up to cover your cake – fondant, even when rolled thinly, is heavy and will tear!

Desperate times call for desperate measures. Buttercream will wipe off rolled fondant if you use a SLIGHTLY damp cloth. Having torn a huge hole in my fondant (see above) I lifted it off to find it smeared with buttercream. Not wanting to colour another kilo of the stuff, I was prepared to give anything a go. Wiping seemed to work.

Ribbon covers a multitude of sins. If you can’t get a nice neat finish to the bottom of your cake, use pretty ribbon – instant gorgeousness.

Always bring along a repair kit! Despite your best efforts, sometimes holes appear for no apparent reason. I drove the cake over to my friend’s house (approximately 30mins away). When I left, the fondant was immaculate. When I opened the box in her dining room, there was a huge tear in the fondant. I was crushed (but my friend graciously overlooked it).

Oh fondant – how I sometimes detest thee! But when at first you don’t succeed, try, try again.

Comments

Wow this is gorgeous, you did a fantastic job!! Thanks for sharing the tips and tricks you learned, so helpful :) Love your blog and so glad to be your newest follower!
http://www.cookskinny.blogspot.com/
beautiful! I'm totally avoiding working with fondant! haha Great tips!
Audra said…
That looks amazing! I haven't even tried fondant I'm too scared. But maybe now I"ll have to give it a try!

Popular posts from this blog

My blog is making me fat

Temptation lurks everywhere. It’s official. My blog is making me fat. It’s also keeping my house messy since I started prioritising writing and baking over vacuuming and putting away laundry. In fact it’s happening right now – I’ve slept in because I stayed up to watch the new Kennedy’s drama on ABC and then wanted to ‘quickly’ check in to see if there were any new messages or comments. Before I know it its really late and that coffee I had after lunch has kicked in, giving me caffeine-induced heart palpitations, delaying sleep even further. Mr Di-licious (bless him) allowed me to sleep in and delivered a latte to my bedside. There’s a bowl of porridge waiting for me on the kitchen bench, ready to be reheated while I turn on my laptop and think about my next post. I used to get up early and go to the gym before breakfast but lately I’ve just been too tired. You know you’ve been MIA when you get notified about a trainer leaving and you’ve absolutely no idea who they’re talk

Recipe rant

This is not a macaron Donna I did something yesterday that I'm not very proud of. I ranted on Twitter and Facebook about a bad recipe experience and named and shamed the culprit. This morning I felt a little ashamed for my lack of manners.  But then I got some feedback from friends and fans that they too had had a bad experience with the recipe and agreed it wasn't up to scratch. If the situation were reversed, I'd be mortified.  But then again, I'm a little voice in the blogging net-osphere. The magazine/author I targeted is a household name with 10+ years standing. I guess what really gets my goat is that the magazine blatantly promotes the fact that they test and retest the recipes to make sure that they're perfect. I followed the recipe to the letter and even I could see that the wheels were coming off early in the piece.  But I was following their recipe and I persevered. In the end I ended up with flat, grainy meringues, not beautiful macarons.

Cute owl cupcake toppers

Hoot Hoot!! How cute are these adorable owl cupcake toppers? I whipped these up last week for a special surprise birthday delivery for my niece. I've been making cupcakes for Hannah's birthdays for the last three years.  Its always interesting to look back at photos of earlier decorating efforts - I've come a long way.  Last year was sort of the p ièce de résistance   - the famed Golden Snitch cupcakes for her Harry Potter themed party. This year we were getting ready for our epic drive to Byron Bay for my sister's wedding , so we didn't make it to Bendigo.  So no Di-licious cupcakes for Hannah.  At least, that's what she thought! Last week I arranged to come and stay the night with Olive and I brought along half a dozen cute owl cupcakes - SURPRISE! We both agree that the embossed ones make the greatest impact but the plain pink ones are cute too. I re-purposed a scrapbooking card embosser to create the embossing effect (cheaper than the cak