The cake was a simple birthday cake recipe we found on the Williams-Sonoma website, with a thick buttercream frosting (I don't like frosting normally, but I do like butter, and I liked this frosting. It was pretty much just creamed butter). Anyone can bake a cake, and the recipe was certainly not what made this cake exciting. As the Flemish used to say in the early-Rennaisance, "God is in the details."
Emily's flowers were made from a special crisco-based deocrater's frosting (not very good to eat, but better-tasting than the premade flower decorations at the store). This was the most difficult part of the whole process: we didn't have a pastry bag, and the tips that we got wouldn't stay put. We tried parchment/wax paper/ziploc, and nothing worked very well, but Emily perservered and came out with rather nice flowers in the end.
For the towers (the main architectural detail of this cake), we put a marshmallow inside a cone, smoothed out with frosting inside another cone, and stuck a princess cut-out through the marshmallow. I cut crenellations for the cone towers with an exacto knife. How are we ever going to top this?!?
For the towers (the main architectural detail of this cake), we put a marshmallow inside a cone, smoothed out with frosting inside another cone, and stuck a princess cut-out through the marshmallow. I cut crenellations for the cone towers with an exacto knife. How are we ever going to top this?!?
p.s. This post was made by Xiaoxi, but when I changed its date, it made me the poster!
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