Wednesday, 24 August 2011

Sonic the Hedgehog wedding cake




As promised, here is the Sonic the Hedgehog wedding cake I made for two very close friends of mine.

The bottom tier is chocolate sponge with chocolate buttercream and the top is plain sponge with vanilla buttercream.


The block the figures' feet are resting on is solid icing. It was more a structural element, but I think it actually brought the whole thing together. In my initial plan, the figures would be standing together on the top. I hoped that if I leant them in to each other lovingly, they would balance, but it was never going to happen as their legs are too spindly and their heads enormous!
I could lie and say I planned it all along, but I don't lie on here- cakes evolve and more often than not, they don't go according to plan, but the way they turn out is actually even better than the plan was!




The only none edible parts of this cake are internal supports- plastic dowels to hold up the cake board inside the cake, and a half a cocktail stick in each figure to hold their heads to their bodies. Yep, the rings are icing. Nothing but icing. They were made a couple of days before hand so they had a long time to dry, then only positioned on the cake on the morning of the wedding. By then they were solid as a rock. I made them by using two different sized circle cutters on some rolled out icing. I thought about dusting them with gold powder, but I thought in game the rings are yellow, so I'd follow suit!

I'm very proud of the figures. I spent a long time researching Sonic as I realised I didn't know as much as I wanted to know to get the detail correct. The pink hedgehog is Amy, who I discovered through my research, essentially stalks Sonic and is obsessed with him!! Oh well! My friends asked for Sonic and Amy, and I think it turned out romantic. I tried to put them in a pose where they looked quite soppy, and gave them wedding rings too. My friends are the sweetest couple ever, and I wanted to encapsulate their romance and how they are besotted with each other in tiny icing computer game characters! I tried to remove them from the cake in one piece when they cut it, but they came apart! They're still going to keep them and the rings in an airtight box as a memento. This is perfectly doable as long as they are kept airtight and out of sunlight, the icing should last. I have some pieces from my own wedding cake still!

I'm happy to answer any questions you have relating to cakes if you want to give these things a go.

Because my husband is awesome, he filmed a video going around the cake, for this blog, so you can appreciate it from all angles. I think it's a great idea of his so you can understand the size of the cake and see it from all sides with out lots of photos!


Monday, 22 August 2011

Random update and a recipe

I know, I know! I've really, REALLY neglected this blog, but I have a good excuse right now as my husband and I have just bought our first house, and most of my time has been taken up with house searching, viewing, packing and moving and now I'm sitting surrounded by boxes! I do have a pretty good wedding cake I did for some friends that has Sonic the Hedgehog and Amy on top. I am so, so proud of it, and my husband even videoed walking around it if I can work out how to post that here, so look out for that!

Well, just so this isn't an entirely pointless 'update' I'd like to share a 'recipe' of sorts, as I made it today, and I thought I'd share!

Well, what do you do if you decorate a lot of cakes and you have all sorts of cake trimmings? You know, all the off cuts from the cakes that get cut to shape. All the burnt edges, and odd shapes you can't quite sandwich up into some sort of cake to present to anyone, ever? What about the extra left over buttercream, or even slightly stale cake bits?! Well... I have the answer!

What I do is something my Mother In Law and me invented once (but is most likely invented by someone else at some point). We call them truffles as they are quite truffley.

Get all the leftover bits of sponge cake (I've not tried it with fruit cake, but it could possibly work, not sure about fruitcake and buttercream though!) and crumbs and buttercream and whatnot. Plop the lot into the bowl of a mixer (I have a Kenwood Chef I love, but you could possibly use a hand mixer) crumble up the biggest bits of cake so it's not too hard on the old thing, and then whizz the hell out of it in the machine. If the mixture looks a bit dry, add some butter, if it looks a bit wet, add some icing sugar and/or cocoa, in fact it's best to add some of all of those things unless you had a lot of left over buttercream. If you want to add extra indulgence, melt some chocolate, and pour it into the mixture. For grown-ups only, a splash of booze is really good.

Once this concoction is whizzed into a big cakey gloop that sort of holds some shape, take gobs of it out, roll it in your palms into a ball, then roll in either icing sugar, cocoa powder or both, and plop on a baking sheet/big flat plate or something with baking parchment on it and chill the lot.

Wahay! A use for left overs! RECYCLING FTW!

Try to remember that what you are eating that can be gone in seconds is essentially a ball of cake with added sugar and fat, so it's not a good idea to eat lots of them on a regular basis, but it's a fabulous way to use up bits that would be scrap otherwise and just get binned.

I just made some of this earlier today, and it was looking too runny, and my husband said "just pass me the bowl and a spoon.." so this is also an option if you are feeling a bit greedy!

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