Showing posts with label Frosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Frosting. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 18, 2011

The Perfect Frosting

We've all heard of... the "I'm Not a Frosting" person...they lurk in the offices, at the parties, or stop by the bake sale table. And I really can't say that I blame them, having had my share of super-sweet frosting with a strong confectioner's sugar overtone which is enough to make one scrape the excess off with a knife.

This frosting, however, is different.

Firstly, there isn't a trace of confectioner's sugar in the mix. Crazy, right? One cup of good ole granulated sugar completes this sweet topping.There's also flour, which is plenty common in the cake, but rarely seen in the frosting. Now that I've got your mouth watering, let's get on with the recipe!

As always, we begin with the ingredients:


The first step should be done well in advance as it will require some cooling time.

The flour and milk go into a small saucepan:


Get this all whisked together and put it over medium heat.


Whisk continuously and be sure to NOT walk away from this mixture, not even for a few seconds. It will thicken incredibly fast once it starts and even just a few seconds could make or break it. The end consistency should be around the texture of pudding.


Once it reaches pudding stage, remove it from heat and continue whisking it until it's all smooth.

Put this mixture aside until it's completely cooled. You can even transfer it to a dish and put it in the fridge. Even if it's cold, it's fine. Just as long as there's no trace of "hot" left!

Once you're ready to continue, get your butter and sugar into the mixer bowl and add the whisk attachment.


Mix for a few minutes until everything is fluffy.


Add the vanilla and the cooled flour/milk mixture.


Now, here's the critical part: put the mixer as high as you can without anything going flying out of the bowl. It will take nearly 8-9 minutes of high speed mixing before the frosting starts to look like frosting. Around the halfway point, you'll stop the mixer to scrape down the sides and wonder just what the crazy cake lady has gotten you into, when you see the slightly separated mixture. Don't fret. Keep Mixing!

At 5 minutes:
 At 10 minutes: (I added orange colouring since I'm going to use this on Halloween cupcakes tomorrow night!)


The final result for your time and patience is a wonderfully smooth and silky, light and sweet frosting. It is the perfect texture for piping a 1M swirl or icing that layered cake.

If you make it the night before (like I did) you'll want to seal it in an airtight container and keep it at room temperature. In the fridge, it tends to separate. But it keeps nicely in a container on the counter until you're ready to use it!!

Enjoy! :)

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The Perfect Frosting

6 tablespoons of flour
1 cup of whole milk (1% or 2% work fine too :)
1 cup of butter at room temperature
1 cup of granulated sugar
2 tsp of vanilla (or your choice) extract

Whisk together the flour and milk in a small saucepan over medium heat. Whisk continuously until the mixture starts to thicken. It will thicken very quickly once it starts, so when it begins to look like pudding, remove it from the heat and whisk until it's smooth. Set it aside to cool completely. If it's not completely cooled, it will melt the butter in your final mixture and you'll end up with a runny final product.

Once the mixture is cooled, whisk together the butter and sugar in the mixer until it's fluffy. Then add the cooled flour and milk mixture and extract. Whisk at the highest speed you're comfortable with (around a 6-8 on my Kitchenaid mixer) for 8-10 minutes, scraping the bowl occasionally, until the mixture becomes light and fluffy.

This will make enough for a whole 8 inch cake or 24 cupcakes!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

A Royal Affair

99% of my decorating...is done with a combination of buttercream icing and marshmallow fondant. Recently, while coming up with an idea for my Mum's birthday cake, I decided to try some royal icing decorations. 

Most of us have seen royal icing decorations in stores as prepackaged, hard and candy-like pieces that can be used to spruce up a homemade cake. It is a versatile, easy way to decorate a cake (I wouldn't recommend it for icing a cake or cupcake because of it's consistency when dry) and a great way to prep some of your cake decor in advance!!


There are a few ways of making royal icing, but I prefer to use the meringue powder recipe which yields about 3 cups:


1 pound (about 4 cups) of icing sugar, sifted
4 tablespoons of meringue powder (can be found here)
6 tablespoons of water


Mix everything in an electric mixer for 7 to 10 minutes until the icing forms stiff peaks. Divide the icing into smaller bowls and colour using a gel paste colouring (since liquid can change the consistency of the icing...) 


Then, let you imagination run wild! :) I am prepping a pretty little cake for my Mum's birthday next weekend, so I decided to make some flowers and some decorations which will be added to a white chocolate cake next weekend -- stay tuned!! 


There's no limit to what you can do with royal icing, so I encourage you all to give it a try. You'll find that once you start working with it, it'll become a staple decorating accessory in your kitchen, as it has in mine! :) 


Happy Baking! xox


Crystal