50 Cakes

Blog and Goal Cut Short

I managed to complete 29 cakes but due to unforeseen circumstances I had to quit there and cut the documentation at 25 cakes. Thank you for reading and the lovely comments.

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23, 24, 25 Anniversary Cake

Anniversary Cake

This was the Anniversary Cake. Decorated by Gloria.

This cake is one I’ve been excited to post about since I began thinking of it a few months ago!  I reused some good recipes (the Marble Cake and the White Cake) but I assembled it into something else.

Heather’s Aunt and Uncle celebrated their 25th Wedding Anniversary at the beginning of September.  In May I was approached by Heather’s grandmother, the same one that has loaned me a good many recipe books, to make them a cake for the party.  I eagerly accepted!

Since Heather and I were away for much of August and September, I had to make the cake on the week of the 17th between Heather’s sisters wedding, renovating our bathroom and preparing for school in the Fall.  I froze the

The Couple

Cutting the Cake.

cakes and spent the day in Heather’s mom’s kitchen making fondant and layering the cake.  Once that was complete I froze it and went on vacation.

Before the party, Heather’s mom and grandmother took the time to make it fancy by adding ribbon and other decorations.  Her grandmother had even stored some of the icing flowers from their original wedding cake which she placed on this one as well.

Though we weren’t in attendance, I had heard that the cake was enjoyed and appreciated.  It certainly was a fun experience.

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22. Chocolate Wafer Icebox Cake

Chocolate Wafer Icebox Cake

The first cut into the cake already shows something is not quite right.

This cake is from The Magnolia Bakery Cookbook.  Thank you to Patrick and Katherine for lending me the book!

Now, I’ve heard very good things about this kind of cake.  It is essentially wafers covered in whipping cream.  Unfortunately I misunderstood the directions and got wafer cookies.  I was a bit confused reading the recipe which suggested making an alternating arrangement that was almost a circle shape since the wafers that I had were long and rectangular.  I arranged them as best I could but was already starting to doubt the cake at that point.

I brought the cake to a party and when I brought it out mentioned that I was a little concerned about this one.  In taking the first bite I found that the cookies had become quite soggy and realized for sure that I had made a mess of this one.  One of the other people at the party had made it before and told me that while I had picked up iced wafer cookies I was supposed to have picked up wafer cookies.

We still ate it and everyone had a good laugh.

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21. Coffee Layer Cake

Coffee Layer Cake House

This was a coffee layer cake designed in the image of my parents house.

I’ve been really bad at updating, life has been busy and honestly I haven’t been too good at keeping up with the cakes either.  I’ve been getting back into it though so I’ll start updating from the beginning.

This cake was made for Father’s day and I found the recipe here.  I was looking specifically for a cake involving coffee (as my dad enjoys coffee) but also that would be good for layering as I wanted to build my parents house.

The building turned out alright but I didn’t have time to go into tremendous detail.  I wanted to make a driveway and a lawn but that got cut in the end.  The address and the window borders didn’t work exactly as planned either because the pen that I was writing with (an edible marker) didn’t write on fondant as well as I had hoped it would.  The garage isn’t well defined nor are the basement windows but it was close enough that everyone there knew it when they saw it.

The model as seen by google street view.

The model as seen by google street view.

For a comparison, this picture is how google street view captured their house.

I didn’t care too much for the cake itself but everyone else said that they enjoyed it so it couldn’t be that bad.

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20. Marble Cake

Marble Graduation Cake

The Marble Cake, it is meant to look like a graduation hat

Another cake from my favorite recipe site, allrecipes.com.

This cake was a surprise to Heather for her convocation of a Master’s degree.  In a secret dual party at her aunt’s we celebrated Father’s day and her degree.  I’ll be honest at the outset, it was her aunt’s idea to secretly make the cake at Heather’s Nanny and Poppa’s house (Thanks Nona!).

I can’t say enough to express how much we loved this recipe however.  It was absolutely delicious!  It was moist and tasty but above all was strong enough for me to shape it and decorate it as I wanted!

On one afternoon on my way home from work, I made the cake and got to know all the splendors of mixing a cake with a mix master in stead of by hand. Then I was able to leave once it came out of the oven and Heather’s Nanny froze it for me.  Two days later I came home a bit late again but this time I had cut it, made the fondant (a first for me) and decorated it in its entirety.  Not only that but I made a huge mess of the countertop.  Oops!  Who knew that black food dye would leave a white counter pink?!  I scrubbed at it for about half an hour before it started to look mostly white again.

The night of the party, Nanny and Poppa brought the cake to Nona’s and I brought it up to Heather’s surprise.  Actually, I’m terrible at keeping surprises very well as I don’t lie very well, so she guessed I was making a cake, but the surprise was the flavor and decor.  This is cake recipe that I would recommend to anyone!

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19. Sponge Cake

Sponge Cake and Ice Cream

Sponge cake with simple syrup and some fancy ice cream

Going back to my classic cookbook by James McNair, this one is called an American Sponge cake.  At Heather’s suggestion, I soaked it in a raspberry simple syrup to accompany her Rasberry sorbet.

We’re heading into barbecue season, not that the weather in Vancouver is showing it, so we decided to bring this dessert to the first one of the year.  I think the sponge cake is something that really needs to be served with something and I’m not sure that a frosting is quite right for it.  The simple syrup was good with it and it’s very light.

There isn’t much else to say about this one.  It wasn’t my favourite cake, but maybe I could learn to like it more if I topped it with something else.  The real treat for this evening were the other desserts: Heather’s raspberry sorbet (pictured above); Heather’s vanilla, honey goat’s milk ice cream (also pictured above); and the brownies by Keith and Michelle (not pictured).

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18. Golden Cake II

Colourful cake with a bow and stripes

A colourful cake with a bow and stripes

As I mentioned in the previous post, I am interested in trying some fancier looking cakes as well as different flavours.  This cake is made from the second half of the recipe that made the first Golden Cake.

Inspired by reading the Ace of Cakes book, I wanted to try something colourful and not so measured.  I also really wanted to try to make a bow of fondant.  As with many of my cakes, I will most certainly take some of this cake away as a learning experience.

During the decorating of this cake, I learned that it’s not ideal to try to stretch your leftover fondant to fit the cake.  I had to roll out the bottom blue layer really thin in order to cover the entire cake.  In doing this, you see every crumb that is sitting on top of the cake.  If you left a large crumb on your crumb coat, it shows as a bump on the outside of the fondant.

Second, carving a warm cake is not as easy as you want it to be.  I tried to flatten out the edges of my cake since I baked it in a slightly sloped dish (which makes it easier to remove from the pan).  In doing this, I accidentally carved off some of the corners and made it look worse than it would have if I had just left it alone.  A little butter cream icing allowed me to fix it up, but it was awkward to say the least.

Third, I found that making large looping bows didn’t work as well as I wanted.  You see the fancy bow loops on all of the really good looking cakes, but my just wanted to cave in.  To disguise it, I put a large glob of orange right in the centre.  That  glob also helped to mask the seems I had made right in the middle.

In all, I’m not disappointed in this cake.  It does look good, even better in the photos actually.  It was still a good learning experience however.

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17. Golden Cake

Golden Cake with "Radioactive" Decoration

This is the golden cake with fondant and gelatin decorations

This recipe was one of the many layer cakes from The Complete Canadian Living Baking Book.  After last week’s success with decorating Serena’s birthday dessert, I found that I have really enjoyed decorating cakes.  As a result of this, I may change my goal slightly.

It seems to me that there are really about three types of cake: cheese, light fluffy (angel food etc.) and butter/sugar.  The butter/sugar type is certainly the most common and once you get the hang of the basics, they all so far seem to be very similar.  After making 16 cakes (13 of which are butter/sugar) I think I’m going to experiment with doing fancier decorations.  This isn’t to say that I won’t continue to try out different recipes but I may make two cakes out of one recipe so that I can try different ways of decorating.  I still have a fair number of cakes I would like to try on my list!

So this week, I went with a fairly easy cake and I’ve split it into two separate cakes.  The first cake is going to be posted today and the second is in the freezer for future decorating.  If you’ve never tried it, decorating can take as long or longer than actually making the cake so no complaining!

For this week’s decoration, I was inspired by my work.  As a back story, to help explain where this comes from, I’ll explain my job.  I work in pharmaceuticals; specifically, I work with radioactive pharmaceuticals.  I quality control them by running different chemical tests on them before they can be shipped off for many different uses including diagnostic testing and treatment.

Top view

Top view of the decorated cake

My first foray into fondant is with this cake.  The large circular symbol is a trefoil, the radiation symbol.  The black barrels are to represent waste containers and the green gelatin oozing from the horizontal one is representative of cartoon nuclear waste.  In reality, most of the chemicals I work with are clear despite their radioactivity.

I have really enjoyed decorating this and all of my coworkers enjoyed the cake!

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16. Maple Cake

Maple Cake with Cappuccino Ice Cream

Maple Cake, Cappuccino Ice Cream and Chocolate Decorations

I found this recipe in The Complete Canadian Living Baking Book.

This one was less about the cake and more about the presentation, as can be seen by the photo.  I’m starting to think that 50 cakes was a lot more than necessary to learn how to make a cake.  My next goal is to make some fancy looking cakes!

I made this cake for Serena’s birthday.  For my birthday, I received some cake decorating utensils as well as decorating books and a book of ice cream recipes.  So for the full out presentation, Heather made a cappuccino ice cream and I made some chocolate decorations.

The cake itself was pretty simple, 3/4 of a cup of maple syrup and few other normal cake ingredients, but pretty average as cakes go.  The full out recipe was meant to have pecans but as there are some nut allergies, we conveniently left those out.

Maple Cakes for a Party

Enough for a party

To present it, we took bowls, cut a slice of cake and placed a scoop of ice cream next to each one.  Whipped cream was placed on top of the cake with cocoa powder sprinkled upon that.  The chocolate decorations then adorned the creation.

In all, I was pretty happy with the outcome and I had a few very nice comments about the whole thing afterward.  I’m hoping that I’ll be able to do more of the fancy decorating in the future!

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15. Pan Honey Cake

Pan Honey Cake

Pan Honey Cake which looks more like a square than a cake

This cake came from The Best of Baking.

However, despite the title of the book, this may be the first cake that failed.  Both Heather and I were in agreement that this was not the best one.

The picture in the book makes it look amazing, with fancy patterns on the top.  There are cherries, nuts and candied peel decorating the surface, making it look both beautiful and tasty.  The candied peel was almost invisible on the surface of the actual cake, but they might have been due to overcooking slightly, thus making the cake a darker brown colour than intended.  The nuts and the cherry did seem to work the intended way, but as I didn’t use sliced almonds and tried to slice them myself and the cherries didn’t slice very well either, even they didn’t look perfect.

Despite all of the downfalls, some very nice friends did say they enjoyed it, but that might be that they are just very polite.  Regardless of how this one turned out, the next one is bound to be incredible!

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