Here's how to make your very own wedding cake from scratch, as taught by an expert in the field.
Master baker Zoe Clark
Clear a week
Monday: Bake the cakes (apart from the fruit cake layer, which can be baked months in advance), then, once cooled, wrap them in cling film and refrigerate overnight. A cool cake is much easier to work with.
Tuesday: Cover the cold cakes with marzipan (even sponge cakes should have a protective marzipan layer) and leave them overnight, uncovered, to let the marzipan dry out. Use a little clear alcohol such as vodka to stick the marzipan to the cake.
Wednesday: Ice the cake board and cakes. The sugarpaste (rolled fondant) should be 3-4mm in thickness – roll it between rulers to keep it level. The marzipan should be a little thinner than the icing.
Thursday: Stack and decorate the three-tiered splendour.
Friday and Saturday: A final check, deliver the cake, and collapse.
Be gentle with your icing
Pick the sugarpaste up on your rolling pin and, moving like a ninja, flop it over your cake.
When the icing is on, use a smoother to go over the top of the cake, working in circular motions. For the sides of the cake, use your smoother in forward circular movements, going right down to the base. Trim the excess icing with a sharp knife, and eat the scraps.
Don’t forget your dowels
As Zoe herself said, “Don’t even think about stacking a wedding cake, or any tiered cake, without dowels. And make sure you trust how sturdy they will be – we once balanced a ball on a doweled cake then sat one of my kids on top of the ball. It carried the weight just fine!”
Decorating ideas
Here are a few of Zoe’s simple decorating tips:
1) Try covering your whole cake in ivory icing, then cut out decorative shapes in white icing to contrast. Punching a little heart shape in the middle of a flower stamp always looks nice.
2) Use edible glue (about £3 a pot) to stick your decorations onto the cake. Nothing else will do!
3) One of the easiest decorating tips is to tie a satin bow around the middle tier. Cheap, beautiful and time-saving, and you could even match the colour of the bow to the bride’s dress.
You'll find many more idea's in Zoe's book, Chic & Unique Wedding Cakes.
All professional photos taken from Chic & Unique Wedding Cakes, by Zoe Clark.
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