Last year, I made the Diego cake, for the daughter of Autumn, a lady I work with. That cake wasn't a situation where I had the creative room I'd prefer. This year, however, she came back asking if I could make a birthday cake again - only criteria, Spiderman! Blue. Red.
It was fun :) And my first topsyturvy!
I started out by searching photos of Spiderman. As well as checking out what has been done in the past. Autumn also showed me a few photos of cakes they had found that they liked, so I had a direction, and made a doodle.
I sent this to her, and she gave me a thrilled response. So I knew I was on the right track.
I started out a week ahead to make all of the buttercream, since the colours I would need - red, blue, black were so vivid that they needed a few days to set. The amount of dye in this cake was almost sickening. I would never suggest a vibrantly coloured cake for a wedding - the guests the day after would be reminded in the worst way of what they ate the day before. I also warned Autumn ahead of time that the dye content would have... certain repercussions.
After the frosting was taken care of, I spent an evening with the gumpaste to cut out the buildings. Simple, random building-ish shapes.
The cakes were my favorite buttercake recipe, nice and dense. I made those two days before the due date. That gave them overnight to chill and become more workable the next day.
All the frosting was done on the night before, as it is buttercream, I didn't want to frost and leave it in the fridge overnight, because the buttercream tends to take on the flavors of the refrigerator, if nothing more than just that "refrigerator air" smell/taste.
Carving the cake was far easier than I had thought. I watched a video on you-tube that made it pretty easy for me to apply their suggestions. Unfortunately I didn't get photos of the unfrosted cake. So the next photos are of the first stabs are the frosting.
A lesson I have certainly learned is that transitioning colours on a corner is really really difficult, especially if you want a nice clean edge. I did however learn quite a few tricks to working with buttercream, and getting a nice smooth look. I'm no longer scared to attack a fondant-free cake!
All assembled, here is the final cake. (Unfortunately, it seems that flash does weird things to shiny, butter surfaces, so it looks strange)
Saturday, November 14, 2009
Spiderman cake, Spiderman cake!
Frosted by Ammy Lea
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13 comments:
Amazing! You're the best. Can't wait for the blog on Des' cake.
That looks fantastic!!
I am a spider man fan..Thanks for sharing this
Regards,
Jimmy Simpson
Wedding Cake Writer
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The cake reminds me of my brother, he's in his 30's now but I have fond memories of him in his spidey outfit. He even jumped down the stairs as a kid thinking he could fly but ended up breaking his arm. Great job.
You're amazing, that cake looks awesome. You should check my blog out sometime!
Great post.
I love this! Mostly because it's fondant free & still looks totally smooth&great.
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I liked it so much and very interesting, too! Thanks for sharing the experience.Wonderful post, really great tips and advice. I was interested by your comment,
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