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Showing posts with label Making. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Making. Show all posts

Thursday, March 22, 2012

How to Make Dark Colored Icing - Making Red, Black, and Dark Blue

Making dark colored icing can be a little tricky. If you've tried, you've probably ran into the same problems most do.

The most common problem is that the color is simply not dark enough. Have you ever tried to make red, but it only looks pink? Then, to try to make it darker you add more and more food color. Makes sense right? Next thing you know the consistency of your icing has changed. So you give it a little taste and yuck! It now tastes bitter and disgusting. Does this sound familiar?

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Are you frustrated yet? I am worn out just talking about it. Well, there is an easier way to make dark colored icing!

Let's start with making red.

How to make Red

What you will need:

-red paste or gel concentrated food color
-red powder food color
-toothpick

The first thing we want to do is make our frosting a nice pink color. To do this use the red paste or gel coloring. Dip a clean toothpick into the color, or just squeeze a small amount if using gel in a tube or bottle. Now, mix in the color.

The goal is to get a nice medium (not too light, not too dark) shade of pink. Just add the color a little at a time and mix until you reach a nice medium shade of pink.

Next, we are going to use the red powder color. Sprinkle the red powder into your frosting a little at a time and mix it in. You will notice it getting darker. Add the powder color until the icing starts to look red. Set it on the counter and walk away for about 10 minutes. When you come back, it will have darkened to a nice shade of red.

How to make Black

What you will need:

-black paste or gel concentrated food coloring
-black powder color
-toothpick

There are two easy ways to make black.

The first is using chocolate frosting. Simply add your black paste or gel food coloring to the chocolate. Since it is already dark, it will not take much color to make it black.

Not everyone likes or wants to use chocolate though. The second method uses white or buttercream frosting to make black. It is exactly the same as making the red.

You want to first make your icing a nice shade of gray. Using the black paste or gel food coloring, mix in small amounts of color until you reach a medium shade of gray. Dip a clean toothpick into the color, or squeeze out a small amount if using gel in a tube or bottle.

Next, add the black powder color a few sprinkles at a time and mix it in until it starts to look black. Walk away for about 10 minutes and it will be dark black when you return.

How to make Dark Blue

What you will need:

-royal blue paste or gel concentrated food coloring
-blue powder color
-toothpick

When making dark blue it is best to start with royal blue paste or gel as your base. There are several shades of blue available, but royal blue produces the best results.

Dip your toothpick in the food color, or squeeze a small amount from the tube or bottle if using gel. Mix it in. Add color until you reach a nice "true" blue color. True blue to me is like the blue on the American flag, a nice medium shade of blue.

Now, sprinkle the powder color in a little at a time and mix it in until the icing starts getting darker. Set it to the side and come back in ten minutes. It will darken as it sits.

If you are trying to make navy blue, add a very small touch of black paste or gel color. When I say very small I mean literally just a touch of it. This will deepen it enough to make it a dark navy blue.

Use the paste/gel food color and powder food color combination to make all of your dark colored icing. It will save you a lot of time and frustration.

How to Make Dark Colored Icing - Making Red, Black, and Dark Blue

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Sunday, December 11, 2011

Don't Fear Baking - Making Cakes is Easy!

For many, the very thought of baking sends shivers down the spine. Yet a sponge cake is one of the easiest and most enjoyable recipes you can make. Whether you're making a very simple classic Victoria sponge or something more elaborate, you could go from making the cake to eating it in under 90 minutes!

I'm not really certain why cakes have a reputation for being daunting. In fact, cakes are what recipes were invented for. Follow the recipe and the cake will turn out perfect every time! There's no playing around, no adding your own 'little touches'. You read the recipe, buy the ingredients then prepare the cake according to the recipe and hey presto, you have a cake ready to eat.

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Perhaps part of the problem lies in the variability of ovens. Everything else in a cake recipe follows a set pattern but ovens can differ from house to house and type to type. Many of the basic recipes we have today were written in the 1960s and 1970s and 1980s where fan-assisted ovens were rare. As a result, those trying those recipes in the new ovens found that no matter what they did, the cakes would almost always burn.

If you are following an old recipe and you do have a fan-assisted oven then turn the temperature of the oven down by 10°C lower than the temperature in the oven. Bake for the same amount of time as given in the recipe, but cover the top of the cake with kitchen foil for the last 10 minutes of cooking to prevent the cake from burning. Then you will get perfect results.

Remember also that when you can smell the cake cooking it's almost done. Even if the recipe says you have another 20 minutes to go always check the cake when you can smell it, as it may have cooked much faster than you thought.

Below you will find recipes for a classic, simple Victoria sponge and a slightly more elaborate cake:

Victoria Sandwich Cake

Ingredients:
180g sifted self-raising flour
180g softened butter
180g caster sugar
3 medium eggs (room temperature)
Pinch of salt
Small amount of milk to aid dropping consistency
Jam of your choice for filling (Strawberry, black cherry, plum)
Icing sugar to dust top of cake
Two 20cm sandwich tins with 3

Don't Fear Baking - Making Cakes is Easy!

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