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Mrs. Sewing, San Mateo, CA/Honolulu, HI Age and Occupation: 24, Electrical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Electrical Engineer Engagement Date: June 27, 2009 Wedding Date: July 2010 Venue: Anela Garden Chapel & Japanese Cultural Center, Honolulu About Me: I'm an easily entertained, compulsive idea-scheming machine who loves good art, good food, and a good engineering challenge. I'm planning a half-destination wedding on the beautiful island of Oahu - imagine a plethora of movies, art and games; savory Hawaiian food; blended Chinese and Japanese cultural details; lush, fragrant tropical flowers and all the air conditioning a NorCal native could want! And once I marry the love of my life, we'll come back to the 'mainland' to party it up all over again in my hometown of Salinas, the salad-bowl capital of the world!
About Mrs. Sewing

Cakie! - The Frosting

February 20th, 2010 @ 1:40 pm by Mrs. Sewing

Friends, let me tell you about my latest fixation:

Princess Cake.

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Bcakes6

(source)

This Swedish treat features delicately sweetened vanilla cake, filled with raspberry jam and fresh cream. It’s moist, yet sturdy, and shaped to perfection with a layer of marzipan frosting.

It is amazing. I suggest you all find the nearest Swedish bakery and try it out.

But the reason I bring up this mouthwatering morsel is mainly because of the frosting. There are, it seems, alternatives to the standard buttercream or fondant choices. Let’s discuss:

-Buttercream

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Coconut

(source)

Made mostly of butter and sugar, this is the standard (and cheapest) cake frosting. Tasty, no frills, icing. It’s easily piped around into flowers or basket weave patterns. It is, however, more difficult to create smooth, flawless looking surfaces. You also can’t make fancy-sturdy models with it.

-Fondant

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake F17b

(source)

A standard for smooth, tiered wedding cakes these days, commercial cake fondant is made of gelatin, glycerin, glucose and powdered sugar (sounds, delicious, doesn’t it? :P). You can also make your own with marshmallows (a la Miss Hamster), if you prefer. It’s more costly than buttercream, and tastes like..well, it doesn’t taste like much. It’s usually just peeled off and left uneaten. It can, however, be easily molded into desired shapes and appliques, and has excellent structural strength.

- Royal Icing

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Royali

(source)

This is the hard, meringue-like substance on decorated sugar cookies and pre-made candy cake decorations. It’s a bit brittle and inflexible as a cake cover, but would work for making sturdy piped details or appliques. It’s made mostly from egg whites and sugar.

-Ganache

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Cak Img

(source)

Ganache is made of chocolate and cream, and tastes like a dream. However, it is super soft and prone to melting, so don’t even think about using it for gravity-defying cake architecture, ’cause you won’t get any support from this!

-Cream Cheese

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Cream C

(source)

Mainly cream cheese and sugar, you can’t go wrong with this for taste, though it’s a monster for anyone on a diet! Soft and creamy, there’s no using this for rigid modeling.

-Modeling Chocolate

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake 2449286

(source)

Perfect for creating rigid, complex structures, modeling chocolate can make for a super-sweet alternative. It’s made of chocolate and a sugar syrup, but I’d still be a little wary about the melting factor.

-Marzipan

Cakie! - The Frosting :  wedding cake Marzipa

(source)

Made of sugar and ground almond meal, marzipan makes for a great cake-cover when rolled out thinly. Let me emphasize thinly, as this frosting packs quite a flavor punch. It’s best paired with simpler cakes like vanilla, since the almond flavor can overwhelm anything more complex. But boy, is it ever delicious! Structurally, it works similar to fondant, though it can become too brittle when dried out. One other note - marzipan apparently only comes in about 2 colors, green and ivory/almond color. Though I’m pretty sure you can dye the natural almond color to your preferred hue…

I’m definitely going to ask any potential bakers what our frosting options are. Mr. Sew is definitely pro-anything-chocolate, but I’m not sure if it would hold up in the Hawaii-heat. And I love the marzipan, but it might not go well with guava-coconut cake.

Even if we end up back at fondant and buttercream, at least now I know there are other alternatives I need to “taste test”!

What are you covering your cake in?

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52 Responses to “Cakie! - The Frosting”

1 2 3 

1.
Miss Cardigan
Bee
Miss Cardigan (message)  8,645 posts, Bee Keeper

YUM! I loooove cream cheese frosting!

 
2.
Mrs. Mouse
Bee
Mrs. Mouse (message)  5,844 posts, Bee Keeper

This is a great frosting roundup! I had no idea there were so many choices. I’m intrigued by the marzipan.

 
3.
ginandtonic
Member
ginandtonic (message)  193 posts, Blushing bee

Princess cake is the greatest thing ever, I agree. And you never know about the marzipan, I mean almond goes pretty well with coconut, so it might be worth a try!

 
4.
amariem25
Member
amariem25 (message)  3,733 posts, Sugar bee

Mine was a fudge ganache. Check it out here http://gallery.weddingbee.com/photo/a-chocolate-fall-wedding-cake

That princess cake looks like it has sooo much frosting on the top of it. I’m not sure if I’d like that!

 
5.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Snow (message)  916 posts, Busy bee

Want. Cake. Now. This is a great post about all the frosting choices (I thought there were two choices: fondant or buttercream!)

The Princess cake looks awesome.

 
6.
Miss Elephant
Bee
Miss Elephant (message)  6,182 posts, Bee Keeper

That’s a lot of options for frosting! We’ll have to check them out, but I think we’re leaning towards buttercream or cream cheese

 
7.
Bee Icon
Bee
Miss Lace (message)  702 posts, Busy bee

I have no idea, but I LOVE the black and white cake. I do LOVE buttercream though. Let us know what you decide on. I’m drooling looking at this post!

 
8.
veganglam
Member
veganglam (message)  2,267 posts, Buzzing bee

Great post! Call me crazy but I think marzipan would go GREAT with guava-coconut cake. Yum.

 
9.
Guest Icon
Guest
Erica

I don’t know if you know about it but there is A sort of past made of coconut, that is about the same consistent of marzipan but it is very hard to find.

 
10.
Guest Icon
Guest
verbal_viking

Yum. Can’t wait to hear what you decide!

 
11.
miss sweden
Member
miss sweden (message)  40 posts, Newbee

Being swedish, I just have to comment on this post! I love princess cake, it’s like a national cake over here. Here you can normally get it in white, green or pink colors. It is super easy to color the marzipan to any color of your choice with food coloring though. (just like fondant)

@amariem25: That is not regular frosting on top, it’s plain whipped cream.

 
12.
sapphirebride
Member
sapphirebride (message)  1,747 posts, Bumble bee

Our close family friend that is making our cake uses Pastry Pride, which is a non-dairy whipped topping. I know that sounds weird, but it’s really perfect stuff. It’s light and fluffy, not too sweet, easy to spread and to pipe. Our cake will be very winter/snowflaked themed, so it’ll be easy to get a snow effect with this frosting.

 
13.
Member Icon
Member
Lizzle101010 (message)  35 posts, Newbee

my baker has an option of using European Meringe with a very thin overlay of white chocolate to give the appearance of fondant …yum!!!

 
14.
Guest Icon
Guest
lydia

I’m from Holland, marzipan and fondant are the most used weddingcakecovers. that’s maybe why I’m charmed by buttercream.. lovely, but I don’t know how it tastes..

 
15.
Miss Hot Wings
Bee
Miss Hot Wings (message)  2,213 posts, Buzzing bee

marzipan frosting?!?! I had no idea. Soo wish someone had told me this was an option. We’re using ganache on our rehearsal cake and buttercream for our reception cake.

 
16.
Gilneas
Member
Gilneas (message)  1,393 posts, Bumble bee

I loooooooove marzipan. Love love love it. But I wouldn’t use it on my wedding cake because people tend to have a love or hate relationship with it.. :(

 
17.
Chipmunk
Member
Chipmunk (message)  617 posts, Busy bee

I’m Dominican and we have a traditional wedding cake that I believe is made of royal icing with different layers of fillings such as tres leches its fabulous and the icing is soft but a little hard in such places its supposed to be like that..I have never met anyone of any culture that doesn’t like it ha that red velvet cake with cream cheese icing looks so yummy

 
18.
ChiCat
Member
ChiCat (message)  335 posts, Helper bee

So as a disclaimer, I could eat marzipan by the bowl, but I agree with ginandtonic - almond and coconut are divine, so I would definitely try the coconut/guava/marzipan combo!

 
19.
Member Icon
Member
Professor (message)  422 posts, Helper bee

What a yummy post! We’re doing buttercream with sugar flowers added for decoration.

 
20.
classysolo2010
Member
classysolo2010 (message)  64 posts, Worker bee

We REALLY wanted a princess cake/torte. It was the first cake we ever shared (on his birthday 6 years ago!) and we both LOVE marzipan. In fact, I have a pound of it in my cupboard for whenever I feel the need to make a marzipan cake. But I digress…
A word of caution about Princess cakes - they do not display well. The marzipan is layered above fresh whipped cream. Within 15 minutes of being out of the fridge, the whipped cream starts to melt and the marzipan skin starts to sag or even rip! It becomes quite messy. We considered a fake foam cake as the display…where they would switch the top tier for real cake at the last minute for the cake-cutting…but it just became too complicated.
Instead we found a great baker who is baking us a vanilla-almond cake with fresh raspberries, raspberry jam, and vanilla custard. It’ll be covered with ivory almond buttercream. Fondant would look more elegant, especially with some of our floral designs, but it’s much cheaper and I looooved the taste.

 
1 2 3 

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Mrs. Sewing
Mrs. Sewing

Mrs. Sewing, San Mateo, CA/Honolulu, HI Age and Occupation: 24, Electrical Engineer Fiance's Age and Occupation: 24, Electrical Engineer Engagement Date: June 27, 2009 Wedding Date: July 2010 Venue: Anela Garden Chapel & Japanese Cultural Center, Honolulu About Me: I'm an easily entertained, compulsive idea-scheming machine who loves good art, good food, and a good engineering challenge. I'm planning a half-destination wedding on the beautiful island of Oahu - imagine a plethora of movies, art and games; savory Hawaiian food; blended Chinese and Japanese cultural details; lush, fragrant tropical flowers and all the air conditioning a NorCal native could want! And once I marry the love of my life, we'll come back to the 'mainland' to party it up all over again in my hometown of Salinas, the salad-bowl capital of the world!

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