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Wedding Cake Success

12 Jan

Congratulations Tinx & Minx!!!!!

Well we promised another cake post in our speech so here are a few more photos of the assembly of the wedding cake. Hover over each photo to see the captions.

You can see in the photo of Tinx and Minx cutting the cake at the top of this post that we also put a few beautiful white gardenia’s on top. Thanks again to Mum for escorting the cakes from Sydney to Queensland and to Peter and Adele for letting us take over their kitchen and fridge to put this together. I was thinking since we had already baked the cakes it would take 1 hour, max 2 hours to assemble it. Nope we took our time, laughed, stirred in a heap of love and took photos along the way and it ending up taking just over 4 hours.

We were pretty excited that the problem we had in our trial cake was solved. When the top tier was lifted off the bottom tier to serve it up, it didn’t take the ganache from the bottom tier with it. Yay!!!! We put a piece of baking paper under the top tier and the dowels stuck up higher than they did in the trial so the top tier was slightly raised. Trying to position the top tier onto the bottom tier was the hardest part of this project because I only had one shot to get it right otherwise it would have messed up the smooth layer of ganache.

Since there was no cake leftover, not even the extra four 8″ cakes we made, I think it’s OK to say that we NAILED IT!

In addition to making the wedding cake we also made Mango Kulfi. You can get the recipe here.

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Related posts:
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  3. Mango Kulfi

Amazeballs Salad

11 Jan

I was just about to post a picture of this salad on facebook but then had a bite and OMG  I don’t think there would have been enough space on fb for me to say what is in it. What a winner this salad is and an even better bonus is I threw it together with stuff I already had in our fridge and cupboard. “Why would you want to go out when this gets served up night after night?”

I usually try to include some protein in my salads but we’re all out of eggs and canned tuna/salmon. However this salad does have a little protein from the feta, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds and tahini.

The dressing, avocado and feta make this salad creamy (but healthy), whilst the seeds give it a nice crunch here and there. In my opinion this salad is AMAZEBALLS!!!

Amazeballs salad

  • Handful of baby spinach
  • baby roma tomatoes (Fresh from Ricardoes farm in Port Macquarie)
  • 1/4 avocado
  • 1 zucchini, sliced on the diagonal
  • Feta
  • sunflower seeds
  • pumpkin seeds
  • baby beetroot balls (I just used canned beetroot)

Dressing

  • Avocado oil
  • 1 garlic clove
  • tahini
  • lemon juice
  1. Heat up grill
  2. Spray zucchini with lemon olive oil and grill to get those sexy lines.
  3. Whilst grilling the zucchini, make the dressing. Sorry I don’t have measurements. I just made it so it was a nice creamy consistency.
  4. Combine the ingredients in a big salad bowl, toss with dressing and enjoy
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Mango Kulfi

09 Jan

Happy New Year!

We had so much fun on NYE. It was also the George Michael Bollywood in the Bush Bonanza. In addition to making the cake for this spectacular wedding, we also made some Mango Kulfi. Kulfi is a frozen Indian dessert. I think it tastes like a Mango Weiss bar. It was super easy to make and we got the recipe from our mum. We mentioned in our speech that we were going to post the recipe here so thanks for stopping by and enjoy.

Mango Kulfi (Serves 10-12)

2 mangoes, seed removed

400g Sweetened condensed milk (1 Nestle tin)

250ml Reduced fat cream (1 Nestle tin)

300ml Thickened Cream

  1. Line a 1L loaf tin with glad wrap. You could also use iceblock moulds
  2. Puree mango pulp using a stick blender
  3. Combine with the rest of the ingredients.
  4. Pour into loaf tin.
  5. Freeze overnight

This recipe can easily be doubled, tripled or made into whatever quantity you need. We made the kulfi in double batches to ensure an even distribution of the mango. Each double batch filled 3 disposable aluminium loaf tins.

I think the mango kulfi was a success. Some people were asking if there was any leftovers at the recovery brunch and we thought it was all gone, except for 2 melted trays of leftovers the caterers had left in the coolroom. However we were pretty excited to find a few more in the freezer. I sure was happy to announce round 2. Ding Ding Ding! Unfortunately for some people this was too late and they had already left. Sorry!

Congratulations to Tinx and Mick aka George and Michael, aka Tinx and Minx, aka Curious George and Micky Mouse, aka Micky and Minnie Mouse!!! It was a fantastic idea to celebrate your wedding on New Years Eve. We all enjoyed partied on into the night. I’m still recovering but had an absolute blast.

To love, laughter and happily ever after.

xx

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Wedding Cake 101

17 Nov

Our older sister Tinx is getting married to the super cool Minx on NYE and they have asked us to make their wedding cake. We were extremely honoured to be asked but also a little scared because

a) we have never made a wedding cake before and

b) the wedding is not in Sydney, so we were concerned about baking in a new kitchen.

After a bit of research on the net and finding other people who were in the same situation and had receieved heaps of advice we used the same advice and learnt ALOT.

1) It is possible to bake cakes in advance and freeze them.

2) Dowels should be used to support tiers and prevent them from squashing bottom layers

3) The cake should be assembled on site to minimise disasters en route.

Since the cake requested by the bride and groom is a secret family recipe obtained when Dan married Chris and we knew it worked we just had to make sure it would taste just as good after being frozen. It did!

So the past few weeks we have been baking cakes to test baking times for both 7″ and 8″ square tins in 2 different ovens. Now this particular cake recipe is a very liquidy batter so when we used the same quantity that makes a 9″ x 13″ cake in a 7″ square pan it collapsed in the centre. :(

We learnt that because the batter is runny it lacks the structure needed to hold itself up. So we halved the quantities and it was OK. Yay!

The next step was to test a few different icings. Of course we had to make a few cakes to cover in the icings. (I think this was when my spare tyre started to inflate.) We made a buttercream, a Swiss Meringue buttercream and a chocolate ganache.

I thought that the buttercreams, although they made the cake look lovely, white and weddingy, all I could taste was butter. There was also the issue of crumbs making the icing speckled.

The chocolate ganache however was heavenly. Now I know a brown wedding cake is not very traditional but I think taste is more important than appearance. whatcha think?

So after working out baking times and the icing the next step was to bake 10 cakes, freeze them, defrost them in the esky (which is how they are going to be transported to the wedding) and trial the whole assembly with the dowels and cake boards.

We have discovered that using the exact same recipe with the same size cake tin we get different sized cakes from our different ovens. Dan’s cakes rose higher and were more domed than my cakes. Hmmmm no problem I’m going to make the 7″ cakes and Dan is going to make the 8″ cakes. We also found that the 8″ cake board I bought is bigger than the 8″ cakes which are the top tier. It sticks out and needed to be covered with ganache. That’s not a major issue though. I can just buy a 7″ cake board and it should be fine.

The assembly begins with laying out four 7″ cakes on the 16″ cake board. Followed by a layer of ganache. Then another layer of 7″ cakes.

We then had to insert our precut dowels. You can just see them in the picture on the right. This was followed by another layer of ganache. We spread an 8″ cake with ganache, stacked another 8″ cake on top of it, then positioned both on top of the now 14″ cake. More ganache was spread over the whole cake.

Our only problem now is that when the top tier is removed to be sliced and served it takes off some of the ganache from the first tier. Perhaps after spreading the bottom tier with ganache we should stick it in the fridge and then put a piece of baking paper down under the top tier’s cake board. It’s worth a shot. I’d love to hear any other suggestions you have to solve this problem.

Next steps:

Bake the cakes the week before Xmas and freeze.

Defrost in the esky on the road trip up to Warwick.

Make the ganache and assemble on site the day before the wedding.

Decorate with edible flowers

What seemed like a massive task initially has been broken down into manageable steps. This cake is totally doable. I can see now why wedding cakes are so expensive. They are hard work! BUT so worth it!!!

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