Crafting the perfect wedding cake icing is an art form that requires careful consideration of flavors, textures, and presentation. Whether you're a seasoned baker or a novice cook, finding the right icing recipe can make all the difference in creating a stunning and delectable centerpiece for your special day. From classic buttercream to modern ganache, there's an endless array of icing options to choose from, each offering its own unique charm and taste. This article will guide you through the world of wedding cake icing, providing tips, tricks, and a curated selection of recipes to help you create a truly unforgettable cake that will wow your guests and leave a lasting impression.
Let's cook with our recipes!
WEDDING CAKE FROSTING
My husband goes bonkers over wedding cake but it has to be REAL wedding cake icing!! This is easy and is just right.
Provided by Sharon the Rocket
Categories Dessert
Time 10m
Yield 1 cake, 8-10 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Blend all ingredients at low speed on mixer till well blended and easy to work with.
- Spread on cake after cake is completely cooled.
- This is enough frosting for 1 - 2 layer cake or 1 sheet cake.
WEDDING CAKE ICING
Very Easy! Add a little more water to ice the cake and a little less to make the decorations!
Provided by CHAYES100
Categories Desserts Frostings and Icings White
Yield 16
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Mix shortening, water, vanilla, almond extract, and half of the powdered sugar with a mixer for 5-10 minutes. (it's very important to mix this long)
- Add the rest of the powdered sugar and beat just enough to mix in.
- Add additional water for desired consistency.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 357.6 calories, Carbohydrate 62.5 g, Fat 12.9 g, SaturatedFat 3.2 g, Sodium 73.5 mg, Sugar 61.4 g
WEDDING CAKE ICING WITH CRISCO
Incredibly fluffy and easy!
Provided by Lindy V.
Time 20m
Number Of Ingredients 6
Steps:
- Start by placing the Crisco all-vegetable shortening into the bowl of a stand mixer. A stand mixer works best because you can leave the shortening to cream at a high speed for a long time. This will ensure that it creates extra light and fluffy frosting. Use the whisk attachment. Cream the Crisco shortening at a high speed for roughly 10 minutes. The shortening should be extremely light in color and have a very fluffy texture.
- While the shortening is being creamed in the stand mixer, start making the milk mixture. Gently heat the milk inside of a small saucepan over very low heat. Then, add the salt and the flavoring you are using. Gently stir the mixture until all of the fine salt has dissolved. Then, remove the milk from the heat and allow it to cool completely before using.
- Once the shortening has been creamed, sift in the icing sugar (powdered or confectionery's sugar). Start by only adding about 3 cups of icing sugar first. Slowly whisk it in before increasing the speed of the mixer and beating it on high for about 2 minutes. Then, add the remaining icing sugar and again, beat it in slowly before increasing the speed. Beat the mixture at a high speed for 5 minutes. Make sure to scrape the sides using a silicone or rubber spatula. This will prevent lumps and some shortening from not becoming part of the creamy frosting.
- After your frosting has been whipped for about 5 minutes, you can now add the milk mixture. Start by only adding half of the milk and giving the frosting a mix. This will allow you to slowly adjust the consistency while you are working. Continue adding milk until you are happy with the consistency. Then, increase the speed of the mixer and beat the frosting at high speed for 10 minutes.
- Now, wedding cakes are usually made with white frosting. However, today, there are a ton of fun and colorful trends making their rounds. So, if you want to add food coloring, do so after your frosting has been made. This way the color won't be diluted with other additives (like milk or powdered sugar).
WEDDING CAKE FROSTING
Buttercream icing for wedding cakes.
Provided by Jeannine
Categories Desserts Frostings and Icings White
Yield 20
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Cream the butter and shortening together until smooth. Gradually add the sugar, milk, and vanilla extract. Mix until smooth.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 370.4 calories, Carbohydrate 50.3 g, Cholesterol 24.9 mg, Fat 19.6 g, Protein 0.3 g, SaturatedFat 8.5 g, Sodium 68.4 mg, Sugar 49.4 g
BRIDAL CAKE FROSTING
I've made wedding cakes for 15 years. I use box mixes but created my own frosting recipe. It has a nice flavor, plus it pipes and sets up well. I used this frosting on the cake when our daughter, Delores, married cowboy Les Jensen.
Provided by Taste of Home
Categories Desserts
Time 40m
Yield 40 cups.
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- In a large bowl, cream 2 cups shortening. Gradually beat in 7 cups confectioners' sugar. Add 1/2 cup milk; beat until light and fluffy. Beat in 2 teaspoons vanilla and 1 teaspoon almond extract. Repeat four times. Store in the refrigerator. Bring to room temperature before decorating cake.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 863 calories, Fat 49g fat (12g saturated fat), Cholesterol 2mg cholesterol, Sodium 9mg sodium, Carbohydrate 105g carbohydrate (98g sugars, Fiber 0 fiber), Protein 1g protein.
WEDDING CAKE FROSTING
I got this recipe some place on the internet. It makes a nice buttercream frosting for wedding cakes. I really like this frosting recipe it does taste just like basic wedding cake frosting. You can use dark vanilla extract but it will discolor the frosting.
Provided by internetnut
Categories Dessert
Time 10m
Yield 2-4 serving(s)
Number Of Ingredients 5
Steps:
- Cream together softened butter, shortening and milk with an electric mixer.
- Next add the clear vanilla extract.
- Then add the powdered sugar slowly.
- Note: 2 pounds of powdered sugar is 8 cups.
Nutrition Facts : Calories 3637.2, Fat 197.2, SaturatedFat 85.4, Cholesterol 252.6, Sodium 688.8, Carbohydrate 481.5, Sugar 470.6, Protein 3
SIMPLE ELEGANCE WEDDING CAKE
To make a three-tier wedding cake, all you need to do is multiply basic cake mixtures and icings, and take your time.
Provided by Jane Hornby
Categories Treat
Time P3D
Yield Cuts into about 90 slices
Number Of Ingredients 21
Steps:
- MAKING THE CAKES: Make the basic Easy vanilla cake recipe (see 'Goes well with'), following the instructions below for each tier, then cool and drench with the syrup. The cakes can be frozen ahead, without icing. However, if you bake them three days before the wedding, the cake will be fine until the big day.
- For the bottom tier, triple the quantities for the basic cake mix, then spoon into a ready-lined deep round 30cm cake tin. Bake for 2 hrs 15 mins on the middle shelf until risen and cooked through as before. While this cooks, make up a quadruple batch of the syrup - this will be enough for all three cakes. Cool and drench the cake with syrup as before.
- For the middle and top tiers, double the quantities for the basic cake mix, then spoon it into ready-lined 15cm and 23cm cake tins, filling each to about two-thirds full. Bake them together on the middle shelf, taking the small cake out after 1 hr 15 mins, and leaving the larger cake to cook for 1 hr 30 mins in total. If you know that your oven has hot spots, quickly move the cakes around after 50 mins. Cool and drench with syrup as before.
- LAYER AND COVER THE CAKES: Make the buttercream as in the basic recipe. You will need 5 x basic quantity - this is a lot, so split your weighed-out quantities in two before you start mixing. You may have some left over, but better too much than too little. Weigh out the buttercream - you will need approximately 400g for the 15cm cake, 600g for the 23cm cake and 1.3kg for the 30cm cake. Spread a little buttercream over the 15cm cake board. Level the top of the cake if you need to, then upturn the 15cm cake onto it. Split into three using a bread knife. I like to mark the front of the cake on each layer before lifting it off, using toothpicks, so I can reassemble it in exactly the right way. Take the top third off first (what was the bottom of the cake) and set aside. Carefully cut the middle layer and set that aside, too. A flat baking sheet or cake lifter can be very helpful here to slide the cake layers off and then back onto each other.
- Spread a layer of buttercream over the cake on the board. Return the middle layer, lining up the toothpick markings, then spread another layer of buttercream on top. Add a little jam if you like, dotting it over, then spreading evenly. Top with the final piece of cake, then dust off any crumbs on or around the cake. Now brush the whole cake with a thin layer of apricot jam. This should stop you getting too many crumbs in the buttercream. Sit the whole cake on a large sheet of baking parchment.
- Spread the rest of the buttercream over, starting with the top, then smooth and paddle it around the sides and down to the board. Repeat the whole process with the remaining cakes, using the corresponding boards and the different quantities of buttercream. The cakes are now ready to be iced. You can leave them overnight if needed, loosely covered with cling film.
- COVERING THE CAKE WITH ICING: You will need about 500g icing for the 15cm cake, 1kg for the 23cm cake and 1.7kg for the 30cm cake. Dust the work surface with icing sugar, knead the icing until pliable, then use your rolling pin to roll it into a circle large enough to cover the sides and top of the cake, with a little left over. Use string to check the size. Use your rolling pin to help you lift the icing over the cake.
- Smooth the icing around the cake with your hands, easing it over the edges and down to the board. Then trim off the excess with a sharp knife, flush with the bottom of the cake board. Smooth any marks with the flats of your hands, buffing the icing to a slight shine.
- Once you've iced all the cakes, cover the thick base board. Lightly brush with cooled boiled water, then lay the icing over. Trim to the edge of the board with a knife (I tend to do this like I would a pie crust, holding the board in my left hand, and knife in my right), then leave the board and the cakes to dry overnight.
- STACKING THE CAKES: Dowels, which are basically plastic sticks, provide stability and strength to tiered cakes, and polystyrene blocks allow you to add a 'floating' layer of flowers. By measuring and cutting the dowels to the same length as the polystyrene, you'll provide an even platform for the next cake to sit on, even if the cake below is a bit wonky.
- Sit the 15cm dummy centrally on top of the biggest cake. Insert four of the dowels into the cake, around the outside of the dummy, in a square shape. Push them right down until they meet the cake board. Mark with a pen where the top of the dummy comes to.
- Carefully pull out the dowels; then, using scissors, score around each dowel where you marked it. Snap the plastic cleanly. Re-insert the dowels in their original holes, rounded end down. Repeat the process with the 23cm cake and the 12cm dummy.
- Position the biggest cake in the middle of the covered board. Run a thin line of glue around the base board and fix the ribbon around it. Fix the ribbon around each cake, using a spot of the glue on the ribbon to secure it to itself. If you're moving the cake to a venue, put the cakes into their boxes now. Make a little kit to take with you - glue, scissors, etc - just in case you have to re-do anything.
- ON THE DAY - STACKING AND DECORATING THE CAKE WITH FLOWERS: I used hydrangeas - they're beautiful, in season and you can achieve a dramatic effect with relatively few blooms. On the day, save putting the flowers on the cake until as late as you reasonably can. Cut the stems of the hydrangeas to about 2-3cm. Split your least-favourite bloom into smaller pieces - this will help you fill any awkward gaps later. Make sure you save one beautiful bloom for the top.
- Insert a length of floristry wire into each stem (or wind it around the stem), leaving a spike of wire about 3cm long. Push this into the polystyrene dummy. Repeat until the two dummies are surrounded with a halo of flowers. The bottom cake should be in its permanent position now - out of direct light and away from any radiators. Lift the 23cm cake onto the bottom polystrene dummy, taking care not to squash any petals, then repeat with the top cake. Fill any gaps with the broken-up flower head you reserved earlier. Sit the final bloom on top of the cake, and you're done!
- CUTTING THE CAKE: Cut the cake across, in a grid, rather than into wedges. You should be able to get 50 servings from the large cake, 30 from the middle and 12 from the top, when cut into 2.5 x 5cm pieces.
Tips:
- Use fresh ingredients: The quality of your ingredients will directly impact the taste of your icing. Use fresh butter, cream cheese, and milk, and make sure your eggs are at room temperature.
- Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy: This will help to incorporate air into the icing, making it smooth and creamy.
- Add the other ingredients gradually: This will help to prevent the icing from curdling.
- Taste the icing as you go: This is the best way to make sure that it is the right sweetness and flavor for you.
- If the icing is too thick, add a little milk or cream: If it is too thin, add a little more confectioners' sugar.
- Chill the icing before using: This will help it to set and hold its shape.
- When applying the icing to the cake, use a piping bag or spatula: This will help you to create a smooth, even finish.
Conclusion:
With these tips in mind, you can easily create a delicious and beautiful wedding cake icing that will wow your guests. So get creative and have fun!
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