Fun & Original Birthday Cakes. Maisie Parish
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Tip
Very dark colours, such as black, dark blue and brown, are particularly useful to buy ready-coloured, because if you add enough paste food colouring into white to obtain a strong shade, it will alter the consistency of the paste and make it much more difficult to work with.
Ready-made packaged sugarpaste is quick and convenient to use. Well-known brands are high quality and give consistently good results.
Making Your Own
While the ready-made sugarpaste is excellent, you can, of course, make your own at home. The bonus of this is that you can then tint your paste to any colour you like using edible paste food colour (see colouring sugarpaste). This can then be dusted with edible dust food colour to intensify or soften the shade.
Sugarpaste is such a versatile modelling medium, it can be used to create an almost endless variety of cute characters.
Sugarpaste Recipe
900g (2lb) sifted icing (confectioners’) sugar
120ml (8tbsp) liquid glucose
15g (½oz) gelatin
15ml (1tbsp) glycerine
45ml (3tbsp) cold water
1 Sprinkle the gelatin over the cold water and allow to ‘sponge’. Place over a bowl of hot water and stir with a wooden spoon until all the gelatin crystals have dissolved. Do not allow the gelatin mixture to boil.
2 Add the glycerine and glucose to the gelatin and stir until melted.
3 Add the liquid mixture to the sifted icing (confectioners’) sugar and mix thoroughly until combined.
4 Dust the work surface lightly with icing (confectioners’) sugar, then turn out the paste and knead to a soft consistency until smooth and free of cracks.
5 Wrap the sugarpaste completely in cling film or store in an airtight freezer bag. If the paste is too soft and sticky to handle, work in a little more icing (confectioners’) sugar.
Quick Sugarpaste Recipe
500g (1lb 1½oz) sifted icing (confectioners’) sugar
1 egg white
30ml (2tbsp) liquid glucose
1 Place the egg white and liquid glucose in a clean bowl. Add the icing (confectioners’) sugar and mix together with a wooden spoon, then use your hands to bring the mixture into a ball.
2 Follow steps 4 and 5 of the above recipe for kneading and storage.
Sugarpaste for Modelling
To convert sugarpaste into modelling paste, all you need to do is add CMC (Tylose) powder (see essential purchases) to the basic recipe. The quantity needed will vary according to the temperature and humidity of the room, so you may need to experiment to get the right mix depending on the conditions you are working in. As a guide, add roughly 5ml (1tsp) of CMC (Tylose) to 225g (8oz) of sugarpaste and knead well. Place inside a freezer bag and allow the CMC (Tylose) to do its work for at least two hours. Knead the paste before use to warm it up with your hands; this will make it more pliable and easier to use.
If you need to make any modelled parts slightly firmer, for example if they need to support other parts, knead a little extra CMC (Tylose) into the sugarpaste.
Throughout this book I have used the combination of sugarpaste and CMC (Tylose) powder, and find it works very well. If you add too much CMC (Tylose) to the paste it will begin to crack, which is not desirable. Should this happen, knead in a little white vegetable fat (shortening) to soften the paste and make it pliable again.
Colouring Sugarpaste
Whether you choose to make your own, or to buy ready-made sugarpaste, the white variety of both forms can be coloured with paste food colours to provide a wonderful spectrum of shades.
Solid Colours
1 Roll the sugarpaste to be coloured into a smooth ball and run your palm over the top. Take a cocktail stick or toothpick and dip it into the paste food colour. Apply the colour over the surface of the sugarpaste. Do not add too much at first, as you can always add more if required.
2 Dip your finger into some cooled boiled water, shaking off any excess and run it over the top of the colour. This will allow the colour to disperse much more quickly into the sugarpaste.
3 Dust the work surface with icing (confectioners’) sugar and knead the colour evenly into the sugarpaste.
4 The colour will deepen slightly as it stands. If you want to darken it even more, just add more paste food colour and knead again.
Marbled Effect
1 Apply the paste food colour to the sugarpaste as directed above, but instead of working it until the colour is evenly dispersed, knead it for a shorter time to give a marbled effect.
2 You can also marble two or more colours into a sausage shape, twist them together and then roll into a ball. Again, do not blend them together too much. Cakes and boards look particularly nice when covered with marbled paste.
Tip
When colouring white sugarpaste, do not use liquid food colour as it will make the paste too sticky.
Edible food colours come in a wide variety of forms – liquid, paste, dust and even pens – all of which can be used to add colour and life to your sugarpaste models.