The Wayfaring We
Adventures of the Norris family (one of them, at least), currently set in Okinawa, Japan
Tuesday, February 22, 2011
Big Helper
We're all glad JR is back from his school and deployment, but I think Zane especially was craving some time with Daddy.
And yes, JR is doing his wood working in my living room. It's a good thing he cleans up after himself.
Thursday, February 17, 2011
Lopsided Cupcake Cake
I made my eighth cake this week. Be warned: this is a long post. My friend Grace was planning a "Mad Hatter Tea Party" themed birthday for her daughter. She had seen this cupcake pan in the store, but she wanted it to be lopsided to fit with the craziness of the theme. She also loves fondant, but we both thought covering the whole thing in fondant wouldn't look right so the bottom is in fondant and the top is iced with buttercream.
So first (Monday night) I baked the cupcake cake and 2 9-inch cakes in red velvet. I didn't need 9-inch cakes, but that was the size pan I had available. I tried to go get some more, but the Exchange only had 9s and 10s. After I took them out and they cooled a bit, I wrapped them well and put them in the freezer.
Tuesday, I took them out of the freezer and started cutting away. First I made sure all my cakes were flat. Then I placed one of the 9-inch cakes on top of the lower portion of the cupcake. I angled to top and cut a flat circle out of the middle to support the top of the cake. I also cut channels in the sides to match the cupcake.
These are the two separate pieces.
I thought that was quite a bit of cake on the bottom so I cut the lower piece in half and "glued" it back together with some white buttercream.
Then I wrapped up the bottom of the cupcake and put it in the fridge.
I took the top of the cupcake and the other 9-inch cake out of the freezer. I cut the bottom of the 9-inch to fit on top of the other 9-inch cake. That way the top of the cake would be supported and would actually be flat on bottom even if it looked lopsided. I cut the top flat and cut the sides at an angle to line up with the top of the cupcake piece and to overhang the other 9-inch. I then "glued" the top 9-inch to the cupcake top, wrapped them up, and put them back in the freezer. I took the bottom of the cupcake out of the fridge, added the lower 9-inch to it (with icing) and then re-wrapped it and put it back in the freezer.
Wednesday I made some white buttercream and frosted the entire bottom portion of the cake to prep it for the fondant.
I had intended to smooth the fondant into the indentions to keep the cake looking like it was a cupcake in a paper liner. That didn't work. Since it's a Mad Hatter theme, I decided to paint the fondant. I forgot to take a picture of the cake before I started painting so this picture has two stripes on it already.
I wanted it to show the brushstrokes and have vivid colors to be reminiscent of the Disney movie. I chose green and yellow, as he has a yellow coat and green shoes, pants, and hat. I decided to do stripes to help it look like a paper liner. Here it is completely painted.
I'm afraid it looks a bit weird. I hope it looks better when it's all put together. Well...I don't know how likely that is. It's going to have bright pink icing on top and blue "sprinkles." I just hope Grace and Celeste like it.
Thursday morning I put the top of the cake on, frosted it bright pink, and put on the sprinkles. They're just white chocolate and blue food coloring poured onto a sheet and then cut out with a circle cutter.
Here's the finished product: one Mad Hatter lopsided cupcake cake.
So first (Monday night) I baked the cupcake cake and 2 9-inch cakes in red velvet. I didn't need 9-inch cakes, but that was the size pan I had available. I tried to go get some more, but the Exchange only had 9s and 10s. After I took them out and they cooled a bit, I wrapped them well and put them in the freezer.
Tuesday, I took them out of the freezer and started cutting away. First I made sure all my cakes were flat. Then I placed one of the 9-inch cakes on top of the lower portion of the cupcake. I angled to top and cut a flat circle out of the middle to support the top of the cake. I also cut channels in the sides to match the cupcake.
These are the two separate pieces.
I thought that was quite a bit of cake on the bottom so I cut the lower piece in half and "glued" it back together with some white buttercream.
Then I wrapped up the bottom of the cupcake and put it in the fridge.
I took the top of the cupcake and the other 9-inch cake out of the freezer. I cut the bottom of the 9-inch to fit on top of the other 9-inch cake. That way the top of the cake would be supported and would actually be flat on bottom even if it looked lopsided. I cut the top flat and cut the sides at an angle to line up with the top of the cupcake piece and to overhang the other 9-inch. I then "glued" the top 9-inch to the cupcake top, wrapped them up, and put them back in the freezer. I took the bottom of the cupcake out of the fridge, added the lower 9-inch to it (with icing) and then re-wrapped it and put it back in the freezer.
Wednesday I made some white buttercream and frosted the entire bottom portion of the cake to prep it for the fondant.
I had intended to smooth the fondant into the indentions to keep the cake looking like it was a cupcake in a paper liner. That didn't work. Since it's a Mad Hatter theme, I decided to paint the fondant. I forgot to take a picture of the cake before I started painting so this picture has two stripes on it already.
I wanted it to show the brushstrokes and have vivid colors to be reminiscent of the Disney movie. I chose green and yellow, as he has a yellow coat and green shoes, pants, and hat. I decided to do stripes to help it look like a paper liner. Here it is completely painted.
I'm afraid it looks a bit weird. I hope it looks better when it's all put together. Well...I don't know how likely that is. It's going to have bright pink icing on top and blue "sprinkles." I just hope Grace and Celeste like it.
Thursday morning I put the top of the cake on, frosted it bright pink, and put on the sprinkles. They're just white chocolate and blue food coloring poured onto a sheet and then cut out with a circle cutter.
Here's the finished product: one Mad Hatter lopsided cupcake cake.
Tuesday, February 15, 2011
Puzzler
Zane likes puzzles. Here are a few pictures of him doing his first 100-piece puzzle. He needed a little help to get going so I showed him how to do the border first and then the middle pieces, but he did most of the work himself.
Saturday, January 8, 2011
Another Baby Shower Cake
This cake was made for a sister in my ward named Correna. She gave birth to her third child, a little girl named Zoey. We weren't sure if there was going to be a shower or not, as she gave birth just a few days before the shower and was released at the time the shower was scheduled to start. We still had the shower; she was just a bit late. I made her cake after looking at a few pictures she had sent me. Each cake I make, since I've only made a few so far, gives me something new to try. When I made this one, there was no fondant on the island so I was forced to try homemade marshmallow fondant. I've been wanting to try it, but I didn't have much of a choice. I did have one box of premade fondant in my cabinet, but it wouldn't be enough for the whole cake. Correna attended Melanie's shower and liked the idea of chocolate for one layer and marble for the other.
This picture is just the cuttings, obviously. I, again, had forgotten to take pictures until JR reminded me. The bottom layer was marble and was supposed to be covered in chocolate fondant with circles in different shades of pink.
Here it is after I trimmed the fondant and attached the circles.
The top layer was supposed to be a marbled layer with white and two different shades of pink. Here's me mixing one of the pinks into the fondant. I really don't know why I took a picture of this. It looked cooler in person, I guess.
It turned out really well until I put it on the cake and smoothed it down. Apparently marshmallow fondant is more malleable than the store-bought stuff. When I smoothed it on the cake, I mushed all the colors together. It didn't turn out how I wanted, but it still looked okay.
I made roses out of the same fondant and put them on top. Then I added some leaves and white flowers as well.
Then I added a ribbon to the bottom of each layer. Here's the finished product.
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
Melanie's Baby Shower Cake
So I actually made two cakes last week. I showed a friend here how to make the Lego cake. Then I made a cake for Melanie's baby shower. I found the little teddy bear mold from Wilton and made one to show Melanie. She liked it so I decided to use it for her shower cake. First, I made a base cake. She wanted a marble cake so I got a Fudge Marble mix and then covered the 13x9 with white fondant.
Next I made the two teddy bears. Since I couldn't really marble the bears I made one Yellow and the other Chocolate Fudge. I had forgotten to take pictures of them until they were half frosted. JR called about that time and insisted that I take pictures of the process because he likes to see them. Here are the bears with just black icing.
The bears weren't complicated or difficult, but they took a lot longer than I expected. My original plan was to have at least one of them holding a baby blanket. I would post a picture of the cake that gave me the idea, but Blogger won't let me. It's called "Off to Dreamland" on the Wilton website. But when I realized how long it took to frost them, I decided it wasn't worth it to try to figure out the blanket. I didn't want to get to the shower with an unfinished cake because I started a project that was too big. If I had done it before and knew what I was doing, maybe, but I would have been figuring it out as I went and didn't want to give Melanie an ugly cake. A simple-looking cake I could handle.
I did try something else that was new, though. I tried to paint the fondant. I made little balls of fondant and marked lines on them with a toothpick. I then used a brush and food coloring to paint them just like I had read about online. Unfortunately, I did not do enough research first. The food coloring doesn't dry on its own. You have to mix it with alcohol and then let it evaporate out. It takes all the moisture with it so it looks like you've painted with water colors. I went to the Shoppette to buy a small (i.e., hotel fridge sized) bottle of vodka because I know vodka dries odorless. I don't know about other alcohols so I wanted vodka. What I learned was that they don't sell little bottles of alcohol here. They only sell big ones. I didn't want a huge bottle of alcohol in my house so I just decided to do something else. I kneaded the balls until the colors blended together. Here's what they looked like while I was painting them.
For the border around the bottom I made some of the letter blocks, but again, because of the paint drying problem, I didn't put letters on all of them. I also made two larger blocks to go on the top of the cake. Melanie and Victor, at that point, still hadn't decided on names for the boys. The doctors call them "Baby A" and "Baby B" so those were the letters I put on the big blocks. While I was at the BX (base exchange) I saw a picture frame that said, "Twins are love times two." I thought it was cute so I wrote that on the little blocks around the bottom. Between the blocks I piped some buttercream frosting.
Here's the finished cake:
Congratulations, Melanie! (and Victor!)
Next I made the two teddy bears. Since I couldn't really marble the bears I made one Yellow and the other Chocolate Fudge. I had forgotten to take pictures of them until they were half frosted. JR called about that time and insisted that I take pictures of the process because he likes to see them. Here are the bears with just black icing.
The bears weren't complicated or difficult, but they took a lot longer than I expected. My original plan was to have at least one of them holding a baby blanket. I would post a picture of the cake that gave me the idea, but Blogger won't let me. It's called "Off to Dreamland" on the Wilton website. But when I realized how long it took to frost them, I decided it wasn't worth it to try to figure out the blanket. I didn't want to get to the shower with an unfinished cake because I started a project that was too big. If I had done it before and knew what I was doing, maybe, but I would have been figuring it out as I went and didn't want to give Melanie an ugly cake. A simple-looking cake I could handle.
I did try something else that was new, though. I tried to paint the fondant. I made little balls of fondant and marked lines on them with a toothpick. I then used a brush and food coloring to paint them just like I had read about online. Unfortunately, I did not do enough research first. The food coloring doesn't dry on its own. You have to mix it with alcohol and then let it evaporate out. It takes all the moisture with it so it looks like you've painted with water colors. I went to the Shoppette to buy a small (i.e., hotel fridge sized) bottle of vodka because I know vodka dries odorless. I don't know about other alcohols so I wanted vodka. What I learned was that they don't sell little bottles of alcohol here. They only sell big ones. I didn't want a huge bottle of alcohol in my house so I just decided to do something else. I kneaded the balls until the colors blended together. Here's what they looked like while I was painting them.
For the border around the bottom I made some of the letter blocks, but again, because of the paint drying problem, I didn't put letters on all of them. I also made two larger blocks to go on the top of the cake. Melanie and Victor, at that point, still hadn't decided on names for the boys. The doctors call them "Baby A" and "Baby B" so those were the letters I put on the big blocks. While I was at the BX (base exchange) I saw a picture frame that said, "Twins are love times two." I thought it was cute so I wrote that on the little blocks around the bottom. Between the blocks I piped some buttercream frosting.
Here's the finished cake:
Congratulations, Melanie! (and Victor!)
Smart, Talented, and Blessed Boys
Zane drew this picture this morning. It looks like what he says it is. This is a "Sun Person" standing on a "clump" (which he says means "dirt") and jumping rope. It amazes me some of the things he comes up with when I've given him absolutely no direction. He's definitely got his daddy's creativity (and randomness).
Nat has started showing some analytical skills. He sits in the play area and explores the toys. When I took this picture he was sitting at the "bang, bang," as Zane called it, and was slowly pushing the pegs in and pulling them out over and over again. JR pointed out to me that the colored pegs were placed symmetrically. I think that means someone else has inherited his parents' OCD tendencies.
JR graduated this week from the first portion of his school. He had the highest score in his class, but due to a technicality, he is not the Honor Graduate. I'm proud of him for having the highest score, though. He apparently has some nice guys in the class with him. When this guy found out JR was going to be alone for Thanksgiving he told JR to load his bike in the guys truck and then took him home to Quantico for Thanksgiving. I'm so thankful that there's someone there to take care of him and that he won't be alone! I love blessings!
Nat has started showing some analytical skills. He sits in the play area and explores the toys. When I took this picture he was sitting at the "bang, bang," as Zane called it, and was slowly pushing the pegs in and pulling them out over and over again. JR pointed out to me that the colored pegs were placed symmetrically. I think that means someone else has inherited his parents' OCD tendencies.
JR graduated this week from the first portion of his school. He had the highest score in his class, but due to a technicality, he is not the Honor Graduate. I'm proud of him for having the highest score, though. He apparently has some nice guys in the class with him. When this guy found out JR was going to be alone for Thanksgiving he told JR to load his bike in the guys truck and then took him home to Quantico for Thanksgiving. I'm so thankful that there's someone there to take care of him and that he won't be alone! I love blessings!
Friday, October 15, 2010
Nat's First Birthday
Here are some pics of Nat with his first birthday cupcake. At first he just looked at it. "Mom, what is this thing? What am I supposed to do with this?" He figured it out, though.
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