Sunday, May 20, 2012

Pink Ombre Ruffled Dress Cookie tutorial


These here are the pink ombre ruffle dress cookies I made up to match the cake I made for a fashion inspired birthday party.

Now Naomi V or her party stylist Putting on a Party didn't even ask for cookies, but y'all know I kinda have a thing for cookies, and ruffles, oh yeah and also ombre at them moment ........ so I wanted to create a ruffly cookie and this seemed like a perfect excuse.

Plus it was a bit of a test run, I wanted to see how the diagonal ombre would work before I started on the cake.


Yup this is the matching cake, click HERE for tutorial on this ruffled pink ombre dress cake

I actually really enjoyed making these cookies, although it took me around half a day to make just over a dozen. They are kinda time consuming but I don't mind I find the hand rolling relaxing and I like the uneven finish. But if you had lots to do you could crank up a pasta machine to whip out the ruffle strips much faster.

and none of my dress cookies were quite right for the look I wanted, so I made up my own template. Making a template pretty much just consists of drawing a dress on a piece of sturdy-ish card stock and cutting it out.

A template will work great if your only doing a few, but if you had like 200 wedding dress cookies to make I think it would be worth the investment to track down a cutter that matched or even have your own cutter made.



Pink Ombre Ruffled Dress Cookie Tutorial

Dress cookie cutter or template
Cookie dough - I used the recipe from Sweets on a Stick
White fondant (make your own marshmallow fondant or buy ready rolled)*
cornflour (corn starch)
Dusky Pink/ Burgandy Food gel color
small rolling pin
Frilling tool
non stick petal pad/foam (see here for example) optional for thinner ruffles
sharpe knife
water and clean brush (used for sweet food purposes only)

* Fondant dries out very fast. You must work quickly and keep in an airtight container when not in use. Knead well before use.

Knead the fondant well and using the food color make 4 different shades ranging from pale pink through to a deep dusky pink.

Cut out dress shaped cookies with cutter (or use template) place on a parchment paper lined baking tray and bake in the oven following recipe instructions until the cookies are golden. Remove from oven, leave on tray for 5 minutes, transfer to wire racks and allow to cool.


Lightly dust a clean bench top with cornflour (corn starch) and roll out the white until quite thin. I like to work with small pieces at a time to reduce the fondant drying out. Using the dress cookie cutter (or template) cut out a white fondant shape the same size as the dress cookies.


Brush the cookie with a small amount of water and adhere the white fondant to the cookie using the small rolling pin to gently press the fondant to the cookie making the surface as smooth as possible. Repeat with all cookies.


To Make the fondant ruffles dust the workbench with cornflour (cornstarch), take a piece of fondant about 1 1/2 tsp and shape it into a rectangle, using the small rolling pink roll in out into a long strip. As you roll you may need to press the sides in carefully with the sides/heels of you hands to stop it from getting too wide. (or if you find that is not working you can always use a sharp knife to trim it back to size) Keep rolling until the strip is quite thin. I like to pick the strip up after each roll to ensure it is not sticking to the bench and when necessary dust underneath again.



Pick the strip of fondant up and place it onto the non stick foam. Using the middle section of the frilling tool roll back and forth (like using a rolling pin) to make the strip even thinner, you will probably get it to double in length.


Then use the edge of the frilling tool rolling back and forth to frill one edge of the strip a little more.



Attach a short length of the fondant ruffle to the bottom corner of the cookie using a small amount of water brushed onto the fondant to adhere it. 


Continue to add more strips of ruffled fondant until you have reached to point where you want to switch to the next graduated colour.


After around 4 strips of the dark dusty pink you will be ready to switch to the next slightly lighter colour.


You can see in the picture above how I made some slight indents in the white fondant so I knew when to switch over to the next colour of fondant ruffles. I only did this on the first cookie and then I used that cookie as a guide for the remainder.

With this particular design I decided to stop at the waist. Continue adding the fondant ruffle strips until the whole skirt area is covered.




Cookie recipe used in this recipe was from Sweets on a Stick by Linda Vandermeer:



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Sunday, May 13, 2012

How to make a ruffled buttercream rainbow cake


Happy Mother's day to all the mothers out there today.

I've had a great day and I'll be finishing it off with a piece of this ruffley creamy cake tonight.

YUP creamy 'cause it's butter cream not fondant.

A while back I baked up a pretty pastel ruffle cake. It was kinda popular, but some of y'all were sad that it was fondant :(


So to make all those sad folk a bit happier I have made up some instructions on how you can make the same style ruffled cake with butter cream.



This one isn't a full rainbow. As it was for our mother's day celebrations it includes green and purple and I've popped a layer of pink in as well, just because it's my cake and I like pink.

Also the butter cream ruffles are never going to be as thin as the fondant ruffles, but the upside of the butter cream is that it takes around a quarter of the time.



and just so you know I'm using the term butter cream pretty loosely here. There is no butter or cream in the frosting I made up, I used a white vegetable shortening like crisco. I really like butter, REALLY LIKE it, so there has to be a good reason for me not to use it. Using the shortening results in a whiter frosting that is easier to color, it also stands up to the heat better than butter and it just plain stands up during piping better than a real butter frosting. If you prefer you can try a different type of frosting and depending on how firm it is it might work. It does work with Italian Meringue butter cream in cool weather.


Now I have to get back to the very important task of picking which Epiphanie camera bag I'll be getting as my late mother's day gift..........


Ruffled Butter Cream Rainbow Cake

Baked cake layers in pink, lilac and green *
sturdy cake board in the size of your cakes
White Frosting (recipe below)
various gel food colors (I used dusty pink, vintage blue and moss green)
off set spatula
#406 Wilton tip
3 disposable piping bags
a cake turntable or a cake stand

# the #406 Wilton piping tip is one of the large sizes that do not fit into regular couplers. It looks like a 104 petal tip but is twice the size.
* My cakes were made using the vanilla cake recipe from my book Sweets on a Stick, you can just use any cake mix you like or even packet mix colored with a little food gel, I also added some strawberry and lavender flavor to the cake mix before baking.





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The night before you decorate the cake color color 1 cup each of the frosting pink, lilac and green, if you like you can add some flavor during this step. I made the pink strawberry and the lilac lavender flavor.

Cut the brown crusty edges off the cake layers.



Place the green cake layer onto the cake board and place a good dollop of frosting on top. Use the offset spatula to spread evenly around the top of the cake and place the lilac layer of cake on top of the first green layer pressing down lightly.


 Repeat the process adding more frosting and then the final pink layer of cake.


Using as little frosting as possible give the cake a coating of the white frosting using the offset spatula and smoothing the top as much as possible. Pop the frosted cake into the fridge until the frosting is firm to touch.

** I was working on a cake turntable up to this step. So that I did not have a cake board in the finished cake I used a large cake lifter, inserted it between the bottom cake layer and the cake board and lifted the cake onto my serving cake stand. You don't need to do this step I'm just explaining as some people think it's weird when I don't have a board in the instructions and then not in the pictures.**

One the frosting is firm to touch frost the top with a thin layer of pink frosting. Smooth as much as possible using the bottom of the offset spatula. If you have a special tool for smoothing you can use that instead.

Cut off the end of a disposable piping bag and place the tip in the end. Fill the bag with about 1 cup of the pink frosting.

** You might like to get a feel for the bag and tip and do a few practice squeezes onto a clean plate or parchment paper to work out how you like the ruffles. I like to attach the bottom thicker edge of the tip to the surface and then pull sideways slowly moving my hand back and forth, parallel to the surface being frosted.**

Starting at the top of the cake frost a layer of pink ruffles. Hold the larger/bottom opening of the tip to the top edge of the cake and move around the cake slowly with small up and down movements.If you are right handed it will be easier to move around the cake anti-clockwise (reverse for left handed).


I held the piping bag with my right hand and the cake stand with my left hand spinning the cake and keeping the piping bag in the same general spot just moving up and down slightly. Doing it this way a row of piping took about 15 seconds. However if you do not have a stand or turntable you can do the ruffle in sections lifting and restarting as you turn your plate around.

Pipe another 2 or 3 ruffle layers around the whole cake trying to keep the ruffles as close to the one above as possible until you can see that you have covered the top cake layer. If you have only used a thin layer of white frosting to cover the cake layers you should be able to see when you reach the end of the pink cake.

I only had one tip so I had to remove it and wash in warm soapy water with a tip cleaner.


This here is where I was fixing up the mistake, but it kinda shows how to hold the piping tip to the cake. It's really hard to take a photo of yourself piping :)

Cut the end of another disposable piping bag, place the tip in the end and fill the bag with the lilac frosting and pipe 3 or 4 layers of ruffles around the cake until you reach the end of the lilac cake layer.

Repeat the process with the green frosting around the bottom green cake layer.

If during the piping process you make a mistake, you can simply remove the messy section with a clean small offset spatula or knife and recipe just the removed section, but this should be done before the next layer is piped underneath.



The cake is best served within a day. It can be stored in the fridge, just remove an hour or so before serving to allow to come to room temperature.

White Frosting

500g  icing sugar sifted (1 lb and 1 5/8oz powdered sugar)
350g white vegetable shortening * or crisco (around 2 cups) (12 3/8 oz)
1/4 cup warm water
1 tsp vanilla extract (I normally use real vanilla extract but I used clear vanilla flavor in this recipe)

In the bowl of a large stand mixer using the whisk attachment, mix the icing sugar and warm water until combined.

Add the vegetable shortening and whisk at high for around 10 to 15 minutes or until the mixture is very light and fluffy.

Add the vanilla extract and mix until combined.

You may add any color or flavor at this stage to achieve your desired frosting.

*In Australia white vegetable shortening can be found at cake decorating and kitchen stores like HERE
or you can buy Crisco in Australia at some good deli's, chocolate stores (the type that sell US candy sometimes sell Crisco) or here at US FOODS.


Linda Vandermeer is a blogger, baker, maker and author of the cookbook ' Sweets on a Stick': More than 150 kid friendly recipes for cakes, candies, cookies and pies on the go!. Published in the US the book is available at most online book stores:

Saturday, May 12, 2012

Pink Lilac and Green buttercream ruffle cake for Mothers Day


 Tomorrow is mothers day and I'm not sure if I will get enough time to get a post out so I'm sharing a picture of the pink, lilac and green ruffle cake I made for our mothers day celebration.

and YES it is buttercream this time for all of you that don't care for fondant.

The pink cake and frosting is strawberry and the lilac cake and frosting is flavored lavender and the green is.....umm well embarrassingly vanilla, but anything I had that would match the green color would have been really odd tasting with the strawberry and lavender :)

and I remembered to take pictures for a tutorial that I will type it up as soon as I get some time. It will include the recipe for the frosting and the piping tip and the colors I used....you know all that useful stuff. I'll let y'all know on my facebook page when I do it, otherwise check back here maybe next Sunday.


I just used the easy vanilla one bowl cake from my book sweets on a stick to make up the cake and added some flavor to the mix before baking.





Or here at fishpond (Aus/NZ)

Sweets on a Stick: More Than 150 Kid-Friendly Recipes for Cakes, Candies, Cookies, and Pies on the Go!