Read The Contemporary Buttercream Bible Online
Authors: Christina Ong Valeri Valeriano
Green)
• 7 small plastic cups, 200ml (7fl oz) or less
• Paper plate or thick cake board, about 15–20cm
(6–8in) diameter)
• Tissue paper
• Cocktail sticks (toothpicks)
• Matching ribbons
• Sticky tape
• Scissors
• Artificial foliage, as accents
• Florist’s card holder (optional)
Use 200–300g (7–101⁄2oz) of plain buttercream to
coat the cupcakes in a thin layer. Colour 100–150g
(31⁄ –51
2
⁄ oz) buttercream pink, 150–200g (51
2
⁄2–7oz)
green, 100–200g (31⁄2–7oz) light purple, and
200–250g (7–9oz) light green. Pipe hydrangeas
(see Camellia and Hydrangea) in pale pink, and
light green buttercream, roses (see Rose and Rose
Bud) in pale purple and leaves (see Sunflower and
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Leaves) in green. Assemble the bouquet following
the Cup Method tutorial. Decorate with tissue paper
and artificial foliage, then finish with a ribbon
around the base.
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Cuppie Cake
How does the idea of a number of cupcakes being
brought together to form one larger cake of your
desired shape and size sound to you? Fabulous and
original, isn’t it? We call it a ‘Cuppie Cake’! The
design possibilities for this kind of cake are
limitless, so have fun with it. A Cuppie Cake will
never fail to raise a smile.
1 Arrange your cupcakes according to your desired
shape. Make sure that they are really close together
on the cake board. When you are happy with the
layout, pipe a small blob of frosting on the bottom
of each cake to ‘glue’ it to the cake board (A).
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A
2 Pipe an even layer of buttercream on the surface
of the cake and cover as a whole. Some buttercream
might fall through the gaps. This is normal, and
there’s no need to try to fill the gaps with
buttercream (B).
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B
3 Level the buttercream using a palette knife and
remove the excess (C). After this, you may decorate
your Cuppie Cake with whatever design you wish
(D).
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C
D
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4 You can add some accents by inserting some
ribbons or artificial or piped leaves.
Tip
What is great about a Cuppie Cake is that you
don’t need to do any cutting of slices. With a
Cuppie Cake everyone can just take a piece of
cake, or shall we say cupcake, and there’s no
need to serve them on plates so there’s no
washing up either!
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To create this cake…
• Covered cake board
• 7 cupcakes
• 550–950g (1lb 4oz–2lb 2oz) buttercream
• Paste colours: pink (Sugarflair Pink), dark pink
(Sugarflair Claret), purple (Sugarflair Grape Violet), black (Sugarflair Black), yellow (Sugarflair Autumn
Leaf), light green (Sugarflair Gooseberry) and dark
green (Sugarflair Spruce Green)
• Palette knife
• Piping bags
• Scissors
• Non-toxic plants as accents (optional)
Arrange and then cover the cupcakes using
200–250g (7–9oz) of plain buttercream, following
the tutorial. Colour 50–100g (13⁄ –31
4
⁄2oz) of
buttercream in each of the following colours: pink,
dark pink, purple, black, yellow, light green and
dark green. Fill a piping bag with each colour and
snip off the end to create a small hole. Pipe the
floral design (see Scrolls, Lines and Zigzags in
Piping Textures and Patterns).
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Palette Knife
Techniques
Using a palette knife to produce a textured surface
is a stress-free technique that allows you to finish
covering a cake in no time, but that is by no means
the only thing you can do with a humble palette
knife. Try marbling, blending and painting – you
can use the knife as if you were creating an oil
painting, and the results can be stunning. Master a
few ‘brush’ strokes and away you go!
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Palette Knife Brush Strokes
With just your palette knife you can achieve very
different results by applying different strokes.
There’s no need to stress with sharp edges, just go
with the flow and channel your inner artist. Here
are the main strokes that you can use.
Vertical strokes
To achieve clean strokes, it is best to run the palette knife from the bottom of the cake upwards and not
back and forth from side to side.
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Horizontal/wavy strokes
Use the same basic principle as the vertical strokes, but this time, of course, move the knife
horizontally. You can slightly angle your palette
knife, with its tip touching the surface of the cake, then continuously turn your cake while it is on a
cake turntable.
Round nozzle with palette knife
Using a simple round nozzle on a piping bag, pipe a
row or column of blobs right next to each other then
using the rounded tip of your palette knife, gently
press down and pull towards the desired direction.
Do this one row or column at a time. You can
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