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Lenten pull-apart cupcake-cake shaped in a cross |
Since I was unavailable to bake the cake over the weekend, I needed to do it during the week. In light of this, I took a shortcut with making the cake, and used a veganized recipe of the Duncan Hines Butter Cake and Devil's Food cake. Surprisingly, Duncan Hines cake mixes are vegan!
Finally, it needed a good icing. I didn't want it to be a pure shortening 'butter'cream icing as it often sticks to the top of your mouth. On the same token, since I am decorating the cake, I needed an icing firm enough to be using as decorator's frosting.
I found a very tasty recipe online from Isa Chandra's Cupcakes Take Over the World. I didn't follow it exactly though. You can find the original recipe here. My adaptations were to skip the soy milk (I don't really like the taste - and I wanted a firmer icing). I used the amount of confectioners sugar listed in the recipe and added small amounts of water until it was the desired consistency.
Once I completed the first batch of icing (I needed approximately 4 batches for 120 cupcakes total), I added enough water to allow it to be easily piped for cupcakes. If I had my cupcake piping tips available (or a piping bag for that matter), I would have used them. Since they were all at another location, I ended up using common things found in every kitchen - a gallon size bag, a cup, and scissors!
I put the corner of the sandwich size Ziploc bag in a tall cup, spooned in the icing, closed the bag while removing the air, and snipped the corner of the bag. I then used it to create a nice little swirl on top of the cupcakes (I found a tutorial on YouTube for anyone who wants to actually see it done - though you can just use the gallon size bag instead of the piping tools they show). I piped the swirls on top of all the cupcakes that were not included in the pull-apart cupcake-cake. We arranged these cupcakes around the cross.
For the cross pull-apart cake, I wanted to create the shape of the Greek Orthodox cross. I ended up frosting (quickly) and using 40 whole cupcakes and about 4 cupcakes with about 1/4 cut off one side. I created the template shown in the image for anyone who wants the break-out of how the cupcakes are placed. Each end of the cross has a cupcake with 1/4 piece cut off the end.
When I started laying out the cross I noticed that it was way too big for any of my normal cake boards. I got creative and used a flattened cardboard box covered with aluminum foil. Not the sturdiest, but it worked.
Once the frosted cupcakes were placed in the shape of the cross, I filled in the holes in the cupcakes with frosting from another batch of buttercream. I made sure it was firm enough to hold, but thin enough that I could spread it. I added some more icing and spread it as flat as I could. I used a Wilton cake smoothing tool, but it isn't required.
Once you have a flat iced cross, you get to be creative :) I recommend at least piping around the edge - makes it look a lot neater. If you don't have piping tools, you could use the same technique I described with the cupcakes above only making little balls of piped icing. Otherwise, any border technique would work well. I used fondant for the sash and piped the message with buttercream icing.
I hope you enjoyed this tutorial! It's my first cake tutorial, so if you have questions, please ask! I hope that this can help others when a cake is needed for church!
Once I completed the first batch of icing (I needed approximately 4 batches for 120 cupcakes total), I added enough water to allow it to be easily piped for cupcakes. If I had my cupcake piping tips available (or a piping bag for that matter), I would have used them. Since they were all at another location, I ended up using common things found in every kitchen - a gallon size bag, a cup, and scissors!
I put the corner of the sandwich size Ziploc bag in a tall cup, spooned in the icing, closed the bag while removing the air, and snipped the corner of the bag. I then used it to create a nice little swirl on top of the cupcakes (I found a tutorial on YouTube for anyone who wants to actually see it done - though you can just use the gallon size bag instead of the piping tools they show). I piped the swirls on top of all the cupcakes that were not included in the pull-apart cupcake-cake. We arranged these cupcakes around the cross.
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Template for Cross Cupcake-Cake cupcake placement |
When I started laying out the cross I noticed that it was way too big for any of my normal cake boards. I got creative and used a flattened cardboard box covered with aluminum foil. Not the sturdiest, but it worked.
Once the frosted cupcakes were placed in the shape of the cross, I filled in the holes in the cupcakes with frosting from another batch of buttercream. I made sure it was firm enough to hold, but thin enough that I could spread it. I added some more icing and spread it as flat as I could. I used a Wilton cake smoothing tool, but it isn't required.
Once you have a flat iced cross, you get to be creative :) I recommend at least piping around the edge - makes it look a lot neater. If you don't have piping tools, you could use the same technique I described with the cupcakes above only making little balls of piped icing. Otherwise, any border technique would work well. I used fondant for the sash and piped the message with buttercream icing.
I hope you enjoyed this tutorial! It's my first cake tutorial, so if you have questions, please ask! I hope that this can help others when a cake is needed for church!
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