Baking a Cake?

in freewrite •  7 years ago 

@mariannewest's 5-minute freewrite prompts: Day 144
Prompt: frosting a cake

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Maxipel.freegreatpicture.com

Cakes are like the yummiest things ever, agree? Yes, everyone who is not watching his weight is aching for a piece.

But what really would a cake be without icing? Why, like a woman who's made no effort to look good! You know, no attractive clothes, no lovely hairdo, no fancy make up... Who's to know that that bird's got a wonderful personality or character at the first glance?

So, frosting is the marketing, baby; whether for the woman or for the cake - beautiful frosting with the perfect ingredients and the right color mix. The icing suggests and we taste.

I tell you that while lots of people throw out the icing on cake for health reasons (sugar, sugar, sugar), the same people will pick a frosted cake over a plain one without a single thought. Plainly, the icing encourages you to take a bite.

But it's actually a pity to see all that icing go to waste when the cake is being eaten. That's hours of fine art! It would be much more pitiful though to see this damage done earlier! So, when you are done frosting your delicately sumptuous cake, you'd better handle it with care and allow no smearing with heavy hands, or sniping off of corners by chubby little fingers.

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Confession time: I've baked a couple of homemade cakes in my life but have never tried frosting a cake. Yeah, all of my advice is actually for me, I know (sigh). I'm more of a eater.

But - I haven't talked about how to actually frost a cake, all that equipment and ingredients needed and their measure story; just plain advised you to give your cakes some frosting. So please google it darlings or ask a professional caterer/baker.

Phew!

Thanks to @mariannewest and the bubbling freewrite community for today's easy freewrite prompt. And kisses to you for reading! Can't wait to see what others have written.

Your girl,
@boladayl

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  ·  7 years ago (edited)

One of my peaceful joys when I got out of the semi, was to bake and decorate a cake for my log-book furlough. Icing can be easy or complicated. But as a beginner, perhaps you might get some icing sugar. About four rounded table spn of icing sugar, one rounded tea spn of drinking chocolate, one desert spn of butter, mix in with a wooden spoon against the side of the mixing bowl and when the powders are buttered, use a tea spn at a time of cold water. Perhaps about two. You might use milk if you wish. The mix should not be too stiff nor too wet. When the cake is cold, spoon the almost runny paste onto top of cake and spread all over top with back of spoon or butter knife. When butter icing is spread, put some hundreds and thousands in palm of hand, then tap the edge of hand holding sprinkles with forefinger of other hand so that sprinkles sprinkle. 😊
If worried about sugar put on as thin as, and sprinkle less 😉 Have fun!!
Resteemed

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

Now I can try this amazingly clear recipe out. It's a shame I saw your comment really late, glad you visited my blog!

  ·  7 years ago (edited)

No worries. A little icing never hurt, and kids, of all ages love it. If chocolate cake a drop or two of peppermint flavour, and if a sponge with currants perhaps a drop of orange or lemon to the icing for difference.
--The marzipan (march-pane) is an almond paste used on Christmas and Wedding cakes mostly. It is really nice, but Really rich too. It is usually rolled out and cut to wrap around outside first, and then a cap is rolled out and cut to fit the top. This encases the cake, usually a heavy fruit affair, and the marzipan is then decorated with coloured rosettes and curlicues, writing or symbols as per the celebrations. But for your occasional, the basic cake mix, with occasionally a handful of sultanas in a butter cake or vanilla cake, and maybe a handful of currants.
--To play, 1 cup of SRF(wholemeal); 1 cup wheatgerm (Raw, as in, Unprocessed), 1 cup of desicated coconut, small half cup of raw sugar, 2/3rd cup of sultanas (or mix of diced apricot and diced dates); 1 cup of tea (coffee, chocolate, milo, as liked). Mix the flour and wheatgerm and sugar, then the coconut and fruit, then the tea. This size will cook at 180C for between 16 and 20 mins (depending on oven, and how dry you like it). It will be perhaps 1 and qtr inches in a seven to eight inch circle tin. If wheatgerm is got unprocessed from the mill, this will gradually go hard (stale, without the coconut going soapy) and five can be made at once and, taken on a long journey replace greasy-spoon stops on highway, and only need a drink taken halfhr before or after to be very sustaining. {hippie, 'Elfen' waybread}. Note; nil egg or butter, or milk. 😇