Showing posts with label Paw patrol. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Paw patrol. Show all posts

Monday, 15 October 2018

Peppa Pig and Paw Patrol Purple Sweet Potato and Pulut Hitam Sponge & Pudding Cake

When your little one has a variety of characters that she loves, and you would like to try a unique cake flavour, you get a cake that looks like this :)


Peppa Pig meets some representatives from the Paw Patrol squad on top of a black glutinous rice and purple sweet potato sponge and pudding cake!

I have shared the recipe for the black glutinous rice chiffon with purple sweet potato pudding in detail in another blog post. It is a more diabetic friendly cake without compromising flavours and aroma. I didn't use any white sugar in the black glutinous rice chiffon cake, but used coconut palm sugar (Gula melaka) instead. The pretty purple sweet potato pudding contains only a fraction of white sugar as compared to the reference recipe I adapted from. There isn't a need to use a lot of white sugar in the pudding as the coconut milk, fresh milk and sweet potato imparts some natural sweetness to the dessert. The harmonious mix of coconut milk, Gula melaka, pandan, black glutinous rice and purple sweet potato is really nice if you love all these.

What I would really like to share here is the recipe for the macaron shells. As all macaron bakers know, it is a pain to work with many colours within a single batch of batter, and even more so when the quantity of macarons required is so few. That makes it not economical to use Italian method although it is my preferred method for multiple colours of batter within a single batch. I prefer the Italian method when working with multiple colours as it is easier to adjust the colour of the batter without risking overfolding as much as French and Swiss methods because you add the colouring to the batter base before the meringue is added. If you split a single batch of macaron batter into many colours made from French or Swiss method, you have less folds to make before you risk overfolding, because the colouring is added to the batter after the meringue is folded in. The French method also has a less stable meringue than Italian or Swiss meringues as the egg whites are not cooked at all. This means you have to try to work really quickly with the French method if you want to make designs with multiple colours, or resort to using a lot of sugar in the meringue. You could choose to use the Swiss method to make the meringue more stable but you still have to be careful not to overfold the batter while adjusting the colours to the desired shade.

How do I overcome this dilemma? I decided to stick with the French method as it is the simplest logistically and suitable for small batches. But I tweaked the regular recipe to make the meringue stable for a longer time. The key ingredient I added here is cornflour. Much as cornflour helps the macaron shells to dry faster, be less prone to cracking during baking and slows down the breaking down of meringue, adding too much of it will make the batter very thick and the texture a lot more chewy. The slightly higher icing sugar to almond flour proportion used also helps with the stability. Care still needs to be exercised when colouring the batter to prevent overfolding.

Here is the French method recipe for making a more stable macaron batter. Feel free to halve the recipe for an even smaller batch.

Ingredients (makes about 24-28 macarons):
Dry ingredients
90g superfine almond meal
110g icing sugar
1/4 tsp cornflour
1/4 tsp salt (optional)

Meringue
80g egg whites
75g caster sugar
1 tsp cornflour
1/8 tsp cream of tartar

Gel food colouring as needed

Steps:
1. Sift all the powdered ingredients together. Set aside. Prepare baking tray with template and parchment paper. Set oven rack to lowest or second lowest position.

2. Make the meringue. In a small bowl mix cornflour together with caster sugar. Set aside. In a clean metal bowl, beat egg whites with cream of tartar until stiff peaks form, gradually adding caster sugar and cornflour mixture once the egg whites are foamy. Make sure the meringue is really stiff, like whipped cream consistency.

3. Make the batter. Scatter half of dry ingredients into meringue. Gently fold in with a spatula until just combined. Scatter the rest of the dry ingredients. Gently fold in until just combined. Divide the batter to to the number of desired colours. Carefully add as much gel colouring as is needed and gently fold in until the batter is homogeneous. If the batter consistency is still too thick at this point, continue folding until it is able to flow like slow-moving lava.

4. Transfer into piping bag and pipe away! Dry the shells before baking. You may find the details of the basics of making the batter, piping and baking in my Creative Baking: Macaron Basics and Creative Baking: Macarons books.

Just to share some photos of the process...

Freshly baked macaron shells. Checkout the awesome feet!

I made only 9 characters in total with a little leftover batter to spare. But it was tedious! Fine details were added in using edible marker and royal icing.

I filled the macarons with dark chocolate ganache and homemade salted caramel as requested.

I mounted the macarons on cake pop sticks so it is easier to display on top of the cake.

I have a few photos to share for the sponge and pudding cake too. Some people are hesitant to replace all the white sugar with coconut palm sugar in the meringue as they are afraid that the meringue will not whip as well. This is to prove that it can!

Egg whites beaten to firm peak with only coconut palm sugar added

Folding in the egg yolk batter and meringue. The black bits are black glutinous rice grains that I didn't process until superfine to provide some bite to the cake.

Nice and tall pulut hitam chiffon!

Layering the sponge and pudding layers. I love the natural colours!

I added on simple deco with white chiffon sheet cake


With love,
Phay Shing



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Thursday, 30 August 2018

Marshall and Chase Brown Sugar Cookies

This is one of those way overdue posts 😅. I made these Paw Patrol themed cookies for my friend along with the cake with macaron cake toppers some months ago.

Marshall and Chase Brown Sugar Cookies!

Brown sugar cookie and royal icing recipe can be found here. I have always used the same recipe as it is always well received. Brown sugar cookie base may not look as pretty as regular white sugar based ones but they taste so much better!

Just to share some pictures of the process...

I use homemade templates to make cookies of customized shapes.

Icing in progress!

Nearly there!

I tried adding shadows to make the image a little more 3D using edible marker and vodka. I perhaps overdid it a little for Chase...Oops!

Anyway, the little boy was thrilled to receive his favourite characters as yummy treats!

With love,
Phay Shing

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Monday, 5 March 2018

Paw Patrol Chocolate Cake with Vanilla Swiss Meringue Buttercream & Strawberries

My friend requested for a Paw Patrol themed cake along with some cookies. Here's the chocolate chiffon cake with vanilla Swiss meringue buttercream and fresh strawberries, topped with macaron cake toppers!


I didn't just make one set of Chase, Marshall, Rubble, Skye and Rocky. I made three!



Some of the piped shells!

I was experimenting with replacing some water with lemon juice for the Italian meringue since my experiment with raspberry juice worked. It's something I won't try again as it changed the nature of the sugar syrup and made the batter seem significantly more hygroscopic. It took a long time for the shells to dry 😂. I noticed that the sugar syrup seemed runnier than usual even though I boiled the syrup to 118℃. The acidity from the lemon juice prevents sugar crystals from forming in the syrup to the extent that it seems to change its viscosity. I experimented twice actually, with the first batch ending up in the bin. In the first round, I replaced half the water with lemon juice. The second time, I only replaced 5g (1tsp) of water with lemon juice and it was better but still caused problems.

And so...I won't recommend using lemon juice in making Italian meringue. So please refer to the recipe here. You may refer to my Creative Baking: Macarons book for a systematic presentation of the basics and complex shaped macarons. You may refer to my video tutorials for macaron basics and piping of complex shapes on the blog too.

Freshly baked shells!

Decorating the shells also took quite a bit of patience and perseverance to see it to the end!

I used royal icing and edible black marker to add in the details.

I filled the macarons with filling that can allow for storage at cool room temperature for a week instead of fridge storage. This is because I used edible marker for quite a lot of the fine details and am afraid that condensation from refrigeration will cause the ink to smudge.

I filled the cake toppers with a mixture of dark chocolate, vegetable shortening, salt and vanilla bean paste 

I filled the loose pieces with homemade salted caramel in the middle and a ring of white chocolate or dark chocolate on the outside.

I used the same recipe for the chocolate chiffon cake as here to make two 9.5" cakes, except that I used the cooked dough method over here to bring out the chocolatey goodness from cocoa powder.

Freshly baked chocolate cakes!

Filling the middle with vanilla Swiss meringue buttercream and fresh strawberries.

I baked some green and blue thin sheets of chiffon cake to decorate the cake.


If you ever make macaron cake toppers for a fairly naked chiffon cake, remember to pack the macarons and cake separately as the moisture from the cake will cause the macarons to turn soggy.

Thank God that the birthday boy was really happy with his birthday cake :)

With love,
Phay Shing

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Saturday, 29 April 2017

Paw Patrol 'Chase' Chiffon Cake


This is my humble attempt at a Paw Patrol 'Chase' Chiffon Cake for a dear mummy friend some time back! Thank God it was well-received and everyone said it looked like stuffed toy! For those who are not familiar, 'Chase' is the name of a police dog in the cartoon Paw Patrol. Very cute cartoon with pups sliding down a long slide round the tower each time there's a rescue mission.

For the base cake, I used the same recipe as my previous Chocolate-Orange Giraffe Chiffon Cake, except that I piped the orange batter on one side only to form the face. For the top cake, I used the same recipe as my previous Minions chiffon cake, with blue forming 2/3 and yellow 1/3 instead.

The ears were cut from excess chocolate batter baked as sheet cake - make 2 cuts using the same circle cutter. The nose was cut from a round cake pop baked in 5-cm cake pop mold (slice off 3 sides). Other details eg eyes were also cut from sheet cakes; you can also pipe them on using melted chocolate. I used melted marshmallows as glue (pop a few marshmallows with a sprinkle of water and microwave for 30 sec). I also used a Paw patrol badge cookie cutter from JB cookie cutters.

With lots of love,
Susanne


Some exciting news, Chinese version (繁体) of my Deco Chiffon Cakes is coming! It will be available in HK, Taiwan and Macau from May 2017!


This is taken from a page of the book, some of you may encounter problems in patterning chiffon cake batter or folding multiple colours. Deco Chiffon Cakes or 造型雪纺蛋糕 has a 6-page extended troubleshooting guide specially addressing these issues:


Links to the English versions:

 


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Monday, 16 January 2017

Everest and Skye Brown Sugar Cookies

This is the second installment of the Paw Patrol themed party bake. Everest and Skye Brown sugar cookies!


Have a peek at the first instalment over here, with macaron versions of Ryder, Marshall, Rubble and Chase.

Just like the macarons, this brown sugar cookie bake is not for the impatient and faint-hearted. It took me a day to make the templates, a day to make the dough, a day to bake the cookies, a day to outline with edible marker, two and a half days of intensive icing and half an hour to pack them individually. Some of the days involve less intensive work of an hour or so while others involve non-stop hard work from morning till evening.

You may find the brown sugar cookie and royal icing recipe from this post and how to make and use your own templates from this post. You may ask why go through so much insane hard work for something that can be eaten in a few bites? These cookies have gotten rave reviews from every single recipient that I baked for in terms of taste as well as looks since I started baking them for sale a few years ago. It's my passion to deliver bakes that taste and look awesome. And this hasn't changed over the years :).

Just to share some photos of the process...

Cutting out the dough using homemade template as a guide

Tracing outlines using edible marker

Day 1 of icing! I piped a thick layer of icing where the snout is supposed to be to create a slightly 3D pop-up effect.

Day 2 of icing! Almost there! 

Day 3 of decorating! Finally done! This last day mainly involves adding subtle shadows using back gel dissolved in vodka and brushed on with a small brush.

There's always a great sense of satisfaction and relief when I am finally done :p.

With love,
Phay Shing


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Friday, 6 January 2017

Paw Patrol Assorted Macarons

My friend wanted to throw a Paw Patrol themed birthday party for her daughter so she requested for brown sugar cookies and macarons from me. Here's the macaron version of some of the characters!


The details and design are rather intricate so newbies will find it challenging or a great test of patience to make a set of these. For the majority of you viewing this post, I suppose it will be for your viewing pleasure only because few people are insane enough to attempt this :p

I used the reduced-sugar macaron shell recipe. Both regular and reduced sugar recipes can be found here. You may refer to my Creative Baking: Macarons book for a systematic presentation of the basics and complex shaped macarons. You may refer to my video tutorials for macaron basics and piping of complex shapes on the blog too.

Just to share some photos of the process...

Piping out Marshall

Piping out Ryder

Piping out Chase

Piping out Rubble. Please excuse the way I used the tray. I was trying to squeeze as many shells into a single round of bake so I broke up the portion for Rubble

Freshly baked shells!

Decorating the shells with edible marker and royal icing...


It took me one and a half days of intensive work to decorate the shells!

I filled the shells with two flavours as requested. Lychee swiss meringue buttercream and dark chocolate ganache with lemon curd.



Remember to store the macarons in airtight container in the fridge. Let them sit at room temperature for about 10 minutes before eating.

With love,
Phay Shing

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Sunday, 4 January 2015

PAW Patrol Chiffon Cake


This is another PAW Patrol Chiffon Cake for my lovely friend's son Cayden who likes PAW Patrol! The cartoon seems to be very popular among boys his age! My son likes it too :).

This is similar in concept and design as my previous Paw Patrol Orange Chiffon Cake except that this was a 9-inch and vanilla-flavored as I wanted to try a more cream colour scheme to get greater contrast. I also took the chance to try out the PAW logo. It is also a pinata cake with hidden marshmallows under the PAW crest!


There are dog bones running all over the sides of the cake. These were cut out from vanilla chiffon cake baked in layer trays using a bone cutter and attached on using melted marshmallows.


Happy belated birthday to Cayden!! How time flies!

With lots of love,
Susanne


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Wednesday, 15 October 2014

Paw Patrol Orange Chiffon Cake


This is a Paw Patrol chiffon cake made especially for Chace who loves Paw Patrol! :) Because of him, my kids also started watching the cute series. My favorite scene is when the pups glide down the slide into their vehicles LOL! This cake is inspired by the Paw patrol crest on the tower, and to make it more special, I put his name on the bone ;).

This is a fun cake with paws and bones running all over the cake! I made a total for 4 vanilla chiffon layer cakes (red, grey, blue and white) to cut them out. And to make it even more fun, I even hid a few bones inside the chiffon cake (just some cake trivia) :p.


The base was orange chiffon cake adapted from sakura orange chiffon cake. This is an updated recipe in which I increased the orange juice and modified the baking temperature to further reduce to 140°C to reduce browning, which was important here as I needed a light orange cake as base for the blue paws.

Orange chiffon cake (17 cm chiffon tin)
3 egg yolks
20g sugar
39g vegetable oil
48ml orange juice (freshly squeezed)
60g cake flour
Orange emulco (few drops, will add to the flavour)
Orange zest (from 2 oranges)

4 egg whites
45g sugar
1/4 tsp cream of tartar

1. Preheat oven to 160°C. I use steam baking with a thin layer of water in a pan under the lowest rack (optional but helps to control oven temperature).
2. Beat egg yolks with sugar with whisk till pale and light before stirring in oil and orange juice.
3. Next add in sieved flour, orange zest and a few drops of orange emulco and whisk till no trace of flour is found.
4. Meringue: Beat the egg whites with ¼ tsp cream of tartar till firm peaks or close to stiff peaks, mixing in caster sugar in 2 additions.
5. Fold in the meringue gently into the batter 1/3 at a time.
6. Gently tap the tin on table 3x to remove air bubbles
7. Bake the cake for 15 min at 160°C then 30 min at 140°C, or until skewer comes out clean.
8. Invert immediately once out of the oven to cool
9. Unmould by hand (video tutorial) after the cake is cool.

Here's the top view of the Paw Patrol Chiffon Cake!


Happy blessed birthday to Chace!

With lots of love,
Susanne





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