We’re going to take a detour today from reflections on family and children and life in general. Because I have some wisdom to share on the subject of cakes, cake decorating and icing. This has been a source of frustration to me for so many years that when the answers finally began to be revealed this week, I knew I had to share. So if you’re not interested in cakes and cake decorating, come back tomorrow. 🙂 But judging from the response the last time I brought up the subject, it’s a matter of interest to you folks!
#1. The Recipe. You know—the icing that makes you want to dive into the bowl and eat till you get sick to your stomach? That one. I don’t know who came up with it originally, but I found it from someone named Bunnywoman:
BUTTERCREAM ICING
From: Bunnywoman1 cup Crisco shortening
1 cup butter (can use salted or unsalted)- softened
1/3 cup luke warm water
1 tsp popcorn salt
1 tsp clear vanilla
1 tsp almond extract
1 tsp butter extract
2 lb. bag of powder sugar**** I recommend using a stand-up mixer (Kitchen Aid) for this.****
Cream together the butter and Crisco until nice and fluffy. (I use speed 6 for this on my KA.)
Measure out the luke warm water in a standard measuring cup and dissolve the popcorn salt in this water. I then add the flavorings to the cup. Stir it up well with a spoon.
Turn your mixer speed to the lowest possible setting and add in the powdered sugar slowly. Alternate back and forth with the water mixture. Keep the mixer on low until all liquid and powdered sugar are combined. Once combined then turn the mixer up a notch and mix well. Approximately 2-3 minutes.
Heavy cream or milk can be substituted for the water too. This will make for a smoother, creamier frosting. Refrigerate your cake if you use these. You can mix and match flavorings in my recipe. I have done all sorts of different combinations. I love Lorann Flavorings in this too!!!!! They have over 30+ different flavors!!!!!
This will make what I call between thin to medium consistency icing. I can frost my cakes just fine with this and do simple borders as well.
To make roses: If I have to make a ton of roses (and only roses) I use the same recipe above, BUT I half everything. Meaning, ½ cup of shortening, ½ cup butter etc. etc. etc. Instead of 1/3 cup water……. I add ¼ cup water. This will give you a stiffer icing, but not so stiff it will make your hand feel like it is gonna fall off!!!!
Icing recipes are all the same in essentials. What makes this one different? THE SALT. I should have thought of this myself. I learned from my mother that a bit of salt adds zest to something sweet, and without it, every sweet thing tastes flat.
Now, women get tremendously bent out of shape over icing. If you want perfectly white icing, this isn’t the recipe. Butter has a bit of color. Unsalted butter is paler than salted, so you can try that and see if it’s white enough for you. For my part, I’m not into white cakes, so I don’t even bother with clear vanilla. Regular vanilla works fine.
#2. For my Wilton class last week, I went ahead and made the Wilton recipe, which tastes eh-okay, but not worth diving into the bowl. To me, it’s not worth the carbs. (After ten years of PCO and borderline gestational diabetes, I have a new philosophy on sweets: If I’m going to blow the carbs, it had better be worth it!) However, I will say that the Wilton recipe does a spectacular job for decorating. It stands up nicely and holds the shapes beautifully.
3. This weekend, I made a cake for a dinner at my cousins’ house (for those who read Monday’s gratitude list, they’re the ones with the treehouse and the zipline). And I decided to try using Bunnywoman’s recipe for decorating as well as frosting. I had to add quite a bit of powdered sugar, and it didn’t hold the shape quite as well as the Wilton recipe, but for my purposes it did just fine:
#3. Cake decoraters also get persnickety about food coloring. They suggest using the concentrated colors that come in little screw-top cans. You probably have to use those to get specialty colors and deep colors, but if you’re not in those two situations, the basic food coloring drops work just fine. You just have to back off on your water/milk to leave room for the extra liquid. And they don’t taste bad (refer to #2)!
#4. Speaking of the amount of liquid…Consistency is the key to the whole works. Icing is the right consistency for making roses, shells etc. when you can tap it with your finger and a bit sticks to your skin. This isn’t perfect, but it gets close. If the shapes aren’t holding, add a bit more sugar; if it’s killing your hand, or the strings of icing break in the decorating process, add a bit of corn syrup. (Like a couple of drops.)
#5. To frost the cake, it has to be a little thinner. One of my big problems through the years has been getting frosting on cakes without pulling crumbs off. My friends Mary and Amy shared their wisdom, and I put it together and came up with this: When the cake comes out, leave it in the pans for ten minutes. EXACTLY ten minutes. After ten minutes, turn the layers out onto plastic wrap or tin foil and wrap them up tight, then stick them in the freezer. Once they’re good and frozen, pull them out and frost them. It doesn’t eliminate crumbs, but it does help. And wrapping during cooling also helps keep the cake moist.
Well, I’m getting close to novella length on this rambling, unpolished opus, so I’ll finish with a simple encouragement: the hard part of cake decorating is everything I’ve outlined here. I’ve been astonished at how easy the decorating part really is. Grab a Wilton class book off the shelf at Hobby Lobby or Michael’s and try it at home. The class is great, but you can pick up a lot of the basics on your own.
Go forth and enjoy!


Great advice! I’ve always wanted to learn how to decorate cakes. I’ve been meaning for years to take a cake decorating class at the local hobby store but just haven’t because of timing/location issues. Perhaps this is the year I’ll finally try! Have you tried using fondant? I gave up trying to do buttercream frosting decorating but I found I could still make a nicely decorated cake using marshmallow fondant.
Here’s something I haven’t quite figured out…who will help eat all the cakes while I’m learning how to decorate them? I certainly don’t need those extra calories! LOL!
Hehehe! I haven’t tried fondant. Some of my cake decorating friends warned me that fondant is actually not very good to eat, so I haven’t barked up that tree. I’m sure I will eventually. (Maybe there’s an elusive yummy fondant recipe out there too?)
I am looking for places to offer to bring cakes. That’s how I deal with it! 🙂
Many,many years ago I took a Wilton class. We were given frosting to take home to practice. After a day of teaching school, I’d sit down at the kitchen table and decorate the table with roses, various piping etc. Not only was I getting better at decorating — it was very relaxing. I just scooped the frosting back in the container and saved it for the next time. btw this was bc [before children]!! Made lots of cakes for our three over the years and now enjoy “Ace of Cakes” !!!
One of our local chefs (also a member of our parish, btw) made Ace of Cakes. We don’t have cable, so I’ve never watched. I mean, we have cable, but not to speak of…we settle for basic basic. The cable guys think we’re nuts b/c we only get networks and about 7 other channels. But I digress. 🙂
I took a Wilton class a few years ago and enjoyed it, but also wasn’t impressed with the flavor of the icing. One of my favorite icings right now is cream cheese. It doesn’t work as well for decorating but it’s worth the calories. I also freeze cakes to help with the frosting part of it. Great post and good tips!
the cake looks very pretty my mom worked at cake decorating for many years
I am an amature decorator, but have been getting more and more adventurous. If you put a thin coating of buttercream on your cake when it is cool, let it set for about 30 min., then the crumbs are locked in and you can add the rest of your frosting. I have worked with fondant and can honestly say I hate it. Doesn’t taste good and if conditions aren’t just right, it will slide right off your cake(especially in humid, hot weather). It is not worth the “smooth” effect you get. With practice, a buttercream cake can look smooth enough and tastes so much better.
I’ve heard that @ fondant. Glad to hear it from another source!
Do you have Bunnywoman’s chocolate buttercream recipe? cant seem to find it online—thanks
It’s on this thread, third msg. down: http://www.wilton.com/forums/messageview.cfm?catid=7&threadid=132579
Ack! Sorry, I was reading too quickly. It looks like on THIS forum thread, Bunnywoman weighs in on adding chocolate. http://www.wilton.com/forums/messageview.cfm?catid=7&threadid=135438