JANUARY 2014
Always fun to do a hawaiian themed cake. Both tiers are cake. The biggest issue putting this one together was the heat. I couldn't get the fondant to stop feeling sticky. Even tried putting it into the bathroom being the coolest place in the house.
The first thing I did in preparation for this cake was to make the Travis figure. The request was to put him on the cake in the outfit he'd be wearing on the night. I had some suggestions and the client had some suggestions and I think the finished figure looked quite similar.
I was even kind enough to add in his muscles and abs :-) The finishing touch was a cocktail in his hand relaxing on a towel.
I've got the hang of stacking cakes much more now. This one was quite large (but not as big as the paris cake).
On the top tier I added some ground up biscuit with some cinnamon sugar dusted over the top to give the look of sand. I was really happy with how this turned out. Previously I've used brown sugar but that's only been on the cake board. I didn't think that would taste too nice on the cake so this was a much better solution.
Next step in assembly was to place Travis onto the cake next to his palm tree. I made the palm tree the same way as previously but making individual leaves on wires and sticking them into the stacked trunk also onto a thicker wire. Not loving this method but it is working.
I took the palm tree off until I was ready to deliver but really should have taken it separately as it did pull down on the cake a bit. You live and learn.
From there I added some 'waves' to cover the cake joins. I put some blue colouring down the sides of the piping bag so that the buttercream would have a streaked effect. It looked quite good as waves coming to shore.
There were quite a few finer details added to this cake to complete the look. I made the shells using gumpaste and a
Wilton Sealife Mold. The
starfish was a mold from Caroline's Sugar Art - I found this one better than the one on the Wilton mold. I brushed them with different coloured petal and lustre dust.
Previously I haven't had great success with silicone molds but I was told to spray them with cooking oil before hand - just a little - and they'll come out a lot easier. It worked a treat.
Before putting on the sealife I added more 'sand' all around the base of the cake.
Also added some turtles, made using gumpaste and turtle mold from Carolines Sugar Art and a family of fish.
I struggled deciding on the colour of the lettering. There were already quite a few colours on the cake and I didn't want it to look too out of place. Happy with the orange in the end.
Used 3 different lettering systems to get the result.