Happy Thanksgiving!
Happy Thanksgiving!
Large cakes and color are becoming a new theme! Last month I found the Wilton Performance Color System for baking and made a pumpkin cake for Halloween that was fun to make!
Now Thanksgiving has provided an opportunity to use the color chart again! Once again I went back to my old recipes and found a Turkey Cake recipe that I had made years ago. This cake, like the Pumpkin Cake, was the actual size of a roasted turkey.
I remembered that the last time I made it, I was disappointed with the final color of the turkey. It looked raw. Now that I had my color chart, I was hoping it would look more realistic this time. The recipe is from a back issue of Family Fun, which was my favorite magazine when my children were young.
You bake 2 vanilla cakes in round bowls. They take longer than when they are baked in 9 inch round pans.
Then bake 1 spice cake in a 9-by-5-inch loaf pan. Similarly it takes longer in the loaf pan than a round pan. I kept checking for doneness but I think they took about 40 minutes. The round bowls were closer to an hour. I just kept checking with a cake tester.
Once the cakes were finished I let them cool on a rack for 10 minutes and then popped them out to finish cooling.
This cake takes a lot of frosting. I used close to 4 cans of store bought buttercream frosting.
Before assembling the pieces I put the cake in the freezer for 15 minutes.
Basically you make a very large Whoopee Pie!
This is an important step- secure the “Whoopee Pie” with a dollop of frosting on the platter.
Trimming the legs out of the spice cake is tricky. Just keep trimming until it looks like a leg! Frosting hides a lot.
I used coffee stirrers (wooden ones) to attach the legs to the body (it is no longer a very large Whoopee Pie!)
It’s starting to look like a turkey. I also think it looks like a Harry Potter Snitch or Captain America’s mask.
Now to the color- I used “Sand” for the base layer of frosting.
Mixing 4 cans of frosting required my large mixer.
Once I frosted the cake with the base “Sand” color I added more brown and black to the remaining frosting until it turns a few shades darker. I added the darker color to the parts of the “turkey” that would darken as it cooks.
Adding the oranges and paper caps added a touch of authenticity!
It was fun to carve it like a turkey!
Happy Thanksgiving!
The entryway in our home has been an important space for me. I like the idea of a welcoming entrance to our home. Our entrance isn’t grand – like most of our home its dimensions have inherent problems when trying to do something with it! Mostly I try to keep it picked up and the closet doors shut.
But one year I was decorating for Thanksgiving and came upon a turkey and pilgrim my children had made in elementary school. They were packed away with Thanksgiving decorations, but I never knew what to do with them!
I decided to put them in a poster frame and hang them in the foyer. They looked surprisingly good there.
In fact, it looked so good that the space looked bare to me when I took them down.
That’s when I decided to hang a poster-sized picture, which I would change out periodically to fit the season.
My first choice was a picture I took on our daily walk. It was a peaceful winter scene.
As much as I enjoyed the poster, when the snow was gone, it was time to move on and store it away until next winter with the hats and gloves!