Showing posts with label Red Wedding Cakes Pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Red Wedding Cakes Pictures. Show all posts

Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures


Red Wedding Cakes Pictures
Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures



** These Red Wedding Cakes Pictures may be useful for you to have a good shape of your own red wedding cakes.
**The History Of Red Velvet Cakes
The history of red velvet cake recipes remains unknown. But, this unusual cake has long been a favorite in the South American. Some food historians think it might have originated as a devil's food cake. (wow ....)
This food cakes became very popular in the early 1900s, and it's said that a chemical reaction between the old-style baking sodas and processed coca powders sometimes gave the cake batter a distinctively reddish tinge. And It's believed that some cooks enhanced and encouraged this phenomenon by adding amount of red coloring.
A famous urban legend links the red velvet cake's origin to New York's famous Waldorf-Astoria Hotel, but it can not be proofed, and the hotel persistently denies the alleged connection.
Strangely, I could not find red velvet cake recipes in any of Grandma's old recipe books. They were simply nonexistent. However, I did not find an old recipe for Philadelphia red cake which bears a striking similarity to red velvet cake.
I also found some old-fashioned devil's food cake recipes. Who knows, these vintage cakes might be the forerunners of today's red velvet cakes. You will enjoy trying these classic cakes for yourself. Because they are so delicious!

Wedding Cakes Pictures


Wedding Cakes Pictures
Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures

Wedding Cakes Pictures



These wedding cakes pictures may useful for you to make a good cake.

About Cake decorating
A finished cake is often enhanced by covering it with icing, or frosting, and toppings such as sprinkles, which are also known as "jimmies" in certain parts of the United States and "hundreds and thousands" in the United Kingdom. Frosting is usually made from powdered (icing) sugar, sometimes a fat of some sort, milk or cream, and often flavorings such as vanilla extract or cocoa powder. Some decorators use a rolled fondant icing. Commercial bakeries tend to use lard for the fat, and often whip the lard to introduce air bubbles. This makes the icing light and spreadable. Home bakers either use lard, butter, margarine or some combination thereof. Sprinkles are small firm pieces of sugar and oils that are colored with food coloring. In the late 20th century, new cake decorating products became available to the public. These include several specialized sprinkles and even methods to print pictures and transfer the image onto a cake.

Special tools are needed for more complex cake decorating, such as piping bags or syringes, and various piping tips. To use a piping bag or syringe, a piping tip is attached to the bag or syringe using a coupler. The bag or syringe is partially filled with icing which is sometimes colored. Using different piping tips and various techniques, a cake decorator can make many different designs. Basic decorating tips include open star, closed star, basketweave, round, drop flower, leaf, multi, petal, and specialty tips.
Chocolate layer cake with chocolate frosting and shaved chocolate topping

Royal icing, marzipan (or a less sweet version, known as almond paste), fondant icing (also known as sugarpaste) and buttercream are used as covering icings and to create decorations. Floral sugarcraft or wired sugar flowers are an important part of cake decoration. Cakes for special occasions, such as wedding cakes, are traditionally rich fruit cakes or occasionally Madeira cakes (also known as whisked or fatless sponge), that are covered with marzipan and either iced using royal icing or sugarpaste. They are finished with piped borders (made with royal icing) and adorned with a piped message, wired sugar flowers, hand-formed fondant flowers, marzipan fruit, piped flowers, or crystallized fruits or flowers such as grapes or violets.
History

Although clear examples of the difference between cake and bread are easy to find, the precise classification has always been elusive.[9] For example, banana bread may be properly considered either a quick bread or a cake.

In ancient Rome, basic bread dough was sometimes enriched with butter, eggs, and honey, which produced a sweet and cake-like baked good.[9] Latin poet Ovid refers to the birthday of him and his brother with party and cake in his first book of exile, Tristia.

Early cakes in England were also essentially bread: the most obvious differences between a "cake" and "bread" were the round, flat shape of the cakes, and the cooking method, which turned cakes over once while cooking, while bread was left upright throughout the baking process.

Saturday, September 25, 2010

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures


Red Wedding Cakes Pictures
Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures

Red Wedding Cakes Pictures



A Red velvet cake is a cake with a dark red, bright red or red-brown color. It is usually prepared as a layer cake somewhere between chocolate and vanilla in flavor, topped with a creamy white icing. Common ingredients are buttermilk, butter, flour, cocoa, and red food coloring or beetroot; although beetroot is traditionally used, many prefer food coloring since it is seen as more appealing. The amount of cocoa used varies in different recipes. A typical frosting is a butter roux (also known as a cooked flour frosting). Cream cheese or butter cream frostings are also used