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Published: 2013-05-23 14:38:42 +0000 UTC; Views: 52956; Favourites: 4274; Downloads: 297
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Backstory: A little while ago, my sister approached me with an idea. She's doing an education degree, and her and her friends had to give a series of lessons on the geological sciences to a class of primary school kids. One of their lessons involved teaching the kids about the structure of the Earth. One of her friends came up with the idea of presenting a model of the Earth made out of cake. So my sister asked me if I could make a spherical cake with all the layers of the Earth inside it.I told her I couldn't do it. "How do you get a sphere inside a sphere inside a sphere?" I recall saying. "Oh yeah," she replied, realising what it would involve.
I spent the rest of the afternoon thinking about it. I don't admit defeat. Ever. But especially not with cake. Nothing is impossible is pretty much my baking motto, so to say this cake was impossible left me feeling weird. There had to be a way. A way that didn't involve carving or crumbing the cake. I kept mulling it over until I had a breakthrough.
I actually ended up coming up with a couple ideas, but I couldn't do my Plan A due to equipment restrictions. So I went with Plan B: baking a cake inside a cake inside a cake.
Tech details: The inner core is vanilla buttercake, the outer core is lemon Madeira sponge, the mantle is orange Madeira sponge. The 'crust' of the Earth is made from buttercream, then it's all covered with marshmallow fondant. I marbled a little white fondant through the blue to make it look like clouds. I hand cut the continents then painted them using food colouring and a dry brush technique. The continents took me about 6 hours straight and I'd be lying if I said I didn't end up hating it. What started as a determination for pin-point accuracy became 'let's get this shiz done'. The painting took probably 3/4 of that time. It took 5eva. But I'm glad I did it because I think it looks a lot better then plain green fondant would have.
More pics at my blog: [link]
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Comments: 894
KyotoKid In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:40:16 +0000 UTC]
...mmmm, planetary noms.
mes complΓ©ments au boulanger
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Code-pi In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:26:50 +0000 UTC]
This is an absolutely amazing cake! You're very talented!
Out of curiosity, how much would this cost? I run a science club at a small community college and I think this would be wonderful to serve on rush week.
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cakecrumbs In reply to Code-pi [2013-05-28 12:11:53 +0000 UTC]
It would depend on the serving size and the level of detail requested.
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Code-pi In reply to cakecrumbs [2013-05-28 17:55:32 +0000 UTC]
Ahh, okay. Awesome.
But I am curious, if you were to make another of this cake -- same serving size and attention to detail -- how much would it be?
I'm looking at your commission information now, and I hope to contact you in the future.
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cakecrumbs In reply to Code-pi [2013-05-29 04:58:27 +0000 UTC]
I'd have to calculate how much it would cost me to make first to sure I wasn't under-charging (there's 6 x quantities of cake batter in this) -- but I'd say at least $150 with flat green continents, and $200 with the painted continents.
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Code-pi In reply to cakecrumbs [2013-05-29 20:22:20 +0000 UTC]
Hmm... okay, good to know. Thanks a bunch! I have to check our budget but these are really cool. I may send you a note in a month or so for more information. Thank you!
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Book-wormeater In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:25:45 +0000 UTC]
Wish we studied this Earth
There's the crust, then the mantle, then the creamy chocolate cake nougat XD
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ONLYoneCANNOLI In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:25:06 +0000 UTC]
I can really sink my teeth into this concept!
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ONLYoneCANNOLI In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:24:28 +0000 UTC]
as a geologist, I can really take a bite out of this one.
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Embucky In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:23:09 +0000 UTC]
Both educational and delicious! This is really awesome work. REALLY awesome!
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Kynkii In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:19:07 +0000 UTC]
Dang. Above and beyond. You should get hero(ine) points for that one.
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Shoye In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:13:04 +0000 UTC]
WOAH, this looks.. just amazing! Well deserved DD, you're truly an artist <3!
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Maple-Girl In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:11:43 +0000 UTC]
It is amazing. You are amazing! You should be nominated for a Cake Wrecks Sunday Sweet edition where they show beautifully made well done cakes to celebrate amazing cake artists!
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cakecrumbs In reply to Maple-Girl [2013-05-28 12:10:37 +0000 UTC]
Aw, thanks so much. β₯ I am lucky enough to have been featured on Sunday Sweets twice now. :]
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Maple-Girl In reply to cakecrumbs [2013-05-28 20:42:00 +0000 UTC]
That is epic. You're probably as good as the Cake Boss guy. I love your designs. Especially video game themed ones.
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cakecrumbs In reply to Maple-Girl [2013-05-29 04:46:46 +0000 UTC]
That's very sweet of you. β₯
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kremlin-dawn In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 01:08:15 +0000 UTC]
Not gonna lie, this is one of the coolest cakes I've ever seen. And I've seen a lot of cool cakes.
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Stet709 In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 00:57:57 +0000 UTC]
i am truly amazed by this wonderful creation! It looks delicious! and educational too
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sooperevee In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 00:24:59 +0000 UTC]
o3o That'd be perfect for a solarsystem project... xD
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sooperevee In reply to cakecrumbs [2013-05-28 19:39:20 +0000 UTC]
Yaaah B| OH you should try that next, a solar system cake! 8D
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veddabredda In reply to ??? [2013-05-24 00:24:59 +0000 UTC]
Wow, this looks SO GOOD. Do you think you could explain a bit better to me how you did the layers? I'm seriously considering stealing this idea... (with props to you, obviously).
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cakecrumbs In reply to veddabredda [2013-05-28 11:58:46 +0000 UTC]
I baked hemisphere cakes inside one another. Same way you make a polkadot cake.
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burkeonthesly In reply to veddabredda [2013-05-24 00:29:21 +0000 UTC]
Not the OP, but I'm going to guess that they got an appropriately-shaped pan, poured in the orange layer batter, then poured subsequent layers in (slowly) at the center of the first. They'd have pushed down where they landed, forcing previous layers out and to the side. Just guessing, though.
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veddabredda In reply to burkeonthesly [2013-05-24 00:35:32 +0000 UTC]
Yeah, it's just that the circles are so perfect that I have trouble believing the batter just behaved that way on its own!
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burkeonthesly In reply to veddabredda [2013-05-24 19:14:40 +0000 UTC]
It does test credulity. Hmm, okay, alternate method: pour the outer layer's batter, spray the outside of a metal bowl with non-stick spray, press it down into the batter to create an indentation. Put the whole thing in the freezer overnight to harden up, then pull the bowl out. Rinse and repeat, so to speak, with subsequent layers. Move the batter to the fridge after putting in the last layer, to let everything thaw. And that, too, is pure guesswork.
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