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Eating & Living in Austin, Texas

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Drip Cake Tutorial

May 21, 2019 by Alyssa

With bright colors, fun decorations, and lots of sprinkles, drip cakes create showstopping moments which is why I chose them as my April baking bucket list challenge.

This post is way overdue because drip cakes were my April baking challenge and here we are nearing the end of May.  And, while I did complete this bucket list item in April, I’ve been a bit tied up with work and life to get a blog post up.

Cactus Drip Cake 2

Since April’s my birthday month, I thought it was only appropriate to choose a cake for my April baking challenge and chose to knock out this challenge by making the drip cake as my own birthday cake.  I love drip cakes because they are so over the top. They’re typically made with bright colors, fun topper decor, and lots of sprinkles (my favorite!) making them perfect for a birthday celebration while creating real ‘wow’ moments when others see them.

Birthday_Drip_Cake

What I really enjoyed about this challenge was that a few weeks after completing my own birthday drip cake, my friend Vanessa asked me to make her a 30th birthday cake giving me another opportunity to practice my drip technique — which is now something I believe I’ve truly mastered.

White Chocolate Ganache Drip

What I learned about drip cakes is that the ‘drip’ part is really the simplest and quickest part about the entire decor.  It’s really nothing more than a chocolate ganache that’s been cooled to room temperature then spread over the top and slowly pushed over the edge of the cake.  I then used a piping bag to make additional drips along the edge of the cake.

Birthday Drip Cake Cut

Chocolate cake with mocha filling & vanilla Swiss buttercream

For a drip cake’s chocolate ganache, you can use either white chocolate chips and heavy cream then tint the ganache to a color of your choosing with food coloring (be sure to choose chocolate food coloring or add color-flo to your chocolate before adding gel or you may seize up your chocolate) or you can use colored melting chocolate, like Candy Melts.  The key to the drip though is ensuring it’s cooled to room temperature.  If it’s not properly cooled, the ganache will melt the frosting on the cake and cause your colors to bleed.

Below I share my ganache recipe!

Swiss Meringue Buttercream

This drip cakes challenge also gave me the opportunity to practice my Swiss meringue buttercream recipe.  I love Swiss meringue buttercream because it’s so light and silky smooth.  However, it intimidated me because it involved cooking egg whites and sugar over a double boiler then whipping that into a meringue before finally adding in the butter.

What I learned while making Swiss meringue buttercream is, much like the ganache, the importance of cooling the meringue before adding the butter.  If the whipped meringue is too warm when the butter is added, the butter ends up melting which result in either frosting that’s more like soup or frosting that tastes like straight up butter.

Vanessa_Drip_Cake

The trick I learned here is to chill the bowl of my stand mixer in the fridge which helps quicken the cooling process.  I use a different bowl for the double boiler then transfer the cooked egg whites & sugar into the chilled bowl to whip into a meringue.  Once the meringue forms stiff peaks and the meringue & bowl are both no warmer than room temperature, I begin to add the butter which forms into the deliciously light buttercream.

Below I share my Swiss buttercream recipe! 

Cake Toppers

Since cakes take a ton of work, I chose to keep my cake toppers simple.  For my own birthday cake, I created striped meringue cookies which, like the Swiss buttercream, is cooked egg whites & sugar whipped to stiff peaks.  I then striped a piping bag with gel food coloring and used a 1M frosting tip to make tall swirls.  Later, I colored the remaining meringue and made little dots all of which dried in the oven for 2-hours until set. (Find the meringue cookie recipe here!)

For added height on my cake, I used white candy melts to make thin sheets of chocolate and added colorful sprinkles on top.  Once hardened, I broke the chocolate into pieces to add dimension to the cake.

Drip Cake Top

My friend requested a specific cake for her birthday so I made cactus cookies out of my go-to sugar cookie dough and decorated them with flood frosting, created royal frosting cacti flowers, and added cactus ‘tines’ using food decorating pens.

Overall, I’m so happy I chose drip cakes as my April baking bucket list challenge.  I love the end results and they’re cakes I’m very proud of.  However, after creating two complicated cakes back to back, I’m sure glad my May baking challenge is simple, just classic lemon bars and homemade raspberry sauce.

Vanessa Drip Cake Cut

Vanessa’s drip cake: lemon poppyseed cake with cream cheese filling & vanilla Swiss buttercream

Have you ever made a drip cake? What would you use as cake toppers on top of your drip cake?

Check out the full Baking Bucket List here.

Chocolate Ganache Drip
 
Save Print
Prep time
10 mins
Cook time
30 mins
Total time
40 mins
 
Author: Alyssa
Serves: ½ cup
Ingredients
  • 1 cup white chocolate chips or 1 cup candy melts
  • ⅓ cup heavy cream
Instructions
  1. Place the chocolate into a medium sized bowl and set aside.
  2. In a small saucepan, heat the heavy cream until it just begins to boil with tiny bubbles around the edges.
  3. Pour the heavy cream over the white chocolate and let it sit for 1 minute.
  4. Using a whisk, mix together the chocolate and cream until it's fully blended. Then mix in your coloring.
  5. Let the ganache cool to room temperature for about 15 minutes before creating the drip onto the cake.
  6. Pour a small portion of the ganache onto the top of the cake and using an offset spatula gently smooth it over the top and over the edge.
  7. Put the remaining ganache into a piping bag and cut a small piece off the tip. Use the piping bag to add more drips along the edge of the cake or to elongate drips that have already started.
  8. Place in the fridge to set completely before adding topper decorations.
3.5.3251

Swiss Meringue Buttercream
 
Save Print
Prep time
30 mins
Cook time
10 mins
Total time
40 mins
 
Author: Alyssa
Serves: 6 cups
Ingredients
  • 4 ounces egg whites (fresh, not packaged)
  • 8 ounces granulated sugar
  • 12 ounces unsalted butter, softened to room temperature and cut into 1-2 tablespoon-size pieces
  • a pinch of salt
  • 2 tablespoons vanilla extract
Instructions
  1. Place the bowl of your stand mixer in the fridge to chill for 15-20 minutes while you cook the egg whites & sugar.
  2. In another large bowl, whisk together the egg whites and sugar until foamy.
  3. Create a double boiler on the stove with the large bowl your egg whites are mixed into until the water is just simmering (ensure the water doesn't touch the bowl on top of the double boiler).
  4. Whisk the egg whites and sugar together on top of the double boiler constantly until the mixture reaches 165°F to 180°F -- this is when the egg whites will be cooked and the sugar melted.
  5. Remove the bowl from the double boil and transfer the egg white mixture to the chilled bowl of your stand mixer.
  6. Whip the egg whites in the bowl of your stand mixer on high using the whisk attachment until stiff peaks form, about 10-minutes. Once stiff peaks form, check to ensure both the bowl and egg whites are at room temperature. If they are too warm, you will melt the butter. If still too warm, place in the fridge to cool or use ice packs on the bottom of the bowl to cool the meringue and bowl.
  7. Once the meringue and bowl are cooled, switch to the paddle attachment and begin adding your butter with the mixer on low speed. Do this gradually over 5-7 minutes. If the mixture begins to break, just keep mixing. Once the butter is fully added, increase the mixer speed to high for 2-3 minutes until the frosting is light and fluffy. At this point, you can add the pinch of salt, extract and if desired, food coloring.
Notes
This recipe should yield you enough to frost and fill a 10″ double layer, round cake or about 2½ dozen standard cupcakes. Or fill & frost a 6" 3-layer cake. Or frost the outside of a 4 layer 8" cake.
3.5.3251

 

Filed Under: Cake & Cupcakes Tagged With: baking bucket list, birthday, buttercream, drip cake, frosting, ganache, sprinkles, swiss buttercream

Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake featuring Dollop Gourmet Frosting

September 5, 2016 by Alyssa

A rich, thick Bananas Foster Cake with traditional caramel and rum Bananas Foster flavors topped with a decadent Salted Caramel Frosting.

I’m a big advocate for cooking food at home and making meals from scratch, but once in a while there’s a product on the shelf that catches my attention, meets my ingredient standards and actually tastes good. This time around, it was Dollop Gourmet’s Sea Salted Caramel Frosting and it inspired my Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake. It’s a cake that whips together quickly, bakes up in a single large cake pan, so there’s plenty to share with minimal mess, and it’s made even simpler with Dollop’s Salted Caramel Frosting!

Bananas Foster Cake 6

In order to achieve the caramelly, brûléed flavor that’s rich throughout Bananas Foster, I used brown sugar in the cake in place of traditional granulated sugar. The molasses in the sugar gives the cake a golden brown hue when baked, that basically screams caramel deliciousness and hits all the brûléed notes of the pan seared bananas in traditional Bananas Foster!

Bananas Foster Cake Full Cake

This caramel flavor is matched with an equally heavy dose of sweet bananas.  When you choose the bananas for this recipe, I recommend choosing large, fat bananas that have been browning for a day or two. The riper and sweeter they are at the time you make this cake, the more decadent, moist and sweet this cake will be. My favorite part about the cake itself is how thick it is! I mean, look at that slice, it’s a cake lover’s dream!

Bananas Foster Cake 4

The star ingredient of the traditional Bananas Foster dessert is the splash of rum that’s used to flambe the bananas right before serving. Since I’m not a big proponent of baking with alcohol, as it sometimes plays tricks with the cake when baking, I added a splash of rum extract to the batter. This splash gives just a subtle hint of rum to the cake that tips it towards the edge of Bananas Foster perfection!

Bananas Foster Cake 2

The cherry on top of my Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake is Dollop Gourmet’s Sea Salted Caramel Frosting. Its caramelly sweetness is a delightful match to the brown sugar and bananas in the cake while Dollop’s hint of sea salt in the frosting brings the final flavor component to my Bananas Foster cake. I love the added touch of sea salt, as it brings a modern twist to the traditional Bananas Foster dessert, making it sweet, decadent and oh so, craveable!

Dollop Gourmet Frosting

It’s rare for me to promote packaged food, as I’m a huge proponent for cooking and baking from scratch but my views were swayed when it came to Dollop Gourmet Frosting. Often times, packaged food is chalked full of unnecessary ingredients and generally, it’s not great for your health — but this is NOT the case with Dollop.

Bananas Foster Cake 1

Dollop Gourmet’s frosting can definitely hold its own against a homemade frosting. While I haven’t done any official experiments, I’d bet my Kitchen Aid mixer that you can’t tell the difference between a homemade frosting and Dollop’s when paired side by side.

I also love that Dollop’s frosting doesn’t contain any wacky ingredients. It’s pretty much the same ingredients I’d use if I were making my own frosting from scratch (with no mess!). I trust this frosting and that’s saying something, as I’m typically one to quickly turn up my nose at the fake, oily frostings regularly found on a grocery store shelf. Seriously, look at these frosting stats!

Dollop Frosting Stats

Do you know any frosting that can pull of these types of stats and still taste good? Seriously impressive.

Now, if these drool-worthy Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake photos haven’t convinced you yet, here’s my advice — get yourself some bananas so they start to ripen, hop on over to your Amazon Prime account, order yourself a jar or 2 of Dollop’s frosting and prepare to slather this cake with Dollop frosting to dig into later this week! You won’t regret it and you’ll be back to thank me for the most decadant banana cake you’ve ever tasted.

Bananas Foster Cake Full Cake 2

5.0 from 2 reviews
Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake featuring Dollop Gourmet Frosting
 
Save Print
Prep time
20 mins
Cook time
45 mins
Total time
1 hour 5 mins
 
A rich, thick Bananas Foster Cake with traditional caramel and rum Bananas Foster flavors topped with a decadent Salted Caramel Frosting.
Serves: 20 pieces
Ingredients
  • 3 large ripe bananas, mashed
  • 3 cups flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon
  • ½ teaspoon nutmeg
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ cup + 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, softened
  • 1½ cups brown sugar
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon rum extract
  • 1½ cups milk
  • 1 jar Dollop Gourmet's Salted Caramel Frosting
  • caramel sauce, optional for serving
Instructions
  1. Preheat the over to 350*
  2. Grease a 13x9 inch pan with a bit of butter and set aside
  3. In a medium sized bowl, whisk together the flour, baking soda, baking powder, cinnamon, nutmeg and salt and set aside.
  4. In a larger mixer, cream the softened butter for 1-2 minutes
  5. Add in the brown sugar and beat until creamy
  6. One at a time, add in the eggs
  7. Once well incorporated, add in both the vanilla and rum extract
  8. Add in the mashed bananas and mix well
  9. Next add in the flour and milk to the batter, alternating each addition
  10. Pour the batter into the prepared 9x13 inch pan
  11. Bake for 40-50 minutes until a cake pin inserted into the center comes out clean
  12. Place the cake on a wire rack to cool completely.
  13. Once cooled, ice with Dollop frosting
  14. To serve, slice the cake and drizzle with caramel sauce
3.5.3208

 

Salted Caramel Bananas Foster Cake - Pinterest

 

 

Filed Under: Cake & Cupcakes, Desserts Tagged With: banana, cupcake, frosting, salted caramel

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Welcome!

Hi, I’m Alyssa! I’m a foodie with a sweet tooth and an obsessed dog-mom! On the blog you’ll find a little bit of everything – it’s heavy on dessert, wine, and life in Austin, Texas with a sprinkling of lifestyle.

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