Showing posts with label Nebraska. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nebraska. Show all posts

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

Royal Icing Goldenrod

Whoops; I already did tributes to both Kentucky AND Nebraska (aka my grey period); states where the goldenrod is the official state flower! So much for 50 states in 50 days…anyway, here's a little bonus. The goldenrod comes in 100 different varieties, so this is just a typical example. Photos I've seen of them show them in clusters, so you'll probably want to pipe lots of these and then scatter them across a cake or cupcakes. Here's all you'll need: stiff consistency royal icing in yellow (er, goldenrod), oval tip #57, round tip #5, parchment paper squares, a flower nail, a Styrofoam brick to rest the nail in, a glue stick, and a dusting pouch filled with a 50/50 mix of powdered sugar and cornstarch. Start by sticking a parchment square to the nail with a dab from the glue stick. 
 Holding the #57 tip at a 45 degree angle and against the surface, pipe 4 petals starting from the center and aiming at 12, 3, 6 and 9. They're just over half an inch long. When you stop pressure and pull the tip away, you might leave a point; touch a fingertip to the dusting pouch and soften the point into more of a blunt end with it.
 The petals don't need to be perfectly evenly-spaced; they'll look more realistic if they aren't. Pipe in a bunch of petals wherever they'll fit. Tap them flat with a dusted fingertip if they begin to stack up on top of each other.
 Switch to the #5 tip and pipe a cluster of dots in the center. Pipe another smaller cluster of dots on top of those to give the center some depth and height. Peel away the parchment when the icing is dry and get to work on a cake celebrating Kentucky and/or Nebraska (print invitations on goldenrod paper if you really want to be thematic!).

Monday, August 27, 2012

Royal Icing Channel Catfish

I love it when whatever project I'm working on already happens to look like a squirt of icing; it makes the creative process that much easier. Tonight's creature is the official state fish of Nebraska, the channel catfish. These fish can grow to be 50+ pounds; I'm pretty sure this one doesn't even weigh a gram. All you'll need to pipe catfish are stiff consistency royal icing in gray (add a very small amount of a product like AmeriColor Super Black soft gel paste off the end of a toothpick to white icing), round tip #12, round tip #2, oval tip #57 by Ateco, parchment paper squares, a flower nail, a Styrofoam block to rest the nail in, a glue stick, a dusting pouch filled with a 50/50 mix of cornstarch and powdered sugar, and round toothpicks. Start by sticking a parchment square to the nail with a dab from the glue stick. 
Using the #12 tip, pipe an elongated teardrop shape about 1.25" long. Hold the tip at a right angle to and just above the surface. Decrease pressure as you near the end of the shape before stopping pressure and pulling the tip away.
When you start, angle the tip to form the fish's upper lip. 

 
 Switch to the #57 tip and pipe the tail fins. Hold the tip against the narrow end and pipe two short lengths of icing. Taper the ends of each fin with fingertips after touching them to the dusting pouch.
 Also using the #57 tip, pipe two fins on the back; the larger one should be toward the front. Pipe them in the same way you did the tail, except for holding the tip at a 45 degree angle to the surface and pulling it along at an angle.
 Pipe two fins on the sides in a similar way, holding the tip alongside the surface. With all of the fins, touch a fingertip to the dusting pouch and gently tap them where they join the fish's body to secure them.
 Switch to the #2 tip to pipe the whiskers. The catfish has 4 pair; if you feel like you only have room for one pair, that's OK. Hold the tip against the surface, squeeze briefly, and pull the tip away.
When the surface is dry, paint in the eyes. To make small dots, I like to smash the pointy tip of a toothpick against the counter before dipping it in the black food coloring and touching it gently to the surface. In addition to Nebraska, the channel catfish is also the official state fish of Iowa, Missouri, and Tennessee; this critter would be an appropriate cupcake topper for a celebration commemorating any of these states!