It's hard to tell from the picture but this cake was a failure.
Fail. Ure.
It all started on a Monday at 5:06 p.m.
Reader Christie mentioned in one of my Easter posts that her family ate Carrot Cake for dessert at Easter. It was a revelation for me. How had I not thought of this before? I must have been thinking of other things my whole life. Things I wrongly thought were more important. Like how to make a living, how to be a good person, how to inspire my fellow humans. Sure these things were vaguely important but I mean ... CARROT CAKE FOR EASTER. How could I not make room in my brain for Easter carrot cake? There's always room for carrot cake.
Wow. I was such an idiot back in the olden days, 2 weeks ago.
Now that I had been enlightened I went straight to work figuring out how the hell I was going to convince my family that the standard Easter dinner we'd had for the past 25 years was gonna be changed.
Yes we'd still have Lemon Meringue pie, but the Cherry Cheese Pie was going to have to go to make room for the Carrot Cake. My mother had inexplicably added creamed cabbage to this year's menu. So now you know my mother is 80, because making creamed cabbage is the equivalent of showing your birth certificate or wearing those massive glaucoma sunglasses.
So I broke the news of the cake the way any coward would. Text messaging.
She was never to be heard from again that girl who called dibs. Weird.
I'm sure she'll pop up somewhere, someday. I'm not too worried about it.
So I got to make the cake which is a lucky thing for me because I really wanted to make the cake. Which I did the very moment after I scrubbed and detailed my wood chipper. That's just something I like to do every once in a while after someone angers me.
Although Miss. Dibs was right about one thing. The America's Test Kitchen carrot cake recipe is good so I went with that one as opposed to my normal carrot cake recipe which belonged to the fella's mother. I would give you the America's Test Kitchen recipe but as it turns out it isn't online. But to be honest with you a carrot cake recipe is a carrot cake recipe.
If you like carrot cake they're all good.
And if you don't like carrot cake you have my sympathies. You probably like brussels sprouts. You're a weirdo.
The real reason for this post isn't about the recipe anyway. It's about the frosting technique.
I'm the one who broke with tradition and introduced the carrot cake to Easter dinner so the cake had to both taste and look impressive. Plus it couldn't contain brussels sprouts. That was kind of important.
You've probably seen these loose roses piped on cakes everywhere from Pinterest to Wilton packaging. I too had seen this technique and even though I'm not much of a cake decorator knew I had to try them. I just had to.
And every single thing about this cake is impressive.
First off, it's 3 layers. A 3 layer cake is going to look impressive once you cut into it no matter what. Just look at any food blog and they're shoving a 3 layer cake into your face. Not literally. That kind of shenanigans only takes place on the creepy clown blogs.
What the food bloggers don't tell you is that unless someone's getting married, buried or blessed nobody needs a 3 layer cake. A 3 layer cake is huge. The slices, no matter how thin you cut them, are still big enough to spill out the back of a pickup truck. Actually, as I was putting this cake onto the flatbed to transport it to my sister's house for dinner, I wondered how much of it we would eat.
We had 13 people for Easter dinner. Everyone had a slice of cake for dessert along with a slice of lemon meringue pie. There was one piece of pie left. And 75% of the cake.
So why was it a fail.ure.? Well it wasn't really but it was one of those things that if you're the one who was making it you know what kind of a disaster it was.
You see to do this rose technique you have to have pipeable icing. Icing you can pipe through a piping bag and will hold it's shape. Cream cheese frosting (the holy grail, there is no other, spit and hiss at anything else) is not pipeable. A carrot cake HAS to have cream cheese frosting.
So the hunt began for a pipeable cream cheese frosting recipe. I went to new friend, chef Signe Langford to ask her advice. She said SWISS MERINGUE. You need to start with a Swiss Meringue.
So I started with a Swiss Meringue even though I've never made one before. A Swiss Meringue is a frosting that's made by whisking egg whites and sugar in a double boiler. It's a cooked meringue as opposed to the regular meringue you're probably used to which is just whisked eggs with a bit of sugar and vanilla. That's called a French Meringue by the way.
That part went well. Noooo problem on the Swiss Meringue.
Now I had to turn the Swiss Meringue into a Swiss Meringue Buttercream. Which means you add butter to it. Not sure how much butter you'll need? Just buy a cow and start milking.
Swiss Meringue Buttercream? Check.
Now I just had to add the cream cheese for the classic tangy taste. I was fully expecting another Check! I did not get one.
This is where things start to fall apart.
The first few blobs of cream cheese were fine. But the more I added the more things started to look like ... wrong. They started to look really wrong. Bottom of the garbage can wrong. Curdly. Icky. Like scrambled eggs. My meringue had split. If you're a cook and you know what that means I'll give you a moment to say a prayer for me.
So I heated up a bit of the mixture and reincorporated it into the meringue. It fixed it. Kind of. But it was a bit warm so I stuck the frosting in the fridge to firm up then rewhipped it. At which point it got even more curdled. Off to Google. Found 3 completely contradictory answers on how to fix it. I tried all of them. Plus a few more just to be safe.
It worked. I no longer had a curdled mess. I had a curdled, WATERY mess. Any more mistakes and this frosting was going to be good enough to win first prize at a local fall fair.
What ended up helping was adding some warmed up meringue mixture to the mix. I just scooped out a small bowl, heated it in the microwave for 15 seconds or so and added it back into the mixture slowly. It helped. Then I just let it keep mixing until it had returned to somewhat of a normal looking frosting. I refrigerated it for 10 minutes or so and then started piping.
The actual rose piping couldn't have been easier. COULD. NOT. HAVE. BEEN. EASIER. So what with the point of this entire post being how you can do this frosting I should now let you know that things turned into such a shit show that I didn't take a single photograph of me doing the piping.
But that's O.K. Because I'd rather steer you towards the woman who invented the rose frosting technique anyway. A blogger by the name of Amanda Rettke. She runs the website I.Am.Baker.
It was her little cake tutorial in 2011 that sparked a frenzy. Wilton is now teaching the technique in their courses and the rose cake is being sold in bakeries all around the world.
She's humbled by it. I on the other hand would probably be incensed. Hopefully she's getting some sort of compensation or credit for it.
The moral of this really, really, probably unnecessarily long story?
Almost anything in life can be fixed with little hard work, some ingenuity and occasionally .... a wood chipper.
Dominic
^^^^^^ Totally stole my idea.
The Abbot of Unreason
That icing is definitely lovely, but WOW what a beautiful cake stand. Where did you get it?
Karen
LOLOL! Extra points for you. ~ karen!
Bonnie
Ever notice how Brussels Sprouts eaters always want to get you to eat them? "If you just fix them this way, or that way, you will love them." I have tried them several ways, and they still taste like Brussels Sprouts. Yech!
Sarah
Oh God Karen, I am laughing so hard. Love this post and can totally relate! YUP! Been there! But DO want to hear more about the wood chipper!?
Bonnie
Karen,
I love your humor and your blogs. I love your creativity and your ingenuity. Mostly, I love how much you hate Brussels Sprouts. I do, too.
I am curious about all of the steps for your icing. Do you have a recipe you can share, or do you think it would be too complicated to repeat?
I found a recipe on a blog that would be perfect for St. Patrick's Day, or any day for people who love dark chocolate and cream cheese: The Dark Chocolate Guinness Cake with Baileys Cream Cheese Icing.
http://loveswah.com/2013/03/dark-chocolate-guinness-cake-with-baileys-cream-cheese-icing/
Kari
I know! I can't believe how simple it is! And I literally put it in the oven and came here. It was fate, haha.
Kari
I tried this on my cake (perfect timing to have a cake in the oven, lol) and I had to come back and say this is the most gorgeous, yet not super hard to do, cake ever... soooo luscious! Thanks for sharing!
Karen
Isn't it the least amount of work that gives the most amount of impact?! Can't believe you had a cake in the oven, lol. ~ karen!
Kari
I love the roses! I've got a cake in the oven right now and I'm going to use the rose design for the (pink) white mountain icing. Yay
Grammy
I always check back to read the newer comments because the people who come here are cool. This time I have to mention something, Karen -- have you noticed how many of your close personal blog-fan friends love Brussels sprouts? Yes, so many!
I'm also one who loves Brussels sprouts, but it would never have occurred to me to mention them in a post about carrot cake with cream cheese frosting. But now, thanks to you, every time I eat either I'm probably going to think of the other, too, and that will lead me to think of you and what it is you do that attracts so many weird folks. You might want to see somebody about that. Or maybe I'm the one who needs help...
Karen
According to the test results I did the other week I have an inordinately high number of people with the same personality type. INTJ. As in, it is so unusual that Penelope Trunk who runs courses on the personality types has asked to interview me, lol. More on that later this week. Point is ... apparently we've found each other and we're stickin' together. ~ karen!
Kathy
Karen-next time offer to plate up dessert and "accidently drop" that crappy lemon meringue pie
Karen
LOL. Forget that! Lemon Meringue Pie is my favourite! The only reason I had so much cake left was because it was so stinkin' big. Tasted and look great. It was just enough to serve a medium sized men's prison. ~ karen! (although I like your sentiment very much)
Robert
Why in heavens name would you do a Swiss meringue when you just could have whipped the cream cheese with the sugar until you got the right consistence? As a proud DIY-er who can honestly not rest if i find something i want to do and do at least something that is inspired by or very similar I have to tell you that you can't always follow the recipe, and I'm actually surprised by the fact that you had to ask for help instead of just doing whipping the cream cheese to a pipe-able consistency which is not to hard to do and which I just did last week for red velvet cupcakes, although I have to confess I am very, very guilty of more often than not doing the most-difficult-I-want-to-kill-myself-how-and-why-did-I-put-myself-through-this way of doing things so feel free to ignore what I just wrote.
ps: please adopt me
Nancy Blue Moon
YUM!!..looks so good!
dian
Hahahahaha Idk why I am lmao except that this sounds exactly like something I would do! I love your blog! Thank you!
Jody
So what happened to the 75% of the remaining cake ??!! Did the chickens eat it?
ev wilcox
I really, really, like Brussels sprouts, and I really, really, do not like carrot cake! And I have been accused of being weird....
Kristin Ferguson
I did this for my daughter's wedding cake last April. It was a hug, three-tiered devil's food cake with pistachio buttercream. It turned out beautiful! I didn't have a tutorial, just a picture she texted me to copy. It was very easy.
I have never lost a buttercream. I've had curdled buttercream, but I always manage to rescue it. I'm glad you did, too, Karen. I always use a Swiss buttercream, too. If it curdles, it's often just that the butter (or the cream cheese, in your case?) is still too cool. You can place the whole mixing bowl in a larger bowl of warm water very briefly. Or, just wait a few minutes before continuing to whip--unless your kitchen is too cold. (My best trick it a funny one: I use my butane torch to heat up the outside of the Kitchen Aid bowl briefly. But not everyone has a butane torch at hand. They should, though. Great for all kinds of things, including creme brûlée.)
Dana
I, too, had a broken swiss meringue buttercream at Easter. Found a lavender blueberry smb on pinterest (of course) as well. It broke after I added half of the butter. Trying the rescue techniques didn't seem to help and I was incredibly discouraged. Hopefully the site you linked to will help next time. Thanks!
Mary from Barrie
I thought I was the only one who hadn't thought of having carrot cake at Easter! I had my own "AHA!" moment this year and served it. I made it from scratch - as in I scratched the price off the box from the bakery in Loblaws. It was delicious but tiny so no mountains of leftovers. (Also, ROFL at the wood chipper - best scene in Fargo).
Jennie Lee
Yes, a carrot cake MUST have cream cheese frosting. I am sorry your frosting gave you such fits, but I want to congratulate you, because it looks like you got the other requirement for carrot cake right, too: it must have English walnuts and raisins in it. Do I see them in there, or am I hallucinating them? I also want to recommend the carrot cake recipe in "The Joy of Cooking". Yuuummm.
Christie
Wow!!! I had no idea what kind of avalanche I started with the carrot cake Easter thing!!! And here's the funny thing... My son requested plain old chocolate cake for dessert!!!
But back to the carrot cake - 3 layers is impressive; but I agree with you - too much cake - and I think the whole point of the carrot cake is as a cream cheese icing delivery system. So - if you make a 2-layer cake, you can cut a bigger piece, thereby getting more cream cheese icing!!!
I use The Barefoot Contessa recipe, for both the cake and icing. It's delicious!!! And I don't bother piping... I kind of swirl around the icing on the sides and top - it looks good enough to eat!!! (haha)
Buttercream icing can be temperamental - the first time I made it I let my son lick the beater... thereby finding out that he was deathly allergic to eggs!!! Fun times - fun times....