Welcome to home cooking Guide
Cooking Food Home Network Paulas Article
. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.
You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.
Halloween Cake Conjures Up A Witch's Brew!
from:Just as the little ones thrill to the ultimate night of make-believe, it's a thrill for us to see our Halloween cakes inspire looks of such surprise and delight on their faces.
This cauldron cake, a design we created as a spin off from the volcano cake, lends itself well to a cake decorator's imagination. And if you're not sure what to add to the brew, ask the kids. Then as a surprise, just before serving, add a little dry ice for magical steam.
Cauldron Halloween Cake
What You'll Need
· Bundt pan or large, glass oven-safe bowl
· Dry ice: Check your Yellow Pages for a distributor. Follow all safety precautions given to you. You can read them now at http://www.wrh.noaa.gov/vef/kids/dryice.php
· Sturdy, round cake board
· Orange or red foil gift-wrap to cover cake board and miniature red and/orange lights (optional)
Bake a firm cake (such as butter, pound or pumpkin) inside the greased and floured pan or bowl. If using glass, lower oven temperature by 25°.
To make the removal of your cake from its pan easier, here's one of the secrets guarded by the pros:
Professional Baker’s Grease
Mix together equal parts flour, vegetable shortening and vegetable oil. First cream shortening, and then add vegetable oil and flour. Mix until well blended.
You will have a bowl of greasy paste that is especially helpful with difficult pans such as bundt pans with their deep crevices and indentations.
This delightfuly greasy tip comes straight from "Cake Decorating Made Easy!"
Here's what one reader wrote about our Video Books:
"I highly recommend them to anyone who enjoys baking, decorating and the feeling of accomplishment when everyone crowds around your cakes for a closer look."
Joanne Robitaille, Windsor, Ontario, Canada
While your cake is baking, cover your cake board with the foil. After the cake has cooled in its pan or bowl on a wire rack, release it.
If necessary, level the bottom so it rests evenly on your cake round.
If you used a glass bowl for baking your cauldron cake, you may need to slice a couple inches off the bottom where it narrows, so that the wide and heavier part of the cake has a strong enough bottom.
Next, carve out a “well” wide enough to hold a small juice glass or jelly jar. If you've used a bundt pan, you already have the well, although you may need to widen it. Then drop the glass gently down into the well.
Cover your Halloween cauldron cake with smoothed, black buttercream (see tips below) Green gel icing could be added on top for an eerie brew.
Now comes the fun part! Decorate the top of the cake with marzipan or rolled buttercream figures that you've model or created with gum paste molds. Or you could use store-bought candies that depict your typical witch's brew ingredients – eye of newt and so forth.
Another decorating idea: Using a jelly roll cake (flat, not rolled), cut out shapes you want, decorate with icing and then plop onto your witch's brew.
Hint: String licorice makes great spider legs!
For added drama, tuck miniature red and orange lights around the base of the cake. This will bring a fiery reflection to the foil-covered cake board.
Just before serving, put your witch's hat on and tell the party guests you have a special cake brewing, but to make the magic work, you need them to recite from Shakespeare: "Double, double, toil and trouble, fire burn and cauldron bubble!"
Ask them to recite each verse louder than the last (while you in the kitchen carefully and using a pair of tongs, place a few cubes or chunks of the dry ice into the glass (that's in the cake's well). Then carefully pour some hot water down into the glass over the dry ice.
As the excitement reaches a crescendo around the dining table, pour an ounce or two of water into the well and carry your steaming cauldron cake out.
When the steam (and applause) fades, you can rekindle it by stirring the dry ice or adding more hot water if needed. Then it's time to serve your creepy Halloween cake. Be sure not to let the children touch the dry ice!
For more happy holiday cakes, check out our Thanksgiving Cake Design Ideas.
And here's that tip for the black in your cauldron: While we don't usually have to use enough to notice, food coloring can be bitter. The amount needed to achieve black can make your buttercream cauldron taste creepier than it looks!
Here's what you can do to keep that buttercream tasting soft and sweet:
· Use gel coloring. It's concentrated, so you won't need as much.
· Begin with dark chocolate buttercream, and you'll need even less.
· Instead of black icing, cover the cauldron cake with plain buttercream and then crushed, dark chocolate cookies.
Happy Halloween Cake Making!
If cake decorating sometimes feels more like a trick than a treat, sign up for our free newsletter at Halloween Cake Decorating Ideas and receive incredible cake decorating tips, along with step by step videos (from the "Cake Decorating Made Easy!" Video Books).
Cooking Food Home Network Paulas News
Economy and Food Prices Mean Fewer Pantry Donors - Washington Post
Economy and Food Prices Mean Fewer Pantry Donors Washington Post, United States - Deen, the host of "Paula's Home Cooking" and "Paula's Party" on the Food Network, worked with Smithfield Foods to launch Helping Hungry Homes. ... |
So Saucy: Chef Jacques Pepin - Express from The Washington Post
![]() Express from The Washington Post | So Saucy: Chef Jacques Pepin Express from The Washington Post, DC - But, wait, there is a way to revolt against the monopoly that is the Food Network, Giada, Bobby and Paula. Pepin is not overstylized. ... |
TV cook serves up laughs, sympathy - FayObserver.com
TV cook serves up laughs, sympathy FayObserver.com, NC - Carter, who had surgery last Friday, said he didn’t find out until earlier Tuesday he’d be getting a visit from the star of “Paula’s Home Cooking. ... |
Food Stuff - Detroit Metro Times
![]() Detroit Metro Times | Food Stuff Detroit Metro Times, MI - Paula Deen, the Food Network's dean of Southern cooking, has her own model. For about $40, you can own this kitchen saver or kitchen replacement. ... |
Can't Get Enough Food Network? -- Get the Behind-the-Scenes "Dish ... - PR Web (press release)
![]() PR Web (press release) | Can't Get Enough Food Network? -- Get the Behind-the-Scenes "Dish ... PR Web (press release), WA - The FN Dish is your back-stage, all-access pass to the world of TV food, when round-the-clock cooking on cable just isn't enough! ... |










