What To Do With The Cake Board Between 2 Cakes?

Decorating By projectqueen Updated 10 Feb 2006 , 3:20am by stephanie214

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projectqueen Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:16pm
post #1 of 7

I'm going to be putting the wonder mold doll cake on top of the petal pan cake. I understand about sprinkling powdered sugar on top of the iced petal cake before putting the wonder mold cake down on top, but do I just sit the doll cake on top of a cardboard cake round and place it on the cake below or do I have to cover it with something first? Parchment? Wax paper? Should I also cover the bottom of the cake round? (I guess the brown side is the bottom and the white side is the top?)

Also, any idea how to cut the doll cake to serve it? Just top to bottom and make wedge slices? Thanks.

6 replies
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llj68 Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:21pm
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When I do doll cakes, I never board the wondermold cake. Mostly because I use a real Barbie instead of a pick, so her feet would have to go through the board and it would irritate me to try and cut that hole.

Since Barbie is acting as her own dowel, I don't dowel her either--even if I am transporting her.

I use a slightly crusting BC and I've never put powdered sugar, partchment, coconut or anything else between my cakes and have never had the icing peel off. But that's just my experience.

As far as cutting the wonder mold cake, I take out Barbie, cut horizontally about 2/3 of the way down from the smaller top part and then cut that into 5 or 6 pieces--depending on who is eating. I then slice out the remainder of the cake. I find that the adults like the bottom half of the skirt because there is more cake and less fillings.

I'm not sure of how many it is supposed to serve. 20 is coming to mind--but I'm not sure!

HTH and post pics when you finish! I would love to see them.

Lisa

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hn87519 Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:22pm
post #3 of 7

I use plain white shelf liner paper and cover both sides. I never bother with powdered sugar or anything because I use IMBC, and just do it when the cake is cold.

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SquirrellyCakes Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:23pm
post #4 of 7
Quote:
Originally Posted by projectqueen

I'm going to be putting the wonder mold doll cake on top of the petal pan cake. I understand about sprinkling powdered sugar on top of the iced petal cake before putting the wonder mold cake down on top, but do I just sit the doll cake on top of a cardboard cake round and place it on the cake below or do I have to cover it with something first? Parchment? Wax paper? Should I also cover the bottom of the cake round? (I guess the brown side is the bottom and the white side is the top?)

Also, any idea how to cut the doll cake to serve it? Just top to bottom and make wedge slices? Thanks.



Well, I cut the Wondermold in halves or quarters vertically, lie these pieces on their sides and cut those into equal pieces. I also use a circle of parchment over the bottom layer, cutting a hole so that I can insert the Barbie Doll using the following method. Oh, the cardboard that the cake sits on should be covered, I use a foil covered board and glue gun the parchment to the bottom of it.
Barbie Cakes
The Wondermold isn't deep enough on its own for a Barbie cake, so you need an extra layer or two of cake underneath so that Barbie can go inside the cake and the cake starts at her waist. I use petal pans. A 9 inch and sometimes a larger one - up to the 15 inch size. Of course you can do it with the round or even place the Wondermold - on a dowelled sheet cake.
First of all, the top of the extra layer or layers of cake has to be iced. Also fill if you are using more than one layer as your bottom cake that the Wondermold will sit on.
I found a great way of keeping Barbie clean and also coring the cake and keeping her enclosed and stable. An empty paper towel roll - well two actually. You are best off boarding the Wondermold and also using a strong cake base for the whole cake. So you mark the centre of the underneath of the double covered boards that the Wondermold will sit on, I places them covered sides out and glue gun the two together. Then I cut a hole large enough for a paper towel inner tube to fit through. So you work the paper towel cardboard roll straight up through the bottom or underneath side of the boarded Wondermold cake and then remove. This will core your cake. Alternately, you can just fill with icing between the Wondermold cake and the additional layer, no boards and core from the top down. I have found that this works well, undowelled too. It just makes the cakes slices a little more awkward because of the height of them. Ok, so if you boarded the Wondermold, and now you have cored it, you also need to core the layer cake this is sitting on. So you centre a board the same size as the boarded cake on the lower cake and mark off the centre of the lower cake, then core the centreagain using the paper towel roll. You will want to put 5 dowels in the centre of the marked area on the lower cake around the cored hole. Place some icing sugar in the area where the Wondermold will sit on the lower cake. So now you place the cored Wondermold cake over the dowelled lower cake and line up the holes. So now you are going to take a fresh paper towel inner cardboard tube. Insert Barbie so that the tube starts at her waist - it is a tight fit - Barbie's hip's will make it a really tight fit. So You check to see if the paper towel roll when inserted with the Barbie, will be too long for the height of your lower cake and the Wondermold combined, and you slice off the correct amount from the bottom of the paper towel roll. Now cover the roll with foil or plastic wrap and reinsert the Barbie up to her waist. If the height of your combined lower levels and the Wondermold, will be much more than the enclosed Barbie in the paper towel roll, then you will want to also place a dowel inside of the enclosed Barbie/roll so that you have a centre dowel that goes though all of the layers to the bottom . Otherwise the Barbie in the roll acts as your centre dowel. So now you are ready to decorate.
I transport these doll cakes using a moving box. I cut the front flap all the way down. Then I completely line the box with foil and tape it well. I line the botom with that rubbery shelf liner that stops any movement - I get it from the Dollar Store. You can cut off the top flaps if the box is high enough to enclose Barbie or tape them all up in a vertical position. So you tape the front flap back in place. Then I take another piece of foil and tape it in place over the top of the opened box. When deliverd, a utility knife is used to cut the front flap that was taped, open.

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dodibug Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:24pm
post #5 of 7

Try covering the round with clear contact paper. I cut the paper big enough then fold it over the round so the paper sticks together then cut it close around the round. I would also dowel the petal cake just because I'm a worry wart. You may not need to but I'd rather be safe than sorry.

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llj68 Posted 9 Feb 2006 , 6:29pm
post #6 of 7

Just to add one other thing to Squirrelly's instructions. I have found that if you put Barbie in all the way to her waist, when you ice her and decorate her, she ends up looking like she either has no waist--is pg--or has an empire waisted dress. The last several that I have made, I have put her in to about mid-hip level and then used by to create a nice "line" to her dress.

Irritated me to no end when the redid Barbie to make her more "realistic". They made her butt/hips bigger and she's a tight fit into her wondermold dress now-a-days! LOL!

Lisa

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stephanie214 Posted 10 Feb 2006 , 3:20am
post #7 of 7

I use the non-stick foil to cover the board.

I love doing the Barbie doll cakes.

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