What Are Your Favourite Fondant And Other Charts That You Use All The Time?
Decorating By Danilou Updated 25 Mar 2014 , 10:13am by cazza1
Over the last couple of years I've been building up my collection of charts that will help me when caking.
So far I have;
All the Wilton charts
How much fondant to cover a cake board (from cakesbakesand cookies.com)
Conversion of U.S to Aus with ingredients (from a chart here on c.c).
I've used the Ganacherator (which was working until recently).
I'd like to know which Fondant chart (quantity needed to cover a cake) is the best as there are so many out there. Before I start having to convert to grams I'd rather work out which is the best. So far I've got Wiltons, Earlenes and cakebaker. They are all different and I'd would like "enough plus a little extra". I used Wilton's last time and it wasn't quite enough. I don't roll my fondant thin at all. Maybe because my cakes were 4 inches high?
Also what are some other charts that you highly recommend?
Ta,
AI've amassed my own over the years, from countless recordings of how much fondant it took to cover, for example, a three tiered cake with 4, 5, and 6 inch tiers with average fondant detailing. How many different pan sizes and how many of each will one batch of a particular recipe fill. How many tiers of various sizes will a batch of SMBC fill and ice...etc etc. That plus the calculations that my accounting software provides for each order, pretty mich nails down what I need to know fairly accurately.
I definitely convert recipes to weight for greatest accuracy, ounces for bigger volume ingredients, grams for small stuff like baking soda and powder.
Serving charts, I use one, which is a hybrid version of Wilton and Earlene wedding servings for all cakes, regardless of occasion.
AMy favorite chart though is one I built that shows neary every ppossible combination of tier sizes for a requested serving amount. For example, if someone asks for a cake for 80 people, I don't have to say, ok that's a three tier. It may well fit a three tier, but I can glance at my chart and offer a 5 tier that is tall and towery, or a combination of half tall tiers and normal sized tiers, or a double barrel with a couple of normal tiers on top. Or a mix of rounds and squares, etc etc. Either way, it takes me all of 1 minute to see all the different configurations for any given serving amount, and I can move on to designing a lot quicker.
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