To Dowel Or Not To Dowel... Please Help!!!!
Decorating By elvis Updated 27 Mar 2006 , 11:25pm by elvis
Hi-- I've been asked to do a baby shower cake for this weekend to feed 50. I may do a 14 inch round (3 layers) topped with a 9 inch round cake... or I may just make all the layers 14 inch.
My question is.. in either case, would I need to dowel? I've never done that before. Is it only necessary to dowel when you've got a smaller cake sitting on top of a larger one? Any insight would be so very appreciated!! My worst nightmare would be for a cave in!!!! Thanks!
How thick will each layer be? A 2 layer(2" each layer), 14" round will serve a good 60 people. If you are only doing the 14", putting dowels in it won't help unless you have a cake board in there somewhere, but you shouldn't need that. If you stack a 9" on top, then yes, I would put dowels underneath that layer. Make sure there is a cake board under that 9" or the dowels will have nothing to support. Also, this will be a bit heavy, so make sure your base board is sturdy and thick enough to support the weight. There's a tutorial on the front page of this site on how to stack cakes, if that will help any. HTH
when in doubt, i always dowl, just for my own peace of mind...
I would dowel. I did a carrot 3 layered (2 inch layer) 10 inch round, while driving to work with it I could almost see it sliding in slow-mo
! I wished I would of doweled
The cake was an instant "whimsical" cake. It was ok, everyone liked the cake but still was pretty sad ![]()
I always dowel...if only to keep the layers aligned. I guess I have a heavy hand, because when I start smoothing the sides, so.metimes I push the layers so much that they get out of alighment I used to just dowel for stacked cakes or if I had a slippery filling....but now I dowel pretty much everything. If I'm just using dowels to prevent layer slippage, I often use drinking straws instead of wood.
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