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Wellington, New Zealand
Food lover. Food talker. Now food writer.

Sunday, 22 September 2013

Pigs in a mud spa

It’s my partner’s birthday tomorrow so I made cake for him and, apparently, his workmates.  It’s very cute so I thought I’d share it.
 
The power of this is in the decoration.  I made chocolate beetroot cake, one of my favourite chocolate cakes.  You could make anything you like.  Any chocolate or vanilla or lemon cake, even fruit cake if you’re into landfill, would work.  The construction is the impressive part.
 
I based the bits beyond the actual cake on the one on this site: fine craft guild with personal adaptations. 
 
I’ll give you my Beetroot Chocolate Cake recipe to use if you want to.  Because of the beetroot, this is a moist cake which gets better with (a little bit of) age. 
 
Line one large or two medium sized cake tins with cooking paper and oil spray.  This is a big cake, so you can make two if you want to.  If you do that, for this particular decoration you can stack them one on top of the other, filled with ganache or something else.  I made one cake. 
 
Pre-heat the oven to 180°C.
 
Take a huge bowl and sift into it:
2 ½ c plain flour
2 t baking soda
½ c cocoa (use the good stuff)
1 t salt
 
Drain an 850g can of beetroot.  Set aside. 
 
In a food processor, mix together:
4 eggs
2 c sugar
1 ½ c cooking oil (I use canola)
2 t vanilla essence
 
Mix that into the flour.  In the meantime, and don’t mess abut as you don’t want the soda to get too excited before the whole thing goes in the oven, blend the beetroot to a fine slush in the food processor (don’t bother to clean the bowl of the food processor). 
 
Mix that into the flour and sugar mixture and pour into the tin(s).  Cook for 45-50 minutes for 2 tins, longer for one large one.  It’s cooked when a skewer comes out clean when poked all the way through.  Cool completely before decorating.  I cut the very top off the cake to make it a bit flatter before decorating. 
 
So for the fun, impressive decorating bit.
 
Pour 1 ½ cups of cream into a clean saucepan.  When it’s hot but not boiling, take it off the heat and stir 200g of dark chocolate into it until it’s all melted together.  This is called ganache.  Set aside until it cools. 
 
To make the pigs I used white pre-made fondant mixed with a tiny amount of pink food colouring.  The fondant needs playing with to make it pliable and mouldable.  Mould into pig shapes – anything you like.  I used these shapes:
 

 
Make sure that they’re cool and hard before you place them on the cake.
 
Once the ganache is set and spreadable, which may take a while (I chilled it in the fridge for a bit) and when the cake is cool.  Spread some ganache around the edge of the cake and and stick chocolate fingers around it to resemble a fence.  Other recipes use Kitkats.  I wonder if twix would work?  Tie a ribbon around the ‘fence’ to keep it all there.  Clearly a pink one is the best idea.
 
 
Pour/spread the rest of the ganache on the top of the cake.  The ganache needs to be quite thick at this point to ensure that it doesn’t slip through the fence.  Gently park the pigs in the most elegant poses possible and chill for an hour before serving. 
 
 
Please send me photos of yours.  I like the idea of it with frogs instead of pigs.  Are you game?
 
 

 
 

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