In a nutshell, we: received a course book, read through a few pages, watched the instructer make icing and discuss various measuring shortcuts based on her experience, smelled a few flavourings, had a tour of the Wilton Isle to discuss gear and must-have items and lastly, decorated our circle cookies.
I slacked on the decorating cookies part because I had already spent so much time with that Wilton tip #18 during my Easter cupcake batch. So, I ducked out a little bit early and bought a few things. Lily was thrilled when I brought her a bunch of decorated cookies to eat.
Most valuable lessons of the class:
~Never tip your cake out of the pan before allowing it to cool for 10 minutes. This must be why my baking breaks, it hasn't cooled long enough.
~Leaving your icing to air dry for 10 minutes, then pressing a paper sheet onto it to further smooth the finish.
~Wilton baking strips that wrap around the cake to create perfectly flat cakes for decorating. My sister knew this trick from before Wilton figured out how to make a profit off of it. She uses wet tea towels and pins around the pans.
~If you're not using a kitchenaid stand mixer, DO NOT double the icing batch. You'll break your machine.
Here's the impulse shopping of the night.
| Butterfly cupcake pics, varieties of non pareils, cupcake cups and meringue powder |
| Motivated to buy these because they remind me of a sweet internet friend of mine from Austrailia. Lissy has the most elegant taste and bakes with the freshest ingredients. |
| The cookies from class. BORING. But I do like the spiral cookie. |
I must confess, I don't always wait 10 minutes, must be why I have so much breakage over here. P.S. Cookies look great.
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