Interview with Liana Stevens of Star & Swirls Bakeries!

Happy Monday! (Yes, I think even Monday can be happy if you frame it the right way!) Today I’m going to share some pictures an interview with the lovely Liana Stevens, who runs Star Bakery, Swirls Bakery (with her partner in cake amazingness), and can now be found sharing her extensive baking knowledge at Sweet Success in Nottingham. She makes super incredible cakes like these -

She even found time recently to stop by City WI to show us how to pipe the perfect swirly swirl and rose swirl on a cupcake

A couple of weeks ago I made my way to Hucknall to visit the kitchen ‘what where the magic happens’ and bake up a storm with Helen and Liana for a fellow Cake Eater’s wedding. While I was there, I asked her some questions!

How did your passion for baking get started?

My passion from baking stems from my Mum’s side of the family – my Nana is an amazing cook and baker and she used to collect the old Wilton Cake Decorating annuals which my Mum ‘acquired’ to feed her love of cake decorating. I then grew up flicking through the pages of those annuals amazed at all the beautiful creations you could make with patience…and lots of icing!

What gives you inspiration for the amazing cakes you create?

I get inspiration from everything that surrounds me! I once made a cake based on a bib I’d bought for my son which was brightly coloured and covered in a rainbow of polka dots – inspiration can hit at any time and as I’m drawn to bright colours so I love looking at fabric websites, Etsy, Pinterest etc. I have a doodle pad which I’ll use to make notes or create drawings detailing my thoughts. I do wake up at 2am with cake ideas and I often find those are the best ones!

What do you enjoy most about baking?

It’s funny, I LOVE baking but I detest cooking and the main difference I see is that baking is very controlled. You have to follow most recipes exactly to ensure they work and I like these restrictions as I can just set myself up with a recipe and know what the end product should look like. As I get busier with work the baking can become a chore but then a client will come along with a new flavour request or wanting something a bit different and I get to enjoy all the fun of creative baking again.

How did you make the leap from marketing to full time small business owner, both with Star Bakery and Swirls Bakery?

Baking is in my blood but I didn’t really start to bake seriously until I had my first son nearly 8yrs ago. At the same time I was rediscovering baking, I was undertaking a Marketing qualification and it was my peers who were encouraging me to think about a part time business as I’d bring treats along to our classes and they’d rave about them! I never would have had the confidence to start my own business if it hadn’t of been for that course as I wouldn’t have met the people I did and also gained the skills that I needed to start my own business. My Marketing background has been fundamental in the success of my business today and going forward with my new bakery venture Swirls Bakery.

As a baker, what’s the next big challenge you’d like to conquer?

The next big challenge for me is Swirls Bakery! I’m now one half of a team so I finally have another cake expert to team up with and we’re focusing our efforts on bespoke designed tiered cakes so the challenge will lie in growing the business to the successful heights that we’ve enjoyed with our seperate businesses over the years.

What’s your favourite cake, cookie or other baked good when it comes to what you want to eat?

Millionaire’s shortbread! It’s the one item that I don’t bake very often for fear of gorging on it :)

What advice would you give to someone just getting started in baking?

The internet is full of resources nowadays and there is soooo much information at your fingertips. I get lots of enquiries every week from people asking how I make this and where do I find that and I always advise them to look online. I have a few staple books that I refer to again and again and once you find a great basic recipe book then the baking world is your oyster!

Thanks Liana!! I also snapped some photos of the stock required to run a bakery out of your kitchen…. check out these baking supplies!!

Have you ever seen a box of sugar that big!!! And a lovely red Kitchenaid *swoon*

 While at Liana’s enbarking on a baking marathon…. I created pink strawberry rice crispie treats and cookie dough topped brownies. I’ll share the recipe for the rice crispie treats today and bring you the brownies another time. I also helped Helen pipe nutella onto some of her amazing almondy biscuits – they were fantastic! Here are some pictures

Strawberry rice crispie treats – you’ll need

  • 1 jar strawberry marshmallow fluff (thanks Mum) or 32 average sized marshmallows (go for pink ones and add some strawberry flavouring – Silver Spoon do a good one. You’ll have to eat the white ones I guess)
  • 30g very soft unsalted butter
  • 500g rice crispies (use your judgement and add more if the mix is very wet)

First, stir your very soft (almost melted) butter and your marshmallow fluff together. If you’re using regular marshmallows just melt your butter in a pan then add the marshmallows and stir as they melt. Combine with your crispies.

 Line a baking tray (at least 1cm deep) with parchment or greaseproof paper. Spoon your rice crispie mix into the tin and flatten flatten flatten – Liana recommended wrapping your hand in cling film or a latex glove and pushing the crispies down firmly (I added some mini marshmallows too for cuteness).

Slice and enjoy! These would be really cute with multicoloured sprinkles, or even coloured layers!


Healthy granola and dark chocolate chip cupcakes

When I first saw these in the Cox Cookies and Cake recipe book, I was dubious – healthy cupcakes? Cupcakes are a delicious treat but they’re definitely an indulgence and do not fall into the healthy category generally…

Really, these cupcakes are more of a muffin since they aren’t slathered with frosting, but I like calling them cupcakes – and these are cupcakes that you can even enjoy if you’re watching your weight! They also freeze well and are great for taking along on a walk or picnic for a healthy snack. If you want them to be EVEN healthier, you could just leave out the chocolate but I couldn’t resist sneaking some in…. plus isn’t dark chocolate like a health food anyway?

You’ll need (makes 6 cupcakes)

  • 115g wholemeal flour
  • 50g mixed muesli/granola
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 30ml sunflower oil
  • 50ml honey
  • 80ml milk
  • 1 tbsp poppy seeds
  • 1 pinch cinnamon
  • 30g dark chocolate, broken into pieces
  • a sprinking more of muesli/granola for the top

Right, lets get going! First, before you’ve even got a bowl out of the cupboard or anything, preheat your oven to a medium heat – say 150 degrees/gas mark 5.

This is a really easy recipe to make – combine your dry ingredients in one bowl, wet in another (whisking the oil, honey and milk together) and then combine the two!

Dry ingredients...

Spoon the mixture into cupcake cases and sprinkle over about a teaspoon more granola/muesli onto each one. Bake in the preheated oven for around 20 minutes until a toothpick comes out clean.

Enjoy with a cuppa! After making these the first time it occured to me how much yummier they would probably me with the addition of some mashed banana so I suggest trying that and easy off on the oil if you decide to make these!

x Kerry


Review : Cox Cookies and Cake

I got sent a copy of Cox, Cookies and Cake by the lovely folk at Baking Mad, which is a website and community with lots of info on baking, recipes etc. It is set up by the company that manufactures various products, including Allinson’s flour and bread, Silver Spoon products, Tate & Lyle products and Billington’s sugars, and it is represented by celebrity chef Eric Lanlard whose TV series ‘Baking Mad with Eric Lanlard’ – catchy title! – was on Channel 4 during March.

As you can see from the pictures, the theme of the book is somewhat risque cakes – the idea of Cox Cookies and Cake, where Lanlard teamed up with shoe designer Patrick Cox, was to open a sexy cake shop. This is an interesting idea, achieved in the most part by making cakes that look like boobs or have little torsos on.

I’ve had this book for a while now and I’m not a big fan of it… I can’t fault the recipes themselves (the salted caramel cupcakes above look AMAZING!), and it has very good reviews on Amazon but there’s just something about it I’m not keen on. The style of the cakes in the book just isn’t me at all for the most part – generally I do like things to look pretty! I also dislike the photography style of the book, which is clearly in-keeping with the aesthetic of their (now closed down after mixed reviews) London shop but again isn’t my cup of tea.

There were some things I really liked about the book – take a look at this ingenious use of bubble wrap – how clever is that!!

And the glittery decorations are pretty cool too. But overall its just not for me. So I’ve decided to donate my copy to the next Cake Eaters Anonymous raffle for the next event which is coming up on Sunday.

I couldn’t review the book without making at least one recipe from it, so I baked these granola cupcakes, or as I have dubbed them, healthy cupcakes! I’ll bring you the recipe on Monday!

In the meantime, if you’re wondering what I’ll be baking for Cake Eaters Anonymous on Sunday, its actually a Eric Lanlard recipe from his second book, Home Bake, which I will also review soon, merged with a bit of this recipe.

Intrigued? I’ll tell you….

chocolate brownies + cream cheese swirl + cookie dough

They’re brand new…. I’ve googled, I think I’ve invented ‘em. Help me out people – what should I call them? ‘Chocolate cheesecake brownies with cookie dough bites’ ‘Cheesecake swirl brownies with cookie dough balls’ ‘Half baked brownies’

I’m not sure if the word balls is a bit out of place…… cookie dough nuggets? cookie dough surprise?

Send ideas!

x Kerry


Loving right now

I just bought this dress from Dorothy Perkins and I cannot wait to wear it! When I first got it I was like grr cheap material (its unlined) but its just sooo flattering and 50s looking that I had to forgive it. I really want to wear it soon but I don’t want its first outing to be at work so I’m going to wait until I have an occasion to wear it to……. thereafter, it will make its work debut!

I never usually eat cereal – I only normally crave a bowl of cornflakes or rice crispies like once a year so its not really worth buying a box for! In fact, if I do have rice crispies in my cupboard, its far more likely to be getting involved in some future chocolate rice crispie cakes than just eaten. Normally for breakfast every day I have muesli with yoghurt and fruit which is super healthy, but lately I’ve become obsessed with cheerios. They’re just so yummy and I hum the song too while I’m eating them “cheery oats, cheery corn, cheery rice and wheat, they’re delicious and nutritious, cheery oh so good to eat!”

The Social Animal by David Brooks – I just finished reading this book recently and I LOVED it. The whole thing was enlightening and moving, but the things that struck me most were the little insights into how and why we behave the way we do. For instance, the chapter on babies and how they’re hard-wired to mimic and bond with the first humans they come into contact with, just minutes after being born was astonishing.

I think this book is for anyone planning to fall in love, have children, work at a job – everyone! You can read an excerpt of the book here.

I’ve been thinking about cupcakes a lot lately…. this post which I did last summer is still the most popular one on my entire blog! I know, even more popular than the rainbow cake! I can totally see why – there are a lot of people getting into baking who’d like to be able to produce homemade great looking (and tasting!) cupcakes like those above, and it can be a little overwhelming when you’re just starting out trying to master the basics. Thats why I’m going to be bringing you a new section of Kerry Cooks called Cupcake Academy with everything you need to know about making cupcakes, from the perfect vanilla cupcake recipe, to various frostings and lots of how to’s!

What do you guys think – do you like the name ‘Cupcake Academy’? Also, let me know if there are any specific posts or topics you’d like me to cover in the new section!

Kerry x


Stop what you’re doing and look at this!


My Red Velvet Layer Cake with Cream Cheese Frosting

I’ve been trying to perfect red velvet cupcake and cakes for a while now. After numerous not quite satisfactory results, and one horrible disaster, I decided to follow the Hummingbird Bakery recipe with some tweaks. It turned out poifect. Here’s what you’ll need! This recipe make either one large 2-layer cake to serve 6, or 12-16 cupcakes.

  • 120g unsalted butter, very soft
  • 330g caster sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 50g cocoa powder
  • red food colouring, preferably christmas red by Sugarflair – NOT Dr Oetker (see below!)
  • 1 tsp vanilla essence or extract
  • 300g plain flour
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 240ml buttermillk
  • 1 tbsp white wine vinegar
  • 1 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  • 100g unsalted butter
  • 600g icing sugar
  • 250g full fat cream cheese

IMPORTANT PUBLIC SERVICE ANNOUNCEMENT – The horrible disaster I had when trying to make these cupcakes was caused by using Dr Oetker red food colouring, which the Hummingbird recipe from my edition of the Cake Days cookbook (2011, so the one most people will have) calls for. For the love of god, do not buy any Dr Oetker ‘natural’ colours – they taste like absolute shit. Since Dr Oetker changed their recipe, I assume to make the product less full of artificial colours and more ‘natural’, Hummingbird have stopped recommending its use in this recipe. The batch of cupcakes I made using it sadly went into the bin, the Dr Oetker colouring gives them a disgusting, awful taste. Hummingbird now recommend that you use a gel/paste food colouring – I used christmas red by Sugarflair in this cake and it worked perfectly. Annoucement ends…

The offending item

Anywhoo… lets get baking!! First, preheat your oven to 180 degrees/375 farenheit/gas mark 5 and prepare your baking tin.I sprayed my new Prestige round spring-form cake tin with Cake release spray (by Dr Oetker…. they’re not totally useless I guess). The tin was from TK Maxx who are AMAZING for great value bakeware.

Whisk up your very soft butter with the sugar until they are very fluffy indeed. Add eggs one at a time, whisking and scraping, whisking and scraping. Sieve in your cocoa powder (important as it tends to be lumpy) and add vanilla.

In another large bowl, sift the flour with the salt and then add half of the flour to your chocolate cake base, then half the buttermilk, then the other half of flour, then the rest of the buttermilk! Whisk whisk whisk it up. At this stage, I added my Sugarflair red food colouring (about half a tub to get it this red!). Lastly, in a small mug or glass, combine the vinegar and bicarb (fizzy!) and then add to cake mix and stir.

Spoon the batter into your greased tin and bake in the middle of the oven for around 40-55 minutes – depending on whether your oven is fan assisted, mine isn’t. Your cake is ready as soon as a toothpick or knife inserted into the middle of the cake comes out clean. Once thoroughly cooled, cut your cake in half using a serrated knife. My cake had sunk in the middle, so I turned the top half over so that the sunk part was on the inside and the flat part was the cakes top. I also cut a little extra wedge of cake off to use to decorate the cale, as you can see from the uneven surface below!

Now we’re ready to make the frosting! I kept having issues with lumpy cream cheese frosting, despite exactly following the recipe’s instructions, until I found this post. Unfortunately, lots of recipes just don’t tell you how to ensure to end up with smooth frosting! The key is to make sure your butter is very very very soft when you add the icing sugar to it, and fully creamed together. This is tough because of the ratio of butter to icing sugar (1:6) so I add a splash of milk until the mix comes together. DO NOT add the cream cheese until your buttercream base is fully mixed, or lumps will result.

Then, add your cream cheese and a squeeze of lemon juice and whisk. Try to resist sticking your face in the bowl. For some reason I didn’t take any pictures of the frosting stage, as I was in a massive rush and just covered the cake in frosting rather than piping rose swirls as I’d planned. You could also use sprinkles (or nothing at all) to decorate the top of the cake, but I love how the red crumbs look on the white background.


!!!!!!!RAINBOW CAKE!!!!!!!!!!

wacka wacka wacka

There are not enough exclaimation marks in the world to convey my excitement for rainbow cake. I first came across this awesome version over at sweetest blog ever Sweetapolita. I also came across this great version by Whisk Kid which I think is the original. I wanted my cake to have a more normal cake to frosting ratio though so I set about making what I now realise may be the tallest rainbow cake ever!!

I’ll tell you a secret – I was actually kinda intimidated by making this cake – I first saw it a while ago but I wasn’t sure I had the skills to pull it off well. In actual fact, making this cake was extremely easy and hassle free! Its a simplified version of the american rainbow cake recipes I found, which tended to have swiss meringue frosting (let’s not talk about my attempt to make that) and use either box cake mixes or homemade versions that were similar to white cake – and used A LOT of egg whites.

I decided to make a UK version, using a standard victoria sponge recipe and cream cheese frosting. It worked a treat.

For the cake, you’ll need -

  • 350g self raising flour
  • 350g soft soft butter
  • 350g caster or light brown caster sugar
  • 6 free range eggs
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
  • up to 40ml semi-skimmed milk

I baked my cakes in small, disposable tin foil ‘flan cases’ that I found in Wilkinson’s (10 for a £1). Supermarkets also increasingly sell disposable cake cases, in loaf and other shapes. But don’t worry if you can’t find anything like this, you can just use regular cake tins – depending on how many you own, you’ll need to cook the cakes in stages (if you own three, two stages isn’t too much hassle, if you only own two cake tins I would consider buying/borrowing another one).

To colour your cake, you’ll need -

Food colouring! But not just any food colouring. NOT the liquid ones of your childhood, although they do seem to be phasing those out now in favour of gel versions that you can get even in the supermarket. The ones I use are Sugarflair and Americolor and I get them from this little exclusive bakery supplies shop – you might have heard of it, its called eBay!

I love getting my gel colours from eBay because they’re cheap (cheaper or at least the same price as any baking supply shops I’ve visited) with free postage, plus its just easy and convenient. To make the cake, you’ll need these colours

Red – Christmas Red by Sugarflair

Orange -Melon + Christmas Red, both by Sugarflair

Yellow -Melon by Sugarflair

Green -Mint green by Sugarflair

Blue -Baby blue by Sugarflair

Purple – Electric purple by Americolor – I have tried and failed to get a bright purple colour using sugarflair (grape violet which is the only purple they do). If you want a bright purple, I recommend getting the americolor version.

Click here for the sugarflair and here for the americolour on eBay. The Amercolour was from an American seller who combined postage, so they worked out to cost about £3 each whereas the Sugarflair colours cost about £2.50 each. If you haven’t used gel colours before, this might seem expensive but they go a looooong way – and last forever.

For the cream cheese frosting, you’ll need -

  • 100g butter, soft
  • 250g cream cheese, at room temperature
  • 600g icing sugar, sifted

Note – when I decided to make this cake, I reasoned that I would need A LOT of cake so I doubled the standard victoria sponge recipe, and produced the mahoosivest rainbow cake ever seen by man. If you’d prefer your rainbow cake to have thinner layers and be less skyscraper like, just divide this recipe in two, for the cake and the frosting.

First, preheat your oven to gas mark 4/170 degrees/360 degrees farenheit and mix up your cake batter in the usual way – cream your butter and sugar until combined, add eggs one at a time followed by a little of the flour and mix well before adding remaining flour and vanilla extract. If your mix is a little thick as mine was, add up to 40ml of semi-skimmed milk – adding a tablespoon at a time and stopping when you get to a consistency that you’re happy with.

Next, divide your mix into 6 bowls (including your original bowl) to do your colours. I divided my mix by eye, not bothering to weigh my mixture and divide it exactly equally.

Drizzle on some of your red gel colour and mix in. Keep adding and mixing a little until you have the vibrant shade you want. Its actually very hard to go overboard with gel colours, but don’t add too much at once (not more than a quarter of a teaspoon). Ten minutes and an aching arm later, you’ll have a beautiful rainbow of cake batters!

Pop them into the oven and keep a close eye on them – you don’t want them to get overly browned. I rotated my cakes on the oven shelves throughout the cooking time (mine took around 20 minutes total), taking them out as soon as a skewer to the centre came out clean.

I can’t lie to you – rainbow cake is messy! But its definitely worth it.

When your cakes are cool, its time to stack and decorate! The picture above pretty much shows you what not to do, since I put way too much frosting between the layers, resulting in my rainbow cake going all leaning tower of pisa on me. It was quite a terrifying time. Don’t be like me – put just a thin layer of frosting between the layers – just enough to stick them together!

Apply a crumb coat and then put your cake into the fridge (I had to remove a shelf!) to set and firm up for about 30 minutes.

After thirty minutes, apply a second coat of frosting and then add sprinkles or decorate your cake to your hearts content!

This cake would be super duper awesome for a kids birthday party…. especially if you kept the rainbow part a secret… can you imagine?

ssh - don't tell anyone I put my layers in the wrong order!

Rainbow cake makes me so happy. Oh and did I mention that rainbow cake is just the beginning? Check out these amazing ombre cakes which use exactly the same method.

Happy baking!

x Kerry


How to : 7 tips for baking great cakes

The original title of this post was ‘Baking perfect cakes’ but I changed it! As you can see from the picture above, my cakes rarely turn out perfect, but they almost always turn out delicious.

Cakes can be really intimitidating for beginner bakers, so I’ve decided to do a series of posts covering the basics! I’ll cover some hints and tips and how to tell for sure when your cake is done in this post, and then move onto using food colouring to tint cakes and frostings next!

First, some tips for better cakes. They’re worth considering every time you set out to bake – if something goes wrong, one of these will be the likely culprit.

  1. Before you start, read your recipe. Then read it again

Skim reading a recipe as you go along while baking in a rush is a sure fire way to mess something up. Before you start, read the recipe twice and be sure you understand all the steps. You’ll thank yourself later.

2.   Bring your ingredients to room temperature

Lush fluffy cakes are made with softened butter, and eggs and other ingredients at room temperature. The only exception to this is cream cheese for cream cheese frosting – you should keep it in the fridge right up until you’re ready to make your frosting.

3.  Weigh your ingredients, ideally with an electronic scale, before you start

Makes it less likely you’ll ingredients in the wrong sequence, plus you can totally pretend you have your own cooking show. Don’t pretend you don’t do that.

4.   Buy real vanilla extract

This stuff. For the love of god, not this stuff. Your cakes will thank you. Sadly your purse won’t, but you can make your own homemade vanilla extract and save yourself some money.

5.   Use quality ingredients, sometimes

Flour, baking powder, bicarb of soda, sugar, cream cheese = buy the cheapest you can find. I’ve experimented with different flours and sugars and found not one jot of difference. Eggs = buy free range and ALWAYS check that none of them is cracked before you leave the store. Butter = be sure to buy a 100% butter and not a vegetable spread/butter mix. I favour Kerrygold and Country Life. Chocolate = buy according to what you’re baking. So for example, for chocolate chip cookies I’d happily use anything from dairy milk to supermarket own brand chocolate. For chocolate brownies, mousse or cake where you want a good depth of chocolate flavour, you need to be sure to use a chocolate with high cocoa solids like a 70% chocolate. You can get supermarket own brand versions that are fine for baking – there’s no need to spend a lot on Green & Blacks or Lindt unless its important to you such as for a special occasion. Do not even contemplate going anywhere near any cooking chocolate.

6.   Move fast once the flour’s gone in

Once the gluten gets added to the cake, act fast. The gluten in the flour forms the network that holds the cake together. Its a ‘toughening’ ingredient to the ‘tenderising’ butter and sugar. The more the gluten in your cake mix is developed, the tougher and chewier your cake will be. To avoid a tough cake, make sure all your other ingredients are well mixed and then add the flour / baking powder / bicarb of soda at the end. Mix to just incorporate, and then put straight in the oven. Cake mix can’t hang around.

7.    Don’t overbake

Pre-heat your oven for at least 20 minutes before you bake, cook your cakes on the middle shelf (or if making multiple cakes or cookies, rotate them between shelves) and start testing for doneness roughly two thirds of the way through the recommended cooking time.

The classic signs of doneness are – browning and pulling away from the edges

Cake bounces back when pressed down slightly

And the most failproof test – the skewer test. Use a knife, skewer, or cocktail stick and stick the centre of the cake. If it comes out with clean (apart from steam and a few crumbs) – the cake is definitely done. If there’s still some raw batter on your skewer, return the cake to the oven for a few more minutes. Try not to worry if your cake takes much less or more time than the recommended cooking time – ovens are all different and I’ve had cakes take twice as long as recommended! Just follow the tests above and you’ll be fine!

Happy baking!

x Kerry


Happy birthday to Kerrycooks!

Hurrah! It’s been one whole YEAR since I started this blog! On a rainy Saturday in March last year, I bought a shiny new laptop and realised I should probably do something with it! Here’s how the internal monologue went -

“I could start a blog? No way, everyone will think its stupid and that I just want to talk about myself all the time! Let’s do it anyway! Plus they’ll be cake! Wheeee!”

I’m very pleased to say that one whole year, 376 posts, and over 1200 comments later, I’m still having an awesome time writing my little blog. I couldn’t have imagined all the great people I would meet from across the blogosphere.

So to say thank you, I baked you this pink lemonade cake. Its fizzy, pretty and delicious. If I could, I would mail you each a piece.

Pink lemonade cake -

For the cake – this is adapted from this Delia recipe. I knew I wanted a really moist cake so it had to be Delia!

  • 175g unsalted butter
  • 175g caster sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 175g plain flour
  • 2tsp baking powder
  • zest and juice of one lemon

For the frosting -

  • 250g icing sugar, sifted
  • 80g unsalted butter, at room temperature
  • 25ml whole milk
  • 30g lemon sherbert powder (I bought a packet from my local Wilko’s for 30p)

First, preheat the oven to 170 degrees/gas mark 3 and cream the butter and sugar

Beat in the eggs, lemon juice and zest. Close up of zest for you!

Add the flour (sifting it into the bowl) and mix. If there are any lumps in your mix, use an electric mixer to get them out, but don’t overbeat, just until everythings incorporated. Pop into greased cake tins and bake for 20-30 minutes.

To make the frosting, combine your butter and sugar and mix with an electric whisk or mixer. When the butter is incorporated and the mixture resembles breadcrumbs, add the milk and continue whisking.

How to deal with a cake disaster – my cake got totally stuck to the pan (I think because my cake pans are old and crappy). Even if this happens (as it also did with my citrus bundt cake!)don’t panic. Just turn out what you can of the cake onto your serving plate and then piece it back together as best you can. And remember – you can hide anything with frosting!

Ta-dah! Pieced together, just a little dip in the centre!

Phew – frosting hides all flaws!

I put a massive crumb coat on this cake – it was so moist and crumbly (and just baked) that it just wanted to fall to pieces. Luckily it held together!

Wacka wacka wacka….

Happy birthday blog!

x Kerry


All I want for Valentine’s Day

I thought quite a lot about what to make for my entry into the Baking Mad Valentine’s Day bloggers competition! They were kind enough to send me this box of goodies from Silver Spoon, including vanilla bean paste, chocolate hearts, and giant snowies (those chocolate button type things with hundreds and thousands on them!). The products are all new ones from their cakecraft range and I was excited to see on a trip to Tesco that they’ve starting selling ready rolled marzipan too! If only it had been two months earlier!

I was super pleased to be chosen from so many bloggers and I didn’t want to let the side down.

So I thought about things that are pink, and heart shaped.

Things that are cute and involve chocolate, chocolate and more chocolate (with some chocolate strawberries on top for good measure).

And then I thought about what Valentine’s Day is about. Your other half. Sharing a life together. Knowing each other, inside and out.

And I realised that what I would like to receive for Valentine’s Day. This cake.

Half luxurious pink velvet with lemon-spiked cream cheese frosting. And half vanilla chocolate chunk bounty cake with a chocolate topping and toasted coconut. Half my favourite cake, half his favourite.

Its us, in cake form.

Two different and seemingly incompatible things, coming together to make something that is as unique as it is awesome.

And if I’m lucky, (and I am), my other half may just give me a slice of his half.

Here are most of the ingredients I used to make my mega cake. I didn’t have any gel red food colouring so I used pink instead!

The ingredients I used to make the cake -

Here’s how to make it! To keep things relatively simple, I made lots of vanilla cake batter using my citrus bundt cake recipe and then divided into two bowls.

  • 6 cups / 600g  plain flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 1 tsp bicarb of soda
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1.5 cups / 340g soft butter
  • 3 cups / 600g sugar
  • 6 eggs
  • 50ml semi-skimmed milk
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract or paste (I used 2 sachets of the Silver Spoon vanilla shown above)

For the Bounty half

  • 2 x Bounty bars (If I made this cake again I would probably use 4)
  • 150g plain chocolate chunks (I used the Tesco version of Bournville chocolate)
  • Shredded coconut

For the pink velvet half

  • 50g cocoa powder
  • 1tsp pink food colouring (preferably a concentrated gel colouring such as Sugarflair)

This cake starts as all good cakes should…. with soft soft butter and sugar

Beat in eggs, vanilla, baking powder, salt, bicarb and flour and then the milk

Next, seperate the batter into two different bowls and add bounty chunks (SO hard not to eat them all) and chocolate chunks to one bowl.

And add the cocoa powder and food colouring to the other bowl.

I cooked the cake for 50 minutes at gas mark 6 / 140 degrees, testing it for doneness with my I heart cake tester!

I used the Dr Oetker cake release spray again which worked okay this time, except where the chocolate/bounty pieces had stuck to the tin. Whoops!

Next I made lovely cream cheese frosting using the Hummingbird recipe that I LOVE although I do want to try this one by Annie soon too.

  • 500g icing sugar, sifted
  • 75g soft unsalted butter
  • 200g cream cheese (cold)

YUM! What are you hoping to receive for Valentine’s Day?


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