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Hi, I'm Katie, and I'm going to show you how to fondant a cake. So I'm starting with a
nice blob of white fondant, this is just a vanilla fondant, and I've kneaded it into
submission. You could see it's nice and soft, very pliable. What you're looking for is almost
like a soft Play-doh, you really want to be able to kind of roll it out and cut it and
shape it as you need. But you could see my cake is already ready to go. I just gave ma
cake a little bit of a crumb coat, that's when you do a light layer, you can almost
see the cake through. The goal is not to put a ton of frosting, especially when you're
putting fondant on top, you really just want something for it to stick to, and you also
of course want the flavor of a little bit of frosting too. But you could see very light
layer all the way around, nice and even, and now I'm ready to go.
So the tools I need are, I have my rolling pin, I have a sifter with a little bit of
confection sugar, or you could use corn starch, I have what's called a fondant smoother thing,
that's not what it's called, but that's what I'm calling it right now, and I'm just going
to use it to smooth out my surface, and a little paring knife to trim my edges, and
that's it, and then it's just your muscles. So I'm going to give my surface a nice sift
of confection sugar, this is to keep my fondant from sticking as I roll, and same thing on
top, it's almost as if you are rolling out a pie dough, same idea.
I'm going to be working and moving it constantly. If you see any bits of anything, you want
to make sure your counters are really clean, but if they're not, just kind of kick out
any crumbs that will tarnish the look of your fondant as you go. Remember constant moving,
it's not only keeping it from sticking, but also if you keep rotating as you turn, as
you roll, it will create a circle instead of creating a large square, if I were to just
shift it by 90 degrees, so just constantly move it around. And what we're looking for
is about an eighth of an inch, which is very thin. If you're in the kitchen and you don't
have a ruler, and you're wondering what is an eighth of an inch, if you look at kind
of the top portion of your thumb, it's usually about an inch, unless you have really big
hands, so that's about half of that is half an inch, your nails is about a little more
than a quarter of an inch, so we're aiming for an eighth, a very small, thin layer. So
going to just keep rolling, and fondant definitely takes a lot of strength. Imagine doing huge
wedding cakes and trying to cover gigantic surfaces, it gets tiring, so pastry chefs
have such good muscles. Keep moving it around.