Emily's Harry Potter Birthday Cake: a gingerbread Hogwarts with royal icing decor and candy glass windows, on a chocolate sheet cake (see recipe below), with marzipan characters. It stands solid and lights up!
When I last left off in the previous post (Harry Potter Birthday Cake {Part 1}), Jenny and I had completed making the gingerbread parts with candy windows and the marzipan characters. The time to assemble had arrived. Jenny mapped out on cardboard cake boards where the building would sit and cut holes in the center with an exacto knife where the lights would sit.
We stuck lights through the holes and taped the rest to the back.
We taped another board over the bottom so that the lights weren't lying in cake and flipped it. Voila!
Then came laying the foundations. A common problem with gingerbread houses is collapse. If you use enough royal icing and make sure the sides are standing, set, and dry before you add the rooftops, all should be well, in theory... luckily in this case, also in practice.
So we waited about 45 minutes for the sides to set, and did a light check while waiting - CHECK!
Finally, it was time for the castle to come to life! The cakeboard was moved on top of the chocolate sheet cake (recipe below). We watered down some of the royal icing and brushed it on the cake board. While wet, we dusted cocoa and sugar on for the ground. Using an Ateco pastry tip #133, I piped green royal icing into grass and shrubs. The landscape was complete with marzipan trees.
Our heros arrived...
Hedwig was standing by to deliver birthday cards...
Another birthday cake was made with scraps from the Hogwarts cake (just in case the dog got to it)...
Emily, who had been in the dark until this point, was in for a surprise... I think she liked the end result :)
Thanks for sharing in this journey. It took Jenny and I the better part of two days to complete, so this cake was definitely a labor of love, but I was glad I could share it with Jenny and her family. It was a bold project to take on and I don't think we expected it to work. We were surprised that nothing catastrophic happened along the way. We were expecting to burn gingerbread, burn ourselves with sugar, collapse roofs, knock down buildings, or drop the cake, but somehow, every step went smoothly. So, bring on the next challenge. I smell a Lord of the Rings cake in my future... Hey, anything is possible. Just ask Ginny Weasley.
"You sort of start thinking anything's possible if you've got enough nerve."
- Ginny Weasley, Harry Potter and the Order of the Phoenix
Texas Brownies or Texas Sheetcake
Ingredients:
2 cups flour
2 cups sugar
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
1/2 cup vegetable shortening
1 cup strong coffee
1/4 cup dark, unsweetened cocoa
1/2 ounce unsweetened baking chocolate
1/2 cup buttermilk
2 eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Butter a 17 x 11 inch jelly roll pan (or baking tray with sides). Combine four, sugar, and soda in large bowl. In a heavy saucepan, combine butter, shortening, coffee, cocoa, and chocolate. Stir and heat to boiling. Pour boiling mixture over dry ingredients in bowl. Add buttermilk, eggs, and vanilla. Mix well, using a spoon or electric mixer. Pour into jelly roll pan. Bake for 20 minutes or until brownies test done in center (toothpick inserted in center comes out dry). Cool completely before serving.
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