These two pictures were taken with a phone so, sorry about the pictures. I wont be winning any photography contests with these. But at least you can kind of see inside the cake.
That was the checkered *Perfect Party Cake*.
Here, I'll give you a few more bad shots of a checkered cake I made in January.
They were fun cakes and easy to make. The kids thought I was a genius. I'll admit, I liked that.
So how do you make a checkered cake with out a special pan?
Well... you do need some cookie cutters.
First I baked a chocolate layer and a vanilla layer. I cut each layer in half to get four layers.
I used 9 inch cake pans, but I have used 8 inch and it worked fine because my cutters aren't exact.
You need a 6" cookie cutter. (hard to find)
I found a 5 1/2 inch one at Cost Plus World Market.
and a 3 inch cutter.
Cut each layer into 3 circles.
Then swap inner circle rings with opposite layer.
Frost the inside of each circle before putting in the next piece. This keeps the pieces together when the cake is cut. I learned this the hard way!
This is how they should look. You'll notice only two layers got the frosting in between rings. That's how I know to frost all the rings. This particular cake wanted to fall apart where I didn't frost. Don't make my mistake, frost!
Frost each layer and I spread some of my Chocolate Covered Strawberry Jam in between.
Yummy goodness!
Add each alternating layer,
Frost and more jam
repeat with all layers
final frosting
Decorated with white and dark chocolate shavings.
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Photography by Kellie. (My 13 year old)
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Finally. Someone breaks it down in a easy way. I get it now!And I dont have to buy the Wilton pan. I could never grasp this. Thank You!
ReplyDeleteOkay, that makes perfect sense! No wonder you checkerboard cakes always look so perfect. I have a "special" cake pan but have never gotten it to look as clean as yours. Very good. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteI have never attempted a checkered cake! Thanks for the instructions! It looks great. I am glad that you like the jam too!
ReplyDeleteI have always wondered how to do this! Thanks for for the pic by pic lesson - just great!
ReplyDeleteHow neat! I think I could even get this! Thanks for sharing your tricks!
ReplyDeletewow! truly, you have more patience than i ever will.
ReplyDeleteWay cool! Saw this in a new cookbook of mine and went, "OH!" when I saw it. It's always been a mystery to me. Very nice job!
ReplyDeleteGreat checkered cake! Nice step by step instructions!
ReplyDeleteHow creative. It adds even more fun to the perfect party cake, and it look easy. Thanks for the step by step pictures.
ReplyDeleteHey there, I have tagged you..again, I think! LOL
ReplyDeleteAHA! I get it! Thanks for showing us the step by step process. I always wondered how it was done.
ReplyDeleteThat is genius!! You are a magician! I never ever would have figured that out. Now I can impress my own kiddy type--and I bet his daddy too!
ReplyDeleteSo this is how you make checkered cake,
ReplyDeleteIt's like magic,
I never know that's how you do it,
You rock!
The cake looks amazing! So ambitious! I'll have to give that a try for my daughter's birthday!
ReplyDeleteThis is genius! I can't wait to try it!!
ReplyDeleteThis looks great! Thank you - my son's birthday is tomorrow and I was kicking myself for not thinking of buying a pan sooner but then I found your blog and now the cakes are cooling on the counter! I can't wait for him to cut into his cake and see his surprise checkerboard!
ReplyDeleteI found it much easier to freeze the cake before cutting and swapping rings. The cake suffered no taste difference and the layers were much more even. Good instructions!
ReplyDeleteNice instructions! Just to add to Slick's technique...after you've got the rings reassembled and frosted, freeze again until the frosting is hard. They'll be "glued" together and won't fall apart when you're moving them around.
ReplyDeleteWhat kind of cake mix did you use? Mine fell apart in to a thousand pieces after I cut it. :( No way to put it back together.
ReplyDeleteIt's interesting to see how you do your checkered cake. I actually own a checked cake pan that allows you to pour the batter in different sections as they bake together. Thanks for sharing this link on the Food Bloggers forum.
ReplyDelete