Graveyard Cake
Written by Bagpuss
Bagpuss shows you how to make a spooky cake for Halloween.
This cake uses the basic recipe from this article.
My roasting tin which is 36cm by 26cm and about 5cm deep took a 9 egg
version of the above sponge mix which I made chocolate. I used a
roasting tin as to achieve a sensible effect with the graves the cake
needed to be quite deep. When filled the tin was half to 2/3rds full
and it took 1hr to cook at 180/gas mark 4. As the article says this can
vary from oven to oven so I would start checking it after about
45-50minutes. When cooked it should stop making noise and a stick/knife
should come out relatively clean.
Other ingredients used
Icing
100-150g butter
100-150g Icing sugar
Green food colouring
Decorations
Digestive biscuits crushed to replicate gravel
Gravestone shaped biscuits
Pink Wafer biscuits
Jelly Babies
Jelly worms
Marshmallow ghosts
Red Jam
Candy sticks to replicate bones
Chocolate mice
mushroom sweets
Supercook writing icing (You get 4 colours in small tubes for about
£2 you could achieve the same effect with coloured icing and piping
bags)
Cocktail sticks
So I started with a sponge cake.
I used paper to vague plan where the gravestones and mausoleum were going to go
I used a small paring knife to cut the graves out. Being fairly
careful with the sponge being removed as some of it would need to be
put back.
The graves were then marked using cocktail sticks so once iced they
could be located then filled with either jelly babies or strawberry jam
and candy sticks.
Some of the removed cake was put back into the holes to allow them to be iced though one grave was left open.
The icing was made with soften butter, green food colouring and
icing sugar, they were mixed together to form a paste which tasted more
of sugar than butter and dyed with green food colouring untill it would
go no more green.
Then the green icing was spread over the cake.
Now I marked a path to a mausoleum I was building from pink wafer biscuits.
Then I started writing on the biscuits to be gravestones various things like RIP or In Loving Memory.
When the gravestones were placed I removed the cocktail stick and
used a knife to make a small incision in which to place the biscuit
before pressing down.
The mausoleum was constructed from several pink wafer biscuits.
This could be prised apart so the writing was done on thinner pieces
then stuck onto the side using icing.
Probably about a biscuits worth of crushed digestive biscuit was
used to line the path. It was pressed down into the green icing to
ensure it remained stuck down.
I used cocktail sticks to place ghosts around the graveyard and just pressed the other sweets into the icing.
It was a lovely cake and probably served about 20-30 people depending on how generous you are with the size of piece.
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