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Conference turris::cooks

Title:How to Make them Goodies
Notice:Please Don't Start New Notes for Old Topics! Check 5.*
Moderator:FUTURE::DDESMAISONSec.com::winalski
Created:Wed Feb 19 1986
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:4127
Total number of notes:31160

2722.0. "CAKE: Strange (turkey) Shaped Cake" by CLUSTA::GLANTZ (Mike 227-4299 TAY Littleton MA) Fri Nov 09 1990 10:49

  High. We'll be making a white cajun chocolate cake in the shape of a
  twenty-pound turkey for Thanksgiving this year. Does anyone have any
  suggestions on how to cook it so the legs and thighs are cooked but
  the breast doesn't dry out?

  Ad(thanks)vance
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2722.2.1 too fast to reply...DUGGAN::MAHONEYFri Nov 09 1990 12:3810
    I think the .1 answer is a bit off key... the cake is in the shape of a
    20 POUND turkey... not 20 pounds of cake...
    
    What's wrong with baking a cake in a shape of a turkey?
    Now, in answer to base note: baking a cake in that shape will be a
    challenge.  I advise that once the cake is baked, you use a fruit juice
    or diluted syrup to coat thighs and edges to make those parts moist...
    as without a doubt, will be too dry so to have the center cake cooked.
    Orange juice with Grand Marnier liquor would be great, or sypup/brandy.
    This should work fine and... I hope you get a fastastic dessert!       
2722.6don't forget the new year's resolution note!CSOA1::WIEGMANNFri Nov 09 1990 16:3015
    If you're serious, you could bake a 9 x 13 cake. Cut maybe 2" off the short
    end.  Then make two cuts in the rest from the midpoint of one short
    side to the ends of the opposite short side, turn and put on top of
    the triangle remaining.  Cut the long piece you cut off into halves and 
    use for a trunk.  What you end up with is a two layer Christmas-tree 
    shaped cake.
    
    One of the cut-up cake books referred to in another note has a turtle
    you bake in a bowl and use cupcakes for the feet and head.  Maybe you
    could make Santa's belly with a bowl somehow!
    
    P.S.  Use cake flour! ;-)
    
    Terry
    
2722.7TLE::EIKENBERRYA goal is a dream with a deadlineFri Nov 09 1990 17:419
  Re: -1

  You might want to browse through the Wilton Yearbook for ideas on a Santa
Cake.  They have genuinely creative decorative techniques in there!
You can get it at Kitchen Etc., or Party Time in Nashua.

  (Though I prefer the 1990 Yearbook to the 1991 one)

--Sharon
2722.8Structural concernsREORG::AITELHunter clawed by tiger - a foe paw.Fri Nov 09 1990 20:0412
    Hmmm, but aren't the Wilton cakes just sheet cakes made in fancy
    shaped pans, rather than cakes that actually stand up and gobble
    at you?  
    
    It is probably easier to do fancy stand-up shapes in gingerbread
    than in cake, since gingerbread is so firm and chewy that it'll
    stand up.  Another thought - I've eaten brownies that are as
    firm and chewy as gingerbread - plus they have the added attraction
    of being CHOCOLATE.  I bet you could build a turkey out of
    brownies.  All brown meat....
    
    --Louise
2722.9I vote for Wilton, too!UPBEAT::JFERGUSONLeading LadyMon Nov 12 1990 13:477
    I agree with the previous idea of checking Wilton Yearbooks.  I made
    a wonderful holiday cakea few years back from one of the books.  It was
    a nutcracker...you know--red uniform, funny mouth.  It was built up 
    into a cylinder using round layers.  It was an awesome job but what
    results!
    
    Judy