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Fondant Tutorial

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I receive baking questions from people almost on a daily basis, not just here on the blog, but the various mediums I'm part of. Right from my personal Facebook account through to deviantART. Some of them are to do with recipes I've posted, others asking for tips or troubleshooting, but almost half of them are fondant questions. Why it has taken me until now to write a fondant tute, I'll never know. So instead of typing out my experiences each time I answer someone, I'm going to document it here to save a heap of time.

This fondant recipe is more expensive and time consuming than marshmallow fondant. If I'm just covering a cake and doing simple decorations, I use marshmallow fondant. My recipe for regular fondant fluctuates based on the need. Sometimes I use a recipe that involves gelatine. If I want it to dry hard, I'll use gum trag in the recipe. This tutorial will give you my main recipe for regular fondant, as well as all my tips for a successful first time working with the stuff.

This said, for me it's not all in the recipe. For me, the most important thing is the quality of ingredients you use and learning what fondant should feel like. I always use CSR sugar because it is high quality and tastes nice. This recipe ends up tasting like fairy floss, which comes down mostly to the ingredients chosen. 

What you need:

Ingredients
675g (1 1/2 lb) pure icing sugar
2 egg whites from large eggs (approx 60g or size 3 eggs)
30ml (2 tbsp) liquid glucose
5ml (1 tsp) glycerine
optional: a few drops of flavouring or rosewater,
food colouring

Tools
Large, clean, grease-free bowls
Fine sieve
Butterknife
Wooden spoon
Plastic wrap or bags

A quick note on the glucerine. If right now you are bliniking at the screen and wondering what this is, glycerol as it is technically know is (as the "ol" in the name suggests) a sugar alcohol. It is an odourless, clear, thick liquid used in a lot of phramaceuticals. As such, it's a product you are more likely to find in a chemist or in the pharmaceutical section of your supermarket. It's used for sore throats, chapped skin, cosmetics and a whole list of other things. (If you ask a worker where it is and they stare at you blankly as happened to me when I shopped for it the first time, ask them where the cough syrups and dettol is instead. Glycerine is usually poking around over there)

So what's it doing in fondant? The short answer is that it keeps your fondant flexible and makes it feel really soft.

The longer, sciency answer involves the want of sugar crystals to clump and bond. The alcohol component both stops the sugar crystals from clumping and breaks down those bonds a tad. Glycerol is a humectant, meaning is retains moisture. Sugar is also amazing at absorbing moisture, so what glycerol does is gives the moisture somewhere else to go. This stops your fondant from absorbing the moisture in the air and becoming sticky or sweating (especially useful on humid days). 

You can omit it and many recipes don't have it, but I feel you are lessening the quality of your fondant without it.

Make sure you grab the edible kind. There is a petroleum-based glycerine that is not suitable for use in foods. You will find it hard pressed to get the two confused, especially given that you need a liscence to purchase it in many countries. It also smells horrifically bad, so you would not feel the urge to put it in your food. 

Okay. So. Let's get our equipment ready and begin. 

Measure out your icing sugar, but keep in mind you will need to judge when enough sugar has been added. Everything from temperature to fluctuations in liquid measurements will alter this. 

Pure icing sugar, unlike other sugars sold for the purpose of making buttercream etc, has no starch (cornflour) added to keep it soft. As such, it clumps. A lot. I find when I am sifting it, simply shaking the sieve is seldom enough to make the sugar go through. I usually use the back of a spoon  to push it through, or for large chunks I simply hold them use the sieve as a grater.

This part is by far the longest, most arduous part of the entire process. When making a large batch of fondant, it is seriously a drainer. It can take half an hour or longer just to get all that icing sugar through the sieve. I like to pass the time by making mountains out of it and watching for the avalanches. It usually degrades from there to pretending the Fellowship is trying to cross Caradhras and I am bringing the fearsom snowstorm down upon them. 

"So, Gandalf, you try to lead them over Caradhras. And if that fails, where then will you go?"

Here my sister usually gets involved and every time the mountain of icing sugar collapses, we yell, "Nooo, Frodoooo". 

I'm a total weirdo in the kitchen, But hey, whatever helps you pass the time. 

So, once the arduous part of making the fondant is done, make like Saruman and bring down the mountain.

"Cuiva nwalca Carnirasse; Nai yarvaxea rasselya; taltuva notto-carinnar!"

Make a well in the centre of the icing sugar and add all the wet ingredients. If you are making a batch of coloured fondant, add your food colouring and any desired flavourings here. 

If you're not precious about it, you can get stick into it with your fingers here. I don't like my hands getting ick so I use a butter knife. Either way, gradually work the icing sugar into the centre.

It will look like royal icing at first. Keep working away, it will thicken up really quickly. Once it gets to this point, I switch to wooden spoon mode. Work in as much of the icing sugar as you can. I can usually get it to near completion in the bowl. This avoids getting the bench and your hands covered in sticky fondant. It will try to eat your hands given half the chance.

Once you've worked in as much of the icing sugar as you can, turn it onto your bench. Dust your work surface with icing sugar and knead the fondant until it is smooth and elastic.  

This is where feel really comes into it. If you've never felt fondant before, I suggest you have a play with pre-made fondant, just so you know what it is supposed to feel like. You want it to be slightly sticky. If you roll it out on the bench without dusting it with cornflour first, it should probably stick. If you knead in too much icing sugar it will become dry and crack, so err on the side of caution if this is your first time. It's better to find you need to add more icing sugar than try to work out how to reverse the process. 

Et voilla! You now have yourself a beautiful batch of home made fondant that tastes and feels a million times better than most of the stuff you buy. 

Click for printable version of the fondant recipe.

Tips For Working With Fondant.

The first time I made fondant, I read all the what-not-to-dos and decided I knew better. "How bad could it be?" I asked myself. The answer is bad. My first few attempts at fondant were trainwrecks. I learned the lessons the hard way, but you don't have to. Learn from my mistakes and follow these 3 easy steps.

   
1. When not using your fondant, keep it covered.   

Fondant dries quickly in the air, so it's important to keep it away from it where possible. 

Once you're done making your batch, wrap it up in plastic. If not using it immediately, I usually glad wrap it, pop it in a freezer bag and then inside an air tight container to leave in the pantry until needed. If I'm working with it, I pop it inside a freezer bag and just take out as much as I need. 

It will store well for about a week before it starts to dry and crack. This said, you can recover it once this begins to happen. This is the same case for fondant that has dried from overworking. The fondant needs to stay slightly warm to be malleable. The best way to achieve this is by kneading with the palms of your hands. The warmth from your hands is enough to do this. If you fondant has dried out, no matter how far gone, keep picking up those crumbly bits of fondant that fall away and knead on, my friend. If you knead it for long enough you will eventually get a malleable piece of fondant back. This works even if you've used gum tragcanth or similar to produce a hard-setting fondant. If you have a large-ish amount of fondant that has dried up or wants a faster option than kneading, you can zap it for a few seconds in the microwave. And I mean a few. No more than 5 seconds at a time. Zap, knead, zap some more if needed. You just want to introduce a little heat. I once forgot about a piece of black fondant I had in the microwave and 15 seconds later it was a bubbling, melted mess all over my microwave. 

2. Never use liquid food colouring

If, like me, your supermarkets only sell food colouring of the liquid variety, you may be tempted to use them. I did and decided it couldn't be that bad. It was. Oh how it was.

You can get away with it if you only want a light, pastel colour and are adding now more than a few drops. Anything more and your fondant will become limp and unworkable. Your fondant figures will sag, it will be messy. 

Find a cake decorating or homewares store that sells gel paste. You can also buy them online from a long list of stores. I don't have a preference for brand. I've used everything. I buy whatever brand has the colour I need. 

You can also use powdered colouring, but I much prefer the pastes. 

3. Don't dust your work surface with icing sugar

This is potentially one of those things that comes down to preference. Some decorators swear by using icing sugar to dust your work surface, others say it is interchangable with cornflour (a.k.a corn starch). In my experience, corn flour is the only way to go.

I've had horrid problems with fondant sticking to my work surface using icing sugar, as well as becoming more sticky itself.

But more than that, I figure that if you are using icing sugar to dust the surface, you are in fact incorporating more icing sugar into your batch. You've just spent the time to make sure you've incorporated just the right amount of icing sugar into your fondant so that it is not too dry, so why would you work in more? The problem becomes exacerbated if you roll out your fondant, go to cover your cake with it and, for one reason or another, something goes wrong and you have to re-roll it.

The moment I began using cornflour instead, I ceased having any problems with sticky fondant. 



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