I have to thank The Partiologist for this wonderful design of a garden bed......
... which, when cut into, reveals carrots growing underground!
My 'carrot' seems to be a little lopsided and possibly even a bit fragmented.
You can see The Partiologist's original
here ... and I admit hers is better!
This is what you need to begin (the full recipe is at the bottom).
I used a basic pound cake mixture divided into one quarter / three quarters - one quarter has to be dyed orange and baked as a sort of half cake:
You need enough to get a line of 'carrots' from it.
I cut the carrots by hand to be as long as the baking tin was deep.
Oil the pan, then stand the carrots, points upwards, in a row down the middle. Help them to stay in place with some baking paper, then freeze them in the tin.
When the tin is frozen, pour the other three quarters of the mixture (flavoured and tinted with cocoa) around the carrots and pop it all in the oven.
When the cake comes out of the oven, upend it - you should be able to see the tops of the carrots through the base.
I made a boiled chocolate icing and poured it generously on, so that a lot of it ran down the sides.
The toothpicks that you see in this pic were the result of The Partiologist's advice that you should mark where the tops of the carrots are. But it seemed to me, after doing it, that it wasn't really necessary, as I had put in an unbroken line of carrots. So I took them out.
Next comes the dirt for the garden bed! This is wonderfully easy, thanks to the qualities of the 'accidental vegan cookie', the Oreo. Yes folks, the makers of Oreo, in trying to make a cheap all purpose cookie, somehow managed to use absolutely no animal products. Therefore the Oreo has gained a totally undeserved (because accidental) cult status amongst vegans.
All you need to do is halve the Oreos, scrape off the yucky fake cream centre, and blitz the cookies in a food processor for 20 seconds. The result is incredibly like grains of dirt.
Sprinkle your Oreo dirt all over the chocolate icing and heap it up at the bottom for a realistic garden bed!
Next you need some leaves for the carrot tops. As you can see in this pic, I dyed some fondant icing green, rolled it out and used a Christmas holly leaf cutter to cut some leaves. Then I cut off the distinctive 'holly' spikes to make a smooth-edged leaf.
I gave them a bit of shape by draping them over the side of a big saucer to dry.
The leaves then need to be assembled on top of the cake to form little clumps. The idea is that you should be able to cut through the leaf clumps and get....
...To reveal the carrots beneath the soil!
Happy eating from Dr Cupcake!!!
RECIPE:
One large loaf tin, greased, floured and the base lined with baking paper
Chocolate/Vanilla Pound Cake
240g butter
200g caster sugar
4 eggs
1 tsp vanilla essence
12 tbsp milk
350g self-raising flour
50g cocoa
1/2 tsp baking powder
orange food colouring
1 x packet Oreo cookies
one quantity boiled chocolate icing (see below)
one quantity fondant leaves (see below)
Boiled Chocolate Icing
*Makes about double the quantity you'll need - you can freeze the rest almost indefinitely and use it for another cake
150g caster sugar
150ml water
300g dark chocolate, chopped into small pieces
(I use 70% cocoa - the greater the cocoa mass, the more chocolatey the taste)
Sugar thermometer or a glass of iced water
Fondant Leaves
*Makes about 30 leaves, each approximately 6mm long
30g white fondant icing
1/4 tsp green gel food colouring
cornflour for sprinkling
small rolling pin
leaf cutter
small knife
latex kitchen glove x 1
Set oven at 175C.
Cream butter and sugar (butter should be at room temperature). Beat in the eggs and essence and mix well.
Sift half of the self-raising flour into the mixture and stir; then pour half the milk in; follow with the other half of the self-raising flour and the other half of the milk.
Scoop about a quarter of the mixture into another bowl and add enough orange food colour to make it bright orange, then scoop it into the baking tin and bake for 20 mins or until it springs back in the centre. Turn out and cool on a rack.
When cooled, cut as many uniform 'carrot' shapes as possible - the 'carrots' need to be about as long as the loaf tin is high. Wash out the tin, grease and flour it again, and line the base with baking paper. Then place all your carrots upside down in a straight line down the middle of the loaf pan, and stuff the sides with spare baking paper to hold them in place. Put the tin in the freezer for at least an hour.
With the rest of the mixture (you should have about three-quarters left of your original batch), sift in the cocoa, then add a little more milk to get the consistency back to a thick 'ribbon-like' consistency (it should be able to be poured or dolloped easily, but not too liquid-y).
Check the colour. Is it dark enough to look like earth? If not, add a little more cocoa and a little more milk, or use brown food colouring to get the mixture dark enough.
Take the loaf tin with the carrots out of the freezer, and remove the excess baking paper. Then pour the brown cocoa mixture around the carrots. You should have enough to just cover the tips of the carrots and fill the tin. Smooth the mixture out as well as you can and place in the oven. Bake for about 35-40 minutes, but start checking it at 25 minutes (check by sticking a skewer into the cocoa bits of the cake - if the skewer comes out clean it is ready. Be careful not to 'test' the orange carrots because obviously they are already cooked!
Leave the cake in the tin for 10-15 minutes when it comes out of the oven to allow it to firm up a little, then run a sharp knife around the edges of the tin to loosen. Carefully upend the tin into a clean teacloth, then place it upside down on a baking rack to cool. At this point, you should be able to see some orange dots or an orange stripe down the middle of the cake - these are the carrot tops showing through. Leave to cool completely. Depending on how much the cake has risen you may need to 'trim' the top of the cake, which is now sitting on the bottom - to do this, wait until the cake is completely cool, then use a very sharp bread-knife to saw through the bits you want to remove. Remember that all the parts of the cake that have risen up out of the tin will not have any 'carrots' in them, so you may wish to cut the cake back to the level of the top of the tin. When you have done this, turn it back over so that the 'bottom' of the cake becomes the top of it.
Now for the icing. Place the sugar and water in a small saucepan over a medium heat. Stir very gently foe a few seconds to make sure the sugar has dissolved, then continue heating without stirring until the mixture comes to the boil. Add the chopped chocolate and whisk or stir briskly until the chocolate melts completely. Continue to heat the mixture while stirring until it's bubbling. It needs to reach 110C (if you have a sugar thermometer) or 'thread' stage, just before 'soft ball' stage (if you don't).
To test for 'thread' stage, dip your thumb and forefinger into the iced water, then get a little mixture in a teaspoon and dip your thumb and forefinger in it, then pull them apart. If a thread forms between your fingers as you pull them apart, the mixture is ready.
As soon as the mixture is ready, pour it generously over the cake. It should be smooth, thick and glossy. The idea is to have the icing coat the entire top of the cake and cascade over the sides in generous streams. You may need to 'encourage' the mixture to flow down the sides by smoothing it gently with a spatula, to avoid the top getting too weighed down with chocolate icing!
To make the Oreo 'dirt', scrape the cream filling from the cookies and put all the cookies in a food processer. Blitz for 20 seconds or until you're happy with the size of the crumb. Then sprinkle the 'dirt' generously all over the cake and all around the base.
To make the leaves, knead the white fondant a little to soften it, then, using a latex glove on your mixing hand, mix in the green gel colouring, kneading it in until you have an even colour.
Sprinkle some cornflour on a clean surface and roll out the fondant as if it were pastry, being careful to pick it ip and turn it and add more cornflour on both sides occasionally to prevent it sticking. When it is about 1.5mm thick, use a leaf cutter to cut out leaf shapes. My cutter also embosses the leaves with veins - if yours doesn't you can mark the veins on with a small knife. Cut as many leaves as you can, remove them with a spatula and leave them to dry, then re-roll the remaining mixture to cut more leaves. Continue until you have used all the fondant.
Arrange the leaves in little clumps on top of the 'dirt garden bed' (i.e., the top of the cake). Serve immediately, or keep in an airtight container for up to four days.
*This cake will last even longer if refrigerated, but take the fondant leaves off before putting it in the fridge because they will become soft and tacky. Reserve them in an airtight container at room temperature and put them back on when serving the cake.