How to Ice a Cake With Royal Icing Without Marzipan

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Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings

Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings

Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings

Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings

I know fondant icing looks great on a Christmas cake, but it's a bother to make so royal icing gets my vote most years. And yes, you can buy it, but if I've actually managed to make a cake, I don't want to spoil the home-made flavours with bought icing. Just call me picky.

Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings
Christmas Cake with Royal Icing

Royal icing is so forgiving. If you are in a hurry - think late on Christmas Eve - you can mix it up, slap it on, and find something in your cupboard to decorate the cake with.

Key ingredients in Royal Icing

Icing sugar - to sieve or not to sieve?

If the icing is freshly bought and opened you might feel you don't need to sieve it. If you have the tiniest doubt, get the sieve out. You don't want any lumps on your Christmas Cake

If you don't have a cover on your mixer, I strongly recommend a splatter lid which will help avoid icing sugar everywhere.

Are egg whites safe?

Use fresh eggs as the cake may last a few weeks. Sugar is a preservative so nothing will go off. In the UK it is perfectly safe to eat raw eggs that are British Lion stamped.

If you have any doubts or want more information, see the NHS guidance on eggs.

Glycerine - animal or vegetable?

Glycerine is used to soften the icing, which would otherwise get very hard. It used to be made from animal fat, but these days most of it is vegetable in origin. Do read the label if it matters to you.

Dr Oetker glycerine is vegan and widely available.

Flavourings

You can use a couple of teaspoons of lemon juice to counteract the sweetness. Or you could try a teaspoon of rosewater or orange flower water for a subtle flavour.

As I put all these in my marzipan, I don't add anything extra to my icing - but feel free.

Secrets of Success

Don't rush adding the icing sugar! Add a spoonful at a time to get the right consistency and avoid covering your kitchen in a layer of fine white powder.

How to decorate your Christmas Cake

For years I had a pack of Santa candles that I looked at every December and ignored. One year I finally put them on the cake, burned them and threw them away. One small step towards the ongoing decluttering!

Edible and inedible decorations

A quick trip to the supermarket usually yields some type of sugar Christmas cake decorations like these sweet holly and pudding buttons - with the bonus that you can eat them and you don't have to find a home for them after Christmas.

For more selection look early or go online - Amazon has a good variety of Christmas cake decorations.

Ribbon around the sides?

If you have a little more time, you could add a red or gold ribbon around the side of the cake.

If you find it slips around, add a few dabs of icing to the underside and it will stick to the cake. A pin under the bow also helps - but do remember to remove it before anyone eats it!

The sad truth is that my family will look at the cake, say something nice and then the children will eat something else because they don't really like fruit cake. That said, they are more likely to try this lighter fruit cake than a traditional matured one, which is definitely for an older generation only, apparently.

If you like this...

...Why don't you try:

Christmas Cake on a glass plate waiting to be decorated

Quick Christmas Cake

A light, moist Christmas Cake that you can make on Christmas Eve and will keep for 6 weeks.

How to marzipan a Christmas Cake - the finished cake ready to be iced.

And if you want a quick and easy recipe for marzipan:

A ball of marzipan on a wooden board

Marzipan

Homemade Marzipan is all natural and tastes great - ready to use in 10 minutes.

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Christmas Cake with royal icing, decorated with sugarpaste holly and Christmas puddings
Christmas Cake Royal Icing

Royal Icing

A quick and easy royal icing for a 20cm Christmas Cake. It's best made in a stand mixer if you have it.

Prep Time 20 mins

Total Time 20 mins

Course: Teatime

Cuisine: British

Keyword: Christmas cake, royal icing

Servings: 1 20cm cake

  • 2 large egg whites
  • 500 g icing sugar, see Notes
  • 1 teaspoon glycerine (5ml)

Prevent your screen from going dark

  • Put the egg whites in a large bowl and beat briefly to break them down

    2 large egg whites

  • Add the icing sugar a tablespoonful at a time and beat thoroughly in between (or leave the mixer on if using). Stop when you get to a mixture that holds its shape and forms soft peaks.

    You may not need all the icing sugar. It will depend on the size of your eggs

    500 g icing sugar,

  • Add the glycerine and beat for 5 minutes to get a good shine

    1 teaspoon glycerine

  • Tip or spoon the icing onto your marzipanned cake and spread more or less evenly over the top and sides with a palette knife. If you want a snow effect, put the flat blade of the knife on the icing and pull off quickly. (It's a bit like dabbing at the icing)

  • Decorate with whatever you like - or whatever the supermarket has the week before Christmas

Everyday Cooks tips:

  • Use the freshest eggs that you have as they aren't cooked. The sugar preserves them, but I like to start with freshest possible
  • You don't need to sieve the icing sugar if you open a fresh pack that is in date and hasn't got damp (if it's in a box it will be fine). If you're using icing sugar from an opened bag you will need to sieve it
  • Glycerine keeps the icing soft but, if you're making royal icing for a tiered cake, leave it out as the icing will need to support the weight of the other cake(s).

How to Ice a Cake With Royal Icing Without Marzipan

Source: https://everydaycooks.co.uk/royal-icing/

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