How to ice a Christmas cake (2024)

Icing your Christmas cake is fun and a great way to get yourself in the Christmas spirit. You can keep it simple or go full-on-festive – the hardest thing is deciding how you want to do it.

With a bit of creativity, you can can achieve a stunning cake with minimal icing skills. Discover the benefits and pitfalls of fondant and royal icing, find out how to cover your cake with marzipan (and how to ice without it) and learn a few simple decoration techniques to put the finishing touches to a cake ‘yule’ be proud of!

There’s no hard and fast rule about when to ice your cake, but it’s best to do it between 24 hours and a week ahead of the big day.

Easy ices

A few creative flourishes will make your cake look fabulous. Click here to learn how to create the pretty frosted berries and dried citrus slices used here.

Fondant or royal icing?

Royal icing can look fabulous, even if you spread it casually. If you want a crisp, smooth finish you need to apply the marzipan carefully. You don’t have to use a lot of icing and it’s less sweet than fondant.

It’s important to get the texture correct when mixing the icing, otherwise it can set so hard you’ll struggle to cut the cake, or slide off because it’s too soft. Adding 1–2 teaspoons of glycerine will prevent the icing setting hard enough to break your teeth, though it will still form a robust crust when left to dry overnight.

To cover a cake, mix the icing until it holds stiff peaks. For piping, you want it a little thinner so it flows through the nozzle.

It’s best to cover the cake with marzipan first so you don’t get crumbs in the icing. Royal icing is more likely than fondant to absorb colour from the cake, so if you don’t want marzipan go for a thicker layer of icing to ensure any discolouration doesn’t show through – and don’t ice too far ahead. You can use a layer of fondant icing instead of marzipan if you wish.

Royal icing is sold in white, but is easy to colour at home using gels (liquids can change the texture).

Fondant icing gives a super-smooth finish loved by cake decorators. Getting a perfect result requires patience and skill, but if you don’t mind a few imperfections it’s easy to achieve a great-looking cake – and a thick ribbon covers a multitude of sins!

The easiest way to get a smooth finish is to apply a fairly thick layer of fondant over marzipan. You don’t have to use marzipan (brush the cake with sieved and warmed apricot jam instead), but the natural lumpiness of fruit cakes means your finish won’t be as smooth, and dark-coloured oils and liquids in the cake might ‘leak’ out and discolour the icing over time (a problem if you want to store the cake for more than a couple of weeks).

Fondant is usually bought in ready-to-roll blocks, which you roll out and smooth over your cake using dry hands or an icing smoother. It is available in many colours or you can colour it using gels, but it’s tricky to get really deep, even colours. You can make festive fondant shapes to decorate your cake, too!

How to cover a cake with marzipan

Marzipan (aka almond paste) doesn’t have to be applied perfectly unless you want a perfect fondant finish or sharp royal icing edges (in which case watch the video for lots of tips). Otherwise, follow these simple steps:

  1. Brush your cake with warmed and strained jam (light-coloured jams, such as apricot, work best).
  2. Dust a work surface with icing sugar and roll out a generous amount of marzipan to the thickness of a pound coin (there should be plenty of overhang).
  3. Lift the marzipan over your cake and smooth it into place using your hands.
  4. Trim away any excess marzipan.

Marzipan should ideally dry out before you apply icing. This can take anything from one to five days, with homemade marzipan usually taking longer than ready-made. It’s ready when it feels dry (it will feel quite oily at first). If you are in a rush you can skip this step, but the oils in the marzipan might discolour the icing if you store the cake for a long time.

Marzipan is widely available in supermarkets, but you can make it yourself, particularly if you want to experiment with different nuts and flavourings (as Dan Lepard does in this recipe).

Decorations to finish your cake

Click through the slide show for easy but impressive ways to finish your cake. Step-by-step instructions are available here.

Image gallerySkip image gallery
  1. How to ice a Christmas cake (2)

Slide 1 of 5, Christmas present cake, Christmas present cake Get your fondant icing smooth, then add a couple of fancy ribbons and a tag to make it look like a gift. Easy!

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How to ice a Christmas cake (2024)

FAQs

How to ice a Christmas cake? ›

Brush the cake with a colourless alcohol (vodka is a good option) or cold boiled water to help the icing stick. Start by laying the icing at the back of the cake and lower it down to the front. Use the flats of your hands to smooth the icing over the cake. Neatly trim away any excess icing.

Should I turn my Christmas cake upside down to ice? ›

Turn the cake upside down as this gives you a perfect flat surface to start with. You then need to sieve the apricot jam so it is totally smooth as you don't want lumps of apricots under your marzipan and icing. Warm the jam slightly and get a pastry brush ready.

How long before Christmas should you ice your cake? ›

There's no hard and fast rule about when to ice your cake, but it's best to do it between 24 hours and a week ahead of the big day.

Do you put jam between marzipan and icing? ›

Splodge the warm jam or jelly liberally all over your cake (brush or spread, whatever you like), then just roll out your marzipan (it's helpful if you squish it into a rough circular shape before you start – use a dusting of icing sugar instead of flour) until it's big enough to flop over the cake.

How to decorate the top of a Christmas cake? ›

A bit of ribbon, a few cut-out snowflakes and a few miniature trees from the art shop – and voila! A simple, elegant looking cakes that's decorated in no time! My other option is to let the kids decorate the cake. Plonk a load of coloured icing, sprinkles, cookie cutters etc, and let them do their worst.

How to ice a Christmas Cake easily? ›

How to ice a Christmas cake
  1. Heat the jam with a splash of water and push it through a sieve.
  2. Brush this all over the sides and top of the cake in an even, thin layer.
  3. Dust the work surface and your rolling pin with icing sugar.
  4. Dust the ball of marzipan with icing sugar too .
Sep 24, 2014

How to keep Christmas Cake moist? ›

Wrap the cake in greaseproof paper or baking parchment then wrap it in kitchen foil. Store cake in a second layer of foil or in an airtight tin. You can repeat the feeding process every couple of weeks for three or four feeds. However, if the cake makes the work surface damp, appears wet or stodgy, discontinue feeding.

How to store Christmas cake when iced? ›

Storing an iced cake

However, the icing needs to be properly applied to the cake on a cake board in order for this to work. Once the cake has been iced, don't store it in an airtight container, or the icing will weep. Rather, place the cake in a cool, dark and dry place and covered in foil.

When should you start your Christmas cake? ›

Some say you should make your Christmas cake 6 weeks before eating, but the advice given on Nigella.com is that 12 weeks before is the optimum time to get baking. Your Christmas cake should be fed every 4 to 6 weeks but in the meantime, after baking, it should be stored away in a secure, air tight container.

How often should you moisten a Christmas cake? ›

It's possible to overfeed your cake, which will make it stodgy and wet. Our advice is to feed it once after it's initially baked, then no more than four times during the maturation period. Try a teaspoonful of whichever alcohol you've chosen before you begin feeding your cake to test its strength.

Can I ice cake straight after marzipan? ›

Leave the Christmas cake covered in marzipan in a cool, dry place. Allow it to dry for at least 24 hours before covering with fondant icing, and at least two days before covering with royal icing. Home-made marzipan takes a little longer to dry out than shop-bought marzipan.

What is a good substitute for apricot jam on Christmas cake? ›

If you can't find apricot jam then marmalade is a good alternative. A crystal or shredless marmalade is the easiest, but otherwise you will need to warm and then strain the marmalade before using it. You may also find the information in Nigella's directions for the Smooth Hatbox Icing for Christmas cakes helpful.

Do you wrap a Christmas cake after marzipan? ›

Otherwise the oils from the marzipan can seep into the icing, causing discolouration. As you need the marzipan to dry out, we do not recommend wrapping the cake at this point or storing in an airtight container.

How far in advance can I ice my Christmas cake? ›

Icing a Christmas cake can be done a few weeks before you plan to serve it, so get it done early and it'll be one less thing to worry about on the big day. If your decoration skills are somewhat limited, it is easy to make a plain iced cake look spectacular with nothing more than a piece of ribbon and a little holly.

Why do Christmas cakes crack on top? ›

In an oven that's too hot, the outside of the cake cooks at a much faster rate than the inside. A crust forms early on, but as the inside of the cake continues to cook and rise, this crack crusts. You might experience the same problem if the cake recipe has too much leavener or if you've used a pan that's too small.

Can you buttercream a Christmas cake? ›

Fill and Frost the Cake

Once you've baked and cooled your cake layers, and made your buttercream, you can get started on the decorating. Stack and fill your cake layers with buttercream, then frost your cake all over with a thin crumb coat of buttercream.

Do you ice a cake upside down? ›

If you've been frustrated with the traditional way of icing a cake then you are going to want to give the upside down method a shot. I literally cannot go back. This way yields a PERFECT result so much faster than doing it the regular way.

When should you flip an upside-down cake? ›

To get a good-looking topping, you need to time your inversion carefully after you take the cake out of the oven. You want the cake pan to be cool enough to not burn you when you flip it, but still warm enough that the caramelized fruit will release easily from the bottom of the pan.

Should angel food cakes be cooled upside down? ›

Cooled in the pan incorrectly: Inverting the pan ensures that the cake continues to expand and hold its shape once cooled. Cooling the cake upside down is crucial – if you cool the cake in the pan right side up, the cake will collapse on itself.

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