This month's best buys, Jamie Oliver's recipe for a winter salad, and how to make a cute cactus cake
Embrace the cactus craze with these fun and stylish decorations
As it’s a proven fact that the internet loves cake and cacti, we’ve made these plants out of sugar – an Instagrammer’s dream. Although this cake looks intricate, the decorating technique is easy to master if you break it down. A plain vanilla sponge iced with vanilla buttercream works well as the base (find a recipe at bbcgoodfood.com). To decorate, start by crumbling up some shortbread to create a sandy base, then load up your cake or cupcakes with as many plants as you like. Mix up the sizes and shades of green for maximum impact.
First, make a basic buttercream
MAKES enough for 1 x 20cm cake or 12 cupcakes PREP 15 mins NO COOK EASY V
Put 250g softened butter in a large bowl. Add 500g icing sugar and 2-3 tsp milk, then combine everything roughly with a wooden spoon. Using a freestand mixer or electric beaters, beat the mixture until smooth and pale. Add some food colouring, if you like. GOOD TO KNOW gluten free
PER SERVING 322 kcals • fat 17g • saturates 11g • carbs 42g • sugars 41g • fibre none • protein none • salt 0.4g
Cactus To make cacti, roll out a ball of green ready-to-roll icing. Dust with icing sugar and flatten it with your fingertips, then wrap the icing around a round chocolate truffle. Roll the whole thing in your hands to smooth the edges and seal it up. Mix a little water with some royal icing sugar to make a stiff paste, then pipe tiny dots all over the surface in curved lines to create spikes.
Aloe Make the leaves by moulding lots of pieces of green ready-to-roll icing into long teardrop shapes (make the tips as pointy as you can). Press the rounded ends of the leaves together, one at a time, bunching them from the centre. Make progressively larger leaves as you work outwards. Make a few of the leaves hang forward and others back for a natural feel. You can also add a light brushing of dark red food colouring to leaf tips to make them look even more realistic.
Sempervivum Fix a leaf nozzle to your piping bag – we used Wilton 67. Fill your piping bag with pale green buttercream. Holding the nozzle at a 45-degree angle, gently squeeze the piping bag and pull up sharply at the same time. This will form a small ivylike leaf shape. Pipe a ring of these leaves, slightly overlapping, with the points facing up and outwards. Start a new ring of leaves within the first one. Repeat until you reach the middle of the circle then pipe a few tiny spikes of buttercream to finish holding the piping bag straight.
Sedum Take any star nozzle you like (or use a few types) and fix it to a piping bag. Fill the bag with pale green, dark green or greenish red buttercream and pipe dots or spikes in clumps. This is great for filling in the spaces between your other designs.
Crush up a shortbread biscuit using a pestle and mortar. Sprinkle it over the surface of your iced cake in clumps to create a sand effect.