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$200 Shopping Spree

April 26, 2010 by Sharon Zambito Leave a Comment

 
Hey guys!

The raffle ends April 30th! get your tickets to win a $200 credit to the SugarEd store.

 
You can spend your credit at any rate you like, when you like. You do not have to spend it all at one time.

 

                                                    Please help a child in need.

                                        See original post here.

                    Buy your raffle tickets here.

                                                   Thank you and good luck!

                                                                     Sharon

 

 

Designer Purse Class

April 22, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 6 Comments

 
Designer Purse Class

Taught by Sharon Zambito of SugarEd Productions
 
 

                                                               June 26-27, 2010

1714 South Miami Blvd. Durham, NC.

 

During this two day class we will create the beautiful purse holding a champagne bottle that you see in the photo attached. We will cover carving, stacking, ganaching, covering in fondant, decorating, and making and placing the bottle.

Class will start at 9 am each day and go 8-10 hours each day. Please be prepared for 10 hour days, in order to be able to complete this project in a quality manner. Lunch will be provided both days, but you are welcome to bring your own food, drinks and snacks as well.

Class cost is $300. We are accepting a 50% deposit at this time, which is non-refundable. The balance will be due 6 weeks before the class date. If the minimum number of students is not reached, the class will be canceled and all deposits refunded. Please do not make travel plans or reservations until we proclaim that the class minimum has been met and the class is 100% confirmed a go.

Preliminary supply lists are include below. When it gets a little bit closer to the class, a more detailed list with exact quantities of each item needed will be provided.

 

We hope you will be able to join us for what is sure to be a fun filled weekend of learning and laughter!

 

Preliminary supply list for students:

cake
boards
dowels
knives
spatulas
hot plate
extension cord
pot
ganache
fondant
cutters for logo
green choc
choc colors
paper towels
gumpaste flowers (optional)
mold clips
ribbon strip cutter
stitching wheel
rolling pins
cornstarch
shortening
exacto knife
foam
piping gel

 

To be provided by Sharon:

bottle molds
bottle labels
purse handles
templates (logo and carving)

If you have any questions, please contact me at szcakes@aol.com.

 

Hope to see you there!

Sharon

 

 

Grapesicle Buttercream and Red Ranunculus

April 13, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 33 Comments

Hello Sugar Babies!
Wow, it seems like forever since I have done a wedding cake, or posted a tutorial for you guys here. Life is finally getting back to normal (whatever that is) after that Cake Off fiasco, LOL.
This past weekend I had a really fun and challenging wedding cake. Those of you that follow me on Facebook lived through some of the mishaps with me this last week. I had some bumps in the road, but luckily it all turned out fine in the end.
The bride wanted me to do a version of the cake found here. But she wanted 4 tiers, buttercream icing, and the lavender color instead of pale pink. (Actually the color swatch she gave me was called Grapesicle. Love that name.) Sure I said, no problemo! But I should have thought about the fact that lavender BC fades terribly, and I was going to be traveling with a tower of a cake over 70 minutes into the city over terrible, horrible roads. Doing this cake in fondant would have been much less stressful. But hey, I live for stress! I eat stress for breakfast!
I believe the flowers are ranunculus, but most pictures I found have them pretty closed and you do not see much of the centers. But the cake photo she provided had them very open, with the centers very prominent.

 So I did not worry so much if they looked like true ranunculus, as much as trying to get them to look as close to the flowers in the photo she provided as possible. I did not find ranunculus cutters anywhere, so my dear friend Rebbecca Sutterby shared her method with me of using rose cutters.
I spent the better part of two days trying different centers and petal formations. I struggled to get the overall shape and petal movement right. When my son told me that the centers looked like giant olives, I knew it was time to call in reinforcements. The big guns. The Wendy.
The Wendy came over in a flash and looked at them with a fresh eye. In fact, she said my centers looked like eyeballs. Olives. Eyeballs. Oliballs. Whatever you call them, they were wrong. And way too huge. So Wendy and I played with centers and petals until we got a formation we were happy with .
Start by putting a ball of green gumpaste onto the end of a wire. The size of the ball depends upon how big you want to go with the flowers. We made a variety of sizes, because we wanted a variety of flowers in different stages of bloom on the cake.
Next you make an indentation on the end of the ball with the flat side of an exacto knife. Then make a little hole inside that circle with the pointy tip of a small paintbrush. ( I forgot to photograph those two steps, my bad.) Then score the sides all around the ball with a veining or dresden tool to make the lines.
Here is a whole bunch of centers that Wendy rolled for me. You can see the indentations in the centers.
Here you see one that I had dusted with green dust. I used a combo of chartreuse and a lime green dusts. Just play with whatever colors you have till you find a look that you like.
Here are some dusted centers. The 2 dark ones were rejects. I tried a darker dust and that was a no go.
Now time to add the petals. I colored my Wilton premade gumpaste (love that stuff) with super red gel color. I rolled it out to number 5 on the pasta roller and used the JEM all in one rose cutter to cut out the petals. I used the 50mmsize for the first 2 rows of petals.
Cut the petals apart.
Use the large ball in the center of the petal only to make it cup shaped, and let them dry out for about 5 minutes.
Then you can attach 3 or 4 around the centers. I did one here in a more closed, tight wrap, and one more open and frilly. I did not want all of the flowers to look exactly the same. If you vary them up a bit, and shape some of the petals differently, you will get a much more realistic look on your finished cake.
Then I cut out more of the same sized petals. This time I used the ball tool to thin them out along the edges, but did not press so hard and to make them very ruffly. Yet. Make the very outer petals more ruffly.

Yes, I use a lot of cornstarch. I love cornstarch. Do not fear the cornstarch, for it is your friend.

 

Here is one flower with the second row of petals in place. I used 5 petals for the second row. Notice that this bud has 4 petals in the inner row. There are no set rules with this flower. Vary the number or petals and configurations throughout the flowers.
Notice how the tips of the petals bend in toward the center. That is a distinct characteristic of the ranunculus. Originally I kept pinching mine in the other direction, and was wondering why they all looked like roses! Inward, not outward!
A couple of buds an another with a 2nd row in place.
After 2 rows with that size petal, then do one or two rows with the next size 60mm all in one rose cutter. I did not take any photos of that cutter, so just imagine we did one or 2 more rows with that one. 🙂

 

Then the outermost petals were done with a larger single rose petal cutter. This set is an FMM rose cutter set. You can just make it work with whatever cutters you have. I used 6 or 7 petals for the outer rows. It is not an exact science. In fact, I was winging this all the way through!

Here are some flowers in varying stages, some tighter and more clustered, some with less rows and more open and loose.

 

 

Here are some drying upside down so the petals do not fall off. You wet the end of the petals, hold your flower upside down, and apply the petals in an overlapping fashion till you make it all the way around the flower. Tweak and bend the ends of the petals with your fingers, and then hang it upside down to dry for a while till it is good and set. You have to do this after every row or all the stuff will just slide right off the flower.
Don’t you like my fancy drying rack? No expense is spared in this operation, I tell you!

 

 

After they are able to hold their own shape, I stick them in styro to finish drying fully, overnight.

 

 

drying, drying….
More drying…. they were everywhere! Invasion of the gumpaste ranunculus!

This was a test one. Dusted it with poinsettia petal dust, with a tad of impatient pink in the center petals. Then I wiped the center with a small brush with a tad of shortening to give it some shine and take the dusty look off. Then I sprayed edible lacquer over the whole flower. (Got that tip from Rebecca also). The lacquer spray will darken the color so keep that in mind. This center had a bit too much red dust on it for my liking, so I was more careful to keep red dust off of them after this one. (Although just a little bit of red here and there looked pretty good on them!)

 

 

All dusted! See how well they matched the color swatch she gave me? Score! Love it when that happens!
This was my favorite flower out of all 60 of them.
WAIT! I am so embarrassed by how funky that dummy is! I promise you it was washed and clean, just stained. But seriously, I think I need to spring for a new dummy. Sheesh.

Now how in the world are we going to get 60 flowers to stay on a BC cake?

 

 

Welcome to my dipping station. I left the wires on the flowers nice and long. But we know we can’t stick nasty wires into the cake, so I coated them in white chocolate. I filled a tall cup with melted chocolate, dipped the wires in, shook off the excess, then threaded them down into the cooling rack to dry fully. When it came time to arrange them on the cake, I just stuck them right in, and they went so far into the cake, they held up beautifully. I did not even need any melted chocolate to glue the flowers onto the sides. Which made things much easier and cleaner for the cake server.
Naked as a jay bird, LOL.
Here is the cake all iced. Next to it you see the color swatch the bride gave me to match, and her topper. I wanted to make sure the cake, the swatch, and the groom bird’s tie all matched.
To get this color I used regal purple, violet and a touch of pink. I got a beautiful match, but within 2 hours of icing a dummy cake, it turned horribly pink. I added some more purple to the batch. Same thing happened again, but it was also too dark. So I made equal batches of white BC, and combined them. Now I had the perfect shade, but it changed to pink again! My friend Heather realized that the lavender in the icing was fading out (as purples notoriously do), leaving the pink to be predominant. I was a bit panicked at this point; I could not set up a pepto bismol puky pink cake! Well Adele came to my rescue and gave me the brilliant idea of airbrushing the whole cake with lavender airbrush sheen. It worked! It stayed! It did not fade! Thank God for cake friends who save our butts!
So we load the cake up and head out on the long treacherous ride to the venue. New Orleans has notoriously bad streets. So bad in fact, I thought I had sworn off taking cake orders for the city. Obviosuly I forgot I did that, cuz I took this one. Well, the dear beloved husband drove way too fast for my liking, despite my pleas for him to slow down. I was very nervous the whole way cuz we were hitting some rough stuff. Well low and behold, when we got there and opened the back of the vehicle, my poor cake was battered. It had surface cracks all over the sides, and my beautiful borderless seems had all cracked open. I refrained from bleeping the hubby out, and just proceeded to do my thing. We got it inside, I repaired all the borders, and placed the flowers on. Oh so luckily, once they dimmed the venue lights, the cracks were barely visible at all. I lucked out on that one!
Here it is at the venue. The photo is dark and out of focus, but this one portrays the color of the icing more accurately than the one at the beginning of this post. I love how they dressed the cake table too, very elegant.
The Love Birds.
They lived happily ever after.

And that is the story of the Grapesicle Red Rannancuclus Cake.

 

 

 

Raffle! Raffle!

April 1, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 11 Comments

 
 
 
Hello everyone!
 
 
I want to tell you about a beautiful little boy named Aidan and his family. Aidan is 4 years old and survived a near drowning accident two years ago. Tragically, it has left him significantly disabled. He needs constant care, special medical equipment, and many specialty services and therapy. Aidan’s mom is a kindred spirit, as she is a devoted cake decorator as well. Erin and her husband also have two other small children. You can read all about Aidan and follow his progress here: Pray For Aidan
 
 
 

 
SugarEd Productions is sponsoring a raffle during the month of April , and all proceeds will be donated to Aidan’s care fund. You will be notified of your ticket numbers via email after your purchase. The winner will be chosen by random drawing the first of May.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Buy your tickets now for a
 
$200 shopping spree at SugarEd Productions.
 
 
 
 
 

                           CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE YOUR TICKETS

                                                       Thank you so much for support!

 

 

 

The Not Quite Ultimate Enough Cake

March 25, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 34 Comments

 
Hello Everybody!

Sorry it took so long to get this post up. Took a long time to load all of these photos!

As you all know, we did not win our episode of Ultimate Cake Off, but we are very proud of our cake, especially in light of all the problems we had in our kitchen that day, which were all true, BTW. No made up drama there. Unfortunately.

 

 

 

Here is my incredible team left to right:

Wendy Baiamonte…. my best friend, an incredible cake artist, the unsung hero of SugarEd since day one, my rock. She kept me calm and grounded during the preparation phase, and never tired of me obsessing over elements, ideas, potential problems and the rest. There is no way I could have done this without her. During the contest, she was the steady force at my side the whole time, driving me on, doing anything I asked, working her butt off. She talked me off the panic ledge a couple of times that day too. They don’t make ’em no better than her, I tell you.

Adele Lind Nichols…. my very good buddy from Colorado. She was one of Rebecca Sutterby’s assistants last season with me and Becky. She was in charge of all the poured sugar work. And she hand painted that incredible floral plaque on the front of the cake. More on that later. She too listened to every thought and worry I had during the whole process. She is a wonderfully talented, funny, and gorgeous lady.

Becky Willard……. is from Kansas and also assisted Rebecca last season. She was our silent but deadly secret weapon. She keeps her head down, quietly moving from task to task around the kitchen, doing whatever needs to be done with grace and poise. I hate that they barely showed her on the show, because she did just as much work as the rest of us, and was just as important to the success of our cake as any of us were. She handled the gumpaste rose work, the scroll pattern, applying jewels, and anything else that needed to done. She has a wonderfully dry sense of humor, and is a complete doll.

There really are not enough words to express how much this was a team effort. Every one on our team was involved in the cake, from the planning phase through the execution. It was very much our cake, not my cake. I wish that came across better on TV.

 

Here we are after a very long day in front of our cake. We were just happy to have finished it!

 

 

                                           This is the blue kitchen on load in day.

 

 

 

Here is the famous clock over a large freezer we could use if needed.

 

 

 

During our 3 day stay there, we saw several other competitors in the lobby of the hotel. We ran into teams shooting before and after us. Every other lead contestant I saw had a 3 ring binder, tabbed, categorized, illustrated and with computer print outs in every section, full of all kinds of top secret notes and sketches. Um, I must either be a total loser or I did not get the binder memo. Because I used a raggedy school notebook I hijacked from my son with a few pages of scribble scratch notes and checklists. Yep folks, this is the master plan we worked from…… Maybe why we did not win? LOL
 
 
 
 
 
 
Remember in a previous post I mentioned how incredibly humid it was in our hotel room? So humid the water was dripping down the inside of the window. We have since drawn the conclusion that this was the catalyst behind the famous “pole won’t go into the hole” scene. You know, the bleeping, friggin’, me freaking out scene. What must have happened was that the humidity caused our black base boards to swell, making the hole in the middle smaller, causing the pole to not fit. It sure fit fine when we tested it at home! And what is even worse is that it actually happened twice! They only showed it once on the show, but it did happen again later in the day. Wendy saved the day, and me from a panic attack, by coming to my rescue and working her magic.
 
 
 
 
 

I do not mean to brag, but I can honestly say that the cake was even prettier in person that in these photos. The colors are not quite true here, and it had more pow, more sparkle, more dimension than the camera can show.

 

 

 

We used a large tapered hex at the base, then alternated tapered round and hexagon tiers with Styrofoam spacers in between the sections.

 

 

 

Adele’s sugar beads hung in swags below the hexagon boards in front of the silver separators.

 

 

 

Unfortunately this is the best shot of the topper that I have, and it does not do it justice. We had our arrangement of purple roses in varying shades, and little battery operated lights tucked in the arrangement that created a wonderful glow coming from behind them. The crystal monogram topper caught those lights and twinkled as the whole topper slowly rotated.

 

 

 

Here you can see the poured sugar brooches that were on top of each swag tie. Wendy custom made the molds using Silicone Plastique from actual brooches that I purchased off of eBay. The gem part was purple poured sugar, let to set, and then the rest of the mold was filled with gumpaste, which was painted silver when dry. The gems were not as dark as they look here, they were a true regal purple. This was one of my favorite elements of our cake.

 

 

 

Here are a couple of the purple gumpaste roses. I used this cutter set here to make them. This set has a lot of different sized petal cutters, so I was able to make them in varying sizes for the spaces I needed. I did them in a free form, fantasy rose style. I did not want them too structured or formal, as the couple said they wanted the cake to be a little hip and modern. They started out white and were dusted with African violet, lavender and violet petal dust. Clusters of silver dragees in varying sizes were glued in the middle with piping gel to add to the Hollywood bling factor. I really really loved how they looked.

 

 

 

Here you can see part of the bottom section of our cake. The art deco thingies were made with this Stephen Benison cutter. We lovingly nicknamed them the Benisons. I used purple Satin Ice fondant with a lot of tylose added, and dried them over a curved former, so they would stand away from the cake. After dry, they were dusted with amethyst luster dust. Silver and black dragees were added above them to accentuate them. I really loved this element of our cake too!

 

 

 

Here you can see the lights shining behind the flowers. That did not show up on TV at all. You can also get a glimpse of the little gumpaste charms we had on wires. They represented the couple’s mutual interests. We had footballs, cooking utensils, that movie clacker thingy (when they say action!), and movie reels. They were so cute! I purchased wine glass charms to make the custom molds with. They were molded of gumpaste and painted with silver luster dust.

 

 

 

Here is the bottom section. Black fondant drapes and ropes with huge sugar brooches at the joins. Clusters of flowers here and there….

 

 

 

None of the pictures are showing the faux finish very well, but it was really visible and pretty in person. Wendy did a great job doing this; she had the perfect touch with the paint brush. After the cakes were fondanted, she used Luck’s airbrush shimmer color in pearl, with a squirt of silver, full strength. And she stippled the whole cake with a fluffy brush. It gave it great subtle dimension. It was a very classy sophisticated look, a lot like marble. It had just a tad of shimmer to it, but did not overpower the rest of the cake. Lagniappe: it totally hid flaws in the fondant, amazingly well! I might faux every fondant cake from now on!

 

 

 

This is not a great photo, but you can see our little silver charms in the flowers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Can you tell that this one is cooking utensils?
 
 
 
 
 
 
And here is the amazing floral plaque that Adele hand painted to match the bride’s invitations. They came out and threw this surprise element at us in the last few hours of the show, and we were really really behind schedule. We spent a few minutes brainstorming, and then I said to forget about it for now. It was more important to finish the cake, and then we would worry about the plaque. Somewhere in those last couple of hours Adele snuck away and used the black fondant and white chocolate we had on hand to hand paint this masterpiece. It was truly incredible! And it really did look like it was meant to be part of the original design. She really knocked it out of the park with this one.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Here you can see the sugar beads hanging in front of the separators. The seperators were Styrofoam that we covered in white fondant, used the line impression mat on, and then airbrushed silver. An easy technique that gave a nice graphic and bold backdrop for the beads and flowers.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
See the little football in the flowers? We also threw a few black Sworovskicrystals in there too for good measure. The beads were oblong, made from black poured sugar using custom made molds that Adele made before the show.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Another picture of the bottom section. The scroll work was done with the cutter sets sold here and here.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Nice shot of the scrolls, flowers and Benisons.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
This is a poor shot of the Benisons close up.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
This is the larger sugar brooch we used at the bottom. Wendy made the silicone molds from a humongous brooch I got on Ebay. Again, they were not this dark in person. They were a beautiful shade of purple and shiny. (Tip: rub them with spray Pam and they stay shiny.)
 
 
 
 
 
 
This is a little more true to the color purple, but still a bit darker than in person.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
After the judging they sit us in these chairs to participate in witty banter while the judges deliberate. Let me just take this moment to say that all three teams left the best of friends. We all got along wonderfully, hung out and laughed together. There were no hard feelings between any of us for any of the events of the show. I was mad at Jan for sitting me out the 2nd time for about 3 minutes, and then we were joking and kidding each other right afterwards. But they did not show that on the show.
 
 
 
 

 

The aftermath.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
More aftermath.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Yikes. Did we do that?
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Here are the teams hanging out while the leads went in for judgement. Can’t you just feel the animosity between them all? 🙂
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
What was left after they dismantled it all.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
In the garbage. I am glad I was not there for this part. 🙁
 
 
 
 

 


After all was said and done, and all the obstacles we had in our kithen that day, I am immensely proud of the cake we produced. It may not be the one the bride picked, but that is OK. We accomplished what we went to do, it was a big challenge, and we did it! I am incredibly proud of my team mates, and our beautiful creation.

 

 

Thank you all for the outpouring of support and encouragement after the show. It means more to me than you could ever know!

 

I look forward to seeing all of you talented peeps when it is your turn!

 

Happy caking!

Sharon

 

 

Cricut Cake Class and Winners!

March 19, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 7 Comments

 
 
Hello Sugar Friends!
 
 
 
 
 
SugarEd Productions and Sweet Ideas the Cake Shoppe will be hosting a 2 day Cricut for Cakes class.

 

Taught by the incomparable Sweet Southern Ladies, Martha and Becky.

Come learn all about the new rage in cake decorating: how to use the Cricut scrap booking machine to make appliques to embellish your cakes.

 

August 1-2, 2010
Robert, LA

Please email Wendy for all the details: wendybcakes@yahoo.com

 

                                              —————————————–

 

                                          Winners of the DVD idea contest are:

Niccicola
Cheley
The Sugary
 
Thank you all for entering your ideas and email us to claim your prize at sugaredinfo@aol.com

 

——————————————

 

We are off to the DC area this weekend to vendor at the NCACS Cake Show. Please come see us if you are in the area!

 

The Bleeping TLC cake post will be up next week, I am still working on it. That’s a lot of photos to resize and upload!

 

Everyone have a wonderful, sweet and delicious weekend and I will check in with you all next week!

 

Sharon

http://www.sugaredproductions.com/

 

 

The Bleeper part two

March 10, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 48 Comments

 

Thank you all for the outpouring of support and love since yesterday’s post. It really has warmed my heart and made me feel better about all of this.

I am who I am and will not apologize for that. I am fiery, very verbal, emotional and animated. That is me, not a show. And I like me very much. Yep, I cuss sometimes. I am human. Yep, I get mad and frustrated. I am human. I use a lot of colorful language to express myself, but most often it is safe words like frap, frig, crapola and things like that. Do I say real cuss words? Yes. Is how they portrayed me on the show true to me? No.

There are some in the comment section of my blog that still feel the need to judge and chastise me. So be it. If my blog and TV appearances offend you, then stay away. And if you are too much of a coward to use your name when posting, then what does that say about your integrity and character?

I know I have set myself up in the public eye to be criticized. And I cannot have everyone like me. That is fine. I have never portrayed myself as a saint, perfect, or free of flaws. I am a cake decorator who wishes to share my love and passion of the art with the rest of you, and try to make a little bit of a living while doing it.

When I no longer deliver good quality cake decorating instruction at a valuable price, then all criticisms will be warranted on that topic.

That is the last I will say on this subject. Thank you again for the overwhelming support. Now back to the fun stuff!

Love you, Sharon

 

 

Sharon The Bleeper

March 10, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 62 Comments

 
 
HEY GUYS!
 
 
Did you watch the show? Did you enjoy it?
 
I will have a full post up this weekend with all the juicy details and all the photos, but I want to address 2 things on last night’s show that were misleading.
 
 
First let me address this comment to my blog:
 
Anonymous has left a new comment on your post “Watch Teambito On Ultimate Cake Off Monday!“:
 
What a filthy mouth for such a family show. I will never watch when you are on this show again. Not just mild words but ones my kids could tell what you said even though they bleeped you out. went back and counted what was shown 49 bleeps must be some kind of record for family tv.
 
 
Dear Anonymous,
 
Knowing your name would be easier to address you, but since you chose not to stand behind your words, I will post my reply here:
 
The bleeping on the show was way overdone for what was reality. ( And I highly doubt 49)
 
1) I did say “shit” once which need to be bleeped.
 
2) When the fondant was tearing I said “It is tearing like a son of a —-” and I did NOT finish the sentence. I said nothing else despite how they made it look. They added a bleep there for drama.
 
3) When the pole would not go into the hole, I was very frustrated yes, and saying “friggit!”, not the other F word. IF you look at my lips you can see what I was saying. Again they added long bleeps for drama.
 
4) There were also bleeps added when my face was off screen and I was not even saying anything.
 
They apparently decided, that since I was feisty, showing a lot of emotion, and using “pseudo-cuss words” a few times, that they would go crazy with the editing and bleeping and make me look much worse than I really was.
 
 
Second issue:
 
During the skills test. I had not piped BC roses in about 20 years and I said so many times on camera. I also said that I knew mine were crappy, Pat’s were perfect, and she had it in the bag. What I actually said during my interview was “I felt confident that Pat won the skills test because BC roses are not my strength.” And they clearly edited my words to say: “I felt confident because BC roses are my strength”.
 
Folks, this is a semi scripted TV show, not a true cake competition. They make it look the way they want it to look. They took many shot of words and facial expressions for all 3 of us and inserted them out of context, to tell the story they wanted to tell.
 
That is TV. We signed a huge contracting waiving our rights to complain, and giving them freedom to edit us anyway that they wanted.

I am no angel, I do cuss at times, but I have more sense than to let it rip on national TV in prime time. I was using my arsenal of safe “ugly words”. Nothing other than the one “shit” did I say that really needed to be bleeped, but they saw the opportunity to create high drama, and did it at my expense.

Believe me if you wish; do not believe if you do not wish.

But I felt the need to clarify, and reiterate that things are almost always not as they seem on TV. Take it all with a grain of salt.

There, I have it off my chest, now back to the fun of caking!

I will put a full post up this weekend full of good stuff after I get my wedding order out the door.

Love you all,

Sharon

 

 

Watch Teambito On Ultimate Cake Off Monday!

March 7, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 36 Comments

 

Tomorrow night! 8 PM central time…. TLC
 
 
 
Watch us crazy a$$ girls get our cake on!
 
If they edit it right, it should be a very entertaining episode. I sure wish/hope they show more of the whole team. This competition is not about one person (the leader), it is truly a team effort. Our cake was a team effort from the design phase thru the execution. It was our cake, not my cake. My gals are the three best ladies anyone could have on their team. I am so very grateful to them for all the hard work, and moral support (yes I was very needy) throughout the whole process. No matter what the outcome, or how they edit it to make us look, I am so very proud and honored to have stood beside these 3 amazing women:
 
 
WENDY BAIAMONTE
ADELE LIND NICHOLS
BECKY WILLARD
 
and
REBECCA SUTTERBY
 
because she was a “silent” team member thru the whole thing as well. She gave design and structure advice when we asked, and was incredibly encouraging in every way. She was even on phone stand by for 911 crisis calls we had while in LA! And she saved our butts on a couple of things too!
 
I love all four of you to pieces!
 
 

 
If I come across as a crazy, mean lunatic, nut ball, I blame the editing. If I come across as delightful, witty, brilliant and skilled, then it was all real. Depending upon which way it goes, I might be entering the federal witness protection program Tuesday.
 
So everybody tune in tomorrow night, have fun, and don’t take it too seriously!
 
Lova ya!~
Sharon
 
 

Sheet Cake DVDs on Sale Now!

February 26, 2010 by Sharon Zambito 14 Comments

 
 
The new DVDs are ready!
 
 

 

Sheet Cake Secrets takes you through three cakes from start to finish.

 

Learn run sugar, two tone icing, fondant and buttercream borders.
 
 
 
 
 
 
Airbrushed frame, chocolate transfer, fondant grass and accents.
 
 
 
 
 
Airbrushed hills and clouds, royal icing plaques, frozen buttercream transfer, and more buttercream borders.
 
Each cake has its own lagniappe section. Almost five hours of instruction on two discs!
 
 
 
 
AND EVEN MORE……..
 
 
 
The Sheet Cake Bonus DVD teaches you even more techniques!
 
 
 
 
 
 
Drop shell border, airbrush highlights, royal icing message.
 
 
 
 
 
 

Bottom buttercream borders.

 
 
 
New Tools too:
 
fence cutter
rope twist cutter
daisy cutters
 
 
Come see at SugarEd Productions!
 
 
 
 
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Sharon Zambito

Sharon Zambito

An RN turned SAHM turned cake maniac. Owner of SugarEd Productions Online School. Join me for some caking, baking, and all around sweet fun :)

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