Sugar paste

Sugar paste icing is a sweet edible sugar dough usually made from sucrose and glucose. It is sometimes referred to as sugar gum or gum paste, but should not be confused with fondant. It is used to cover cakes, mold features and create decorations for cakes.

Sugar paste in the shape of flowers

Sugar paste hardens so it is ideal for creating large cake decorations. By contrast, cake fondant is softer and more ideal for smaller figures or flowers.

One of the biggest advantages of the commercial sugar paste is that it can be stored for up to a year. The disadvantages of homemade sugar paste is that it is not as easy to manipulate, doesn't store as long and is difficult to make pure white.

History

Evidence for its use in various settings dates back to at least the 16th century.

The first sweets to go into the first Christmas crackers were made from sugar paste, and would be stamped with words and short phrases.

gollark: Labels are 32 characters. Only 187 characters are allowed but with some finicky encoding this works out as ~30 bytes.
gollark: Computers can read the labels of networked computers.
gollark: This is between adjacent devices. For wireless just use modems.
gollark: You're just not thinking with insanity enough.
gollark: It changes the computer's label very fast.

References

  • Ingrassia, Catherine (2007). "Diana, Martha and Me". In Curran, Colleen (ed.). Altared: bridezillas, bewilderment, big love, breakups, and what women really think about contemporary weddings. New York: Vintage Books. ISBN 978-0-307-27763-3.



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