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14
May 2022
"It's so good to be back", said product and innovation manager Lisa Bennison as I stepped into Bettys Cookery School.
This sentiment was echoed from the whole team, who were all clearly grateful to be doing what they love again.
The school, which launched in 2001, has recently opened its doors to customers again following a two-year closure during the pandemic.
So it genuinely felt quite emotional to be back in the warm glow of the familiar classroom. It served as a stark reminder of the hardship the hospitality industry has had to endure.
The team at Bettys Cookery School.
Bettys Cookery School.
After a coffee and a warm pain au chocolat, we headed over to the demonstration bench where we were introduced to our tutor for the day, Jenny Culver.
Jenny has worked her way up through the ranks at Bettys and is like a walking encyclopaedia for the brand. Desperate to know how the famous fondant fancies are made? She's your gal.
Her enthusiasm is infectious and she's obviously incredibly skilled at what she does too.
I was relieved to be told that we didn't have to make the Genoese sponge or buttercream, as I knew then it would at least be edible.
Course tutor Jenny Culver leading a demonstration.
She then rolled it out thinly, using oil on her hands to stop it drying out, and sprinkled cornflour on the worktop to prevent it from sticking.
My flowers and leaves before adding the edible lustre.
Jenny then cut out the decorations and thinned the petals and leaves with a small plastic tool that resembled a crochet hook. She then added definition and brought them to life with edible lustre.
She made it look ridiculously easy, so I set to work feeling pretty confident.
Jenny applies the buttercream to the sponge.
To make it more pliable, she advised giving both a good stir so it's easier to apply. And with the buttercream, more is more, apparently. Apply a lot more than you need and then smooth it out with a palette knife dipped in hot water to make it more spreadable.
At this stage, I had to keep reminding myself not to eat all the buttercream before smothering it on the cake.
Lunch at Betty's Cookery School.
I didn't realise that the best way to work out the ratio of icing to the cake was to simply measure it with string. Mind blown.
Plastic rolling pins are also better than wood, as the grain then doesn't leave marks. You also use it to carefully lower the icing on to your cake.
My sponge just before I added the buttercream, marzipan and icing.
Once you've done this, you smooth it all out and cut off any excess. I naturally cut off too much so had to patch it up slightly.
At this point my cake definitely resembled a bowler hat - bulbous in shape - which apparently is really difficult to achieve. Obviously this was intentional...
(L-R) Me and my fellow bakers, Beth Windsor and Victoria Turner with our finished cakes.
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