Sunday, March 24, 2013

Beach Bridal Shower

Yay! Spring has finally arrived... except Mother Nature missed the memo! We are supposed to get another batch of snow tonight and it's almost April. This can't be real life. Uggh, and to make matter worse I had a beach themed bridal shower cake yesterday!! Now, all I can think about it is the summer, a nice tan, and being able to run outside without freezing to death. My fingers are crossed that a warm-up will be here sooner than later! 
On to the bridal shower cake! It was a two-tiered, buttercream finish cake. It had turquoise buttercream and I made the "sand" from graham cracker crumbs. A lot of cake designers vary their technique for sand, but I have found graham cracker works the best!
The finished cake! 

This is the sketch I did for the client. We decided to nix the anchor, and I was just too lazy/artistically challenged to draw the adirondack chairs. I'm extremely anal about having everything planned out to the very last detail with my cakes and that's why I almost always do sketches for my clients. It helps me to pinpoint their vision and ensures that they get the exact cake that they had in mind. 


To make the coral, I colored the buttercream with red and orange food coloring and then piped it on to the cake with a #14 star piping tip. The bubbles were made the same way with white buttercream and #9 round tip. 


The initials of the bride and groom-to-be were piped with tan royal icing. 




The seagrass, seashells, and cattails were are made from colored gumpaste. 




I have a candy mold that I used to make the seashells, and once they were dry I added detail with edible petal dust




I am really hoping that this cake was a sign that summer is right around the corner... that, or that I need a beach vacation ASAP! Thanks for reading! 

Always, 
Sarah 






Wednesday, March 20, 2013

Let's just start from the beginning... Part Two

Hello again! Alright, so where did I leave off? Right! Miami! 
In August 2010, I packed my bags, said my goodbyes, and made sure that I had all of Sophie's (my miniature cockpoo that you will know and love!) favorite chew toys. Making the move from rural PA to Miami was by far the hardest and most rewarding decision of my life. I was taking a leap of faith with culinary school... leaving everything and everyone that I knew and loved. I was going after my dream and I had no intentions of looking back OR failing. 
My time at Johnson & Wales went by in a blur. I was taking courses like Artisan Breads, Chocolate (which I had issues in because my abnormally warm hands would melt the chocolate!), Pies and Tarts, Plated Desserts, etc. I had never been so focused before in my life and it definitely paid off because I excelled in each course.  I was really anticipating the time when I would take the Specialty Cake class because this was the whole reason I went back to school! The skills practical (the hands-on final exam portion of course) in the Specialty Cake class was to decorate a two-tiered, fondant cake. Ya remember how I went all out for Claire's birthday cake? Yeeeeeah, I kind of had the same mentality when it came to this practical. Instead of doing one cake... I kind of did seven cakes! I HAD TO THOUGH!!! I wanted to do something with the theme, "Tastes From Around the World," and each cake represented a different country. 
All seven of my cakes from left to right: Mexico, Philadelphia, Japan, the Main Cake, Australia, China, and Italy
 There was the main cake that had flags from around the world, a globe, and a plane on top with a banner that read, "Tastes From Around the World." 

Mexico with tacos and tequila 

The United States, which I had to represent good ol' PA with a cheesesteak! 

Japan with sushi

Australia with some shrimp on the barbie! 

The one side represented the Outback 

While the other side represented the Great Barrier Reef

China had some take-out stir-fry! 

Had to include the Great Wall of China

And then Italy with a bowl of spaghetti and glass of wine! 
One side depicted the Sistine Chapel

While the other side had the Coliseum 
I spent countless hours, sleepless nights, and so much energy working on all of the cakes. I actually didn't think I was going to finish everything in time, but I did! And you better believe that I cried like a baby when I turned them in to be graded. When Chef Andrews was critiquing my work, she shook her head and said, "Sarah... I'm speechless! Your work speaks for itself. In almost all of my years of teaching, I have never seen a student go so above and beyond what was expected of them. You've set a new standard for future students." I am certain that those were her exact words because I have the memory engrained into my brain. It is the memory that 100% validated my choice to return to school. I knew that every single sacrifice, every penny spent on tuition, leaving my family and friends, the hard work, and my future career... it was all worth it. I was on Cloud 9, but still had to finish out the school year and intern over the summer. 
Ohhh man, I forgot about the whole internship debacle. Before I even thought of going back to school, I had fallen in love with the work of The Pink Cake Box. It is a cake shop in New Jersey and the work they do is INSANE. See for yourself... This was the only place that I wanted to do my internship, so I applied and sent in my portfolio. Sure enough, I got an interview! I met with them during my spring break and two days after the interview they offered me the position. My dreams were coming true! Orrr so I thought! The apartment that I had been renting in Miami had me locked in a lease until September 2011 and I would have to pay a RIDICULOUS amount of money to break it. In addition to that, I would have to find an apartment to sublet in New Jersey for the summer. Things slowly fell apart and I had to give up my internship at The Pink Cake Box. I'm still pretty bitter about it so I'll just leave it at that. I spent the summer interning at Couture Cakes in Delray Beach and it would have been great if I didn't have to deal with an hour's worth of traffic on 95 every morning and night!
After my internship was over, I returned to NEPA (North East Pennsylvania for all of those non-local readers). I had already applied, interviewed, and was offered a job at a cake shop in the area. I worked there for about 6 months and then quit for.. well we will say it was because of artistic differences so that I don't get sued by my former employer. When I started working there I had to sign a noncompete agreement that prevented me from doing anything cake/baking related in the entire state of PA for 6 months after I quit. Welcome to my own, little personal hell! Literally HELL! The six months were torture and I had to deal with a lot of unnecessary drama. I had the state agriculture department (they license home bakeries) contact me and then a few months later show up at my house because an "anonymous caller" reported that I was running an illegal, unlicensed home bakery. I guess the caller didn't know, or forgot!!! about my noncompete contract. Ugggh, I'll be the bigger person.. I'll be the bigger person! Pheeew... but this is all water under the bridge because I did become licensed when my noncompete contract expired!
I am now working out of my parents' finished basement, and I'm loving every minute of it... except for the tiny sink that I have to do the dishes in! The support from my family, friends, and growing clientele has been astounding. There have been so many times that I just want to throw the towel in and find a regular 9-5 job that doesn't require having food-coloring stained hands 24/7! But I would be giving up my dream. What I do for a living is my passion, although I can get frustrated with things, I can't picture myself doing anything else.
So that is where I am at today! I constantly have my eye open from places being put up for rent because I am determined to open a shop within the next year or two. I guess everyone will just have to stay tuned to see where life takes me!!!

Again, thank you so much for reading my blog! Now that I have my background story done, my posts will be more geared towards my cakes, business, etc.

Always,
 Sarah 







Saturday, March 16, 2013

Let's just start from the beginning... Part One

Well I guess I should start this whole blog thing by introducing myself. I'm Sarah Hayduk and I'm the owner/operator/marketing director/grocery store runner/dishwasher/etc., etc., etc. of my specialty cake company, Infinite Sweets. I decided to start my blog for several reasons but mainly because so many people ask me the same questions, "How did you get started?" "How's business going?" "How did you make that?" "What do you even do all day?"... Oh ya know I just twiddle my thumbs and eat buttercream!!! Hahah.. anyways, I hope that this blog serves as a way to answer all of those questions, as well as give people a little glimpse into my life and my crazy journey to eventually open a cake shop! I'll also be posting pictures of cakes, cupcakes, cookies, some how-to's, and evidence of how I can turn my clean kitchen into a war zone in 5 minutes flat! Life can be a little hectic for me, but I will try to update as much as possible and attempt to keep my potty mouth in check. I make no promises.
This entry is going to be Part 1 of my back story. I figured I should probably split the whole thing into two parts so that I don't bore your pants off with my first entry! In order to truly build my story, I have to go alllll the way back to my senior year in high school when I was supposed to be deciding what I wanted to be when I grew up. Pshh it easily took me 20 minutes to pick out shoes to wear with an outfit... make me pick a profession?! Good luck with that! Either way, I always loved to be in the kitchen so I figured that culinary school would be my next step. Wrong. George and Sherry Kay (big, intimidating father who is a teddy bear and southern belle mother!) were footing the bill for my tuition and they were more comfortable with me getting a bachelor's degree that I could "fall back on in the future." They said that if I still wanted to be a chef after graduating college then I could go back to school on my own. Four years later, I had graduated with a dual bachelor's degree in Business Management and Marketing from Millersville University and couldn't find a job. I had been interning with UPS for almost a year and was going through the interview process to become a full-time sales representative when they entered a hiring freeze. Things went from bad to worse! Not only were they in a hiring freeze but then they had to cut the intern program from their budget. Me and the other interns were laid off and I was completely lost. I had put all my eggs into one basket! Rookie mistake. I started working part-time while applying for sales jobs, but things weren't going anywhere. I was in a huge funk and didn't know what to do. My roommate at the time, Claire, had a birthday coming up and her boyfriend had asked me to help with the surprise party. He knew how much I loved to bake and left the birthday cake up to me. With an AMPLE amount of free time, I said, "Screw it! I'll make the cake myself!" I went all out, making a replica of Dwight Shrute's desk from "The Office." 
My very first cake. Looking back at it now... I cringe! 
I had NO CLUE what the hell I was doing. It was the first time I ever touched fondant or gumpaste. I had never stacked a cake with more than three layer before.... but I was hooked! I spent hours planning everything, molding the bobble head and making the computer screen. Yeah, that weird, grey box thing is supposed to be a computer. I loved every minute of it! All of the tiny detail work put me into a zen kind of mode and this is coming from the girl with EXTREME road rage and the attention span of a fruit fly! However, I knew that this was something I was meant to do! So, the day after Claire's birthday I started looking at culinary schools. 
My search took me to Johnson & Wales University where they had a program called, Garnish Your Degree. It was specifically for individuals that already had their bachelor's degree and wanted to return to school for an associate's degree... Ummm HI! That'd be me! In one year I would have my degree because all of my general education credits from Millersville would transfer and count towards my associate's degree. I would only have to take lab (technically kitchen) courses along with a sanitation certification class. SOLD! Johnson & Wales has four campuses in the United States; Providence, Charlotte, Denver, and Miami. I originally applied to Charlotte because it would get me out of PA (another reason I wanted to go back to school), but would be close enough if I wanted to go home to visit. My acceptance was deferred because the Baking and Pastry program was full in Charlotte, leaving either Denver of Miami. Decisions... Decisions. 


BIENVENIDO A MIAMI!!!! 

Hahah well that's where I'll be ending Part 1 of my little story! My next entry will be about culinary school and everything after graduating. Thank you for taking the time to read my blog. I promise my future entries won't all be novels! 

Always,
Sarah