Monkey & Banana Cake
A year ago, my friend gave birth to her son after a grueling 38-hour labor. Today, I spent my evening making Rowan’s first birthday cake.
Theresa e-mailed me a couple of weeks ago and asked if she could hire me to make his cake. I, of course, agreed without hesitation. We talked a little bit about themes, things Rowan likes, and what would work for a cake. She also expressed interest in having a small smash cake just for Rowan. One of the first things she mentioned to me was monkeys, and when I started googling for ideas, I came across a few pictures of monkey cakes with banana smash cakes. Perfect.
And so I set out designing and creating my own. Here is the finished product:
For the cake itself, I decided to try out yet another new white cake recipe. I sampled the scraps, and it was delicious! The texture was fluffy and springy, and the almond extract adds a wonderful flavor to it that’s different than your traditional white/vanilla.
Classic White Layer Cake
(Source: Cooks Illustrated, as seen on The Way the Cookie Crumbles)
Serves 12
CI note: If you have forgotten to bring the milk and egg white mixture to room temperature, set the bottom of the glass measure containing it in a sink of hot water and stir until the mixture feels cool rather than cold, around 65 degrees. Cake layers can be wrapped and stored for one day.
Ingredients:
– Nonstick cooking spray
– 2 1/4 cups cake flour (9 ounces), plus more for dusting the pans
– 1 cup whole milk, at room temperature
– 6 large egg whites (3/4 cup), at room temperature
– 2 teaspoons almond extract
– 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
– 1 3/4 cups granulated sugar (12 1/4 ounces)
– 4 teaspoons baking powder
– 1 teaspoon table salt
– 12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks), softened but still cool
Directions:
1. For the Cake: Set oven rack in middle position. (If oven is too small to cook both layers on a single rack, set racks in upper-middle and lower-middle positions.) Heat oven to 350 degrees. Spray two 9-inch round cake pans with nonstick cooking spray; line the bottoms with parchment or waxed paper rounds. Spray the paper rounds, dust the pans with flour, and invert pans and rap sharply to remove excess flour.
2. Pour milk, egg whites, and extracts into 2-cup glass measure, and mix with fork until blended.
3. Mix cake flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in bowl of electric mixer at slow speed. Add butter; continue beating at slow speed until mixture resembles moist crumbs, with no powdery streaks remaining.
4. Add all but 1/2 cup of milk mixture to crumbs and beat at medium speed (or high speed if using handheld mixer) for 1.5 minutes. Add remaining 1/2 cup of milk mixture and beat 30 seconds more. Stop mixer and scrape sides of bowl. Return mixer to medium (or high) speed and beat 20 seconds longer.
5. Divide batter evenly between two prepared cake pans; using rubber spatula, spread batter to pan walls and smooth tops. Arrange pans at least 3 inches from the oven walls and 3 inches apart. (If oven is small, place pans on separate racks in staggered fashion to allow for air circulation.) Bake until thin skewer or toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, 23 to 25 minutes.
6. Let cakes rest in pans for 3 minutes. Loosen from sides of pans with a knife, if necessary, and invert onto wire racks. Reinvert onto additional wire racks. Let cool completely, about 1.5 hours.
15 Responses to Monkey & Banana Cake
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About
I'm Heather. I'm 33 and have been married to Michael for seven years. Together, we have two beautiful little girls we love more than anything, and a miniature dachshund who drives us crazy. I'm a full-time working mom who has very little time for my own "stuff" these days, like home improvement, cooking/baking, cake decorating, and photography. Despite the team not making the playoffs since 1999, I'm STILL a Buffalo Bills fan, which I think speaks to my loyalty AND sense of humor. I can't wait to pick up the pace with travel again some day... you know, when we're done being ruled by tiny fists. Welcome to my blog.The Address
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you. are. fantastic. :-D did you learn all of your skills from the wilton class?
That is so cute! I love the idea of the banana being the smash cake. I hope everyone loves the cake!
I LOVE this cake! So awesome. What a talent! xx
THIS.CAKE.IS.AWESOME!!!
You are so talented and I’ve been following you since Road to the Aisle!! I got my directions for my aisle runner from you!
I just wish I had more time to try out your recipes. Where do you find the time?
I just found your blog and I love it! Especially this monkey and banana cake… I am beginning my first Wilton course next week so hopefully by the time we are ready for a 1st bday cake I can make something as creative as this!
This is amazing! So funny because MY sons name is Rowan and we call him Monkey as a nickname!! I’m gonna have to try to make this!
How do you texture the brown frosting and color the banana?
Hi Marion, I made the texture of the brown icing using Wilton tip #233 (used for grass, hair, fur, etc.). As far as the color of the banana… I’m not sure I understand the question? It’s buttercream icing, dyed yellow using gel colors.
Hello, I want to make this cake for my son’s 2nd birthday in a month and I was wondering if there were more instructions. Or possibly I am missing them or looking in the wrong place…I was wondering what frosting recipe you used and also how you assembled the cake. Thank you so much it is just adorable.
Hi Cheyenne,
I typically use Wilton’s buttercream recipe: http://www.wilton.com/recipe/Buttercream-Icing
I do describe how I assembled the cake in the post above. Each cake is two layers. The head is a complete cake (two 9″ layers), and then I baked two more 9″ layers from which I cut the ears and banana. I hope that helps!
How did you get the different shades of brown for the icing? Is this just one batch of the Wilton Buttercream recipe … (I’m assuming this is the chocolate recipe)
Hi Megan, no, it’s actually all vanilla icing so I was able to tint it the different colors!
Then pardon the amateur question…but how do I tint to brown??? ;) Did you mix several colors? I know you posted this several years ago so it’s ok if you don’t remember exactly the amounts.
Thank you!
I use the Wilton gel coloring or Americolor for all of my frosting. They make brown. You should be able to pick up a jar of the Wilton brown at any craft store (Michaels, Joann, etc.).
Thank you so much! :)