I love how you just have no time for any BS when it comes to cooking myths or misconceptions. You don’t mince words, you rely on your experience and just respectfully and honestly tell it like it is. Much respect for that.
When I took a baking class at the local community College. The baking text book stated that there is a difference between icing and frosting. Frosting is usually creamy, fluffy and contains fat, and icing tend to be thinner and contains little to no fat. Think buttercream vs royal icing. :)
Yeah, I've never had a formal baking class, but I've always understood an icing to be something you can pour onto a cake, while a frosting is thick enough that it needs to be spread.
@@crabapples1995 icing and frosting are used around the world. They are 2 separate types of sugar based coatings to inhance flavors, improve astetics and help keep baked goods from drying out as quickly.
I was going to say the same thing. Icing and glaze are interchangeable words for me, and is translucent and hardens in a thin layer. Frosting is creamy and airy.
I was born and raised in Erie, PA till age 13...we always called it "pop"...then moved to the deep south...now I call it "soda"...love hearing it called pop...brings me back to childhood lol! Great recipe..
Greetings from Ashtabula Ohio, Tera! I ran into the same thing when I lived in Virginia years ago. Although NE Ohio is a little weird, too. Soda and pop are both used, seemingly without rhyme or reason.
Buttermilk is violently hard to procure where I live. Always substituted it with lemon / white vinegar, but I've never heard of the sour cream/yogurt trick. Definitely giving that a shot the next time around.
I thought this looked familiar right off the bat. I made your Ultimate Dump Cake recipe earlier this month as my own birthday cake, and it was fabulous. I have no doubt this will have pretty much the same results. One thing I did differently was use yoghurt whey (I make my own Greek yoghurt) and it basically does the same thing as buttermilk.
Growing up in Tasmania, icing was the only word we used. Frosting as a term came later as an import from Nth America. Now I hear both. "Frosting" still sounds American to me though.
Today is my birthday, and I had a Coca-Cola cake with homemade chocolate walnut frosting! We used "frosting" on the cake, but I told my daughter I was "icing" the cake when it was cooled completely! I never thought about what I called the cake topping or how I used those terms interchangeably - so interesting! Great video, now I want to try and make a Dr. Pepper cake!
Frosting in my family is either a butter frosting or a 7 minute one, icing means something like a melted thing that forms a hard crust on the cake. At least in so far as I can figure.
From Minnesota. We called soda Pop, I still do. That would be frosting on the cake. Icing would be much looser, and would be a very thin layer. I am loving your channel!
Appreciate that you mentioned replacing a neutral acid and milk for fermented dairy results in an insipid cake or what have you. Really does make a difference. Also Midwest US and typically use frosting for what you made. Icing usually is confectioners sugar and milk/water.
Both sour cream and buttermilk are really hard to find where I live, and most of the yogurt is 0% fat, which isn't great for baking, so I use the lemon juice milk he mentions, too. Even if it's not ideal, it's certainly better than plain milk for the crumb texture.
Here in the U.S. this kind of cake is almost always made as a sheet cake, and it gets a cooked icing that gets poured over (often with nuts in it) and it forms a sort of fudgy shellac layer on top of the cake. It's really good.
As a Dr. Pepper fan, I love Glen continuing down this rabbit hole. May it never end. Though if you ever branch into other pop related cooking, try doing something with Brio!!
Glenn is Canadian - here the terms icing and frosting are interchangeable. In the Maritimes where I live, I think "icing" is more traditional and commonly heard. 😊 Looks yummy!
In Vermont we typically say that frosting has larger grains of sugar and is thicker, and icing has smaller grains of sugar and is tinner, kind of like ice is slick but frost is more crystalline, if that makes sense
I just got done tonight making a soda pop cake. And I did something horribly wrong. It turned out more like a dense baked pudding. I'm so glad you're showing your method. Btw- I really enjoy frosting🥰🥰🥰
I laughed when I saw you'd made a Dr. Pepper cake after the Dr. Pepper jerky. Here's a soda-based recipe to try: I had a co-worker who was half Korean who learned to make Korean style ribs with a marinade that was half Coca-Cola and half 7-Up. The ribs were amazing!
We tried the recipe. The cake is AMAZING. The most soft and moist cake I've ever had, and the flavor... The flavor is so rich from the buttermilk and Dr. Pepper. (even though you can't specifically taste it) Might try a version with more Dr. Pepper next time, or a different 'pop'. Buttermilk was easy to get here in the Netherlands. We're a dairy country, it's very common haha. Plenty of choice in the supermarket.
From Texas. Frosting or icing is basically interchangeable here. Wouldn't be unusual to hear either one. EDIT: This is in my experience. I'm sure there are plenty of people here that understand the differences and use the words appropriately.
Same in NE/Mid-Atlantic USA. I've heard both probably evenly, and have used them interchangeably. Maybe a bit more toward icing. Same with the verb for applying it: frosting a cake or icing a cake. Same thing.
Hey Glen. I'm a fan and just wanted to tell you that I really enjoy your content. I appreciate the depth and breadth of your knowledge, and I like that you don't have some kind of "agenda" e.g. vegan, e.g. local, e.g. snobby. I talk to my friends enough about your channel that they tell me to shutup. Anyway, thanks, and thanks for representing Toronto.
When I was a kid, my friends mother would make a chocolate mayonnaise cake. It was very rich and moist. I think you might find it interesting to try sometime. We lived in Stouffville, ON (not far from you!) but his mother was from the Northwest Territories. Not sure if this is a regional recipe or not.
Wow... thank you. I was thinking of making a dr pepper cake out of nowhere yesterday and I never ever make or eat cakes or drink dr pepper and found this video 1 day after I think about making it.
Icing if it's more of a glaze, frosting if it's kinda yummy & buttercream! CA roots with an endlessly cooking mom. p.s. Right around 1974-5 Mom started making a Beet Cake--chocolate with loads of beets. My sister and I were quite alarmed as neither of us had, up until that point, eaten a beet (I think both my parents had eaten a few too many when they were kids). However, Mom was never afraid to try something new. (Plus, it had a very delicious chocolate buttercream frosting.) We went camping with that beauty queen along, and that's when I lost my fear of beets. Fantastic cake! I think the beets are mashed or grated, and add to the moisture, tenderness, and sweetness, like a harlequin carrot cake with none of those spices...just chocolate, chocolate, and more chocolate. Mm-mm! Yummy
I am just a few hours down the road from you Glen, and I say icing (instead of frosting) and soda (instead of pop). I guess it just depends on your family traditions.
"Live your life. It doesn't have to be exact. There's HUUUGE things to worry about now." I love this. If you wanna be exact, go ahead but Glen's looks just fine. ... I learned this years ago in art school. When matting our final presentation, most folks did a difficult measuring job to make sure their artwork was PERFECTLY centered. I just eyeballed it and stuck it on. I figured ... it's our eyeballs judging the accuracy anyway, not a ruler. It's fine. I never got a complaint from any of my professors. :)
As a Brit it's always icing a cake and icing sugar. I have seen a few of my countrymen call it "frosting" though due to American influence. I really love the debunking about the carbonation though, and Jules it's always a delight. One day I hope to see you reverse roles. just for fun.
Something you might want to try, last night we smoked ribs, during the last hour we basted them twice with Crown Royal Peach. It carmelized and gave the impression of bbq sauce
(UK) Most people just call it icing but home cooks here (including me) will probably tell you that there's a difference between the two terms. Frosting has a lot more fat in it, is much softer, can applied in quick a thick layer and is unlikely to set firm (e.g. buttercream/meringue) while icing is thinner, firmer and will set hard(er) (e.g. fondant or royal (my favourite cake icing)).
This guy is a HOOT!! Haha!! Love this cake.... minus the egg lol. In America, for the most part, I believe we top cakes with frosting. Cookies can have an icing or a frosting.
'Pop'. Hahaha. I love how different areas say carbonated beverage. Here in Texas, everything is a coke. "What kind of coke do you want?" "A Dr Pepper." My mother is English so I grew up with Frosting is the fluffy spreadable stuff and icing is basically a slurry of powdered sugar and a flavouring you drizzle over the cake. But of course, there was 7 minute or Royal icing you put on christmas puddings.
that cake looks so good. I have a freind who is a bake and she would twitch every time someone said I'm going to eyeball it. I would love a piece of this cake.
I grew up in Midwest US, and It's all "frosting." And I like hearing you refer to the coke & Dr pepper as "pop." I didn't realize that was common anywhere other than the Midwest. "Soda" is Arm & Hammer.
Frosting and icing are different where I come from. For me, icing is Liquid based and you pour it over your baked items and it gets a slightly hard shell or crisp outer layer. Where as frosting is more light and fluffy and more solid than an icing and can be there and thicker.
Lived all around the D.C. Metro area USA. Frosting: Is a "creamier" confection; When applied to a cool cake it stands on it's own like a soft whipped cream, is spongy and dries matte. Icing: Is a "harder" confection; More often used for detail decorations on cakes or cookies, after a 'curing time' it lays flatter, is more brittle/crumbly, and can be glossy or matte. Although I also see people/advertisements saying whipped cream icing or whipped cream frosting interchangeably, shelf stable "Whipped Frosting" is also a thing which is it's own separate thing entirely.
Looks moist and tasty. In Georgia, we call everything "Coke", even if it's Pepsi! I think of icing as white and frosting as chocolate or caramel. What do I know? I like cake without frosting most of the time
Aussie here, icing is the traditional term, frosting is well understood too, and often conveys the idea of an American style icing (fluffier and thicker than we are used too). Icing here is usually what Glen mentioned as “a thin glaze”.
Huge success for a friend's birthday. I have to make another one for me and my husband. I only got to taste the batter and frosting. I found Godiva chocolate liqueur. What brand did you use? Love your videos and recipes !!!!!!!!!!
I say frosting. My grandmother iced cakes with frosting though. And I still use the idiom about “icing on the cake”. I grew up in Denver in the sixties. Grandma started I Minnesota, but lived for years in Montana.
Powdered Buttermilk culture keeps amazingly well in the refrigerator. I've been using it to make buttermilk up for years now. The powder keeps on a shelf for about a year, but refrigerated I've had it keep for over 2 years. That perforated baking pan you have would work great for making spaetzle. Sit the pan on top of boiling water, Drop a blob of batter on top, then push through with your bench scraper. No need for an overpriced unitasker.
U.S. South - Icing Frosting pretty much interchangeable. Soooo, would a Dr pepper tasting cake be good, maybe. A Lemon lime 7 up cake might be nice, especially for the warmer weather. Great ideas.
What is that baking tray? And have you seen those European ovens with tray racks? The ovens come with a regular rack and a tray rack. I wish our oven came with one. Thank you for the reminder to relax! It’s taken me years to chill out when I’m baking. I make mistakes with almost every bake, but it all works out in the end.
The cake looks great! When I was in high school (many many years ago),a friend of ours father worked at the local Dr Pepper bottling plant and at parties the would serve heated up Dr Pepper which as I remember was actually pretty good. Here in North Florida sometimes it is said you make the frosting but you use it to ice the cake.
In Northern China we ate a bunch of restaurants where a simmering teapot was at the centre of every communal table - but it was filled with hot Coca Cola. Really good.
Frosting and icing are interchangeable for my brain when others say it living in Mid- Michigan. When I say it, the buttercream type is frosting, the generally white, thinner, firmer stuff that sets up a bit when it gets cold that you'd put on a bunt cake or cinnamon rolls is icing 😁
Weight watchers came out with a diet soda cake decades ago. You use one can of diet soda and one box of cake mix. Blend well, bake according to box directions. It does not rise as high, but it is the moistest cake you will ever eat. I have found that there is never much of any residual flavor from the soda, but I do try to keep in mind the flavor palettes that I am working with when making hear cakes. Spice cake gets root beer or ginger ale, chocolate a cola or cherry cola, lemon a ginger ale, etc.
Frosting is thick and spread with a frosting knife. An offset spatula, if you will. Icing is like glaze for donutS, but for cakes. It’s thin and is drizzled over the cake. Like a Bundt cake for example. Pacific Northwest, USA.
Hi, Glen !! I enjoy your channel very much, especially your old cookbook recipes. I appreciate your scientific explainations of recipes as well. I was born in Michigan, but moved to N. Carolina in my 20's and I am a FROSTING gal and use CONFECTIONERS' sugar. LOL My favorite frosting recipe is Ermine Frosting. I have seen recipes for Coca Cola Cake many times, but have never made it. Will definately try your recipe in the very near future.
I love how you just have no time for any BS when it comes to cooking myths or misconceptions. You don’t mince words, you rely on your experience and just respectfully and honestly tell it like it is. Much respect for that.
When I took a baking class at the local community College. The baking text book stated that there is a difference between icing and frosting. Frosting is usually creamy, fluffy and contains fat, and icing tend to be thinner and contains little to no fat. Think buttercream vs royal icing. :)
Retired chef here...this, exactly. Icing is liquid plus sugar, frosting is fat plus sugar.
Yeah, I've never had a formal baking class, but I've always understood an icing to be something you can pour onto a cake, while a frosting is thick enough that it needs to be spread.
I think icing is a more European thing.
@@crabapples1995 icing and frosting are used around the world. They are 2 separate types of sugar based coatings to inhance flavors, improve astetics and help keep baked goods from drying out as quickly.
@@FrostedCreations Crisco is shortening right? I believe it’s made of plants, so I would think it would be common these days.
How about cherry coke with like a cherry cordial filling layer in between the two cake layers? That sounds amazing.
That sounds really good.
Sounds Black Forest-ish.....yummy actually.
We used cherry pie filling on top and between layers and chocolate frosting on sides of cherry coke cake
Take your cordial, if it’s liquid, dilute it with water, and brush it on your layers. Nice subtle bang for your buck, and not overwhelming.
That's a beautiful idea.
In the southern part of the States we say both. The icing is thiner like the glaze on cinnamon buns. The frosting is thicker for cakes.
What Audrey said -- from Iowa.
Yep. Same in Georgia.
I was going to say the same thing. Icing and glaze are interchangeable words for me, and is translucent and hardens in a thin layer. Frosting is creamy and airy.
Yup. Southeast Missouri here.
Sounds about right. New York.
I was born and raised in Erie, PA till age 13...we always called it "pop"...then moved to the deep south...now I call it "soda"...love hearing it called pop...brings me back to childhood lol! Great recipe..
Greetings from Ashtabula Ohio, Tera! I ran into the same thing when I lived in Virginia years ago. Although NE Ohio is a little weird, too. Soda and pop are both used, seemingly without rhyme or reason.
@@itatane I use the two interchangeably. ;p That's because I grew up east of Syracuse and spent most of my life north of Buffalo. :P
Always been icing here in Sarnia, ON. I'm glad to know that I'm not the only one who licks the beaters/spatula.
Buttermilk is violently hard to procure where I live. Always substituted it with lemon / white vinegar, but I've never heard of the sour cream/yogurt trick. Definitely giving that a shot the next time around.
Yeah, it’ll give you a beautiful, tender crumb, whether in cake, bread, muffins, or pancakes.
“All of the pops work!” 😜 love this show!
I thought this looked familiar right off the bat. I made your Ultimate Dump Cake recipe earlier this month as my own birthday cake, and it was fabulous. I have no doubt this will have pretty much the same results.
One thing I did differently was use yoghurt whey (I make my own Greek yoghurt) and it basically does the same thing as buttermilk.
Personally when I hear icing I generally think something hard like royal icing and frosting I think of something more spreadable like buttercream.
Yes! Iced cookies have royal icing, and frosted cookies have the much better and tastier, buttercream.
Same here. frosting is thick and fluffy, icing is thin and glossy and sometimes even has a bit of a shell.
Growing up in Tasmania, icing was the only word we used. Frosting as a term came later as an import from Nth America. Now I hear both. "Frosting" still sounds American to me though.
California here. I feel like I hear both.
@Natty Fatty Sounds about like me and I'm in the northeast (actually, just across the ditch from Glen in Western New York).
Today is my birthday, and I had a Coca-Cola cake with homemade chocolate walnut frosting! We used "frosting" on the cake, but I told my daughter I was "icing" the cake when it was cooled completely! I never thought about what I called the cake topping or how I used those terms interchangeably - so interesting! Great video, now I want to try and make a Dr. Pepper cake!
As a Texan, I’m very happy to see you do this Glen. Long live the Dr Pep!
Heyyy...I tried this recipe and it was turned out amazing....!!!😍💕😋
Thank - You 😊❤️✌️
I love orange and chocolate. I had found a Greek restaurant that made a chocolate cake with Grand Marnier. It was awesome.
Frosting in my family is either a butter frosting or a 7 minute one, icing means something like a melted thing that forms a hard crust on the cake. At least in so far as I can figure.
Anthony described perfectly the difference between frosting and icing for me, a Michigander.
Same here. Frosting is a creamy spreadable coating, Icing is a pourable coating that hardens when it cools. From Kansas.
Frosting you spread, icing you pour over.
We use "icing" for everything, but you could also call the thin runny one a glaze. I'm from Alberta.
Across Lake Ontario from you, in WNY I generally say frosting. We also say pop :)
Icing for donuts, frosting for cakes. Appreciate all the comments below. Glen, you are great!!!! Look forward to your videos.
Boiling Dr Pepper? That just reminds me of Blast From The Past! (In my part of Australia, it’s called Icing)
I've never heard of this in Melbourne. Have to give it a try
In Texas, some people drink it like tea
@@SamM-lv8hr , my husband grew up drinking Dr Pepper with Red Hots. I found it disgusting! They also called it wassail, which it definitely is NOT!
The most underrated 90s movie
In like the 60s they tried marketing hot Dr. Pepper as a Christmas-time drink.
From Minnesota. We called soda Pop, I still do. That would be frosting on the cake. Icing would be much looser, and would be a very thin layer. I am loving your channel!
I'm not the only one who licks the batter.
Frosting? Icing? I use them both. Any argument would be over quantity. I like a lot.
Appreciate that you mentioned replacing a neutral acid and milk for fermented dairy results in an insipid cake or what have you. Really does make a difference. Also Midwest US and typically use frosting for what you made. Icing usually is confectioners sugar and milk/water.
I also appreciated the idea of using yogurt or sour cream. I had never thought of that but it makes sense.
Both sour cream and buttermilk are really hard to find where I live, and most of the yogurt is 0% fat, which isn't great for baking, so I use the lemon juice milk he mentions, too. Even if it's not ideal, it's certainly better than plain milk for the crumb texture.
Here in the U.S. this kind of cake is almost always made as a sheet cake, and it gets a cooked icing that gets poured over (often with nuts in it) and it forms a sort of fudgy shellac layer on top of the cake. It's really good.
As a Dr. Pepper fan, I love Glen continuing down this rabbit hole. May it never end.
Though if you ever branch into other pop related cooking, try doing something with Brio!!
Like you, Glen, I'm from the GTA and we've always called it icing. And so nice to hear you call Dr. Pepper "pop" not soda. Go Leafs Go!!
“Love your life don’t worry about the small things” thanks for doing what you do Glen! Love your channel!
Live.... typo!
Loves this Canadian man calling it pop!!
It sounded to me like someone just laid down the challenge Orange soda/pop cake at the 75/25 ratio. Will Glen take up the challenge?
Okay, I'm fasting this morning for a lab test, so watching this video was very fun in a painful kind of way. :-)
Hope for good results!
@@Paultimate7 Back from the lab, re-watching this video on a full stomach. :-)
Glenn is Canadian - here the terms icing and frosting are interchangeable. In the Maritimes where I live, I think "icing" is more traditional and commonly heard. 😊 Looks yummy!
Frosting tends to be like butter cream here. Icing is generally like a glaze or a thick pourable glaze, but they are also used interchangeably.
I like that you call it pop. I do too. Most people down here call it soda or soda pop. The cake looks delicious.
Made this for my mother's birthday this year. The family has collectively decided no more store-bought cakes. Thanks Glen!
Love you guys, just make it fun to make food and enjoy and discuss it. I would love to hear about anything with Root Beer.
In Vermont we typically say that frosting has larger grains of sugar and is thicker, and icing has smaller grains of sugar and is tinner, kind of like ice is slick but frost is more crystalline, if that makes sense
That recipe you sent really helped me and it went really good. Thank you!
I just got done tonight making a soda pop cake. And I did something horribly wrong. It turned out more like a dense baked pudding. I'm so glad you're showing your method. Btw- I really enjoy frosting🥰🥰🥰
Glen, your Dr. Pepper cake looks phenomenal!!!! I have to make this cake!!!! Thanks
Made this recipe recently. Very good! Excellent cake body and flavor. Frosting also a home run! Two thumbs up!
I laughed when I saw you'd made a Dr. Pepper cake after the Dr. Pepper jerky.
Here's a soda-based recipe to try: I had a co-worker who was half Korean who learned to make Korean style ribs with a marinade that was half Coca-Cola and half 7-Up. The ribs were amazing!
They do this in Hong Kong, too! With just Coke.
I judge these by the size of Glen's happy dance after tasting. This was more of a happy bounce, so it's probably a good cake 😃
Australia calls it icing.👏👏👍🇦🇺
We tried the recipe. The cake is AMAZING. The most soft and moist cake I've ever had, and the flavor... The flavor is so rich from the buttermilk and Dr. Pepper. (even though you can't specifically taste it) Might try a version with more Dr. Pepper next time, or a different 'pop'. Buttermilk was easy to get here in the Netherlands. We're a dairy country, it's very common haha. Plenty of choice in the supermarket.
From Texas. Frosting or icing is basically interchangeable here. Wouldn't be unusual to hear either one.
EDIT: This is in my experience. I'm sure there are plenty of people here that understand the differences and use the words appropriately.
Texas sheet cake!
Same in NE/Mid-Atlantic USA. I've heard both probably evenly, and have used them interchangeably. Maybe a bit more toward icing. Same with the verb for applying it: frosting a cake or icing a cake. Same thing.
It makes me happy hear other people outside my state refer to soft drink as pop.
I'm in New Mexico USA, and we use icing and frosting interchangeably. Also, thanks for the buttermilk hack, I will keep it in mind.
I appreciate you sharing your baking knowledge and the research that went in to making this cake.
Hey Glen. I'm a fan and just wanted to tell you that I really enjoy your content. I appreciate the depth and breadth of your knowledge, and I like that you don't have some kind of "agenda" e.g. vegan, e.g. local, e.g. snobby. I talk to my friends enough about your channel that they tell me to shutup. Anyway, thanks, and thanks for representing Toronto.
That looks delicious. Also called icing here in South Africa.
When I was a kid, my friends mother would make a chocolate mayonnaise cake. It was very rich and moist. I think you might find it interesting to try sometime. We lived in Stouffville, ON (not far from you!) but his mother was from the Northwest Territories. Not sure if this is a regional recipe or not.
Cool, first time I've heard of this. I'm not a mayonnaise fan, but in a cake it could be good!
Wow... thank you. I was thinking of making a dr pepper cake out of nowhere yesterday and I never ever make or eat cakes or drink dr pepper and found this video 1 day after I think about making it.
Icing if it's more of a glaze, frosting if it's kinda yummy & buttercream! CA roots with an endlessly cooking mom.
p.s. Right around 1974-5 Mom started making a Beet Cake--chocolate with loads of beets. My sister and I were quite alarmed as neither of us had, up until that point, eaten a beet (I think both my parents had eaten a few too many when they were kids). However, Mom was never afraid to try something new. (Plus, it had a very delicious chocolate buttercream frosting.) We went camping with that beauty queen along, and that's when I lost my fear of beets. Fantastic cake! I think the beets are mashed or grated, and add to the moisture, tenderness, and sweetness, like a harlequin carrot cake with none of those spices...just chocolate, chocolate, and more chocolate. Mm-mm! Yummy
I would not call you a madlad since we use to do a coca cola cake here in Brazil. Nice video, as always. :)
I am just a few hours down the road from you Glen, and I say icing (instead of frosting) and soda (instead of pop). I guess it just depends on your family traditions.
"Live your life. It doesn't have to be exact. There's HUUUGE things to worry about now." I love this. If you wanna be exact, go ahead but Glen's looks just fine. ... I learned this years ago in art school. When matting our final presentation, most folks did a difficult measuring job to make sure their artwork was PERFECTLY centered. I just eyeballed it and stuck it on. I figured ... it's our eyeballs judging the accuracy anyway, not a ruler. It's fine. I never got a complaint from any of my professors. :)
As a Brit it's always icing a cake and icing sugar. I have seen a few of my countrymen call it "frosting" though due to American influence.
I really love the debunking about the carbonation though, and Jules it's always a delight. One day I hope to see you reverse roles. just for fun.
Love it! No shame in the spoon licking game!
Something you might want to try, last night we smoked ribs, during the last hour we basted them twice with Crown Royal Peach. It carmelized and gave the impression of bbq sauce
(UK) Most people just call it icing but home cooks here (including me) will probably tell you that there's a difference between the two terms. Frosting has a lot more fat in it, is much softer, can applied in quick a thick layer and is unlikely to set firm (e.g. buttercream/meringue) while icing is thinner, firmer and will set hard(er) (e.g. fondant or royal (my favourite cake icing)).
THANKS for another fine video!
Please do a full on dr pepper cake. Love your work!!
This guy is a HOOT!! Haha!! Love this cake.... minus the egg lol. In America, for the most part, I believe we top cakes with frosting. Cookies can have an icing or a frosting.
Frosting or Icing it is all YUMMY!
'Pop'. Hahaha. I love how different areas say carbonated beverage. Here in Texas, everything is a coke. "What kind of coke do you want?" "A Dr Pepper."
My mother is English so I grew up with Frosting is the fluffy spreadable stuff and icing is basically a slurry of powdered sugar and a flavouring you drizzle over the cake. But of course, there was 7 minute or Royal icing you put on christmas puddings.
I have a friend that makes a root beer chocolate frosting. It's delish.
that cake looks so good. I have a freind who is a bake and she would twitch every time someone said I'm going to eyeball it. I would love a piece of this cake.
Here in Iowa, if it has butter or cream cheese in it, it is frosting. If it has milk, lemon juice or some other liquid, it is icing.
Thank you for those buttermilk alternatives tip! Always nice to learn something new. Time slot @3:33
A split second before Glen said he doesn’t use all the icing, I thought where’s the rest of the icing! Great video. Thanks.
frosting and icing are both different things! i'd call this a frosting!
I grew up in Midwest US, and It's all "frosting." And I like hearing you refer to the coke & Dr pepper as "pop." I didn't realize that was common anywhere other than the Midwest. "Soda" is Arm & Hammer.
It’s pop in the Uk too
Great content
I love that you say pop, you’re literally the only youtuber that i’ve heard say it the way i do
In Canada and the UK they call it pop
Frosting and icing are different where I come from. For me, icing is Liquid based and you pour it over your baked items and it gets a slightly hard shell or crisp outer layer. Where as frosting is more light and fluffy and more solid than an icing and can be there and thicker.
That’s a beautiful cake!
my family all loves eating this cake cold the day after it is made and has a chance to chill in the fridge.
Lived all around the D.C. Metro area USA.
Frosting: Is a "creamier" confection; When applied to a cool cake it stands on it's own like a soft whipped cream, is spongy and dries matte.
Icing: Is a "harder" confection; More often used for detail decorations on cakes or cookies, after a 'curing time' it lays flatter, is more brittle/crumbly, and can be glossy or matte.
Although I also see people/advertisements saying whipped cream icing or whipped cream frosting interchangeably, shelf stable "Whipped Frosting" is also a thing which is it's own separate thing entirely.
Family from Maine and New Hampshire, and we called it frosting. Icing was the stuff you used to decorate on top of the frosting
Looks moist and tasty. In Georgia, we call everything "Coke", even if it's Pepsi! I think of icing as white and frosting as chocolate or caramel. What do I know? I like cake without frosting most of the time
Aussie here, icing is the traditional term, frosting is well understood too, and often conveys the idea of an American style icing (fluffier and thicker than we are used too). Icing here is usually what Glen mentioned as “a thin glaze”.
I was taught icing is confectioners sugar, milk, and a little bit of flavoring extract. Frosting is much thicker. I grew up in Buffalo New York.
Huge success for a friend's birthday. I have to make another one for me and my husband. I only got to taste the batter and frosting. I found Godiva chocolate liqueur. What brand did you use? Love your videos and recipes !!!!!!!!!!
Very curious about that orange pop idea. I may have to try that.
I have to have all of the frosting on my cake. Nice and thick.
Another triumph! That looks so delicious.
In my family "frosting" is the thick topping on cakes 🎂. "Icing" is the thin topping used on cookies 🍪 . Haha you made me think. Cheers.
Seattle area I grew up with frosting, but after taking cake decorating classes icing was used interchangeable with frosting.
I call it frosting, but I grew up in California. Only back home for about one year. It’s good to be back! 🇨🇦🇨🇦🇨🇦
What a great recipe. I can’t wait to try it. I’m in NH in the United States and I call it frosting 😀
My mom always called the thicker kind you spread with a knife or spoon frosting, and the thinner kind you drizzled over a cake icing.
I say frosting. My grandmother iced cakes with frosting though. And I still use the idiom about “icing on the cake”. I grew up in Denver in the sixties. Grandma started I Minnesota, but lived for years in Montana.
Powdered Buttermilk culture keeps amazingly well in the refrigerator. I've been using it to make buttermilk up for years now. The powder keeps on a shelf for about a year, but refrigerated I've had it keep for over 2 years.
That perforated baking pan you have would work great for making spaetzle. Sit the pan on top of boiling water, Drop a blob of batter on top, then push through with your bench scraper. No need for an overpriced unitasker.
U.S. South - Icing Frosting pretty much interchangeable. Soooo, would a Dr pepper tasting cake be good, maybe. A Lemon lime 7 up cake might be nice, especially for the warmer weather. Great ideas.
What is that baking tray? And have you seen those European ovens with tray racks? The ovens come with a regular rack and a tray rack. I wish our oven came with one. Thank you for the reminder to relax! It’s taken me years to chill out when I’m baking. I make mistakes with almost every bake, but it all works out in the end.
The cake looks great! When I was in high school (many many years ago),a friend of ours father worked at the local Dr Pepper bottling plant and at parties the would serve heated up Dr Pepper which as I remember was actually pretty good. Here in North Florida sometimes it is said you make the frosting but you use it to ice the cake.
In Northern China we ate a bunch of restaurants where a simmering teapot was at the centre of every communal table - but it was filled with hot Coca Cola. Really good.
Frosting and icing are interchangeable for my brain when others say it living in Mid- Michigan. When I say it, the buttercream type is frosting, the generally white, thinner, firmer stuff that sets up a bit when it gets cold that you'd put on a bunt cake or cinnamon rolls is icing 😁
I'm not a big fan of orange pop. but I agree that it would be a great one to try.
Oh, that's a lovely cake! Look at the loft and the texture. So, when we makin' a Nesbitt cake?
Weight watchers came out with a diet soda cake decades ago. You use one can of diet soda and one box of cake mix. Blend well, bake according to box directions. It does not rise as high, but it is the moistest cake you will ever eat.
I have found that there is never much of any residual flavor from the soda, but I do try to keep in mind the flavor palettes that I am working with when making hear cakes. Spice cake gets root beer or ginger ale, chocolate a cola or cherry cola, lemon a ginger ale, etc.
Frosting is thick and spread with a frosting knife. An offset spatula, if you will.
Icing is like glaze for donutS, but for cakes. It’s thin and is drizzled over the cake. Like a Bundt cake for example.
Pacific Northwest, USA.
Hi, Glen !! I enjoy your channel very much, especially your old cookbook recipes. I appreciate your scientific explainations of recipes as well. I was born in Michigan, but moved to N. Carolina in my 20's and I am a FROSTING gal and use CONFECTIONERS' sugar. LOL My favorite frosting recipe is Ermine Frosting. I have seen recipes for Coca Cola Cake many times, but have never made it. Will definately try your recipe in the very near future.