Sugar Dog Cake Decorating and Baking Tutorial

Tutorial Preview

Sugar Dog
with Paul Bradford
Skill level: Easy
HD Lessons: 1
Decorating time: 30 Minutes
Now Playing
09:56

1. Lesson 1

Paul takes us through each step to make the perfect little pup out of sugarpaste, which can be used as a cake or cupcake topper for a dog lover.

The Sugar Dog model tutorial is perfect for learning to make a variety of different dog breeds. The skills learnt can easily be adapted to allow for different thickness of coats, change in colour, size and features to create the perfect pup to add to a cake or cupcake.

Click here for printable tools and ingredients list

Grams to lbs

Inches to cm or vice versa

other US to metric and Metric to US

Sugarpaste

  • 200g Chocolate Brown
  • 10g White

Other

  • Spaghetti

Cake Card and Drum

  • 6″ Round Card

Cakey Tools

  • PME Modeling Tools
  • Small Knife
  • Black Food Pen
Paul Bradford

Paul Bradford

Paul Bradford´s mission is to ‘Empower people to achieve their cake decorating dreams’ by providing a range of cake decorating courses and online tutorials through their website, which currently teaches 195,000+ students.  

Comments

  1. milliep02

    this lesson has really helped me with trying to start a business of baking and decorating and modelling was not a strong point and no i am much more confident after watching this tutorial

    Reply
    • Danielle

      Hi Millie, thank you for getting in touch and for your kind comments, it is truly appreciated! So glad you are more confident:-) I hope you find many more of our tutorials helpful!
      Thanks, Danielle x

      Reply
  2. poppyann

    im lovely all your courses only using the free ones for now but once i start to bake ill be upgrading to the pay ones keep up the good work thank you so much poppyann x

    Reply
    • David Brice

      Thank you for your lovely feedback and its great to hear that you are enjoying the tutorials. Please let me know if you have any questions at all.
      Kind regards
      David

      Reply
  3. sammy11

    im lovely all your courses. But I love to see your make a 3D horse & 3D train

    Reply
    • David Brice

      Thanks for your comments. I’ll put these suggestions to Paul at our next planning meeting which is this Friday. We appreciate your suggestions which helps us hugely.

      Reply
  4. Christa64

    Love the way you Tutor it’s simple and affective thank I have learned so much thank you kindly

    Reply
  5. Joana Teixeira

    when you make these kind of figurines are they made with just sugar paste, or do they have some CMC to harden?

    Reply
    • David Brice

      It largely depends on how much drying time you have. If you can leave it overnight then sugarpaste is fine otherwise best to add CMC.

      Reply
    • madeitwithlove

      Hi AdeoyeTitilayo

      Not a good idea to use plain flour as it contains much bigger grains and absorbs far greater volume of moisture. Your fondant will have large patches of flour marks and it will become dry and cracked. If you don’t have cornflour, use a little white vegetable fat on your work surface or roll the fondant out between two pieces of silicone/parchement paper. Icing sugar is the other alternative. 🙂

      Reply
  6. Roisin O’Rorke

    Hi,

    If I wanted to make this as a wedding cake topper, how far in advance should I/can I make it?

    Reply
    • David Brice

      So long as the model is kept in a cool and dry environment it should keep 6 months or more.
      However, it will look its best between 1-21 days.

      Reply
      • Roisin O’Rorke

        Are there any disadvantages to doing this using polymer clay instead?

        Reply
        • David Brice

          It will work in exactly the same way. If you are using it as a decoration for a cake, make sure that it’s foodsafe i.e. the clay is not directly touching the cake.

          Reply
          • Roisin O’Rorke

            Hi,

            I finally got round to making this and I’m really happy with the result; thank you. It’s my first time doing anything like it, can you advise how to store it – it’s very hot at the moment so not sure where to put it! Thanks in advance.

          • David Brice

            Hi Roisin,

            Well done on making the sugar dog, especially in this hear when so many cake decorators are struggling! Keep up the good work x

  7. Sharon Northcott

    I am new at making models so it would be useful to know approx. weight of sugarpaste for the body and head, perhaps this could be added to beginner tutorials? I find it hard getting the proportions right. Great tutorial though and has given me the confidence to make one of these for my nieces birthday which is coming up…she loves animals.

    Reply
    • David Brice

      Hi Sharon, sorry that the weights weren’t given in our early tutorials. The sugar dog was filmed 8 years ago and we soon found that weights were important, especially for anyone starting out. Our more recent tutorials have the weights and sizes. Using the dog tutorial it will take a bit of trial and error to get the proportions without the weights, but it may be helpful in the long run. Please contact me on [email protected] if you have any questions at all.

      Reply

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