Every Wild Rumpus needs Rumpus Cakes! Sugar is essential to rumpusing! Our Wild Rumpus last weekend had two.
There was a cheesecake for the more genteel participants. This is my first cheese cake ever! It was surprisingly easy. Here I am looking proud.

And I put Max and a Wild creature on a chocolate cake too! I think most people could use the technique I used and put their own pictures on cakes. Read along and I'll show you how it works. Then you could put Buzz Light Year on your cake if you want, though I usually would recommend that for a six year old!

If you want to try this as home you will need an iced cake, scissors, toothpicks, two copies of the picture you want to put on the cake in the exact size you need it to be, a box of powdered sugar, food coloring, cocoa powder, water and several hours.

First bake the cake, cool and ice it. Let that frosting dry and harden slightly. (1 hour or so)

While you are waiting, cut out the outline of the picture you want to put on the cake.

Mix powdered sugar with water to make icing. (It should be thick enough that it doesn't run off the spoon when you pull it out, but should still melt into itself when you put the spoon back in. ) Study your picture to see what colors in has. Divide your icing into as many little bowls as you need, one for each color you intend to make. Mix the colors in each bowl. Use cocoa power to make brown, and cocoa powder and blue to make black and grey shades. Spoon each color into a ziplock sandwich bag.
Touch the cake to make sure the icing doesn't stick to your fingers. Then position the cut-out picture where you want it on the cake. Using a toothpick, trace around the outside of the picture.

I noticed this after I took the picture, but isnt' it funny how the wild thing looks scared of the toothpick I am holding?

Next, look at the picture and notice all the lines you need to draw. Choose the lines closest to the outside, and cut along those lines. You will cut off the parts you have already traced to reveal the new lines you need to draw. Replace the paper on the cake, line it up with your first trace marks. Trace the new lines your cutting revealed.

Repeat this process until you have all the lines you need from your picture traced onto the cake. Your picture should be in little tiny pieces by now.

Now comes the fun part. Using the second picture as a guide, choose the color for the first section you want to outline. Pick up sandwich bag with that color, and squeeze all the icing into one bottom corner. Cut off the tiniest piece of that corner that you can manage. The size of your hole will determine how fat your line of icing is. (You can always make it larger if you need to, but can't make it smaller.) First outline the shape you want, then fill it in with the color. You will find that the icing melts into itself.

Note: If you want two colors right next to each other, you must wait for the first to harden before you fill in the next color. If you don't wait for it to dry, the colors will melt into each other. If you want your picture to have a cartoon appearance, you can use black to outline all the lines. Again, make sure you
wait for it to harden, then fill in the spaces with color.

Here's Max and a Wild Thing. They are not exact, but still pretty recognizable! I used the left over icing to decorate the cheese cake too.