I (sort of) did it!  I may or may not have made some serious structural changes and left off lots of details (like most of the windows), but the point is, I captured the essence of the Nauvoo Temple.  :)No tutorial for this, but here is a look at the progress in photos:
Notice how the bottom two layers look good, and the top two look saggy and undercooked?  I prefer to call that "moist."
At this point, I was seriously questioning my judgment.  Looks like a disaster in the making.
Fondant helps!  It went a bit easier than last time.

Frosting bags are the worst.  I am just not good at using them.  Frosting always comes out of both ends, and I get claw-hand.  I prefer to use the metal syringe kind (someday I will rescue mine from storage!).
almost there...
Ta-Da!  The writing around the cake says, "Build a house to my name, for the Most High to dwell therein," which is part of Doctrine & Covenants 124:27.So, like I said ... not exactly a replica, and it doesn't match the vision in my head, but it is recognizable. I am satisfied. Tonight it received a few oohs and ahhs, won the competition, and then was gobbled up.
Supplies used for this cake:
- 2 French Vanilla cake mixes, prepared the delicious way - substitute milk and melted butter for the water and oil, and add an extra egg. Each was baked in a large cookie sheet pan.
 - 2 1 lb. boxes of ready to use fondant
 - 2 batches of buttercream frosting
 - 1 batch of royal icing
 - 1 decorative wooden spool (random, I know - I used it inside the steeple to keep the shape)
 - 1 wooden skewer
 - black food coloring
 - round wilton cut outs
 - wilton's metallic shimmer powder
 
To all of my non-LDS readers, this post probably makes little sense to you. Sorry! I now return to my regularly scheduled, non-religious crafting.


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