Yi Han's handpainted final cake at ICE.

The ICE Alum Winning Cake Competitions Around America

Yi Han has decorated five first-place cakes in 10 months since completing The Art of Cake Decorating.

Yi Han's final cake at ICE in 2018.

In 2016, Yi Han and her family became vegetarians, and she enrolled in the Chef鈥檚 Training Program at the Natural Gourmet Institute (NGI). Yi flew from China to New York two days after being accepted last minute for the last spot in a class, with the intention of opening a vegan buffet restaurant after graduating. When Chef Instructor Richard LaMarita hosted a class pie competition, Yi鈥檚 artistic talent was exposed.

Though she鈥檇 never made a pie or cake, Yi applied an ancient Chinese wedding pattern that symbolizes good luck to her cranberry pie鈥檚 crust and blew the school鈥檚 faculty and students away with the presentation and taste. Chef Richard recommended Chef Toba Garrett鈥檚 professional development course at ICE, The Art of Cake Decorating, and Yi began the program immediately after graduating from NGI.

鈥淐hef Toba is a legend of the cake world, and I became like a sponge to learn from her,鈥 Yi says. 鈥淓very day, I couldn鈥檛 wait for class to start. It was a fantastic experience!鈥

Yi's (from left to right) first pie at NGI, final cake at ICE with Chef Toba and blue ribbon at the CCCSAS Cake Show & Competition.
Yi's (from left to right) first pie at NGI, final cake at ICE with Chef Toba and blue ribbon at the CCCSAS Cake Show & Competition.

In the 10 months since she graduated from ICE, Yi has competed in nine competitions, winning first place five times, including a best of show, plus a grand prize spectacular.

鈥淔or my grand prize Cinderella cake, I used almost all skills I learned from ICE: piping, royal icing, string work, flowers, fondant, gumpaste and pastillage,鈥 she says. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 why I won. In competition, the more skills you show on one cake, the more chance you have to win.鈥

In California, Yi achieved first place at the Contra Costa Cake and Sugar Art Society Cake Show & Competition, LA鈥檚 The Sweets Show and The Cake Bar Cake Show in 2018. She placed second in the non-tiered professional level at the 2019 San Diego Cake Show, second at Austin, Texas鈥 That Takes the Cake Show in 2018, and third at The Ultimate Sugar Show in Atlanta in 2018.

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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Yi remembers Chef Toba鈥檚 instruction when reviewing the judges鈥 notes, including advice that the cake base and covering are as important as the character sculptures. Through her own experience, she鈥檚 learned the importance of each artist鈥檚 attitude, especially with the challenges of transportation and sleep for long-distance competitions.

Today, Yi combines her ICE education with her prior professional experiences making dolls, arranging flowers, painting, cooking, and even working in TV advertising and graphic design, to run Yi Cakes Studio in Los Angeles, where she teaches decoration with a focus on figure modeling for all ages and levels.

鈥淢y previous high-pressure jobs entangled me with anxiety for many years, but when I make cakes, I feel peaceful,鈥 she says. 鈥淚t's a joyful meditation experience, and sometimes I can feel like nothing in the world exists but cake and me.鈥

Yi also sells cake supplies online and spends 10 hours a day working with her hands to master cake design, saying she wants to make more exquisite cake pieces for personal achievement.

鈥淚f you want to enter this cake decorating world, you have to know everything," she says. "The ICE program teaches all the fundamental knowledge and basic skills, but it鈥檚 impossible to become a master when you graduate 鈥 it is just a beginning."

Begin with technique guided by Chef Toba's expertise in The Art of Cake Decorating.

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