How Much Marshmallow Fondant To Cover A Cake Calculator
Estimate homemade marshmallow fondant by cake size, tiers, coating, rollout thickness, MMF batch yield, coloring, humidity, board coverage, and trimming waste.
Start with a common home cake or event tier, then adjust the recipe texture and rollout plan.
Calculation Breakdown
| Cake Size | Home MMF Needed | Rollout Sheet | Classic Batch Share |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 in round, 4 in tall | 16 to 20 oz / 455 to 565 g | 15 to 17 in circle | About 0.6 batch |
| 8 in round, 4 in tall | 26 to 32 oz / 735 to 905 g | 18 to 20 in circle | About 1 batch |
| 10 in round, 4 in tall | 39 to 48 oz / 1.1 to 1.36 kg | 22 to 24 in circle | About 1.5 batches |
| 12 in round, 4 in tall | 56 to 68 oz / 1.6 to 1.9 kg | 26 to 28 in circle | About 2 batches |
| 9 x 13 in sheet, 3 in tall | 40 to 50 oz / 1.13 to 1.42 kg | 21 x 25 in sheet | About 1.5 batches |
| MMF Batch Style | Expected Yield | Marshmallows | Powdered Sugar |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small homemade batch | 24 oz / 680 g | 12 oz / 340 g | 1.5 lb / 680 g |
| Classic homemade batch | 32 oz / 907 g | 16 oz / 454 g | 2 lb / 907 g |
| Large party batch | 40 oz / 1.13 kg | 20 oz / 567 g | 2.5 lb / 1.13 kg |
| Double-ish batch | 48 oz / 1.36 kg | 24 oz / 680 g | 3 lb / 1.36 kg |
| Rollout Choice | Thickness | Coverage Effect | Best Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Thin | 3/32 in / 2.4 mm | Uses about 25% less | Small cakes, clean crumb coats |
| Home smooth | 1/8 in / 3.2 mm | Reliable baseline | Most homemade MMF cakes |
| Thicker | 5/32 in / 4 mm | Uses about 25% more | Dark colors, soft batches |
| Soft plush | 3/16 in / 4.8 mm | Uses about 50% more | Carved cakes and textured covers |
| Adjustment | Add-On | Why It Matters | When To Use |
|---|---|---|---|
| Deep color | 6% to 18% | Gel and extra kneading soften MMF | Red, black, navy, saturated shades |
| Humid kitchen | 5% to 12% | Sticky fondant needs extra sugar and trim | Rainy days or warm rooms |
| Ganache edge | 6% | Sharper corners need working room | Wedding and square cakes |
| Fondant board | 10% to 22% | Board wrap can use real sheet area | Display boards and themed cakes |
Home-thickness MMF hides tiny buttercream marks without becoming too heavy.
A firm base lets marshmallow fondant smooth down cleanly at corners.
Strong colors often need extra resting time and powdered sugar.
Round up a little when covering tiers, boards, or textured cakes.
Calculating the correct amount of marshmallow fondant is important to cake decorating. Having the correct amount of marshmallow fondant for you cake will prevent you from running out of this essential material while smoothing the fondant. If you do not have enough marshmallow fondant for your cake, you will be forced to purchase additional marshmallow fondant or you may have to stress over patching the cake while the marshmallow fondant is setting.
Additionally, if you have too little marshmallow fondant, it will be dificult to smooth the cake without tearing the marshmallow fondant. The amount of marshmallow fondant required to roll out for your cake can depend on many different variable. For instance, the base of the cake will change the amount of marshmallow fondant you use because ganache create a different texture then buttercream.
How Much Marshmallow Fondant Do You Need for a Cake
Additionally, the humidity in the room where you roll out the marshmallow fondant will play a role in the amount of marshmallow fondant you use. In dry rooms, marshmallow fondant will firm up quick. However, marshmallow fondant will remain soft in humid rooms.
Therefore, you must consider the environment in which you will roll out the marshmallow fondant. The calculator will ask for several different inputs from the cake decorator to calculate the total weight of marshmallow fondant that is required to decorate the cake. The inputs will include the shape of the cake, the height of the cake, the number of tier that the cake will have, and the thickness of the rolled out marshmallow fondant.
Additionally, the calculator will ask for the color of the marshmallow fondant because strong gel color will require additional powdered sugar to the marshmallow fondant so that the fondant doesnt become too sticky. Because powdered sugar is heavier than marshmallow fondant, the calculator will account for this extra weight by using a color factor to even out the weight of the marshmallow fondant that are colored. Another factor that you must account for is the skirt of the cake.
Skirt refers to the portion of marshmallow fondant that will hang over the edges of the cake. When rolling out the marshmallow fondant, you will need the excess marshmallow fondant to smooth out the edges of the marshmallow fondant. If you dont account for this in the calculator, the marshmallow fondant may tear at the top of the cake.
To account for this, the calculator will provide an allowance for the skirt of the cake so that the dimensions of the marshmallow fondant are larger then the dimensions of the cake. Another factor to consider is waste. When you roll out the marshmallow fondant to even the top of the cake, you will trim some of the marshmallow fondant to even the crumb coat.
This trimmed marshmallow fondant is considered waste since it can no longer be used on the cake. Fifteen to twenty-five percent of the marshmallow fondant will be trimmed; however, if you are rolling out marshmallow fondant to cover a carved shape, you will lose more marshmallow fondant. The marshmallow fondant calculator will allow you to set a percentage of marshmallow fondant to trim so that it account for your preferences in terms of waste.
The thickness of marshmallow fondant can play a major role in how much marshmallow fondant is required to roll out for your cake. If you roll out thin layer of marshmallow fondant, you will use less marshmallow fondant. However, thin layers of marshmallow fondant will showcase the imperfections in your crumb coat.
Using a thick layer of marshmallow fondant will cover any imperfection in your crumb coat; however, you will have to use more marshmallow fondant. The calculator can be used to select the thickness of marshmallow fondant that you will use for the cake. Finally, you must decide if you will make one batch of marshmallow fondant or multiple batches.
A batch of marshmallow fondant can yield thirty-two ounces of marshmallow fondant. This amount of marshmallow fondant may not be enough to cover any cake that may have multiple tiers or a cake board that must also be wrapped in marshmallow fondant. It is best to make two batches of marshmallow fondant rather than attempting to use one batch of marshmallow fondant for more then one cake.
The marshmallow fondant calculator will provide the number of batches of marshmallow fondant that you need to prepare before you even begin decorating your cake.
