absolutely! just put a bit of icing on and stick candy or whatever you want on the icing, or draw a letter or shape or such out of icing!
Rice is located within the rice paper. -Riceologist and Head of Rice Studies at the University of California
no.
Well first of all you need to have a particular shaped -out icing spread and if you watch many ADS (advertisments).You can see they always will say about icing spreaders. Cover the iced cake with a sheet of wax paper and smooth it out with your hand. Refrigerate the cake for awhile and peel off the wax paper once the icing has hardened. You will know it is ready when the icing does not stick to the paper. Another way to have the effect of smooth icing is to use fondant. It is like dough, but it is made mostly out of sugar and its easier than trying to get icing smooth..
Rice paper
No; Rice Paper : A common misnomer applied to lightweight Oriental papers. Rice alone cannot produce a sheet of paper. Rice or wheat straw is used occasionally mixed with other fibers in paper making. The name may be derived from the rice size (starch) once used in Japanese papermaking
Most resins do not stick to wax paper
The consistency of the icing is important when you are decorating with a paper cone or pastry bag because it flows freely from the opening to form a solid thread.
They do not stick to their paper cases because they have a special lining on them which stops this. However, a cupcake would stick to normal paper.
Because it was used to make packages of rice, rather like tea bags are today. There are several different types of rice paper. See the link.
No. Cupcakes are wraped in that fringy tissue paper. So when you put them in the oven, they bake on to the paper, then you add the icing, sprinkles, etc. Depending on the batter, you may have to, as i have had cupcakes that stick, but about 95% of the time you don't. There isn't really a way to tell if the batter is going to stick or not, so it is just trial and error really.
Some early forms of paper included papyrus, parchment, and rice paper. Papyrus was made from the pith of the papyrus plant, while parchment was made from animal skins. Rice paper, on the other hand, was derived from rice straw.