Sunday, November 20, 2011

Cornucopia - Easy



My niece's birthday was on Thanksgiving last year, so I made a special dessert for her.  Very easy.

Bake a cake using the paisley pan.  (1 or 2 layers, depending on how much cake you want.)  Frost with light brown or tan buttercream.  Tint good fondant brown, roll thin and cut into even strips.  Weave these into a mat (using a standard basketweave pattern).  Lay over the cake, trimming the edges and across the front (so that you have cake "sticking" out to hold the bounty from the cornucopia).  Twist 2 fondant ropes to make the nice edge. 

Add whatever you like to the top of the cake - maripan fruits, fondant fruits, real fruits, candy... This is a mix of wrapped Rocher chocolates with sparkly plastic fruits that I had on hand.  Impromptu!  I decorated the base with buttercream stars and candy corn.

Saturday, November 19, 2011

Petranaki Arena - Medium/Difficult

Oldest son wanted this classic scene from Episode 2 for his birthday, but he doesn't like cake so much so he asked me to use snickerdoodle cookies.  The arena walls are all cookies, the rest is fondant and inedible decorations.



This treat requires some prep.  I started with a very large plastic plant saucer from Home Depot, then got 4 sheets of craft foam from from Michael's.  Greg was nice enough to cut a big hole in the foam so the saucer could fit inside.  (So the foam was like a collar around the top of the saucer.)  He then covered all the Styrofoam with brown duck tape.

The Styrofoam gave me added height for the arena walls, to help with scale.  It also gave me a perfect way to anchor skewers to hold the cookies up.

I also got a pine dowel at Home Depot, stained it Sedona Red, and cut it to 8" lengths for the posts. Using a glue gun, secure these to the saucer.

Make the figures and beasts in advance from fondant.  I made Padme crouching, to position her on top of her post.  Anakin and Obi Wan were flat, for positioning against their posts.  For all, I made the bodies and heads, but left them bald (piped on hair at the end).  Make little handcuffs from dark grey fondant.


The Geonosian was suspended on a clear skewer obtained from the florist dept at Publix,   Roll the wings very, very thin.  I made the legs and arms separately, then attached with 1/2 toothpick.


The reek was the easiest - make him out of dark grey fondant, with a very thin stip of red on the back.  Add horns.  I did the brown bumps later with icing.  I did use the end of a skewer to make indentations on the back, then I piped brown icing into the indentations to get the desired effect.



The nexu was made from brown fondant.  I also made the spines for the back from dark grey fondant. When assembling, I piped tan icing on top with a #16 Wilton tip.  I used a #2 black tip to add some of the brindling (see a pcutres), as well as the claws, and I inserted the spines on the back into the icing. No. 2 tip white teeth.

The acklay requires some experimentation.  I made the body out of blue fondant, which set up on a glass (on its side) to give it the rearing-up shape.  I went over the back and head with some water and diluted green food coloring when he was set.  I also make the legs.  Note that he has 3 vestigial toes.  My plan was to support him with a clear skewer, but I could not do that on the plastic saucer, so  I ended up attaching the legs to a bit of white fondant that I wedged under the body to make it stand properly.  You could see the white wedge, but it was not a problem.


I traced the saucer curve shape onto parchment paper and cut it out. I made 4 batches of snickerdoodle cookies, using a rolled sugar cookie recipe.  Chill the dough, roll a long strip, the use a pizza cutter to cut the bottom edge of the cookies to follow the curve of the saucer.  Cut the strips in approx. 3 " lengths, and using a large round Wilton tip (such as 172) cut a hole in each cookie approx 1/2 inch from the end.  You will thread cookies onto skewers with the hole, so try to get cookies that are the same width with the hole in approx. the same place!   Before baking, sprinkle sugars with cinnamon-sugar.   Width of the cookies doesn't matter as much - I make some wider for the bottom rows, then some narrow for the top.  But do keep the width the same, so you don't get gaps between the rows.

To assemble, fit a row of cookies around the saucer, covering 2/3rd of so of the circumference. Stick a long skewer through each hole, securing it well in the Styrofoam.  Fitting cookies in like a puzzle, build the arena walls.  You'll want a lot of the height behind the posts.  This took around 160-175 cookies.

The spires are fondant covered Styrofoam cones, just for effect.  I also used some fondant for the "doorway" on the side of the saucer.

Friday, November 18, 2011

Star Wars Cookie Ideas

I had to share this link to Yoda-girl Sugarbelle's blog about making Star Wars cookies using standard cookie cutters. Brilliant!   

http://www.sweetsugarbelle.com/blog/2011/11/star-wars-cookies-with-holiday-cutters/

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Star Wars Halloween

Greg carved the Death Star - Very difficult (took hours & hours!)  I did the rest - Vadar was difficult, but the rest were pretty easy.   Happy Halloween!


 


 This one's a jawa.

And the obligatory picture of the kids in their costumes!

Tuesday, October 4, 2011

Halloween Treats - Super Easy

Although not Star Wars, I wanted to share some easy cupcakes for Halloween.


These are box mix cupcakes, iced with orange-tinted buttercream.  The spiders are chocolate-covered cookies.  (I think I used Snackwells.)  Add small fondant eyes.  The eyeballs are candy balls (round sprinkles).  The legs are small pieces of  black licorice - see if you can find whip licorice.  You could also use pretzel sticks in a pinch.  Pipe a small red smile on each spider, using red tube icing and a No. 2 Wilton tip.

Monday, September 5, 2011

Cake Pops - Easy (with bit of practice)

Cake pops are quite easy, although you do have to get the hang of them.  For tips and ideas, see Bakerella website.  http://www.bakerella.com/category/pops-bites/cake-pops/

Basic cake pops - Triple Chocolate, the ones I served at D*C

Supplies:
Box chocolate cake mix
Can of chocolate frosting
Parchment paper or waxed paper
2 bags Wilton dark cocoa candy melts or similar dipping chocolate - the Ghirardelli dipping chocolate is wonderful! 
Lollipop sticks (from craft store)
Styrofoam block or ring 
Candy bags with ties (if you like, for presentation)
 
Make a box chocolate cake mix in a 9x13 sheet pan.  (or 2 layers, it doesn't really matter)  Let cool completely, then crumble the whole cake into a large bowl.  Mix crumbled cake with the can of chocolate frosting.  Note - you can use homemade frosting here, but it needs to be the thickness and consistency of canned frosting.   

Thoroughly mix the cake and frosting with a spatula or your hands.  It is very, very messy.   Roll little balls of the mixture and place them on baking sheet that has been lined with parchment or waxed paper.  One box mix should give you approx. 75 cake pops, depending on size.  Start with them kind of small - they are easier to work with.


Place the sheets in the fridge to chill.   While they chill, melt 1/2 bag of the dipping chocolate according to the package instructions.  Either melt in microwave or over a double boiler.  I prefer the double boiler as the water keeps the chocolate warm, which is nice if you are doing a lot of pops.  Dip the end of a lollipop stick in the chocolate, then insert it into the cake pop, about 1/2 way.  Repeat for all the pops.

Place pops with stick in the fridge for at least an hour (overnight is good).  When they are firmly chilled, melt the rest of the chocolate.  Holding the stick, dip each ball in the chocolate, swirling gently so that the melted chocolate reaches the cold chocolate around the stick. Use a small spatula if needed.  GENTLY swirl the pop up, out of the chocolate and GENTLY tap against the side of the container, turning and tapping to remove excess chocolate.  (No, I don't really understand the concept of "excess chocolate" either - just tap until the choc doesn't drip off!)   Keep the ball up a bit, so it doesn't fall off the stick.  If you like, add some sprinkles or nuts at this point.  Place the pop upright in the Styrofoam block to set. 



A few tips:  the pops really do need to be very cold, so if you making a lot, dip in small batches while the rest stay in the fridge.  Also, at first, you'll have some pops fall off - you'll get the hang of it pretty quickly, so don't be discouraged.  If you want really smooth pops, tap and turn a lot - if you are happy with a bit of excess chocolate, don't worry about it.   Just get the heavy excess off.

When the pops are set, you can decorate with white chocolate swirls or candy markers, if you like.  Package in clear bags with twist ties.

Ackbar Earrings

By popular demand, a photo of my Admiral Ackbar earrings!  From ETSY.  

It's a trap!