Modeling Chocolate

Modeling Chocolate (from Candy Melts)

Ingredients:

  • 14 ounces candy melts (color of your choice)
  • 1/3 cup of light corn syrup

Directions:

  1. Warm the melts in the microwave them at 30 second intervals. Let it rest for a minute or two, especially if it’s hot.
  2. Pour in the corn syrup and mix with a rubber spatula until incorporated and doughy.
  3. Pour out the doughy mixture on a baking sheet covered with a silpat or wax paper. Using another sheet of wax paper, pat the dough down to about a 1/4″ thick.
  4. Let the dough sheet rest for 2 hours until set, then break up the sheet as needed and knead it together until it becomes a clay.

To store the modeling chocolate, wrap it tightly in a plastic sheet, and keep it in an airtight container at room temperature or in the fridge. It’s there to use any time you need it! This will keep for months.

Tips:

  • To tint your modeling chocolate, add a few drops of oil soluble food color (candy color). I like Chefmaster Candy Color. A good time to add the color is when the candy melts are in its liquid stage, just before adding the corn syrup. You may also add color to already made clay.
  • To work with it, remember your warm hands can start to melt the chocolate. Not a problem! Just put your sculpture in the fridge for a few minutes to harden, and continue working.
  • After making the clay, resting it overnight can make it easier to work with.

Modeling Chocolate (Semisweet or bittersweet)

Ingredients:
  • 8 ounces semi sweet or bittersweet chocolate
  • 1/3 cup of light corn syrup

Directions

  1. Melt the chocolate over a bain marie or in a chocolate melter until it is just melted. Let it cool so as to not shock and seize the chocolate in the next step.
  2. Stir in corn syrup and mix until incorporated.
  3. Scrape out onto plastic wrap and chill until firm (about 2 hours)
  4. Take out the chocolate and knead until it is a clay consistency.

To store the modeling chocolate, wrap it tightly in a plastic sheet, and keep it in an airtight container at room temperature or in the fridge. This will keep for months.

Tips

  • After firming up in the freezer, the chocolate does become very hard. Kneading it takes some muscle!
  • You can use a pasta roller to roll out flat, even pieces.

Valentine’s Day Photo Roundup!

Here’s some super cute inspiration to share your sweet, sweet love this Valentine’s Day!

Heart Cookies

Heart Cookies decorated with sanding sugar! Clicking on this photo brings you to the Cakeb0t video tutorial on how!

Cake Power Kiss Cookie

I love these cute kiss cookies on a stick from Cake Power! Click on the photo to read Kate's tips for cookies on a skewer on the Cake Power Blog!

Eat Cake Be Merry Scrambled Letters Cake

Love the love in this cake from Eat Cake Be Merry! Use a letter mold to make the a scramble of letters. Then make your message clear with a different, bold color! Why not LOVE?

Click on this photo for a tutorial on how to make chocolate sugar cups for your cupcakes!

Baked Ideas Hearts With Lyrics

Love the lyrics in the Heart Cookies from Baked Ideas! "The simple secret of the plot is just to tell you I love you a lot!" Click to visit the Baked Ideas Facebook page for daily inspiration!

Heart Cake Pops

Here, have a little heart! One heart-shaped cake pop and a glass of milk is a simple way to show your love! Click on the photo to see how to make a heart cake pop!

Heart Cake Pops

Heart Shaped Cake Pop

Here’s a simple way to show some love: a cake pop with a cool glass of milk!

Making these heart shaped cake pops is simple.

Follow this tutorial on how to make cake pops, with a couple small differences:

  • After mixing the cake with frosting, flatten out the mixture in a sheet pan to 5/8″ to 1/2″ (depending on your cutter). Refrigerate the mixture until firm.
  • Then, cut out hearts using a 1 1/2″ “>heart shaped cookie cutter.

You can use this technique with any small cookie cutter of your choice. I love this soft pink heart, especially for Valentine’s Day!

 

Guest Tutorial: Sweet Lavender Bake Shoppe - Cute as a Button Decorations!

The moment I laid eyes on Sweet Lavender Bake Shoppe’s blog, I fell in love with its super-cuteness! I asked Sweet Lavender’s Christina Main to share a tutorial on any one of the cute cupcake/cake toppers which are available in her Etsy shop. Christina was so awesome to put together this wonderful photo tutorial! Now, you can buy these cute buttons in her shop, or make them yourself! This tutorial makes about a dozen buttons. ^_^
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Supplies Needed:
1. Cookie sheet lined with tinfoil (or parchment)
2. Self healing cutting mat (or plastic smooth surfaced cutting board)
3. 2 oz of gum paste per desired color (I chose purple, green, and orange)
4. Toothpicks
5. Mini offset spatula
6. Mini roller- something like this would also suffice
7. Flat edged gum paste tool- you can get a kit like this which has everything you’ll need!
8. Assorted piping tips- I specifically used a Magic Tip 9pt, Ateco #806, and an Ateco #804
9. Plastic wrap (not shown)

Get out your nifty cutting mat and roll out your gum paste until you’ve reached a thickness of 1/8-1/4″. I like my buttons closer to 1/8″ thick, but for new beginners, thicker would be easier :) Any extra gum paste you have needs to be kept rolled up in plastic wrap, or else it will dry out FASTER than you can say, “Dang that dried up fast!”

Cut out assorted sized circles with the tops AND bottoms of your piping tips. Can you say, “Multi-tasking tools rock?!” For larger buttons, use bottom of the Magic Tip 9pt, medium sizes use top of Magic Tip 9pt, and for the smallest sized buttons use the tops of an Ateco tip #806 and #804. Of course, you can be creative and use whatever, but these are the sizes that work for me! Roll scraps back into a ball and wrap tightly in plastic wrap…you know…because of the drying and stuff.

For the largest buttons:

After you’ve cut your large buttons out (bottom of Magic Tip 9pt), use your flat edged gum paste tool and smooth the edges so that you have a smooth circle. If any of the medium or smaller sized buttons have ragged edges, do this to them as well.

You can go many ways when creating the larger buttons, and I highly encourage creativity- but what I’ve found works really well and produces buttons I just adore and think are pretty snazzy- I take the bottom of my Ateco tip #806 and GENTLY and EVENLY press down until I’ve created a sort of border. Careful not to go through the gum paste all the way…or else…well, you’ll have a little smaller of a button! No big.

Next, using your mini offset spatula, carefully pick up your large button and with a toothpick punch through 4 holes in the center.

Another way to go with the larger buttons: You can skip creating the border and go straight to punching holes in the center with your toothpick. 2 to 4 holes of course! Variety is key!

For the middle sized buttons:

For medium sized buttons, I cut out my buttons using the top of my Magic Tip 9pt piping tip. To create a button with a border, I use the top of my Ateco #806 to gently press onto my button cut out with the top of my Magic Tip 9pt piping tip.

Like with the larger buttons, using your mini offset spatula, carefully pick up buttons and punch through the center with either 2 or 4 holes.

I’ve found that with the medium and smaller buttons, you might have to flatten out the surface again once border has been made and holes have been punched. Sometimes these little guys like to try and roll up.

Finished medium sized button with border!

For the smallest buttons:

After cutting out button with the top of my Ateco #806 piping tip, I use the top of my Ateco #804 to gently and evenly press down- this again, creates the button with a border. Remember kids, don’t go through all the way!

Using mini offset spatula, carefully pick up small button and punch through 2 (or 4 if you’re a daredevil) small holes in center with toothpick.

If the button is too small for you to pick up, just leave on cutting mat and carefully pierce through the center with your toothpick. Go ahead, no one is looking…we won’t judge.

Finally, lay each button flat on your cookie sheet lined with tinfoil (or parchment) and let air dry for 24 hours. If you live somewhere with crazy amounts of humidity (let’s say Hawaii…love you Hawaii…but let’s be honest, you’re one humid state!), this drying step might take a little longer. Just test them out everyday- they’re done with they’re completely firm!

Once dried and completely firm, gently lift off of tinfoil and decorate your favorite cupcake!!!

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Christina Main is a culinary school grad, and the blogger behind the wonderful Sweet Lavender Bake Shoppe, where she shares recipes and cute decorating ideas! I just love the photos on her blog.

More cute confections can be found on her Etsy shop, where you can even purchase custom orders! Stay connected: Follow Christina on Twitter, Pinterest, and Like on Facebook.

Guest Feature: Olivia the Pig Cake - Lovely Cakes

I met Renata Papadopoulos of Lovely Cakes at the BRIDES pop up shop a few months ago. I just adored the cake she had on display, and I had so much fun talking to her.

She was nice enough to send these behind-the-scenes photos of this perfectly-executed Olivia cake, along with some great tips. I love the illustrated look of this cake!
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If you think of this sculpted cake in terms of tiers, this is a sculpted three tier cake. The top tier is made of a mix of cake and buttercream (like a cake ball). For support, the bottom and second tier are doweled, and there is a central dowel which runs the length of the entire cake.

Renata used a photo and an Olivia figurine as references for carving. The entire cake was iced in buttercream, and then covered it fondant. “I added some buttercream under [the custom support of] the snout so it wouldn’t be flat.”

In covering the cake with fondant, Renata first covered the skin, followed by the dress. Then, she added the ears and arms.

“The ears are fondant with tylose”. After she modeled the ears, she dried them in the oven, with just the oven light on.

The ears were then inserted with thin dowels. You can do the same for the arms.

If you have good paintbrush skills, you can paint on the face like Renata did: “I drew the face with a brush and food color mixed with vodka. I dusted inside the ears and the nose with light pink.” Another option is to use edible marker for the face.


Lovely Cakes is an award-winning cake shop, recently featured in Brides Magazine as a winner America’s Most Beautiful Wedding Cakes. Lovely Cakes is located in Norwalk, CT, serving Connecticut and the New York Metro area.
Olivia is the creation of Ian Falconer.