Tags:
Heather,
Go find the posting on Cake Balls and I believe that you will be on track with this. I have some pictures on my wall and remember, these are Cake Balls so they are smaller but the same idea. I used "Seriouscakes" as my teacher to this delicious and fun project and then devised my own way of drying my cake balls.
Add a little oil or shortening to the chocolate chips not milk...
Try to use 1.5 tablespoon of cake, and when using the wilton brand candies, use 1 teaspoon of shortening to thin it out a bit. This should work for you.
I am new to this site, and thought I would share my technique and recipe for covering cake balls and such.
Using your fave poured fondant recipe, add a handfull of candy dots.
Allow to melt and keep warm over double boiler.
The fondant is easy to pour and the dots allow it to harden without being sticky or too thick.
These candy dots come in many pretty colors and yummy flavors, including chocolate.
You will not get a bright color product as the poured fondant (don't know why) will soften color to a pastel shade.
mimi
Mimi,
Thank you for the suggestion. I tried melting fondant once and found it too sweet. Any ways to make it not so sweet?
mimi said:
I am new to this site, and thought I would share my technique and recipe for covering cake balls and such.
Using your fave poured fondant recipe, add a handfull of candy dots.
Allow to melt and keep warm over double boiler.
The fondant is easy to pour and the dots allow it to harden without being sticky or too thick.
These candy dots come in many pretty colors and yummy flavors, including chocolate.
You will not get a bright color product as the poured fondant (don't know why) will soften color to a pastel shade.
mimi
Try a tiny bit of popcorn salt.
mimi
© 2024 Created by Theresa Happe. Powered by