Showing posts with label How to. Show all posts
Showing posts with label How to. Show all posts

Monday, March 15, 2021

How to create antique or vintage shades of buttercream icing


The good folks at Sprinks have supplied these awesome colour charts, to show you just how easy it is to create vintage shades using buttercream icing and the Sprinks range of gel paste food colourings.


The Sprinks bottles come fitted with an eye dropper, so you can easily count the drops. You can find the entire range here at Kiwicakes.


Tuesday, May 5, 2020

Rainbow coloured chocolate curls

 

These awesome curls were made by layering Wilton candy melts up in a plastic container (allow each one to cool before adding the next colour). Once set pop out your block - and curl away with your vege peeler 
This was part of a recent candy melt/chocolate demo at Kiwicakes



Wednesday, April 15, 2020

How to make your own custom chocolate bars, to make your cakes really pop



 Making your own custom chocolate bars is quick, easy and fun! And they will really set your cakes apart from store bought chocolate bars.
The examples above use chocolate moulds from Kiwicakes . You can either use pre-coloured candy melts OR colour your own white chocolate using candy colour oil based colours or powder colour. (You cannot use gel paste or liquid food colouring, as this will cause your chocolate to seize and make it unsuable)

You can mould them with or without sprinkles. As a single colour or marbled. The choice is yours.


A finished bar weighs less than 100g, making them quite economic to make.


Bars like this are often referred to as "bark" this is the Wilton Happy Birthday Mould, you can find them in other seasonal designs (which are not always bar shaped - but do consider other shapes). Simply melt your coloured chocolate, spoon in to mould, tap on the bench for a good ten taps, to ensure any bubbles trapped are popped. Then lightly sprinkle over your sprinkle medley and allow to cool. They will release easily once set


To create the marble colour simply place your dominant colour in the mould first, then add small blobs of other colours, and stir gently (I use a lollipop stick to do this).Do NOT use your candy colour to do the marbling, as once removed from the mould, the swirls of colour can come off on your hands.


If you're after a traditional bar shape. And you want sprinkles on the side that would normally have the lines where you break the bar apart, take care to look at the example below.



You cannot add just a little sprinkles to the mould, if you do, you will get the result as shown in my photo. as the melted chocolate allows the sprinkles to move around.


You need to pack them right in there and fill it right up.


The bars can be bagged and given as a gift, just like thy are. When placing on a cake, I find they look best at differing heights. You can simply break off a piece of one bar, to make it shorter. It is important when placing on the cake, to cut a narrow aperture for the bar to be pushed in to. If oyu push down in to solid cake, you risk breaking the bar. 
These little bars make an affordable take home gift, from your party, and can be made to match the birthday cake.








Tuesday, December 17, 2019

Cute fondant Penguin figurine tutorial


How cute are these penguins?. This tutorial was designed for us, by Lisa from The Whole Cake and Caboodle. Click on the photos to enlarge, and you can print the pages, for step by step how to.








Monday, December 16, 2019

Isomalt Snowflakes with Cake Lace


Whether you are making snowflakes for a Frozen cake, or for a Northern Hemisphere inspired Christmas cake, Cake lace trapped inside isomalt is just so pretty!.
The photos speak for themselves, however if you're wondering how it was done


(1) spread cake lace on to snowflake lace mat and allow to dry



(2) Pour melted isomalt over lace snowflake slowly, so that your snowflakes don't join together. Allow to cool
(3) spritz with glitter if desired



(4) peel away from mat - spray with edible glaze, to help fight the humidity

Friday, June 7, 2019

Cookies for a Cat Lover

A friend who is a great cat lover was having a birthday what better than cat cookies. Here at Kiwicakes we have a great range of items for animal lovers including lots of cat cookie cutters


 A dilemma which one to choose  I finally settled on this one a Sitting Cat


I used this biscuit mix we stock, it keeps its shape very well and doesn't spread during baking.



All directions are on the packet and it is very easy to use.


I used half a packet and that made a full oven tray of biscuits . I cut the biscuits out as instructions and thought I knew better and shifted some of my biscuits to fit more on the tray which distorted my shape slightly.I would not recommend this, I would use two trays next time .


The biscuits are baked at a low temperature and hold their shape well. Instead of Icing I used Renshaws Marzipan. I put this on while the biscuits were still warm to help it stick.



I chose this cat wafer paper. We have an extensive range of wafer paper printed designs at Kiwicakes



I  traced round the cutter and stuck the wafer paper down using Sugar Glue



All bagged up and ready to go with the cutter tied round the neck of the bag as an extra gift should the birthday girl like to make more cookies for herself.


I think they got the seal of approval from the birthday girl's cat Phoebe, here she is keeping warm on this cold Winter day.


I hope this inspires you to try your own cookies We have over 600 cutters etc click here  for our full range


Tuesday, January 30, 2018

Pretty unicorn cookies



 This lovely step by step tutorial comes to us from Lisa at The Whole Cake and Caboodle 


Using a unicorn cutter from Kiwicakes. Lisa baked sugar cookies, to which she added fondant horns, shaped by hand. Painted with Rolkem Super Gold, mixed with a little rose spirit to form a paint 



Using the cookie cutter. Cut out fondant icing unicorn, then remove the horn and mane using a knife.



Glue the fondant to the cookie using  edible sugar glue and mark the ear and nose hole with a veining tool. The line for the mouth is cut with a knife.


These photos show the steps to pipe the mane. They are random squiggles of royal icing (which sets hard allowing cookies to be bagged) using Wilton tip #16


The eye can be drawn on with an edible marker pen, or painted with a brush and edible black paint.





Wednesday, March 15, 2017

Coloured Easter chocolate bark from Kiwicakes


I decided to make some chocolate bark using our Easter Sprinkle Medley. I couldn't decided between properly moulded bars of free form so I decided to try both. I melted some Wilton candy melts and half I spooned in to a bar slab mould and the other half I spread on parchment paper. Then I simply sprinkled over the medley mix and allowed to cool before removing from the mould or breaking in to pieces.



Any remaining candy melts can be simply spread on parchment paper, allowed too cool


Then broken in to pieces for remelting another day



I then packaged in to clear cello bags. These were super yummy to eat, the crunch from the sugar pearls and non pareils made it very enjoyable to eat.


By changing the style of sprinkle medley this would also be a fun idea for unicorn and butterfly parties, or even parties for adults. Which style do you like best?




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