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Camp Site Eclair | Getting Creative with Fondant

June 12, 2011 By Laura 22 Comments

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-14

I was brainstorming about a good dessert to have for Father’s Day coming up,

when I came up with this idea:  A Camp Site Eclair Dessert.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert I know the Daddy in our family, loves camping, fishing, and marshmallows! So this whole dessert was going to make him very happy, because there is a whole lot of marshmallow fondant involved! And as a bonus, there are other surprise treats everywhere!

I decided to make it ahead of time (with a little help from the Daddy in celebration, and our kiddos.)  Thankfully, we can save all of the decorations on top, make the dessert again next week, and redecorate.  Because I wanted to be able to share the idea with you all, our blog readers, in case you’d like to replicate the idea, or let it spark an idea of your own in some way.

So this decorated dessert is the pan variation of No Bake Eclair. You may remember we shared this recipe before, as individual cup servings, that looked like this:

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-2 You can find that recipe and directions for the cups version here.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-1 This is what our No Bake Eclair Dessert originally looked like, before covering with crushed

graham cracker, for a nice dirt ground effect, to set the scene for our camp site.  Here is the easy, no-bake

recipe for it. You can whip this part up ridiculously quickly!

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No Bake Eclair

Participating Ingredients:

  • graham crackers
  • 2 boxes instant vanilla pudding
  • 8 oz. cool whip
  • 1 can of chocolate frosting and 2 tbsp. milk
  • 3   1/2  cups of milk

Directions:

Mix the pudding and milk with the blender- let it get a little thick. Add the cool whip in.

Butter a 9X13 in. cake pan. Place WHOLE graham crackers in the bottom of pan. You will need to break some though.

On top of graham crackers add 1/2 of the pudding/cool whip mixture.

Put on another layer of crackers and then the other half of the pudding mixture.

Place last layer of graham crackers on top.

In a separate bowl empty the frosting and add 2 tbsp. of milk. Mix so the frosting is creamy and easy to spread.

Frost the crackers and enjoy!

 ::::::

Now to share as much as I can, about how we decorated the pan of No-Bake Eclair:

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-5 The ground as I said, is the top frosting layer, covered in lots of very crushed graham cracker.  On top of that, everything is made out of marshmallow fondant, various kinds of candy, and little pretzel sticks.

Now please keep in mind, we are no fondant artists, yet! This is our very first time working with the stuff.  This is actually marshmallow fondant, which is made so easily with mini marshmallows, confectionery sugar, and water.   Then of course, we used some food dye. (Not food coloring, but food dye, used for coloring icing.)  I very easily found 2 videos on making marshmallow fondant, and coloring it, just by Googling. I will put them at the end of this post, for your convenience.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-4 Don’t mind the father’s face, lol.  We really didn’t expect it to show much. It was just quickly smushed together. lol
But we’re not sure we could have done much better, if we tried. LOL

He is completely made of white/uncolored marshmallow fondant, and then painted with food dye and a brush.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-5 The camp fire is made of colored fondant for the flames, pretzel sticks, and chocolate rocks that we found in the cake aisle of Michael’s Arts & crafts.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-6  The tent and family feet are also all fondant, and pretzel sticks to hold the tent up.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-7 Here’s a helicopter view.

The trees and bushes are green dyed fondant, molded around Hershey Kisses, and then more green dye painted on the trees & bushes, for texture.  The pine tree uses a pretzel for the trunk.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-8  This is a set picnic table.  The table top probably could have been another layer higher.  But the table and bench seats are made of Andes Candies, the plates are Smarties Candies, and the little triangle napkins is plain marshmallow fondant.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-9 All of the logs you see here and there, are Tooties Rolls, with a little edible black writing pen to show some grooves and bark.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-10 The 2 fish on the scene are Swedish Fish.

The marshmallow on a stick is actually fondant, but we could have just used a mini marshmallow, since we had plenty left from  making the fondant.

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-11

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-12 The water is plain fondant, painted with blue and green dye.

The sign face is fondant, with a pretzel stick, and more chocolate rocks. (Love those!)

fondant-art-fathers-day-dessert-13  The tent, and the family dirty feet, is my favorite part!

It was so fun to make, and we thought it came out pretty good!!

Between shopping for the goods, and making it all, it was almost a day project, but a fun family one!

We wanted to note too that, while fondant and the colors are all edible, we don’t really eat artificial colors. But it is all SUPER fun to get creative with, as decorations.

Please tell us you are a at least little impressed with our work, even if you aren’t. 😉   Either way, hope you find yourself inspired to play with some fondant, and get creative with food, too!!

::::::

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Making Marshmallow Fondant

Coloring Fondant



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Filed Under: Desserts, Fun Food, Holidays, Recipes, Treats Tagged With: cake decorating, coloring fondant, fathers-day-dessert, fishing-camping-scene-dessert, fondant ideas, fondant-art, getting-creative-with-fondant, marshmallow fondant, no-bake, no-bake-eclair

Midnight Snaps (Festive Cookies for New Years Eve)

December 30, 2010 By Laura 20 Comments

New Year's Eve clock cookies

My kids and I were trying to come up with some themed food for New Year’s Eve, and {JM} came up with this great idea, right off the bat:  Cookies that are designed like clocks! (Oh, to have his quick, 8 year old brain!)

Right away I started trying to figure the details, and decided to start with homemade Gingersnap Cookies.  To design them, we went with a white icing that hardens, and a bit of chocolate art.  The design process does involve some intricate detail work, but if you enjoy the creative process and have a little patience to work with, they are worth the effort!  Your party-goers will be impressed with these festive cookies, you made!

First, I’m going to start by giving you this basic Gingersnap Cookie Recipe.  This post is not featuring how to make the cookies, with step by step photos, etc.,  but how to turn them into clocks.  So, using the recipe below, bake some cookies and let them cool before getting to designing.

Participating Ingredients for Gingersnap Cookies:

  • 3/4 shortening
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1/4 cup molasses
  • 2 cup all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon ground ginger

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.  Grease cookie sheets.

In a large bowl, cream the shortening and sugar. Add the egg and beat until light and fluffy, then stir in the molasses.  In a separate bowl, mix together the flour, baking soda, salt, ginger and cinnamon.  Add to the egg mixture, and stir until well blended. * (See foot note below). Roll bits of dough into 1 inch balls.  Dip each ball into sugar and place on cookie sheet, sugar side up, about 2 inches apart.

*Now, being the first time we made these, we did indeed use 1 inch balls of dough.  However, we found that the cookies were pretty small to work with, and it was difficult making such tiny chocolate numbers!  So……we advise that you make cookies twice the size, using 2 inch dough balls, and putting a little further apart on the cookie sheets.  That way, your chocolate numbers can be made larger, and it will all be easier to do.

Bake for 10-12 minutes, until cookies have spread, and cookies have cracked.  Let cool on wire rack.

New Year's Eve clock cookies They are delicious straight and plain, for sure! Crispy on the outside, a little softer on the inside, and amazingly good!  Surely no one would notice, if just one, was missing. ;  )

New Year's Eve clock cookies

Again, these are small cookies, and we recommend having bigger ones to work with.

Now, once they are cool, you’ll need to whip up some icing.   I am going to guess some of you already have a recipe, and I am sure there many variations out there.  This one below is the one I started with. BUT, I really needed to add a lot more liquid than it calls for, being careful to keep it a very pretty thick consistency.  Really, this is one of those recipes where you need to tweak as needed, depending on how yours is looking.

Note:  You’ll probably want to at least make a double batch of this icing.

Participating Ingredients for Cookie Icing

  • 1 cup confectioner’s sugar
  • 2 teaspoons milk *
  • 2 teaspoons light corn syrup
  • 1/4 teaspoon of preferred extract (called for almond, I used vanilla, frankly, because I hate almond. )

* I probably had to add at least 2 tablespoons of milk!  But gauge for yourself.

New Year's Eve clock cookies Using a piping bag, we outlined a circle around the edge of each cookie, and filled it in, using the tip to push the icing around some, to help get it all covered.
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New Year's Eve clock cookies

The icing is bound to drip a little sometimes, but if you try not to be close to the edge where the fall-off is, you should do o.k.

At the back of the photo above, you can see where we experimented with seeing if covering the whole cookie would be easier.  It was just too much icing.  So we stuck with our original icing plan.

Allow the iced cookies to set, so that the icing can harden.

*****

Now you’ll need to melt some chocolate to work with, otherwise known as tempering.   I should do a post just on this process at some point, but you’ll need to know it for this recipe! So I’m going to share with you a quick tutorial. Now, you may have used the double-boiler method of melting chocolate before, but we’ve never had much good luck with that.  Then, we learned a quick and easy trick to tempering chocolate, from Barefoot Contessa – and I am going to share it with you right now:

You’ll need: some milk chocolate -shaved or chips (we used  Hershey chocolate chips, which as chips are easier to melt), a glass measuring cup, a wooden spoon, and a microwave.

In the glass measuring cup, add about half of the amount of chocolate that you’ll need.  Microwave it for about 15-20 seconds. Take out, and with the handle/ butt end of the wooden spoon, mix the chips rapidly.  It will likely need more melting, so put it in for 10 second increments, and stir with the end of the wooden spoon very rapidly after each time, until the chocolate is all melted smooth and glossy.  Now, just as the remaining half of your chocolate, and stir rapidly some more.  You really want to mix it hard and fast – the more you do, the shinier your chocolate will be.

Now that’s a tip we can all use for life!!  Thanks Contessa!

***

Now below is some writing with chocolate tips.  Since I didn’t photograph making the teeny-tiny numbers, here below I am using the photos of when we made the words for Jesus’ Birthday cake on Christmas.

We printed out the words on a piece of paper, having laid out the size we wanted, in the font we wanted.   Then we slipped that ‘stencil’ to trace, under a piece of parchment paper.  Using a fine tip on a piping bag filled with the melted chocolate, do your writing or designs!

New Year's Eve clock cookies

New Year's Eve clock cookies

As the chocolate cools, it will harden.

Our words came out nice, and when they were hardened, we just placed them on our cake!

New Year's Eve clock cookies

Michael and the kids had chocolate left in the bag, and they just couldn’t stop themselves from playing with chocolate some more.

New Year's Eve clock cookies
See how you can just pick it up?

So this is the method we used, to make tiny little number and click hands. They were probably only 3/8ths of an inch, so you can imagine it was a tad difficult.  Bigger would be easier.  This way, doing the chocolate work on parchment paper first, if something comes out awful, you didn’t ruin a cookie or a cake.  You just start a new one on the parchment paper, and use the ones that came out best.

If the icing on the cookies is hardened, then use a bit more icing to apply the numbers and dots to the cookie.
Otherwise they won’t stick and stay put.

New Year's Eve clock cookies

So here is how our Midnight Snaps came out!!  Not perfect by any means.  But we think they are imperfectly cute!

New Year's Eve clock cookies

Now I realize I am giving you this grand idea, pretty last minute.  (lol….lol….).  So I wouldn’t blame you, if you went out and tried to find some large, store bought gingersnap cookies, or maybe even molasses cookies, to just bring home and decorate.  That would be a time saver for sure.  ; )

May you all rock around the clock on New Year’s Eve, (or at least until  midnight) and may we all have a Happy New year!

Filed Under: Baking, Fun Food, Holidays, Recipes, Treats Tagged With: chocolate-art, clock-cookies, cookies-for-New-Years-Eve, how-to-write-with-chocolate, midnight-cookies, new-years-eve-menu-ideas, new-years-eve-treats, tempering chocolate

Political Cookies

November 22, 2009 By Laura 3 Comments

We have a de-LICIOUS roll recipe coming right up, submitted by a regular and loved blog reader, Paula.  But first, we just wanted to share with you some of our oldest daughter, {A}’s,  creative cookies she made last week.  (She is an ambitious baker these days, if you don’t know.)

{A} has a very strong interest in the Kennedy Family, and has as of late, been studying their family history in great depth.  That’s  not to say she is a fan of all of them. ; )  But, she does like who Robert F. Kennedy was.  So much so, that she made sugar cookies for his birthday on Friday, November 20th.   She thought it was a great excuse to practice her piping skills.

political-kennedy-cookies

There were many duplicates of these cookies above, so this is just a sample of each design.  She even had more detailed pre-sketches on paper, but realized they would be really hard to pipe.  I think they came out really cute though.  I also think it’s cute that she made these. lol

On a side note, I just wanted to mention that we’ll be doing a little renovation on the Home Page (just a little one).  So if you notice things are out of sorts at any point, that’s why. : )

And that, I believe, was my shortest post, ever.  I deserve a cookie, don’t you think?

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Filed Under: Baking, Fun Food, Recipes, Treats Tagged With: creative-cookies, political cookies, Robert-F-Kennedy-cookies

Hallowtide: Part 1 – Halloween (All Hallows Eve or All Saints’ Eve)

November 14, 2009 By Laura 7 Comments

This is Part I of a 2-Part series of posts about the triduum of Hallowtide, and how we celebrate it:
1. Halloween  (All Saints’ Eve),  2. All Saints’ Day and 3. All Souls’ Day.

Essentially, over the course of these 3 days, we, the Catholic/Western Christians, remember our dead. We say prayers for the souls in Purgatory, we celebrate the lives of the saints, and we remember that Christ conquered death, with His own death on the cross, ultimately offering us life thereafter. In that light, death is not something to be so afraid of. But rather a point in time in which we cross over, to hopeful and glorious new life, with Christ. And during this time of specific opportunity known as Hallowtide, we remember and pray for the souls currently at that crossover.

Hallowtide is always a festive 3 day event in our family.  We love this time of year, and very much enjoy our traditions, which I suppose differs a little bit from the vast majority.  I think we have a nice balance though.   We have fun with ‘Halloween’ and the silliness/just-for-fun that comes with that, while also giving attention to the historic Catholic roots of ‘Halloween’, and how it all began. Thus, our more extended focus on the 3 days of Hallowtide.

Just to note:  One Halloween tradition we do not participate in is Trick-or-Treating.  We don’t feel there is anything wrong with anybody doing that traditional activity on Halloween of course, but we personally don’t for a few reasons:  The most important being {S}’s severe peanut allergy.  There is just no way to make it 100% safe, and it’s sure not worth the risk to his life for us, one bit.  Secondly, we hardly eat candy. And lastly, we don’t have a great neighborhood for that anyway>  Not only do we not have sidewalks, but we only know our immediate neighbors, who do not have kids, and they don’t get any trick-or-treaters (nor do we) because we live on a dead-end with 1 street light. (That’s scary, alright. LOL.)  So years ago, we began the tradition of our own little party, which the kids enjoy planning and participating in more than I could ever tell you. (I think the photos over the years  speak volumes!). Needless to say, we haven’t bothered with costumes in recent years either.  But we do have a tradition of designing fun Halloween shirts that Daddy makes! (It’s just vinyl cut out and applied, and we peel off later. )

This year however, started out our festivities with a break from our own tradition, by accepting the thoughtful invitation to some friends for a pre-party, party!  These friends REALLY love Halloween, and the hostess is uber-creative!! We enjoyed a few hours with our good and long-time friends (3 generations 0f them), as well as some new friends.  We all had a blast, and then we came home and partied some more!

Here are the kids showing off their Halloween shirt this year, and ready for a long night of partying!

catholic-halloween-hallowtide

Sorry about the glare on {O}’s shirt there.  And yes, {J} does still have a right hand. lol  (I just noticed that. lol)
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-1

catholic-halloween-hallowtide-2

{A} got extra -creative with her shirt idea-front and back!
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-3

The kids and some of their friends on the very popular trampoline.  (No one was hurt in this jumping jamboree, despite the number of kids.  They were pretty careful of each other. Perhaps because of my 93 reminders.)
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-4

Our little wild-man, {S}, taking advantage of no other kids in the trampoline.
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-5

We brought this cake we made to the party too, with the spider inspired from {A}’s shirt design.  Our hosts were overly-impressed, but we loved them for it. lol.  It’s chocolate cake, with butter cream frosting. (I know some of you cake-lovers were seriously wondering! ; )
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-10

When we got home, we kicked off our own party.  We started with some more eating.
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-9

Just some simple picking food, with a little creepy thrown in!
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-7

Earlier in the day, {A} had made these ‘Cleopatra Centipedes”, out of breadstick dough, red licorice and black piping.  Reason being, we come across the occasional ‘Cleopatra’ downstairs in our house, and they are indeed creepy and scary!  They freak us all out.  Yes, even Michael.  Don’t let him tell you otherwise.
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-8

These look rather harmless though, don’t they?  lol
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-11

The small feast in progress.  After this photo, I had a little too.  But really, I picked a lot at the pre-party party.  I was pretty all set.
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-6

After dinner, the kids played ‘Donuts on a String‘.  Michael had originally thought of bobbing for apples, but I said to him, “Umm…the kids hardly have any front teeth right now!”  He was like “Oh yeah.”  (That would be a long game, huh? lol).  My friend suggested Donuts on a String instead, and it was a hit!  Of course, those are our home-made donuts we pulled out of the freezer and defrosted.

(Now here comes something rare….photos of ME in a post….I set up camera for {A}.)

catholic-halloween-hallowtide-12

Now I was doing ok at first, but I can tell you….I’m not the partier my kids are!!  I was fading FAST!
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catholic-halloween-hallowtide-14

I tried to fake it and put on my best-having fun face for awhile, but really….

catholic-halloween-hallowtide-13

Is it bedtime, yet? I’m a lousy faker at anything. I was so giddy and T I R E D, and thinking mostly about my bed relatively soon into our own party.
But I hung on for my kiddos, who had an absolute blast, until we went to bed very late!

Hope your Halloween was ‘all that and a bag of…..candy?’  : )   Want to see more of our Hallowtide?
You can check out Part II, All Saint’s Day and All Souls Day, HERE.

BOO! to you….and yours.

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Filed Under: Celebrations, Faith, Faith/ Catholic, Fun Food, Holidays, Recipes, The Big Picture, Traditions Tagged With: All Hallow's Eve, All-Saints-Eve, Catholic, Catholic-blogs, Catholic-families, Catholic-families-and-Halloween, Catholic-Halloween, Catholic-Hallowtide, creative-Halloween-food, Hallowtide, Hallowtide-ideas, triplets

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