Thursday, June 10, 2010

Cake balls!

My bridesmaids already agreed to make these for my wedding. I've made these for them before and they loved it so much.

Dress up cake balls for Valentine's Day

09:04 AM CST on Wednesday, February 3, 2010
By VALERIE JARVIE / Special to the Dallas Morning News

Looking for inspiration for Valentine's Day treats?

Evans  Caglage/DMNTake the Basic Cake Ball recipe and embellish with your imagination, using various coatings and decorations. "


Take the Basic Cake Ball recipe and embellish with your imagination, using various coatings and decorations.

Cake balls are on a roll. The spherical confections, a combination of cake and frosting covered with a crisp coating, continue to delight sweets-lovers, who buy them from local bakers or try their hands at turning out cake balls at home.

"It's a bite-size treat," says Michael Doherty, the man behind Patty Cakes by the Baker Man cake balls, sold at Weir's and other local stores.

"They're just the right size, three bites or so, for people who want a sweet fix but don't want to indulge in a whole slice of cake," says Charlotte Lyon of the Cake Ball Co., the first area purveyor specializing solely in cake balls. "They're perfect for parties because they're so easy to eat, and you don't have to worry about plates or utensils."

Manufacturers use difficult-to-handle chocolate coatings, but consumers can substitute almond bark or chocolate chips, or candy-melt wafers sold in craft and cake supply stores, to achieve the hard coating that makes the treat finger-friendly.

Home cooks Karen Washington, Helen Goblirsch and Sue Merkel, all of Dallas, craft cake balls for entertaining and gifts.

"I'll make them for Valentine's gifts for girlfriends, neighbors and teachers," Washington says.

"They make great hostess gifts and party favors, packaged in cellophane bags and tied with colored ribbons," says Goblirsch, who writes a lifestyle blog on entertaining and shopping, www.kappaprep.com.

"It's a fun project to do with kids," says Merkel, who keeps cake balls on hand in the freezer, ready to be pulled and dipped in coating for impromptu desserts or to deliver to friends on short notice.

The creative aspect to crafting cake balls makes them especially fun. For Valentine's Day, chocolate flavor is a natural choice. Set it off with contrasting pink and red frostings, sprinkles, candies or sugar decorations from cake supply shops. The tiny cakes, packaged in tins or cellophane bags, make a stylish statement with punch. You can make cake balls from almost any cake and frosting recipe, including a mix and prepared frosting. See below for a basic recipe to play off of at home.

Valerie Jarvie is a Dallas freelance writer.

FUN COMBINATIONS FOR VALENTINE'S DAY

Devil's food cake, fudge icing, dark chocolate flavor coating. (Spike frosting with 2-3 tablespoons liqueurs such as Chambord [raspberry] or Grand Marnier [orange] for extra flavor, and-or add raspberry, orange, hazelnut, etc., flavored oil to candy coating.)

Strawberry cake, cream cheese frosting, chocolate coating or vanilla pink-tinted coating

White cake, white frosting, red- or pink-tinted coating

Red velvet cake, cream cheese frosting, chocolate coating

Lemon cake, lemon frosting, vanilla coating tinted red or pink

White cake and frosting with multicolored sprinkles, pastel-tinted vanilla coating

CAKE BALL TIPS

•Work in small batches when dipping frozen cake mixture, keeping the rest in the freezer.

•Warm chocolate and confectionary coating in a double boiler, microwave or (for a large batch) slow-cooker, but do not overheat, as it burns easily, especially in the microwave. Be sure you have plenty on hand; a burnt batch must be discarded.

•Be careful not to splash water into confectionery coating; it will turn grainy and must be discarded.

•Use only oil-based candy dye and oil-based flavoring to add color or extra flavor to confectionery coating. Start with a few drops, adding a little at a time.

•Lay the dipped balls on wax paper to harden, placing the spot where you pierced the ball down to cover the hole, or cover the hole with decoration.

•For decoration, you can fill a narrow-tipped squirt bottle with a contrasting color of melted coating and paint stripes over the balls.

•To thin confectionery coating, add vegetable oil, one teaspoon at a time, and stir.

•Decorate with opaque sprinkles and sugar decorations immediately after dipping each ball; coating sets instantly.

•Once dipped, the balls will keep at room temperature for days; if you refrigerate them, the coating will sweat. Undipped balls can be kept frozen for weeks.

1 (18.25-ounce box) cake mix, plus ingredients required per instructions


1 (16-ounce) can prepared frosting



Almond Bark Coating (recipe follows) or Confectionery Wafer Coating (recipe follows) or 24-ounce package semisweet chocolate chips, melted in a double boiler

Bake the cake according to package instructions. While warm, crumble the cake into a bowl with a hand mixer to a fine texture. Mix in frosting to make a paste, using half to three-quarters of the can, to taste. Chill the mixture for at least 2 hours.

Using a melon baller or your hands, form the mixture into 1 ½ -inch balls. Place the balls on wax paper; freeze at least 6 hours.

Working in small batches, remove the balls from the freezer and dip them into warm, melted Almond Bark Coating, Confectionery Coating or melted chocolate chips, using candy forks or toothpicks to manipulate the balls. Remove the balls. Place the balls on wax paper to harden. Makes about 30 cake balls.

Almond Bark Coating: In a double boiler, melt one 20-ounce package vanilla- or chocolate-flavored almond bark, stirring constantly; alternatively, in a tall-sided narrow container, microwave almond bark for 45 seconds; continue to heat in 15-second intervals, stirring in between until melted; be careful not to scorch. Stir in 1 teaspoon vegetable oil. If coloring is desired, stir in oil-based candy coloring to vanilla flavor, one drop at a time, until reaching desired color.

Confectionery Wafer Coating: Melt 48 ounces confectionary wafers in double boiler or microwave following the instructions for Almond Bark Coating.

Chocolate chips: Melt 12 ounces of chips in double boiler; add more chips as needed. This variation will result in a softer (less crisp) coat.

Want something extra-special for your sweetie? Add richness to a standard cake mix by substituting melted butter for oil and milk for water in package instructions. Or, try this luscious variation to standard chocolate:

Raspberry Chocolate Cake Balls: Thaw 9 ounces frozen raspberries; place in a fine sieve and, with the back of a spoon, squeeze out excess juice. Combine drained berries with 3 tablespoons sugar, a (18.25-ounce) devil's food cake with pudding mix, 1 cup sour cream, 1/2 cup vegetable oil and 3 large eggs in mixing bowl. Beat at low speed for 1 minute. Scrape down sides of the bowl with a spatula and beat for an additional 2 minutes on medium. Pour into greased, floured 8-inch cake pans and bake at 350 F for 25-30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean. Cool to slightly warm, crumble and combine with chocolate frosting according to the Basic Cake Ball recipe above.

Optional: For extra flavor, stir 2 tablespoons Chambord raspberry liqueur into frosting.

SOURCE: Adapted from Chocolate From the Cake Mix Doctor by Anne Byrn

WHERE TO SHOP

Ready-made cake balls are available through these sources and area bakeries:

•The Cake Ball Co.: www.cakeballs.com, 214-559-5788.

•Patty Cakes by the Baker Man: www.pattycakesbythebakerman.com by special order or retailed at Weir's Furniture stores, Drip Coffee, Holy Ravioli, Molto Formaggio and the T Shop.

Supplies for making cake balls:

•Almond bark: on the baking aisle of major grocery stores

•Confectionery coating, oil-based candy coloring and flavored oils, candy forks: crafts stores such as Michaels, Jo-Ann's, and cake and kitchen supply stores such as the Cake Carousel, 1002 N. Central Expressway, Suite 501, Richardson, www.cakecarousel.com , 972-690-4628, and Asher's Gourmet Shoppe, 3114 S. Cooper St., Arlington, 817-468-9411.


The article URL is http://www.dallasnews.com/sharedcontent/dws/fea/taste/stories/DN-nf_cakeballsjump_0203gd.State.Edition1.2b8fa70.html

Wednesday, June 9, 2010

cake ideas





Invitations!

I decided on a heart origami thingy that opens up and you read the inside for invite details. It sounds really cheesy but I think if done right with the correct paper and colors, it will look ADORABLE. It is really different and shows the whimsy informal fun theme we want our wedding to have. Luckily my fiance approved the idea and even my nephew approved the "Cool factor" of it.

I got the idea from http://www.eatdrinkchic.com . i LOVE that website so much.

I am unsure if I will do double envelopes as I am trying to stay green and save as much paper as possible. It was why I chose this design because each sheet of paper could make THREE invitations. I could also save on postage since each envelope should not need more than a stamp each. I do love the translucent envelope idea and maybe could at least do a tiny pocket for the invitation then put that in the outside folder. Probably won't sew the edges but will use tape (i have plenty of tape and my hands won't be able to sew 125 envelopes).







all pictures are from http://www.eatdrinkchic.com/post.cfm/diy-origami-heart-love-note#respond you can also go there for instructions on doing them yourself, if you would like

Centerpiece Ideas


I keep changing my mind about what I want. Maybe I can mix the ideas around so it is not all the same. These are what I am considering:





*Cutting branches from trees in yard and gluing tissue flowers onto them. saw pictures online and it looks sooo pretty but CHEAP!



this is a picture done with pomanders which is another idea. maybe i could do that out of tissue paper.



*since I am not having a candy bar after all (b/c of the photo booth doubling as favors), I thought I would incorporate our sweet tooth into the centerpieces with jars or clear bowls of cute blue and silver candy like blue rock candy, silver jordan almonds, etc

maybe with a sign "to a sweet life together" or something corny like that. i did see a picture with the theme "eat, drink, and marry" which i thought was cute


*tea lights are super cheap (especially at IKEA) so maybe I could put a few of them on a small mirror. i am concerned about how long they would last though. the wedding would be at night so maybe the glow would look so pretty. Maybe small candles instead. I could make my own soy or honeycomb candles and put them into tea cups from thrift store.

even just silver cupcake holders would be cute to hold the candles


*origami, we LOVE origami and may use an origami heart as invitations (more on that in another post) so it would be cute to continue that theme with misc origami done in beautiful blue and white paper (perhaps christmas wrapping paper bought at target's 75% after christmas clearance?) scattered around.

Monday, June 7, 2010

matron of honor dress











dress! (updated Nov 16)

Update: AHHHH, my mom said we can have TWO dresses made for me!!!!

I am driving myself crazy (in a good way) with trying to find a wedding dress that is a perfect fit for me. I thought I found one but when I tried it on, it was too off off white that it looked tan and the bottom was just too poufy.

These are a random collection of dresses I like so far. I am aware of how different they are from each other. This is how picky I am!


**UPDATE** This is the dress I will wear for the ceremony :-D


CALISTA
Windsor Duchess/Tulle. Strapless A-line gown with draped Satin bodice and seamed Tulle circle skirt. Waistline is accented with Grosgrain ribbon. Available in Ivory as sampled and White.



Possible choices for reception dress:


RHIANNON
Tulle A-line gown with floral bust detail.
Available in Ivory as sampled

SUTTON
Silk Chiffon. Crinkle Chiffon gown with asymmetrical one-shoulder detail. Ruched bustline is accented with delicate floral detail.





Wednesday, June 2, 2010

Making life easier...

I've decided to make my life via wedding planning tons easier by renting a photo booth instead of the candy bar and dessert table as I originally planned. The wedding cake and mini cheesecake should be enough as dessert. The original candy bar idea as favor would probably end up costing a thousand dollars when I added up all the varieties of candy needed, the pounds per candy I would need to order, the plastic bags, stickers, etc. I found out to rent a photo booth, you get all this:

" Photobooth available at your event for up to 6 hours

· Delivery, setup, and removal

· Photobooth attendant on site for duration of event

· Unlimited photos

· Your choice of guest book, including everything required for guests to write a message and add their favorite photo to the book

· Digital copies of photos delivered on DVD

· Photos available online for all the guests to see

The strip of 4 pictures prints out in approximately 90 seconds. The photos online are generally available one week after the event. The digital copies take approximately 1 month.

Everyone has a blast with the photobooth at the event, and seeing the pictures online the following week is hilarious. Plus the photo strips work as great favors. We can even add names and date to the pictures or print the strips in color at no additional charge.
"

That is so freakin' amazing! I dont have to worry about wedding guestbook or favors or entertainment if I just go with the photo booth! Extremely worth the money!