Mini Easter Egg Cakes

Mini Easter Egg Cakes

I cherish making treats for Easter. Spring is noticeable all around, blossoms are sprouting and pastel hues are at last back. Also, the Easter table just appears the ideal event for petit four estimated little cakes.

So as to avoid the typical traps of making petit fours, we will do it the secure way; locally acquired pound cake and icing. It works inevitably, without an excess of object and still leaves time to add your own beautifying contact to every little cake.

How fun are these Mini Easter Egg Cakes? The best part is they are produced using locally acquired cake! Besides, you can improve them to such an extent or as meager as you need. These are incredible for a fun Easter festival with your loved ones!

Peach, mint green and gold appeared to be a characteristic approach with the shading palette, however so as to keep the small egg cakes increasingly present day, an example appeared all together. Stencils prove to be useful for this and with some experimentation, it functioned admirably to stencil the fondant first before adding it to the cakes.

Somewhat bizarre, indeed, yet this procedure works and has exactly the intended effect. Abandon them plain or add contacts of gold to complete and you'll have really little chomp measured egg cakes for your Spring table quickly by any stretch of the imagination.

Also try our recipe Easter Egg Sugar Cookies

Mini Easter Egg Cakes


Make these Mini Easter Egg Cakes using store-bought cake and icing! A super easy yet impressive treat for Easter dessert.

Ingredients
  • 1 – 16 oz. Store Bought Pound Cake
  • 2 – 16 oz. Tubs of Store Bought Vanilla Icing (not whipped)
  • 1 1/2 pounds White Fondant
  • Vodka or Clear Extract
  • Blue, Yellow and Pink Gel Paste
  • Egg Cookie Cutter (2 1/2″ Long)
  • Chevron Cake Stencil
  • Edible Gold Dust
  • Light Pink Cupcake Liners
  • Paintbrushes

Instructions
  1. Tint half of the fondant peach (pink gel paste + touch of yellow gel paste) and the other half of the fondant mint green (blue paste + touch of yellow gel paste).  Set the fondant aside, tightly wrapped in plastic and inside a plastic ziplock bag.
  2. Next, divide one of the tubs of frosting into two bowls and match your fondant colors.  Place plastic wrap on the surface of the green icing.
  3. Pull the frozen pound cake out and let it sit for a few minutes until slightly thawed.  Slice the rounded edge off the top of the cake, flip the cake over and cut the entire cake crosswise into two even layers.
  4. Use the small egg cookie cutter to cut out 12 egg shapes.
  5. Place 6 of the eggs on a sheet tray fitted with a cooling rack, place the other 6 eggs in the freezer.
  6. Place the peach icing in the microwave and heat for 10 seconds, stir and then heat for 10 more seconds.  It should be the consistency of a pourable glaze.  Immediately pour the icing over the eggs, making sure to thoroughly cover each egg.  If you run out of icing before all 6 eggs are covered, don’t sweat it.  Just scape up any icing off of the tray and reheat as necessary before continuing.
  7. Let the eggs sit until the icing sets a bit, about 15 minutes.  While the eggs sit, use scissors to trim the height of your cupcake liners so that they are more shallow.  This will make placing the eggs easier and look prettier!  Use a spatula to transfer each egg to a cupcake liner. Repeat this entire process with the remaining eggs and the green icing.
  8. Divide the remaining tub of icing into two separate bowls and tint each color a darker shade than the glaze.  Once again, place plastic wrap on the surface of the green icing.
  9. On a surface dusted lightly with powdered sugar, roll out 1/2 of your peach fondant into a long, very thin rectangle.  Place the stencil on top and hold it steady while you ice the top with a generous layer of peach icing.  Use your spatula to evenly remove excess icing until you can see the surface of the stencil.  Carefully lift the stencil to reveal the pattern and then set the stencil aside.  Trim any excess fondant around the pattern and save it for the next roll out.
  10. Let the fondant sit for about 5 minutes to firm up and cover your bowl of icing in plastic wrap.
  11. Use the egg cutter to cut out a shape. Brush a cake egg with a touch of water and position the fondant egg shape on top.
  12. You will get 4 egg cut outs from this stencil size.  Discard any fondant scraps that have icing on them and use the remaining peach fondant to repeat this process and cover the remaining eggs.
  13. Repeat the entire process with the green eggs as well.
  14. Place 1/2 jar of edible gold dust in a bowl.  Add the clear extract a few drops at a time until you have a paintable mixture that is the consistency of heavy cream. Please note that not all gold dusts are FDA approved and considered edible, so make sure you select one that is!
  15. Paint various stripes on the eggs.  Add additional drops of extract as necessary because the gold paint will thicken as you work with it.
  16. Serve and enjoy!

Source : https://bit.ly/2FfSBIP

Read more our recipe The Perfect Watermelon Lemonade

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