1.22.2012
A Chinese New Year Cake
9:07 AM | Posted by
Kelly the Overthinker |
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Last week, I volunteered to bring some sort of food to Ashlyn's Chinese school New Year Gala today. What to bring, what to bring?
I found a winner. Easy peezy. I think the word she used was "foolproof."
If you want to give it a try yourself and wow your kids, Chinese friends, or simply yourself (I'm thinking I have been my biggest admirer on this one), here's how to do it:
Find a dragon head online to use. My inspiration used this one. I preferred something a little more elaborate and Chinese looking. So, I used this picture I found online that was a bulletin board decoration a teacher made for Chinese New Year.
Gather ingredients. I may be slightly over ambitious to try this thing. But, I'm not insane. Cake mixes are just fine. And, I used two to make my dragon about 26" long. My inspiration used M&Ms to cover her cake with scales. But, when I went over to the single color bulk M&Ms and realized I would need to spend over $30 on M&Ms alone, I quickly decided that icing with nonpareil sprinkles and gummy orange slices for spikes would be just fine. I did "splurge" on an impulse buy of rock candy on a stick for his horns for $.99 each. And, I spent a whole $.33 on bright colored gummy tulips to use for feet.
"Foolproof" didn't start out real well when my first attempt at my bundt cake turned out like this.
Here's my formal thanks to all my Facebook friends who talked me off the ledge and coached me through how to butter and flour a bundt cake pan. I happened to have another mix in the pantry. So, back to work. And, the next two turned out just perfect.
After your cakes are fully cooled, cut them in half and set them up on the board in S shapes.
Mix up your icing to be whatever color you want. For two canisters of icing, I used a whole container of yellow food coloring with a couple drops of red to make an orange color. Then, start icing the thing. I intentionally made the icing "rough" to look textured. And, I used the icing to glue the cake pieces together a little when I got to the seams.
As you finish up icing a half cake, sprinkle the nonpareils or sprinkles if you are going to use any (I used them only behind the head and around the tail) and go ahead and start to set up your spikes since the icing will harden if you wait to the end and make it hard to get those things to stick. When I was buying these in bulk, I had no idea how many we would need, so I bought 3 lbs of these at $1.50 a lb. Turns out, we only needed 28 total and I have about 3 times that left. Orange slices, anyone?
Use Twinkies or some other Twinkie-like cake (I used butterscotch crumpets with the icing removed since my store was out of Twinkies...how does that happen?) to form a tail. Mark masterfully cut down the end of the cake and shaped the tail for me like a surgeon. And, after generously icing the tail, I used three orange slices sort of fanned out to make the tail look like a dragon tail and not just a snake tail or something.
Done.
I guess it was sort of foolproof once I got the cake out of the pan.
Now, wake your husband who went to bed a few steps ago and Skype your mom and dad at close to midnight and make them oooo and ahhh at your creation.
Now, I just have to get this thing in the car and to the gala. Lord help me.
During breakfast, Mark suggested you could make individual servings of something similar using bagels or frosted donuts. He's a genius.
I found a winner. Easy peezy. I think the word she used was "foolproof."
If you want to give it a try yourself and wow your kids, Chinese friends, or simply yourself (I'm thinking I have been my biggest admirer on this one), here's how to do it:
Find a dragon head online to use. My inspiration used this one. I preferred something a little more elaborate and Chinese looking. So, I used this picture I found online that was a bulletin board decoration a teacher made for Chinese New Year.
Gather ingredients. I may be slightly over ambitious to try this thing. But, I'm not insane. Cake mixes are just fine. And, I used two to make my dragon about 26" long. My inspiration used M&Ms to cover her cake with scales. But, when I went over to the single color bulk M&Ms and realized I would need to spend over $30 on M&Ms alone, I quickly decided that icing with nonpareil sprinkles and gummy orange slices for spikes would be just fine. I did "splurge" on an impulse buy of rock candy on a stick for his horns for $.99 each. And, I spent a whole $.33 on bright colored gummy tulips to use for feet.
Find some sort of board to use to put this baby on (unless you happen to have a platter several feet long). My board was 1'x3'. I wrapped it nice and tight with a red plastic table cover from the dollar store.
"Foolproof" didn't start out real well when my first attempt at my bundt cake turned out like this.
Here's my formal thanks to all my Facebook friends who talked me off the ledge and coached me through how to butter and flour a bundt cake pan. I happened to have another mix in the pantry. So, back to work. And, the next two turned out just perfect.
After your cakes are fully cooled, cut them in half and set them up on the board in S shapes.
Mix up your icing to be whatever color you want. For two canisters of icing, I used a whole container of yellow food coloring with a couple drops of red to make an orange color. Then, start icing the thing. I intentionally made the icing "rough" to look textured. And, I used the icing to glue the cake pieces together a little when I got to the seams.
As you finish up icing a half cake, sprinkle the nonpareils or sprinkles if you are going to use any (I used them only behind the head and around the tail) and go ahead and start to set up your spikes since the icing will harden if you wait to the end and make it hard to get those things to stick. When I was buying these in bulk, I had no idea how many we would need, so I bought 3 lbs of these at $1.50 a lb. Turns out, we only needed 28 total and I have about 3 times that left. Orange slices, anyone?
You can see here that cute little foot gummy we used too. We added those last but I wanted to show you the spikes.
Use Twinkies or some other Twinkie-like cake (I used butterscotch crumpets with the icing removed since my store was out of Twinkies...how does that happen?) to form a tail. Mark masterfully cut down the end of the cake and shaped the tail for me like a surgeon. And, after generously icing the tail, I used three orange slices sort of fanned out to make the tail look like a dragon tail and not just a snake tail or something.
When you are all done icing and spiking it, attach your paper head by putting some icing on the front of the cake to use as glue and then just stick it right on there. I had laminated the dragon head at an office supply store but ended up printing out a new one on card stock and using that instead since the laminated one wouldn't flex enough to work.
For the horns, I had Mark cut off the balls at the end of the rock candy sticks and then stuck them in the first cake on an angle behind the head.
For the feet, I used a little bit of icing and stuck the gummy tulips opposite each other along the body. I realize that most dragons only have 4 feet. But, we used 8 for fun.
I really got creative then with the streamers and whiskers using Fruit by the Foot. I used one full fruit by the foot in some tie-dyed flavor cut in half for the streamers. Using icing as glue, I sort of ruffled it starting behind the head and looping it around. For the whiskers, I used kitchen shears to cut the fruit by the foot to be thin using the lines on the snack itself and then looped it around behind the head to mimic the whiskers from the picture itself.
I guess it was sort of foolproof once I got the cake out of the pan.
Now, wake your husband who went to bed a few steps ago and Skype your mom and dad at close to midnight and make them oooo and ahhh at your creation.
Now, I just have to get this thing in the car and to the gala. Lord help me.
During breakfast, Mark suggested you could make individual servings of something similar using bagels or frosted donuts. He's a genius.
Now, off to make some of our own hóngbāo to give the kids later. No money in ours though. I'm going to handwrite some blessings for them and use that instead.
Labels:
China,
Traditions
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(58)
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April
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- Building the Nest 2012
- Love your neighbor
- Dear Monday
- Discrimination makes me sad...okay, a little mad t...
- The funnest part of a giveaway
- I'd like to thank the Academy
- I believe I've found an indicator of my mental hea...
- CongCong's story
- All is well
- A Cord of Three Strands {Review and Giveaway}
- Kelly, the mother Jesus loves
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March
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- A Giveaway to Fund the Way
- Dear Lydia, two years later
- Supermom...whatever
- Created for Care: What it was and what it wasn't
- I'm about to have a lot of fun
- Man training
- Labor in Love
- I know I said I'd end this tradition
- And then she was 3
- 100 sq. feet
- May is turning out to be an exciting month around ...
- {Advocating} For A Strong Hero
- "Caring" Propaganda Instead
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▼
January
(13)
- Adoption Links Worth Lingering On
- This is What 8 Looks Like
- Overthinking Chinese New Year Children's books
- A Chinese New Year Cake
- Pausing to Remember
- Using Your Passion {Red Thread Sessions}
- Since when is international adoption un-American?
- Little Miss Independent
- Do you Duo?
- One of These Things Is Not Like The Others
- {Advocating} Still Waiting
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23 shout outs:
How fun! I love creative things like that!
You are such a great mom. I used to do things like that when the kids were younger. A little worn out now.
Your cake is fabulous, I am so impressed!!! We live in China and haven't even seen any dragon SHAPED cakes, that's just too cool!
Beautiful! I did something similar for my son's bday party...we had a reptile party and I made a snake.
What a great idea!
Oooooh!
Aaaaaah!
WELL DONE!!
Kelly, can I pin this to Pinterest?
Awesome!!
Seriously clever! Wow...I'm impressed! :)
Nikki
Gorgeous!!!!! Lovelovelove the fruit by the foot and the horns and the head. Oh man, your dragon is perfection! Oh, and the rough icing looks great too - I was so scared of icing and that might have been easier. Woohoo!
so awesome!!!!
Impressive!
i was going to ask to "pin" it too! SO WONDERFUL! We love dragons, fairies, and mythical fun :)
It turned out PERFECT!!! Love it!
Looks amazing! Stumbling it!
Well I am WAY impressed! You could work for the cake boss! That is amazing! Way to go!
Love the Dragon cake!!!! It is stunning!! I re-pinned (with your blog.. ) and I may try this for an upcoming event!! We aren't allowed to do cakes in our school.. but my Chilliez would LOVE that!!! Great Work!!!
Missy
Kelly,
This is the most beautiful cake I have ever seen! I think I may have to try this one day!
Tricia
Incredible. Someday I will get back in touch with my crafty creative self and attempt such things...or not. I would have given up as soon as the first cake flopped.
I am so excited to find your cake--it's fantastic!! I hope you won't mind if I try to make it for our Cub Scouts Blue & Gold (Chinese New Year Theme) Banquet coming up and this would be the perfect cake for our cake contest!
Rose from Texas
I LOVE your dragon cake!!!
Thank you for sharing!
Thank you, thank you, thank you for the rough icing idea. I just don't think I could handle putting as many M&Ms as M3 did on her beautiful dragon cake.
Thanks for the inspiration!
http://lifewiththepages.blogspot.com/2012/01/january.html#comment-form
Hi! I linked over from M3's blog, as I'm planning to attempt a dragon cake for a very late CNY party, but I had to tell you that I'm ROTL over that bagel! I'll have to surprise the family at breakfast. ;)