Article #35


Mother's Day Chocolate Roses


Chocolate clay is a perfect edible art medium for children. The instructions for making roses for Mom are easy and of course you can experiment with any kind of chocolate flower or sculpture.




Mother's Day is almost here; Dad can make chocolate clay roses with the kids and give Mom perhaps the biggest surprise of all - something beautiful made by even the most inexperienced cooks!

Chocolate Clay Ingredients

10 ounces semisweet chocolate (coarsely chopped chunks or chips)
1/3 cup light corn syrup

Melt the chocolate in a small bowl over hot water, stirring occasionally. The correct method for doing this is to boil the water, take it off the heat, then put the bowl with the chocolate on top. If necessary, return the pot of water to the burner on low heat.

Add the corn syrup to the chocolate and mix well, scraping the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula and folding in the syrup until no shiny syrup is visible and the mixture forms a thick ball. Pour mixture onto waxed paper and spread with the spatula until it's about 1/2 inch thick. Let it sit and stiffen, uncovered, for about 2 hours at room temperature. Now it's ready for making your roses.

Chocolate Roses Instructions

Knead a handful of chocolate clay at a time on a counter or cutting board until it is soft and pliable like regular clay.

Roll the chocolate dough into twelve 1/2-inch diameter balls (for each full-size rose) and put them on waxed paper about 1 inch apart. Press each ball with your fingertips until it is a flat disk about the size of a quarter. Make the top thinner than the bottom.

To make the center of the rose, roll one disk into what looks like a tepee, rolling the thinner edge tightly into the top of the tepee. Wrap the next disk around the opening of the tepee and the third disk at the back of the tepee - this is the rose bud. Now continue adding one disk at a time as individual petals, gently curling the top edge slightly downward. You can leave some roses as rosebuds, then make various sizes, making them larger by adding more petals. If there is excess chocolate at the bottom of your roses, pinch it off with your fingers to make more balls.

Harden your finished roses at room temperature, which can take up to a couple days, and then store them in a cool, dry place. To retain the best chocolate flavor, it is best not to store them in the refrigerator.

You can get fancy if you like by using white chocolate and experimenting with adding food coloring. Or, decorate your chocolate roses by painting them with melted white chocolate.

Tulips are fun too, and are really pretty made with white chocolate and then painted.

To make larger roses, start with larger chocolate balls.



  FastBack:   Send Us Your Feedback



Click Here to share this page with your friends, website visitors, ezine readers, social followers and other online contacts.


Powered by WebRing.

This site is a member of WebRing. To browse visit here.


Become a master chocolatier in record time! Want to learn four secrets that will make you an unstoppable Candy-Making Queen or King? Learn this secret system of pumping out chocolate candy and other chocolate delights fast and at low cost with the Dessert University video course. Dozens of categories, hundreds of recipes--get the audio guides, ebook tutorials, and the whole chocolate multimedia learning system today for only $19.95!



Would you like to receive a short summary of each new article when it's published?

Name:

Email:



It's so easy to find all your chocolate candy making needs - chocolate, equipment, tools, and wrappers!













  



Here are the latest articles published on this site:

Main:  Nutella Truffles
Main:  There's Always Room For Nutella
Chocolate:  Effects Of Eating Chocolate: What's The Truth?
Chocolate:  The Smell Of Homemade Chocolate Candy
Chocolate:  Chocolate Nostalgia
Chocolate:  The Appearance Of Fine Chocolate
Chocolate:  Chocolate Lovers Indulge In Healthy Dark Chocolate
Techniques:  Chocolate Candy Dipping Made Easy
Equipment:  5 Inexpensive Chocolate Candy Making Tools
Simplerecipes:  Homemade Hot Chocolate





Here are all the articles published on this site:



sitemap


Subscribe to my Squidoo Lens RSS feed "Life is Like a Box of Chocolates".


If you can point and click, and fill out a form, you can build yourself a website just like this one! Earn $75 commission for each referral.