Monday, January 14, 2013

How to make your own edible hydrangeas with icing

make your own edible hydrangeas with icing


It's interesting:
"Just as the happy couple wanted, this is a lovely, small, intimate gathering of close friends and family – so could someone please tell me why I’m here. Oh, that’s right, to make a speech, so here goes …"

Flowers made from gum paste, fondant or sugar have long been used as edible decoration for wedding cakes. Those surprisingly realistic embellishments might seem as if they take hours to make and years of skill to perfect, but that's not always the case. One of the easier flowers to create from icing is the hydrangea. The technique only takes a few minutes to learn, and can produce an impressive piece of edible flora.

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Things You'll Need

  • Small container of gum paste or fondant
  • Nonstick silicone cutting board
  • Gel paste color (your choice)
  • Rolling pin
  • Ruler
  • Hydrangea flower cutters
  • Five-petal silicone mold
  • Cornstarch
  • Luster dust
  • Painter's palette
  • 2 soft paint brushes
  • Royal icing
  • Edible sugar pearls
  • Non-pareils (optional)
  • Small baking pan or plate

Instructions

    • 1

      Place the contents of the gum paste or fondant container on a nonstick work surface and knead in the gel paste coloring of your choice, a few drops at a time, until you achieve an even, pastel-hued mass of gum paste. Consider traditional colors of gel paste, like blue, red or violet, to make normal hydrangeas or experiment with more vibrant colors to make hydrangeas one would never see in nature.

    • 2

      Roll the tinted gum paste out to a thickness of two millimeters. Cut out hydrangea flower shapes with the cutters, as many as you can get out of the sheet of gum paste.

    • 3

      Dust the silicone flower mold with cornstarch. Lightly press the flower mold into one gum paste cutout to add details to the flower. Carefully remove the flower. Repeat with the remaining flowers, dusting the mold with cornstarch each time before pressing. Place the flowers back on the cutting board to dry.

    • 4

      Take a small paint brush and dust off any cornstarch that remains after the flowers have dried, then brush luster dust on each flower, starting from the center and moving outward.

    • 5

      Place a dot of royal icing in the center of each flower and attach an edible pearl to each. If desired, you could add nonpareils instead of edible pearls. You could also further decorate the flowers with the royal icing.

    • 6

      Set the flowers on a baking sheet and allow them to dry for several hours, or up to one day.


Source: www.ehow.com

Tags: paste fondant, your edible hydrangeas, cutting board, each flower, edible hydrangeas, edible hydrangeas with, flower mold