Originally I thought I'd do a giant Lego brick cake. Have you seen them? Basically a sheet cake with cupcakes on top all iced a solid color. Effective but I thought maybe I could do better. I did have a silicone cake mold of a Lego Man I had purchased at Lego Land. Maybe I could use that. I did a test bake in the mold and realized it would not work with cake. Cute as a brownie. But with added buttercream icing, because I do not, will not do fondant, the details would be lost.
Then an idea occurred to me. CANDY! I'd always seen the bag of Wilton Candy Melts on the cake aisle at Michael's. Maybe I could make a candy man from the mold. And I did. And it was easy. And it was awesome! Then I made candy Lego bricks from a Lego ice cube mold.
The cake was a big hit. And a candy love was born.
Next I had the genius idea to make my own molds for candy after seeing this Han Solo in Carbonite candy mold. I had the toy! I could do it. I went and bought the food safe mold product and set to work.
The Han Solo toy and my first ever candy mold. |
My very first Han Solo in Candybaronite. |
The kids found it fun and tasty but I wasn't happy with the way Han's digits weren't surviving the process. So on International Star Wars Day, May the Fourth Be With You, I made a new Han mold from a second toy the boys had. This one had much better results.
My first mold and its resulting candy on the left, the second version on the right. |
The second version of Han Solo in Candybaronite. |
All my Star Wars day treats. Yoda green candy pops, Han Solo Candy and a Rice Crispy Treat Darth Vader dyed black. |
My first candy plaque. |
My first candy plaque with my the Velma birthday cake I made myself. |
But there was that Darth Vader pan in my basement itching to be made into chocolate...
so...just to clarify...your lego men aren't actually cakes right. they are just a candy mold essentially??
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