Showing posts with label candy wafers. Show all posts
Showing posts with label candy wafers. Show all posts

"Sweet" DIY Favor/Gift Idea

A great DIY favor, that is sweet and savory, are candy coated pretzel sticks/rods.  These are so delicious, they have the crunch of the pretzel, the savor from the salt, and the yummy goodness from the melted candy or chocolate.  What makes them cute are the touches of candied sprinkles or edible glitter, and adding colorful ribbon to tie the treats together!

These treats are perfect for wedding or shower favors, they are easy to put together, and are easy to make an elegant and fun splash to your event.

Here's what you need, tweak where desired depending upon number of guests.

1 bag of pretzel rods
1/2 lb bag of Wilton candy melts (vanilla or chocolate)
Wilton nonpareil sprinkles-edible glitter-cupcake sprinkles, etc.
parchment paper
cookie sheet/jelly roll pan
pretzel rod treat bags and ties
curling ribbon or personalized ribbon
Optional:
candy coloring
vegetable oil

First thing, place some parchment paper onto a hard surface, such as a cookie sheet.  Using the cookie sheet will enable you to place the pretzels into the freezer/fridge to aid in the hardening of the melted candy. Plus, the sheet will be helpful when sprinkling the sticks, letting the sprinkles fall where they may on the sheet, and not all over your table or counter.

Next, start by melting the chocolate.  You can do this simply by boiling water in a pan.  Once water is boiling, sit a sturdy glass bowl over the pan, (be sure water does not touch the bowl!), add in the candy/chocolate wafers, and stir with whisk until melted and smooth.  If you want to color your candy, now is when to delicately add in a few drops of food coloring-a little bit goes a long way, start with small drops and gradually add one by one until your desired color.

If chocolate isn't smooth and somewhat thin, it is OK to add vegetable oil a little bit at a time, it helps to thin out the possible thick chocolate, and does not interfere with the flavor.  Adding the oil also leaves a nice sheen, and doesn't taste oily, unless you add too much, so be cautious in adding small amounts at a time till desired consistency.  You don't want it super runny, but you don't want a thick goopy mess.  You want enough to coat the pretzel, where you can't see the pretzel through the melted candy layer.


What I did, as my bowl wasn't deep, and the pretzel rods were a bit long, I spooned the melted candy over the pretzels, completely and evenly covered the stick, leaving about 1-2 inches at the base of the stick for the guests to hold onto free of melted candy/chocolate.  Tap the stick gently on the edge of the bowl to shake off any access candy/chocolate to drip back into the bowl.


Then, before placing the sticks onto the parchment lined cookie sheets, I sprinkled the sticks with nonpareils, evenly covering the melted candy.  Roll the stick in your finger tips, so evenly cover the stick.  Once evenly coated with sprinkles, place onto the cookie sheet.  The best part about the parchment paper, the sticks should not stick to the paper, and you might have a flat surface on one side, but when candy has hardened, sticks should easily separate from the paper with no pulling.

Repeat, and place the pretzel sticks next to each other, but leave a bit of room so each candy covered pretzel breathes, and hardens individually.  To speed up the process of hardening candy, I placed the cookie sheet(s) into the fridge.

When I pulled the sheets out of the fridge, I pulled the pretzels up off the parchment, and if any melted candy had spread, like angel wings, it was easy to tap away any access hardened chocolate wings with my finger tips, which then revealed a perfect candy coated pretzel stick.

Last phase is to grab your pretzel favor bags, turn them upside down, take your candy coated pretzel stick and drop into bag, leaving exposed side up, at the opening of the bag.  At this point, pinch the bag where the pretzel ends, and tie with favor tie.  If you plan to attach ribbon, lightly tie the ties, as they help to bind the bag together, so that when you tie the ribbon over the ties, you can simply remove them once the bags are secure with your ribbon.  I mention this, as this is great if you don't have extra hands.  Tying the bags with favor ties can be done with ease, but tying ribbons can be difficult if tying without a support, so this little trick alleviates the fuss.  I learned this by tying ribbon onto an bag without support, and found it quite frustrating.  You know, you do this, holding bag with one hand, attempting to tie with the other, the bag slips through the trial, and ribbon is vastly uneven.


Et voila, you have your fancy candy coated pretzel sticks, and will be loved by your guests.  As always, quality control, and you will see you will love these too! They are yummy and delectable, and will add a sweet and classy touch, your guests might not know these were done homemade, but maybe by a candy company!

As pictured above, I created these treats for the holidays, and they were a hit! As family can often be biased, when I added these to their gifts, they honestly had no idea I had created the candy coated sticks!  Such a great and simple way to add a homemade touch to any event, be it for a bridal shower, wedding, birthday, any event!  You can personalize to your color theme, with your name or date of event, any way you want!

Enjoy and happy planning!

Sugar Cookies



This recipe belongs to Alton Brown from the FoodNetwork.  It is easy to follow, easy to make, and I am thrilled with the results.  I will post his recipe here, and then follow up with decorating tips and ideas.


Ingredients
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 egg, beaten
  • 1 tablespoon milk
  • Powdered sugar, for rolling out dough
Directions
Sift together flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside. Place butter and sugar in large bowl of electric stand mixer and beat until light in color. Add egg and milk and beat to combine. Put mixer on low speed, gradually add flour, and beat until mixture pulls away from the side of the bowl. Divide the dough in half, wrap in waxed paper, and refrigerate for 2 hours.
Preheat oven to 375 degrees F.
Sprinkle surface where you will roll out dough with powdered sugar. Remove 1 wrapped pack of dough from refrigerator at a time, sprinkle rolling pin with powdered sugar, and roll out dough to 1/4-inch thick. Move the dough around and check underneath frequently to make sure it is not sticking. If dough has warmed during rolling, place cold cookie sheet on top for 10 minutes to chill. Cut into desired shape, place at least 1-inch apart on greased baking sheet, parchment, or silicone baking mat, and bake for 7 to 9 minutes or until cookies are just beginning to turn brown around the edges, rotating cookie sheet halfway through baking time. Let sit on baking sheet for 2 minutes after removal from oven and then move to complete cooling on wire rack. Serve as is or ice as desired. Store in airtight container for up to 1 week.


Everything mentioned here I followed exactly.  The only thing I did different was sprinkling surface with flour instead of powdered sugar-this dough can be tough to work with, and I found a needed a bit of flour.  If I had used the powdered sugar it would've been a waste of money, and I didn't taste a lack of flavor at all.  Its up to you, what you wish to use to cover your work space.

In previous years I frosted with canned frosting or a powdered sugar glaze I made, and of course sprinkled with colored sugars, etc. This year I opted to dip my cookies into melted candy/chocolate wafers!  I found Make'n Mold Candy Wafers at my nearby Hobby Lobby.

I chose to heat the wafers in a double boiler type process, meaning bring water to a boil in a pot, then let simmer, place a glass heat resistant bowl over pot, with wafers, and stir wafers with a whisk, the wafers will start to melt right away.  I learned that adding vegetable oil a little at a time helps make melted candy less thick, and it does not affect the taste in any way!

I also purchased the dipping tools, which really helped, they don't cost much, and are great to have for dipping all sorts of goodies.

I dipped the sugar cookies into the melted candy/chocolate, some on the points of some cookies, some I completely immersed into the melted candy/chocolate.  I set them onto a cookie sheet with wax paper and let this sit in the fridge to get the candy to harden.



I also sprinkled with colored sugars as soon as I dipped, so the sprinkles adhered to the melted candy.  Also, I portioned out some of the white chocolate candy, and added food coloring, to either drizzle over the cookies with a fork, or to have it coat the cookie entirely.



Its fun to play with these little options!  Also, I dipped pretzels into chocolate, which are yummy and were a hit!


Have fun and enjoy creating your Sugar Cookies!