Posts Tagged ‘eggs’

buttercream easter eggs

i thought this might be a nice place to share our family recipe, passed down through generations, for buttercream easter eggs. mostly because this blog serves as a record for N to have (i print my blog into books for her to keep,) and so that my mom, sister, and i don’t have to frantically call each other every spring asking for recipe details. this is one of the easter rituals that has been passed down for YEARS in my family, so let’s archive it here and share the sweetness!

every easter when my mom was a kid, and when i was a kid, it has been tradition for us to find a large chocolate-covered buttercream easter egg, with our name on it, in the center of our easter baskets. these eggs are like diabetes in a ball – they are SUGARY SWEET through and through. this isn’t like a piece of candy you can bite into and eat. it’s one to slice ever so thinly and eat over time… if you can exercise restraint.

we don’t put the egg in N’s basket as though a bunny brought it. rather, it’s something we make together around easter time and enjoy and share with friends on easter sunday. here’s the secret family recipe… shhhh…

stir together:

  • 1/2 cup melted butter
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2/3 cup sweetened condensed milk*
  • 6 cups or 1 1/2 lb. of powdered sugar

use hands to form mixture into egg-shaped orbs of whatever size you wish. set aside.

for the chocolate coating melt (over a double boiler) a bag of semi-sweet chocolate chips with a tablespoon of vegetable shortening. on my first attempt this year, i tried to use milk chocolate ghirardelli chips first, and it just clumped into a ball instead of melting nice and smooth. had to try again with the old stand-by semi-sweets and it worked fine.

once liquified, spread spoonfuls of this chocolate directly on wax paper to serve as the bottom of the buttercream eggs.

place buttercream orb atop this chocolate, then spoon chocolate over top of the orb until it is coated. you can smooth it out with the back of the spoon.

once it is hardened (you can expedite this by putting it in the fridge) you can decorate the eggs with royal icing or any icing that will harden (not gels.) this year, i got lazy and just used that cake mate brand icing in a tube.

voila! you’re finished. garnish your easter baskets and share with your loved ones and friends and co-workers. the recipe makes PLENTY!

bookmark or pin this for next easter. or you can make these in other shapes for other holidays, i’m sure! let me know what you come up with!

*as you’ve noticed by now, pretty much any “secret family recipe” in my family involves sweetened condensed milk. remember our snow ice cream recipe? perhaps that’s why i’m a vietnamese coffee fiend!

 

04.12

2012
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egg carton creative challenge: teeny baskets

we’re one of several wonderful blogs taking part in the tinkerlab creative challenge: create something using egg cartons! we made cute and tiny egg carton baskets.


what a timely challenge this was, too! on saturday when dyeing our easter eggs, i challenged my little N to make whatever she wanted with the egg carton.

first she instructed me to cut it up for her (after realizing it was too tough for the kid scissors. darn.)

N decided to paint each little cup with watercolors. i’m not sure if she had an idea in mind yet, but as she painted, she said they should be small easter baskets.

some were pretty intricate in their design.

she wanted to “sew” a handle to the cartons, but later decided that if she painted strips of the egg carton to staple to the egg cups, that would create a basket!

each basket was filled with a bit of easter grass. N was delighted to find these were the perfect size and shape to hold the wooden watercolor eggs she painted to give to friends.

a couple were even created for our tinkerfriends themselves, as we were lucky enough to have easter brunch with the tinkerlab crew! can you believe our good fortune in being neighbors with these folks?!?

N declared that the unpainted cups would be good drying spots for our dyed eggs…

…which turned out suuuuuper-bright this year, by the way — we used intense ukrainian egg dye!

check out what many other amazing bloggers did with egg cartons:


Tinkerlab
TinkerlabChild Central Station Red Ted ArtSun Hats & Wellie BootsTeach PreschoolThe Chocolate Muffin TreeThe Educators’ Spin On It The Golden GleamGlittering MuffinsInspiration LaboratoriesKitchen Counter ChroniclesLiving At The Whiteheads ZooMake, Do & FriendMama Mia’sheart2heartNurtureStorePlayDrMomRainy Day Mum,  The Imagination TreeToddler ApprovedReading ConfettiKindergarten & Preschool for Parents & TeachersRainbowsWithinReachMommy Labs,  Green Owl ArtReusecraftsThe Outlaw Mom BlogHappyLittleMessesExperimenting-MomDuck Duck OctopusPaintCutPasteTrain Up a ChildGrowing A Jeweled Rose Coffee Cups and CrayonsReady. Set. Read!Scribble Doodle and DrawCarrots Are OrangeJDaniel4′s MomQuirky MommaA Mom With A Lesson PlanGood Long RoadTwo2Read

wishing everyone a colorful spring!

04.09

2012
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wooden waldorf symbol eggs

for the past three spring seasons, we have enjoyed watercoloring wooden eggs that we get from casey’s wood products, each time with a different twist.

the first year and second year we posted about this project, we woodburned eggs with the names of N’s friends and gave them as easter or spring gifts. this year, N intends to give an egg to each child in her class this week. in waldorf kindergarten, each student has a visual symbol that identifies their cubby, their coat hook, and each piece of their art work. these symbols have become important to N, so she asked me to woodburn the symbols onto each egg.

after the symbols were on the eggs, N was excited to watercolor them in colors that remind her of each friend.

after they were painted, we sealed them with our homemade wood creme. (see our recipe here.) i have to say that the imaginary play that ensued almost tempted me to keep the whole “kindergarten class egg set” for N to use to act out scenarios amongst her friends. it was fascinating play to witness!

but we’re sticking with the original plan and gifting these little lovely eggs to each child in her class, as well as two larger eggs for her teachers. (and perhaps we’ll create a kindergarten class set another time for home?)

we love this annual egg ritual because these are eggs that stick around year after year. i think i’m going to create a few story eggs for N’s easter basket this week, too.

have you ever wood-burned and/or painted wooden eggs before? what types to do like to create?

04.03

2012
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colors of spring

spring has sprung, and with the new season comes freshness and color all around our home. from mantel decorating to watercoloring wooden easter eggs and greeting cards to ink painting on beautiful smooth stones, it has been an artful and colorful spring so far around my home. my favorite hue is the inspiration for our spring mantel…

i used elements i saved from N’s nest-themed baby nursery to adorn the mantel, like the distressed iron bird candle holders and this robin’s egg blue nest plate.

isn't this beeswax egg candle beautiful?! it was a birthday gift from N's friend. (click photo to find one on bella luna toys for your home! nope, i don't get paid for that.)

N even made a spring “mantel” of her own on her bedroom dresser, just like she did for valentine’s day and st. patrick’s day.

we’ve been playing with watercolors a lot more since spring began… maybe it’s all of the rain that’s putting us in the mood for them. march showers bring… april showers…?

N's weather paintings on a rainy saturday morning

N is enjoying our annual spring tradition of watercoloring wooden eggs that we get from casey’s wood. i’ve posted about it twice, so i’ll just mention it here with the link to say, yep, we’re doing that again. they make for sweet spring gifts for little friends.

all our eggs in one basket

N has also been playing with liquid watercolors in the afternoons… mostly doing some wet-on-wet watercoloring and making sticker resist greeting cards.

i’ve been dabbling a bit in my acrylic inks, taking inspiration from geninne and inking some smooth stones we found on the beach. (i’m looooving the pale green stones!)

i’ve also been having lots of fun beading, needle-felting, and doing some light sewing… nothing to write home blogs about really. just the usual that i’ve blogged on before, but loving the rebirth of creativity i’m feeling this spring!

and i love that we got to bring out the spring placemats we made  – snaaaaails and flowers!

in the photo above you see my  sunday breakfast i saw on dr. oz – a 5 minute microwave muffin. it totally tasted like sand until i added the butter and honey, but gosh, i felt healthy! click the link to try it out. (i may add a little cocoa powder to mine next time.)

what sort of colorful inspiration is springing up around your home? 

 

03.27

2012
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felted stones (as easter eggs)

wool roving is quickly becoming one of our favorite art materials around here. N learned how to felt stones at school recently, to make them into colorful, fuzzy eggs for spring. she came home all excited to teach me and my husband how to make some, too. so we let her lead in teaching us this activity.

first we gathered supplies: egg-shaped smooth stones (we have collected tons of beach rocks perfect for this,) colorful wool roving, a bowl of warm, soapy water, and a towel.

each of us selected a stone with which to work, and we each chose a first color of wool. i wasn’t able to take step-by-step photos of this because my hands were soon wet and soapy, but it’s pretty easily explained and if you want a photo tutorial, there’s a good one here on lil fish studios blog.

we spread out the wool and wrapped the first layer around the rock until it covers the stone entirely. you can use a felting needle to close the seam here, if you’d like, but it’s unnecessary. then we dipped the stone into the bowl of warm soapy water. once it was wet, we tossed the wet stone back and forth between our hands. it’s a gentle, repetetive motion of back and forth, which can be very soothing.

kid hands, husband hands

you can even squirt some liquid soap into your palms for this part, if you’d like. after the wool seems to adhere together a bit, wrap your second color around the stone in the same way and repeat. you might not want to cover the first color entirely – it’s fun to see it show through.

back and forth

we chose to wrap our rocks with three colors each. after they were wrapped, we put them on a plate to dry. N informed us it would take “a whole day plus a night” to dry.

she was right – in about 24 hours our egg/rocks were dry… and oh so cute!

since we made ours as egg shapes and in spring colors, they are so wonderful with our spring/easter decorations! i’d love to make some solid color ones (like she did on lil fish studios) as pretty stone gifts, too.

large one on left is N's egg, small ones in nest are my husband's and mine


03.22

2012
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easter eggperiments

oh-so-many colorfully creative ways to dye an easter egg floating around the web this year… we could not choose just one! we had to sample them all!

see our garden flags in the background?

we got out tons of supplies and started on our mission to color a couple dozen eggs!

from one of our old annual stand-bys of the melted crayon dye resist on the hot hard-boiled egg…

to blowing out eggs (until the veins in my neck burst) to create hollow masterpieces we can keep for a while (and keep out of the fridge!)

N tried it too - it was way difficult for her, as well

to decoupaging tissue paper patterns onto eggs a la the artful parent

to sticker masking

to shaving cream marbling (like we did with paper two years ago – and hey, it works on eggs, too! tip: try the darker colors for best results)

to food coloring in a strainer a la pink & green mama’s post

to botanical masking (gone wrong)

to toenail easter eggs ;)

even some of our accidents were pretty…

cracked (oops) then double dipped in red & purple (N's fav colors)

…and some of our accidents were NOT pretty!

the contents of 6 hollowed out raw eggs dumped on our nice area rug

next year i vow to stray from the paas and food coloring to try vegetable egg dyeing. i’ve always wanted to, and have found some great recipes in the past. i LOVE the ones over at tinkerlab this year! but gosh, we had a lot of fun this week…

 

i also wanted to add that i was quite impressed with martha stewart’s egg dyeing iphone app! it’s 99 cents well spent for all of the inspiration it provides! (oh how i wish martha would give me a kick back for saying that!)

i’m saving some of these ideas for next year. once my neck and ears recover from hollowing out those eggs, i want to try more hollow eggs so i can create and decorate an easter tree with them since i didn’t get around to fulfilling that easter dream this spring.

all in all, it’s been quite an eggperimental easter week over here!

happy hoppy to you and yours!

04.23

2011
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our egg ritual

yes, i’ve posted this one before… and it’s because we’ve just realized that this is becoming one of our springtime rituals in our house. sure dying easter eggs is fun, but watercoloring wooden ones leaves a lasting impression.

a package was delivered to us last week from casey’s wood products. when i opened it and N saw a bunch of wooden eggs of all sizes, she started jumping up and down… “we’re painting wooden eggs again!?!? yay!!!”

because we were having a few families over for dinner, N wanted me to woodburn the names (blurred out below) of the kids onto a few of the eggs (and one for her, of course) with my trusty woodburning tool.

then she was totally absorbed in watercoloring the eggs with colors that remind her of those people.

 

after polishing the eggs with our homemade wood creme, we presented them in a nest to the kids at the dinner. the artiste was very proud.

i think we’ll do this every year… as gifts, and as decor for our own nature tables and baskets. what springtime rituals do you have in your home?

sharing the joy

04.01

2011
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