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Indulge Your Sweet Tooth This Valentine’s Day!

January 27, 2012 by AllFreeHolidayCrafts

People always have mixed feelings about Valentine’s Day. Some are all about it, going all out with red and pink decorations and making handmade cards for everyone they love. Others, myself included, are a bit more skeptical of this gushy holiday. Don’t get me wrong; I’m all about expressing love for the special people in your life. It’s just that I don’t think I need to cover myself (and my apartment) in head-to-toe pink in order to celebrate.

There is one thing about Valentine’s Day that makes the holiday totally worthwhile. What’s that?  The sweets, of course!  This is the one holiday (other than Halloween) where you get to gorge yourself on candy and other sugary treats. And for a chocoholic like myself, that’s all you need to fall in love with a holiday 🙂

To indulge all of us with a larger-than-average sweet tooth this Valentine’s Day, I decided to round up some of my favorite sweet treats.  Some of these you can actually savor, while others are merely dessert-inspired. But either way, these are all — by far — my favorite Valentine’s Day crafts in our collection.

Sweet, Sweet Crafts:


These Licorice Love Cookie Pops are such an adorable way to play with your food!  Hop on board the “cookie pop” trend with these crafty sweets on a stick!

Skip those Candy Conversation Hearts you can buy at the drug store and make your own instead!  This recipe shows you how to make a version that’s much tastier than the boxed variety. Plus when you go the homemade route, you can personalize the candies with whatever sayings strike your fancy!

I love the idea of giving someone a gigantic Hershey Kiss shaped treat for Valentine’s Day. But all is not as it seems from the picture. Inside this foil-wrapped treat is actually a giant rice krispie treat!  I think this is such a clever idea for a gift — or just a fun snack to eat on February 14th!

 

Sugar-Inspired Creations: (*NOTE: These should not actually be ingested):

Don’t these Crochet Cookie Hearts look good enough to eat?  Though I wouldn’t recommend eating them (unless you’re a fan of the taste of yarn!), they sure are cute to look at — and so much fun to make!  Use the free pattern to make a batch for your family and friends this Valentine’s Day!

 As Forest Gump was fond of saying: “Life is like a box of chocolates.”  But for us crafters, life is really more like a Box of Crochet Chocolates, now isn’t it?  Use your yarn to whip up something that will make your Valentine drool!

Who would have thought you can make gift wrap that looks like candy?  This Peppermint Candy Wrap would be a perfect way to give a Valentine’s Day present to someone special. Just make sure they don’t try and lick it!

If you love the idea of crafts that look like food, there are plenty more ideas just like these!  Check out our board on Pinterest for more foodie inspiration!

Now tell me:  Will you be making any sweet treats for Valentine’s Day this year?

 

Filed Under: Valentine's Day Tagged With: Candy Craft, crafts for valentines day, edible crafts, valentine crafts, valentine ideas, Valentine's Day, Valentine's Day crafts

Design and Build a Gingerbread House for Christmas

December 3, 2011 by FaveCrafts

Hello there, folks! I hope you’re having a lovely holiday season so far. This year, I was feeling rather ambitious in my preparations Christmahanukwanzakaa (as my multicultural friends and I call it), and I resolved to attempt the daunting feat of building my very own gingerbread house. A gingerbread house, after all, is an edible craft, a creative snack, a delicious decoration, and an imaginative way to enjoy Christmas candy and cookies all season long! Have you ever made a gingerbread house before? If so, post some pictures or tips in response to this post!

Here is my finished product. (You can also find it on FaveCrafts.com).

It’s surprisingly easy. Somehow, I thought that constructing a house out of cookies and candy would be difficult, but I built the whole thing and decorated it in one evening.

Some people will tell you that you have to buy a kit or cookie cutters, but I found that lightweight cardboard makes an excellent stencil. I had never made a gingerbread house before, so I experimented with some different shapes and styles by cutting shapes out of a clothing box. Instead of a basic six-piece house with a plain pointed roof, I decided to play around with different roof shapes. Once I had a shape I liked, I labeled all of the pieces and taped them together to make sure that they would fit properly, like so:

I had to re-size and cut out some new pieces as I went along, but it’s best to do this in the cardboard phase so you don’t have to go back and bake new pieces. Once I has completed my cardboard house, I took it apart and began looking for dough recipes.

Because I wasn’t planning to eat the house, I opted for a sturdier structural dough without the traditional spices instead of the classic gingerbread cookie recipes used for Christmas cut out cookies. If you want to eat the house, you can use a recipe like these Gingerbread Cut Out Cookies for Christmas, but you will have to be very careful because it won’t be as hard or solid as the structural dough and will crumble more easily.  The ingredients and recipe are listed below. If you want the house to smell like gingerbread, add some allspice, ginger, and cinnamon to taste.

Ingredients:

  • 2 cups dark corn syrup
  • 1 1/2 cups firmly packed light brown sugar
  • 1 1/4 cups Crisco
  • 9 cups all-purpose flour (plus extra for flouring surfaces)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • allspice, ginger, and cinnamon (optional)

Instructions:

  1. Combine flour, salt, and spices (optional) in a large bowl.
  2. Combine corn syrup, brown sugar, and Crisco in a medium-sized microwaveable bowl.
  3. Microwave corn syrup mixture, stirring every minute, until sugar had dissolved and Crisco has melted. Be careful not to overheat or burn the mixture.
  4. Pour corn syrup mixture over the flour mixture.
  5. You can stir it together to combine it if you wish, but it’s a really tough dough, and I had a lot of fun squishing it around with my hands until the consistency was smooth. If you’re working with kids, they’ll love this part; just make sure the mixture is cool enough for them to handle without burning themselves.
  6. Combine until the consistency is even and the dough pulls away from the sides of the bowl. Add more flour if it’s too sticky. At the end, you should be able to mold it like playdough, or put a smiley face in it like I did. It’s happy to see you!

  7. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
  8. Store dough in a gallon-sized plastic bag and set aside.

Next, I laid out some parchment paper and floured the surface and a rolling pin. Though this wasn’t in the original recipe, it will make things SO much easier later on.

Once the dough has cooled to room temperature, roll it out on the parchment paper to about ¼-inch thickness. Make sure the dough is smooth and even because it does not rise much and will retain any flaws after it has baked.

Flour your stencils (this is important—the stencils will stick to the dough and peel off the top layer if you skip this part) and lay them on the dough. I used a pizza cutter to cut out the pieces because it made cutting straight lines much easier, but a knife works if you don’t have one.  Lift the stencils off of the dough and set aside. Set out a few ungreased cookie sheets, preferably without edges.

In order to make the transfer to the cookie sheets easier, I removed the excess dough from around the pieces of my house and then used scissors to cut the parchment around the individual pieces, so that each piece was on its own square of parchment. Be sure to leave about an inch around the edges of each piece so that you can grab the edges and gently slide or lift it onto the cookie sheet.

I didn’t have any incidents of breakage, but I’m usually a bit of a klutz, so I made a few extras of the larger pieces just in case. I still had leftover dough, so I made some dinosaur cut out cookies too!

If you want to reserve some for another house or something else, you can just toss it into a Ziploc bag until you’re ready to use it again. Don’t refrigerate it—it may get too hard to manipulate.

I baked the pieces of my house for about 12 minutes, just until the dough had set and had barely browned at the edges.

While the pieces were cooling, I prepared my royal icing cement. Here’s a great recipe for Royal Icing from RecipeLion.com.

For that, you’ll need…

  • 3 egg whites
  • 2 lbs confectioner’s sugar
  • 1 tsp cream of tartar

Instructions:

  1. Combine the egg whites and cream of tartar in a large bowl.
  2. While beating the mixture in the bowl, gradually add the confectioner’s sugar, beating 1-2 minutes at a time, until the icing forms stiff peaks.
  3. Cover the icing bowl with a damp towel until you are ready to use it.

Next, I prepared a construction surface. I used a sturdy tray so that I could create a “yard” for my house, and I set out I set out my pieces and assembled them, beginning with the walls.

Fill up and icing bag and set it tip down in a tall glass. Placing one wall flat on the surface, pipe a line of icing along each side of the flat piece. Hold the two adjacent walls in place until the icing has hardened enough for the walls to stand on their own.

At this point, you can stand the pieces up, or you can top them with the final piece, attaching it to the edges of the two adjacent walls to make a complete square wall. I wish that I had done the latter, because I attempted to stand the walls up too soon. They fell apart, and I had to slather more icing on and wait for it to dry. This is fine, but excess icing makes the house look messier.

Once the house is standing, position it on the tray and add the roof pieces, holding each one in place until it can stand on its own. If your pieces start falling apart, stiffen the frosting by mixing in a little more confectioners’ sugar.

While the icing on the house dries, gather candy for decorating. You can use anything you want, but I looked around for recommendations and made up some of my own. Below is a list of all of the items I used and their purposes.

  • Stick gum for roof tiles and the front door (I used two colors to give it a more complex and festive look.)
  • Hershey’s chocolate bars and graham crackers for the front porch
  • Starburst for the chimney (I assembled the chimney before I attached it, sticking the pieces together with frosting and letting them dry before I attached it.)
  • Pull-and-peel Twizzlers for window frames
  • Regular Twizzlers to line the rooftop and create columns and part of the porch banister
  • Cheez-Itz for window panes (If you don’t want to incorporate cheese crackers into your sweet treat, you can melt hard candies and make “glass.”)
  • Small licorice squares for a row of bricks around the back of the house
  • Thick pretzel sticks for a woodpile and thin ones for the porch banister
  • Skittles or M&Ms for Christmas lights and a doorknob
  • Sparkly white sugar for snow on the rooftop
  • Shredded coconut for snow on the front yard
  • Gum drops to line the walkways
  • Green fruit slice jellies for a bush or tree
  • Sugar Babies for cobble stones

You can also make a mini marshmallow snowball pile or a marshmallow snowman, a sled of graham crackers and a licorice strand, or pine trees and people out of cookies. I had a blast getting creative with all of my decorations, so relax and have fun with it! Happy Holidays!

Check out the 23 Gingerbread House Designs and Recipes eBook for more gingerbread-related craft projects, gingerbread house templates, and tasty candy and cookie recipes for Christmas. Here are some more great gingerbread craft projects from FaveCrafts.com!

  • Gingerbread Birdhouse
  • Gingerbread Candy Cups
  • Gingerbread Gift Card Holder
  • Spice Up Your Christmas Tree

Questions? Comments? Tips? Post your ideas in the comments below!

Filed Under: Christmas Tagged With: Candy Craft, Christmas, Christmas Crafts, christmas decorations, cookies, edible crafts, gingerbread, gingerbread crafts, gingerbread houses, recipes

Build a Home for Your Gingerbread Buddies with the New Gingerbread House eBook

November 13, 2011 by FaveCrafts

Picture it: You’ve just pulled a lovely batch of gingerbread people cookies from the oven, and you’re preparing all of your supplies: royal icing, candy, sprinkles, colored sugar and more. You feel a twinge of sadness when you add a pair of icing eyes to your first gingerbread man cookie. He looks so sad! But what can you do?

You can build him a gingerbread house, of course! With 23 Gingerbread House Designs and Recipes, the latest free eBook from FaveCrafts and RecipeLion, you can design, build and decorate a gingerbread house for all of your gingerbread friends! Designing and decorating a gingerbread house is a blast for children and adults alike. The 52-page eBook contains dozens of delicious, adorable recipes and gingerbread house templates for all sorts of amazing craft ideas. Celebrate Christmas by getting creative with a homemade gingerbread house!

 

Download your copy of 23 Gingerbread House Designs and Recipes today to build a German Gingerbread House (pg. 6), decorate it with candy recipes like Homemade Cinnamon Hard Candy (pg. 35), and bake some residents for your gingerbread house with Gingerbread Cut Out Cookies for Christmas (pg. 52). Then, make gifts for your friends like a Gingerbread Birdhouse (pg. 7) or Gingerbread Ornaments (pg. 48) for your Christmas tree. The eBook also contains two other great ideas for to make your own gingerbread house, great decorative candy ideas, tasty gingerbread recipes, and a whole section of precious gingerbread-themed craft and gift ideas!

Go build a gingerbread house and more today with the 23 Gingerbread House Designs and Recipes eBook!

Then when you finish, you can snack on gingerbread people and their houses too!

Filed Under: Christmas Tagged With: Christmas Crafts, edible crafts, gingerbread, gingerbread crafts, gingerbread houses, holiday crafts, recipes

FREE Thanksgiving Dinner and Decorations eBook: Let Me See Your Turkey Trot!

November 3, 2011 by FaveCrafts

Thanksgiving is all about celebrating everything we have, from the bounty of the harvest to the support and love of friends and family. Gather everyone you care about this year for a marvelous feast to commemorate this momentous occasion. But don’t stress—FaveCrafts and RecipeLion are here to help. With our latest FREE eBook, you can create the perfect autumnal atmosphere for your Thanksgiving celebration. 24 Thanksgiving Dinner Recipes and Fall Craft Projects will help you host a picture-perfect evening, complete with all of the recipes and decorations you’ll ever need.

From home décor projects to kids’ crafts, this all-inclusive guide is the best tool for a flawless Thanksgiving feast. A list of traditional roast turkey recipes, stuffing recipes, side dishes and desserts precedes the ultimate guide for the holiday crafter. Gifts, centerpieces, wall decorations and more make this an irreplaceable tool for the thankful soul.

Set the table with Colorful Fall Leaves Dinnerware and Pretty Pumpkin Napkin Rings before you complete it with recipes like Brined Wild Turkey and Apple Pie A La Zing. Plus, the kids will love making Candy and Cookie Turkeys and other edible crafts! But be careful; if you use this guide, everyone will beg you to host Thanksgiving every year!

 

Click here to download 24 Thanksgiving Dinner Recipes and Fall Craft Projects eBook!

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Thanksgiving Tagged With: autumn, crafting with kids, decorating ideas, DIY, downloadable, eBook, edible crafts, fall, fall centerpiece, food, free eBook, Holiday, home decor, table decorations, Thanksgiving, thanksgiving crafts for children, Thanksgiving decorations, Thanksgiving recipes

Do You Eat Your Crafts?

May 24, 2011 by FaveCrafts

I’ve had food on the brain lately. I sent out a newsletter issue on edible crafts last week (subscribe here so you never have to miss out again!), and then I featured edible crafts in a Link Love post. Now I’ve written an article on 24 Edible Food Crafts, featuring crafts you can eat, crafts made of food, and other food-inspired projects. I definitely worked up quite an appetite while thinking about all that delicious crafting!

One of my favorite crafts from the article is the Amazing and Edible Chocolate Body Scrub. I love so many things about this project: First of all, it involves chocolate, which is enough to get me on board! Second of all, it doubles as a dessert and a body scrub, which is quite impressive. And third of all, I’m a sucker for gifts in a jar, especially homemade ones, and especially edible ones!

I also really like the Ice Cream Cone Party Hat. You can’t actually eat it, but it’s so darn pretty! This is a great craft to use up stale ice cream cones, and I bet it would be a big hit at adult birthday parties too. It reminds me of fun childhood parties that always had to include conical party hats.

The Candy Flowers project caught my attention because it seemed like it could be a cute wedding or wedding shower centerpiece as well. I love crafts that serve multiple purposes, and these paper flowers are both a candy receptacle and a whimsical centerpiece.

One of my favorite craft websites, Craft Gossip, has an entire section devoted to edible crafts. I love poring over the adorable cupcakes, edible party favors, and other food crafts they feature. Here are some that I particularly enjoyed drooling over:

This rainbow cake in a jar is basically perfection. Cake–yes, please. Jars–you already know my opinion of those. Rainbows–sign me up!

When I saw this ruffle cake, I literally gasped. I’m definitely planning on becoming a cake decorating enthusiast now, just so that I can learn how to make this.

And how clever are these graduation push pops? Craft Gossip first tipped me off to the push pop trend, and I can’t get over how adorable and wonderful they are.

Don’t forget to check out my article on 24 Edible Food Crafts to see the rest of the delicious ideas I found on FaveCrafts. And tell me: Are you a fan of the edible craft?

Filed Under: Craft Trends Tagged With: edible crafts, food, Foodie Crafting

Link Love: Fun with Food

May 19, 2011 by FaveCrafts

I love edible crafts! Maybe it’s because it combines my 2 favorite things–food and crafting! If you missed our recent edible crafts themed newsletter, hopefully these foodie projects will satiate your appetite (and while you’re at it, subscribe to the free FaveCrafts email newsletter so you won’t miss another issue!).

  1. Cookie Palm Trees from Random Thoughts of a SuperMom
  2. Graduation Party Sandwiches from Sweetology
  3. Owl Pancake Dippers from Jenni Price Pancake Art
  4. Fruity Rainbow Wraps from Babble
  5. Peeps Sushi from Serious Eats
  6. Cake Push Ups from My Cake School
  7. Turtle Icebox Cookies from Diamonds for Dessert
  8. Edible Teacups from Disney
  9. Checkerboard Cake from Amanda’s Cookin

Filed Under: Link Love Tagged With: Candy Wrapper, cookies, edible crafts, food, Foodie Crafting

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Full Project Tutorials

How to Decorate Glass Bottles With Fiskars Border Punches

 This tutorial is brought to you by Jade Harrington aka Jaderbomb. Be sure to check out her review for another Fiskars product, the ProCision Rotary Bypass Trimmer.   Howdy Jaderbugs! I am so excited to share this tutorial with you today. I will be showing you some of Fiskars’ amazing boarder punches which I already […]

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Free eBooks

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