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Wonka Chocolate-Vision

November 2006

In November I took a break from baking for a purer form of sugar worship- Chocolate Making. A few of my coworkers and I headed to Artisan Confections for the ultimate team builder.

After a brief education on the cacao plant and chocolate process, we were able to taste chocolates from different regions and with different percentages of chocolate. Like coffee beans, the different regions had flavors that varied in intensity and fruitiness. With a few new facts under our belt, it was time to get crafty.

Using colored cocoa butter (yeah, like in suntan lotion) we painted sheets of acetate with modern designs.


Jason, owner and creative guru behind the shop sliced up the ganache (filling) and showed us how to load up the conveyor belt to coat it in chocolate. Although we helped layer some chocolate ganache onto a mandarin orange batch he was working on the shop, it has to sit for several days before use. We were just as happy to use a batch that was ready for eating.

The tasty squares are lined up on the conveyor belt for a trip under a fountain of melted chocolate. Just for variety we used a mix of flavors that included: 76% chocolate ganache, vanilla bean enhanced chocolate, and a salted caramel and hazelnut layered treat. Though we were hoping to pick up a machine like this at Costco for our office kitchen, it turns out that they have to be specially ordered from France and take several months to customize and ship. It holds about 75 lbs of chocolate at carefully controlled temperatures.


Once doused, the squares are shaken (not stirred) so an even coating forms over the top. Then we applied our designs by hand by laying the cocoa butter paintings over the top of the coated chocolates as they set.


To keep us from causing trouble in the store while out designs set up, we were allowed to make our own chocolate bark using all kinds of nuts, fruits and crunchy candies. We also tasted many of the company’s regular varieties like truffles flavored with Cinnamon Honey, Ancho Chiles and Mint Tea. My favorite was the peanut butter and jelly, with a layer of peanut butter filling, crunchy cookie flake, and raspberry filling, wrapped in chocolate. Yummy.

Finally it was time to reveal our handiwork. We peeled back the transfer sheets, and viola!


The bright colors and sparkled sugar were impressive, even though we had seen all of the steps going into it.


Though ours were hand-painted, the design sheets used for the chocolates that they sell in the store are designed by local Arlington artists and silk screened onto transfer sheets. Companies and restaurants custom order logos and designs (min = about 1,000 pieces) which I think would be awesome.

Here is my finished box:


I wasn’t as hyped up about the chocolates as I get for some of our baking/cooking outings, but it was definitely my favorite class not attended by Dave Lieberman (haha). I definitely have a better appreciation for the chocolate making process and the art that goes into mixing the different flavors and textures. If you are reading this article from Arlington, you need to head over to the shop and taste all of these goodies for yourself. (I think that they also ship to lucky friends and relatives.) Classes will start again in the new year and I highly recommend getting some friends together and going. Good friends, a bottle of wine (because friends, “Candy is dandy, but liquor is quicker.”), chocolate tastings, handmade confections to take home and support of a local business serving our community… What could be better?


View the clip from Fox News by clicking here to see it in action.

And click here for even more chocolatey fun. Because in life there are “little surprises around every corner, but nothing dangerous.”

Posted in Chocolates.


Happy Halloween











What you see here is technically my Halloween costume, but the irony of the 50’s housewife is just funny all year. The front has a great panel of a woman taking a pan out of the oven with huge oven mits. It reads “Drop it like it’s HOT”. Priceless.

Here is a chocolate chip cake with strawberry jam filling that is coming together nicely.

While the cake is cooling, say hi to Little Blue, who has revolutionized my homemade frosting. Looks a little naked without its paddle- sorry Blue!

Yummy. Thanks for stopping by.

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Pumpkin Patch

Orange Pumpkin Cupcakes
October 2006


This year for Oktoberfest I splurged on the mini-pumpkin pan from Williams-Sonoma. I LOVE pumpkin everything. But on these babies I cheated. Erin was baking up a delish Apple Spice cake so I wanted to go another (less pumpkin-spice) route with this orange-lemon pound cake. It had an orange juice glaze which made it a little bit sweet for my tastes, but still tasty.

The leaves were made by rolling out green gumdrops in regular sugar. The stems and vines are green royal icing.


Posted in Cupcakes.

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Darla’s Peanut Butter Special

October 2006
Darla’s Peanut Butter Special


Darla requested a chocolate cake with peanut butter frosting. I don’t know the exact Altoona recipe, but I think this one was yummy. Though I am not necessarily a fair judge since I think peanut butter right out of the jar is perfection.

Posted in Celebration Cakes.

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Yaarrr- Birthday Ahoy

August 2006


For me matey Rach’s b-day, thar be a pirate cake ahoy.


This cake was so much fun to make! The sand is crushed ginger sandwich cookies (from Trader Joe’s). The creme filling gave it a little moisture and much better consistency than ginger snaps, which also would have worked. Swedish fish, decorative candles, and a piping gel treasure map completed the look. I spent so much time on the outside I don’t even remember what kind of cake is inside. On vacation at the beach- something from a box I bet! (*wink wink)

Posted in Celebration Cakes.

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