To make this cake I sandwiched together four caramel mud cakes to achieve a cube. The recipe is here www.taste.com.au/recipes/12743/caramel+mud+cake. Tweaked it a bit to make it failsafe – …
This is the most unique and fun wedding cupcake tower we've created to date! Congratulations to Kathy & Dave 25/09/2010 www.cupcakecentral.com.au
Ideas, inspiration, and free printables for a Nintendo themed birthday party, with lots of easy DIYs for a Kirby, Zelda, or Mario birthday party.
A slow-moving, iron projectile of death is still an iron projectile of death.
I was so excited that I was able to find some awesome tutorials and ideas for the Mario Party. I want to share where all those great ideas came from. First up are the Mario and Luigi visors. UPDATE: The original tutorial has been removed, so I have created the instructions HERE I saw the idea...
seen: super mario cupcakes Cole is turning four at the end of March and we're brainstorming ideas. The most obvious: Super Mario, Wii edi...
For his 7th birthday, our little guy requested a Super Mario Party....at HOME!! (oh the horror!). I won't lie, this took some ser...
How to Plan your own DIY Mario Bros Party Here is how I made my own DIY Mario Bros Party. A lot of work went into this DIY Mario Bros Party for all my Super
La décoration en pâtisserie est primordiale. C’est d’abord avec les yeux que l’on dévore un gâteau. Et ces 15 pâtissiers et pâtissières l’ont...
This cotton candy popcorn is a delicious variation on classic candied popcorn and is actually made with real cotton candy sugar, so it has that truly authentic flavor. I developed this recipe to use as cotton candy party favors for my daughter's birthday party.
A lemon surprise cake filled with chocolate gold coins and decorated to look like the question block from the Mario Bros. games! This Mario Question Block Surprise Cake is the perfect way to celebrate gamers all around! Makes one 6-inch square cake Things you'll need Ingredients 3 cups cake flour 2 cups all purpose flour 1 teaspoons kosher salt 5 teaspoons baking powder 2 ½ cups milk 4 tablespoons vegetable oil 3 sticks butter 3 cups sugar 8 eggs 2 teaspoons lemon extract Zest of 4 lemons Equipment Large mixing bowl Medium mixing bowl Hand mixer Offset spatula Rubber scraper Whisk Six 6-inch square cake pans lined with parchment 8-inch cake board Small knife Fondant roller Small circle cookie cutter Decoration Yellow frosting Chocolate gold coins White & yellow fondant Mario question mark template Let's get started! Preheat oven to 350ºF. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flours, salt and baking powder. In a small measuring cup, whisk together milk and oil. In a large bowl, beat together sugar and butter with a hand mixer until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, mixing and scraping between each addition. Add extract and zest and mix. Alternate between adding the dry ingredients and the milk to the creamed mixture bowl (1/3 dry, mix, 1/2 wet, mix, etc.) Divide the batter evenly into sprayed and lined cake pans. Bake for 45 minutes. Cool and remove the cakes from pans. Level each cake then cut out a 4 inch square in the center of 4 of the cakes. Use an offset spatula to spread yellow frosting over the top of the base layer of the cake and then in between each layer as you stack the cakes. Fill the hole with chocolate gold coins. Place the last layer on top of the cake and then frost the entire cake yellow. Time to decorate! Use the Mario question mark template to create five question marks and then cut out 20 small round circles using the cookie cutter (PICTURE at 5:23). Place a question mark on the center of one side and put four circles on each corner. Repeat with all sides of the cake (PICTURE at 6:08). TaDa! If Mario punches open this block, he’ll find lemony cake and yummy gold coins! Download Template
Welcome! What could be better than a kid birthday party, right? Kids are so excited about a party - wide-eyed and smiling from ear to ear ...
Stuff to help you remember the simpler times.
chocolate cake and fondant figures - all edible by Ana Fuji
A lemon surprise cake filled with chocolate gold coins and decorated to look like the question block from the Mario Bros. games! This Mario Question Block Surprise Cake is the perfect way to celebrate gamers all around! Makes one 6-inch square cake Things you'll need Ingredients 3 cups cake flour 2 cups all purpose flour 1 teaspoons kosher salt 5 teaspoons baking powder 2 ½ cups milk 4 tablespoons vegetable oil 3 sticks butter 3 cups sugar 8 eggs 2 teaspoons lemon extract Zest of 4 lemons Equipment Large mixing bowl Medium mixing bowl Hand mixer Offset spatula Rubber scraper Whisk Six 6-inch square cake pans lined with parchment 8-inch cake board Small knife Fondant roller Small circle cookie cutter Decoration Yellow frosting Chocolate gold coins White & yellow fondant Mario question mark template Let's get started! Preheat oven to 350ºF. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flours, salt and baking powder. In a small measuring cup, whisk together milk and oil. In a large bowl, beat together sugar and butter with a hand mixer until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, mixing and scraping between each addition. Add extract and zest and mix. Alternate between adding the dry ingredients and the milk to the creamed mixture bowl (1/3 dry, mix, 1/2 wet, mix, etc.) Divide the batter evenly into sprayed and lined cake pans. Bake for 45 minutes. Cool and remove the cakes from pans. Level each cake then cut out a 4 inch square in the center of 4 of the cakes. Use an offset spatula to spread yellow frosting over the top of the base layer of the cake and then in between each layer as you stack the cakes. Fill the hole with chocolate gold coins. Place the last layer on top of the cake and then frost the entire cake yellow. Time to decorate! Use the Mario question mark template to create five question marks and then cut out 20 small round circles using the cookie cutter (PICTURE at 5:23). Place a question mark on the center of one side and put four circles on each corner. Repeat with all sides of the cake (PICTURE at 6:08). TaDa! If Mario punches open this block, he’ll find lemony cake and yummy gold coins! Download Template
Vous avez déjà aperçu un peu de la fête de Maé de Mario pour ses 5 ans sur les réseaux sociaux, je vous en parle plus en détails aujourd’hui :) Nous avons fait la fête samedi dernier, jour de…
Mario Party 8 (Wii) Artwork, images and pictures of the main characters like Mario and Luigi plus supporting characters like Fly Guys and Dry Bones + lots of group art.
A Coin is an iconic item from the Mario series, and has been used in various mainstream Mario titles, and has been around for as long as Mario as existed in Super Mario Bros. onward, and remains to be a staple in history as one of the first collectible items in video games. The coins were an idea from Miyamoto. After all, what was a Mario game without coins? In the other Mario titles, such as the Mario Kart series, it starts in the first game Super Mario Kart and being removed in Mario Kart 64,