Winter Wonderland of White Chocolate Trees- Blog Tutorial
Today I'm going to share a gorgeous Winter Wonderland Cake of White Chocolate Trees! This surprisingly simple cake tutorial has been one of our most popular for Christmas and winter gatherings!
One of my favorite decorating mediums for creative accents is candy coating (aka candy melts, compound chocolate, chocolate bark, etc.). There is no tempering required--just microwave, pipe your designs, pop in the fridge or freezer to speed set, and you're done!
Let me show you how I made some beautiful Christmas trees today. This design is also perfect for "winter wonderland" themes all through the season.
Here are the basic materials that I used~
Candy coating (Today I used Ambrosia brand white candy coating which is at my local grocery store.)
Various dragees/sprinkles/hologram twinkle dust
Lollipop sticks
"Glue" My glue was light corn syrup today, but I also like basic tylose glue (aka sugar glue), or piping gel.
Pearl dust or Pearl Spray (Wilton and PME make pearl spray)
Waxed paper or parchment paper lined cookie sheet.....and you'll need a frosted yet empty, lonely cake ;0)
First, I melted my white chocolate candy coating in the microwave. Then, I filled a disposable piping bag with the "chocolate", snipped the end, and began piping Christmas tree shapes in various sizes.
I like to freehand but if you'd prefer to use a template, you can slide one beneath the waxed paper and trace. **Make sure to pipe your trees fairly thick. Mine are pretty lumpy and bumpy. If they are thin, they will break more easily.
Some of my tree branches have a rounded look, but for others, I used a toothpick to drag out the tips of the branches into a point.
I piped some presents too! Then, into the freezer--the whole tray, for about 10 mintues. Once firm, they're ready for the next step.Fresh from the freezer! I flipped over my chilled trees and attached lollipop sticks to the back with melted chocolate (piped on). I flipped them because I wanted the textured, bumpy side to be in front. If you prefer the smooth side, no need to flip! These candy stick anchors will allow our trees to stand nice and tall with no worries tilting or breaking.
Back into the freezer they go for about 10 more minutes. (You don't have to freeze or chill the chocolate to set...it will set up at room temperature also, but it will take longer & the trees will be a little more fragile when handling.)
Once everything is nice and chilled, you can safely pick up your trees!
Now, for decorating...my favorite part~
I love pearlizing. I experimented with Wilton Pearl Spray for the first tree below, and brushed dry Super Pearl dust for the middle tree. You can see that they look very similar... the pearl dust may be ever so slightly more shimmery. The last tree is naked for now. What a difference!
Next, sparkle time. Here, I have both Gold & Silver Hologram Twinkle Dust. I experimented with mixing a little light corn syrup right into the gold dust. This allowed me to paint on the glitter only where I wanted to.
The corn syrup took several minutes--probably a good 15 minutes or so to dry. If I had mixed in a little vodka, it would have dried more quickly. It's fun to experiment though. Piping gel would have worked well too--and so would "sugar glue".
One quick word about the Disco/Twinkle dusts & dragees~ I prefer to use my "bling factor" accents on decorations that aren't going to be eaten. I
f you suspect that your partygoers will devour the forest along with the cake, I would use sprinkles, sanding sugar, candies, etc. instead (And pearl spray is fine!)
I love the sparkle! I added some silver dragees. I pressed them into the light corn syrup "paint" I had just brushed on, but sugar glue or piping gel would dry a little more quickly.
You know what would have been even better? To have dropped on my dragees just after piping the chocolate trees, before the chocolate had a chance to set. Next time, that's what I'll do. I LOVED this part. I could have decorated trees all afternoon.
I decorated the presents using the same method (only I wanted the smooth side of the gifts to be the front). These would be fine to leave at room temperature or a cool place in your house until you need them. I still like to pop the cookie sheet with decorations into the freezer for just a few minutes before placing the decorations onto the cake.
I placed the trees into our 8" round cake which was frosted with vanilla buttercream. I attached the presents to the front side of the cake with a little buttercream. The snowy bottom border was piped from a Wilton tip 12 (medium round tip), in no particular pattern. The frosting on top was applied with just a swirly motion of the spatula.
And here we are!
Thanks for stopping by, I hope you learned something new! If you've never tried working with candy coating for decorations, this is the perfect time to start. Have fun with with it!
It would be so easy to use the same method but with much more color--you could even use green candy coating for green trees. Enjoy making winter wonderlands of your own, and I hope you'll share your creations with us!
Make sure to check out our full collection of tried and true frosting and cake recipes in our Recipes Section!
You can find more beautiful cakes and ideas in our Winter and Christmas Roundup of Cakes, Recipes, Tutorials, and Ideas!
*We create very similar chocolate trees (but green) in our Red Truck Cake Topper-free video tutorial also if you'd like to see a video of this simple process!
We also have a similar variation of this design in pastels in our member section! Pastel Christmas Cake
So pretty :)
So beautiful I will try to make it this christmas thanks
Hi i was wondering could you lay the lollipop stick down first and pipe the chocolate over it?
I tried this, came out good..only mine was thinner. So, it was spreading...I added more chocolate after it hard, put them back in refrigerator. Do I need to wait until the chocolate cool or I warm it too warm ?
Hi Yvonne, after you have melted your chocolate, let it cool slightly so it will not run. As it cools it will thicken, what type of chocolate are you using?
@Belinda--I think that it should work fine! You may have a thin strip of the stick exposed in back but maybe you could dip the stick in chocolate first or just pipe a tiny bit of chocolate on the waxed paper before placing the stick on top of it and piping your tree. If you experiment, let us know how it goes!
Hi Melissa..I am going to make this design soon (I may make my presents out of colors of fondant, and I am toying with making some skiis standing criss cross together along with the presents...), but I did have a question. Can you give me an idea as to the "height" of your trees? I know you have an 8" cake in your blog, maybe 5" tall? I am going to make a 6" cake approx 5" tall; so as to not make trees too small or large for the height of the cake, do you have advice as to what would look good tree height wise? Thank you.
I so love your cake! Simple but elegant, will definitely try this recipe and see how it looks on my cakes.
Very beautiful !!!
A great job.
M'agrada molt, és preciós.
Una gran feina.
Ester
I tried making the trees tonight! I loved the results and will post my cake soon! Thank you Melissa for this great tutorial!
Thanks again, everyone for your lovely comments! -- @Paula--Yes, probably my tallest was approx 4.5-5". Others were probably closer to 4" and even 3". -- We actually used the same trees on a much smaller cake later that week--it was only a 6" cheesecake and they still looked cute! We just needed fewer trees. I think you'll find as you are piping that they are very quick to make--you can throw in a couple of small and medium sized trees so that you'll have more to choose from ;0) --
@Angela--I'm so glad that you made them! Can't wait to see ;0)
Thank you Melissa!