St. Patrick’s Day Cupcakes

Are you looking for a easy, but totally festive dessert to make for St. Patrick’s Day?  Look no further!!

Super Simple St. Patrick's Day Cupcakes | Shake Bake and Party

Take a white boxed cake mix and prepare according to the directions on the box.  Before baking, add orange food coloring or gel paste until you reach the desired shade.  After the cupcakes have baked and cooled, whip up a batch of your favorite vanilla frosting (here’s mine!).  Pipe frosting onto cupcakes and garnish with the green candies of your choice.  I used Mint M&M’s, but you could just pick out the green ones from a plain bag, use Skittles, green Sixlets or even jellybeans since they are already popping up in the stores.

St. Patrick's Day Cupcakes | Shake Bake and Party

If you prefer a more liquid St. Paddy’s Day treat I have a few cocktails for you to check out!  There’s the Whipped Popsicle (it’s the perfect shade of green!), Summer Green Sangria, and the Drunken Irish Potato!  Everyone have fun and remember to drink responsibly this St. Patrick’s Day.  That means that for every cocktail you drink, you should also have a cupcake!

Easy St. Paddy's Day Cupcakes | Shake Bake and Party

Spiked Irish Potatoes

Hi everyone!  Sorry I have been MIA for the past two months!  In addition to this being the WORST winter weather-wise (seriously, 3rd snowiest winter in Philadelphia – I think I have spent half the past two months just shoveling my driveway!), this has also been a very bad start to 2014 on a personal level.  Hence, my disappearing act.  Things are better now though, and with St. Patrick’s Day right around the corner I am hoping a bit of the Luck o’ the Irish will get everyone through the rest of this winter unscathed!  In order to facilitate said luck, I made some Irish Potatoes and added an extra special ingredient – booze (I know, no surprise there right?)!

If you aren’t from around here you may not be aware of these delightful confections. I am obviously not talking about those spuds that grow in the ground.  I am talking cream cheese, powdered sugar, coconut flakes and cinnamon.  They are a traditional Philadelphia candy that look like little potatoes, and are especially popular this time of year.  There is absolutely nothing Irish about them. 🙂

Until last year when I shared my Drunken Irish Potato cocktail recipe, I had no idea that people outside of the Philadelphia area may have never experienced the sweet perfection of these little treats.  So this year I am making it my mission to get everyone acquainted with my little spuddy buddy, the Irish Potato.

Spiked Irish Potatoes | Shake Bake and Party

These couldn’t be any easier to make and the taste payoff is beyond worth the minimal effort!  You just mix all the ingredients together in a bowl, roll the mixture into little balls or potato shapes and then cover them in cinnamon!  And then you spend the rest of the night sneaking into the fridge to grab “just one more” and furtively wiping the traces of cinnamon from your fingers.  Or maybe that’s just me…

Spiked Irish Potatoes (adapted from Irish Potato Candy submitted to Allrecipes.com by Saundra)

Ingredients

1/4 cup butter, softened
1/2 of an 8 oz. package of cream cheese
4 cups confectioners’ sugar
1 tablespoon Malibu Coconut Rum OR 1 tablespoon RumChata OR 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/2 cups flaked coconut
ground cinnamon

Directions

In a medium bowl, beat together the butter and cream cheese until smooth.  Add the liquor of your choice (or vanilla extract if you don’t want to use alcohol) and confectioners’ sugar, one cup at a time, beating until smooth.  Mix in the coconut flakes – I used my hands! – and then chill the mixture for about 20 minutes in the refrigerator.  Pour a few tablespoons of ground cinnamon into a small bowl.  Once the mixture has chilled, roll into small balls or potato shapes and then coat in the cinnamon.  Place onto a cookie sheet and chill to set.

The addition of the coconut rum just enhances the coconut flavor in the Malibu potatoes, and the RumChata potatoes were slightly creamier with a hint of vanilla.  These aren’t overwhelmingly boozy the way rum balls at Christmastime can be.

Irish Potato Candy spiked with Malibu and RumChata | Shake Bake and Party

These are fun to make, and even more fun to eat!  If you leave out the booze these are definitely an easy St. Patty’s Day treat that kids can help whip up; their little hands are perfect for shaping these bite sized spuds!  If you have never had an Irish Potato before, give these a try and let me know what you think!  I’d love to hear from any first-timers out there!

Spiked Irish Potatoes | Shake Bake and Party

If you agree that the combination of creamy coconut and cinnamon is as awesome as I think it is, try out my liquid version – the Drunken Irish Potato!

Merry Christmas Baby!

I just delivered this adorable set of cookies to a coworker who is doing a “Baby’s First Christmas” theme this year to celebrate her grandson.  I really enjoyed making the little onesie cookies.  Baby's First Christmas Cookie Set | Shake Bake and Party

Rudolph Onesie Cookie | Shake Bake and Party

I Heart Santa Cookie | Shake Bake and Party

Baby's First Christmas Cookies | Shake Bake and Party

And since this is a baby themed post, here is me with Santa when I was a wee one.  So precious…

Me and Santa

Dark Chocolate Mint Chip Cookies

Hello all!  It’s that time of year – cookie baking madness has taken over many a household.  I heard from someone who baked 15 dozen cookies on Saturday, and another friend made 8 different types of cookies!  My Facebook newsfeed was filled with pictures of thumbprints, chocolate chip cookies, sugar cookies and all kinds of other tasty goodies!  I LOVE IT!

I too was was bitten by the cookie baking bug and of course, I made more cake mix cookies.  It’s been… well, it’s only been a few days since my last cake mix cookie post, but that’s long enough – right?!

Dark Chocolate Mint Chip Cookies | Shake Bake and Party

I also took the opportunity to get out my Snoopy cookie jar!  Isn’t it cute?

Dark Chocolate Mint Chip Cookies | Shake Bake and Party

In case you haven’t read any of my posts raving about cake mix cookies before, I’ll give you a quick run-down.  They are simple, customizable and delicious!  If you have never made them before, you must try them and if you have made them before then you are probably making some more right now because they are THAT GOOD!

These ones are dark chocolatey, chewy, minty Christmas cookie happiness.  If you have any mint fans in your household these are a must bake!

Dark Chocolate Mint Chip Cookies | Shake Bake and Party

Dark Chocolate Mint Chip Cookies
(adapted from Funfetti Cheesecake Cookies by Kitchen Meets Girl)

Ingredients

1 box devil’s food cake mix
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs
1/3 and 1/4 cup Nestle® Toll House® Winter Dark Chocolate and Mint Morsels, divided

Directions

1.  Preheat oven to 350.  Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
2.  Combine cake mix, oil and eggs in a medium bowl until a dough forms.  Mix in 1/3 cup of the morsels.
3.  Roll dough into small balls and place 2 inches apart on cookie sheets.  Flatten the cookie balls slightly and then press a few of the remaining morsels onto the top of each cookie.
4.  Bake for 10 to 12 minutes.  Remove from oven, cool for 2 minutes and then move to a wire rack.

Makes about 18 cookies.

Goat Cheese Cheesecake with Rum Raisin Compote

SPIKEDRECIPECHALLENGE_zps72efc014

I LOVE goat cheese.  My grocery store sells little logs of the tangy cheese flavored with all kinds of wonderful things – honey, fig, blueberry.  One of my favorites is the goat cheese rolled in rum raisins.  Give me that and a package of water crackers and I’ve got dinner a very lovely snack.  So when I saw that this month’s Spiked Recipe Challenge ingredient was spiced rum, I knew I wanted to make something with goat cheese and rum raisins.  But what???

Goat Cheese Cheesecake with Rum Raisin Compote

This was the very first cheesecake I have ever made and it is definitely a keeper!  It has that added tang from the goat cheese that I just love, and the Biscoff cookie crust is to die for… but more on the ingredients later!  First let me say – there are SO many opinions on cheesecake!  Butter in the crust, no butter in the crust, egg whites, no egg whites, water bath, no water bath, bake, no bake, remove from the oven, leave in the oven to cool.  My head was spinning trying to figure out how to make this darn thing!

I started off by looking for a recipe that sounded tasty yet relatively simple.  I found one on Oprah.com of all places.  After a few ingredient swaps I was ready to bake.  I decided to do the whole water bath thing since so many people seemed adamant about it.  No, you do not dunk your cheesecake in the tub.  You are supposed to wrap the outside of the springform pan in tinfoil, place the pan with cheesecake filling in a larger pan, fill the larger pan with water (boiling, not boiling.  I went with boiling.) about halfway up the springform pan and THEN carefully put the whole setup in the oven. . All this is supposed to prevent your cheesecake from cracking on top.  Mine did not crack, but whether is was due to the water bath or just my mad cheesecake baking skills we will never know.

Rum Raisin Goat Cheese Cheesecake

After letting my cheesecake chill in the fridge overnight I made my rum raisin compote.  Then it was time to plate and photograph.Just one minor problem… my cheesecake was stuck to the bottom of the pan!!  I had sprayed it with baking spray but apparently that was pointless.  My previously crack-less cheesecake was turning into the Grand Canyon as I tried in vain to lift it off the pan bottom.  A quick internet search let me know that I should have covered the bottom of the pan in parchment paper first.  WHERE was this info in all of my previous cheesecake research?!

Luckily I was able to get a few nice pieces out of the cheesecake.  The rest isn’t pretty but it doesn’t really matter because it’s damn delicious!

Goat Cheese Cheesecake with Rum Raisins | Shake Bake and Party

Goat Cheese Cheesecake (adapted from Goat Cheese Cheesecake with Spiced Cherry Topping on Oprah.com)

Ingredients
  • 1 stick butter
  • 1 3/4 cups Biscoff cookie crumbs (I just put a bunch of cookies in a plastic bag and crushed them with my rolling pin)
  • 3 – 8 oz packages cream cheese at room temperature
  • 8 oz goat cheese at room temperature
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 tbsp all purpose flour
  • 3 eggs
  • 2 tsp vanilla bean paste (that’s where all the little flecks you see in the pictures come from; it’s not dirt – I promise)  You can use vanilla extract if you do not have the paste.

Directions

Crust: Preheat oven to 325°. Melt butter; then mix it with Biscoff cookie crumbs. Press crust into the bottom of a greased 9-inch springform pan (or try the lining it with parchment paper trick!). Bake for 10 minutes.

Filling: Combine cream cheese, goat cheese, and sugar in the bowl of a mixer using a paddle attachment. Blend on low speed until smooth. Scrape down sides of bowl; add flour. Mix until flour is thoroughly incorporated. Add eggs one at a time, mixing well and scraping down sides of bowl between additions. Add vanilla; mix until incorporated.

Remove crust from oven and pour in filling. Smooth top with a small knife or spatula. (Now is the time to put together your water bath if that’s the route you are taking). Bake cake until edges are slightly cracked and center is jiggly, 30 to 40 minutes. Remove from oven; set pan on a wire rack until it cools to room temperature, then remove sides of pan. Refrigerate cake until ready to serve.

Rum Raisin Compote

Ingredients

  • 1 cup spiced rum (I used Captain Morgan’s)
  • 1/4 cup heavy cream
  • 1/3 cup golden raisins
  • 1 cup regular raisins
  • 3 tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tbsp butter
  • 1 tsp vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
  • 1 tbsp cornstarch and 1 tbsp water (optional)

Directions

Combine all of the ingredients except the cornstarch and water in a small saucepan and bring to a low boil.  Boil until raisins plump and sauce starts to thicken.  It will still be rather liquid, so if you want to really thicken it up mix together one tbsp cornstarch and one tbsp water in  small bowl, then pour the mixture into the sauce and stir.   Remove from heat, let cool slightly and then serve on top of a slice of the cheesecake.

All in all, my first cheesecake making experience was a pretty good one!  I will definitely use the goat cheese cheesecake recipe again, and I’m already thinking about topping the next one with some blueberry preserves!  I think the only thing I would do differently is double the recipe for the crust – it was a little thinner than I like.  Oh, and maybe make some whipped cream to top the whole thing off with! 🙂

Many thanks to Carrie from Frugal Foodie Mama and Julie from This Gal Cooks for hosting another fun Spiked Recipe Challenge!

 

 

Disgustingly Good – Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars

It’s time for another

SPIKEDRECIPECHALLENGE_zps72efc014This is a funtastic recipe challenge from Julie at This Gal Cooks and Carrie at Frugal Foodie Mama.  The challenge is to use the chosen booze to make anything other than a drink, and the for this go-round we had to use a fall beer!  This challenge was very, well, challenging to me because I really don’t like beer.  Here is a picture of me the last time I actually consumed an entire glass of the stuff:

Me, with a beer

That was almost 4 years ago, on my 30th birthday.  I’m going to be 34 in a little less than a month.  Ugh.  Anyway, the birthday was awesome, the beer was raspberry wheat and it was… tolerable.  Most times, when my boyfriend insists that I try a sip of whatever beer he is drinking I end up having to gargle with a chocolate cupcake just to get the taste out of my mouth.  This beer didn’t make me run for the nearest bakery, but I didn’t ENJOY drinking it.

So, to create an awesome tasting recipe with a seasonal beer sounded like a daunting task.  However, I think I got lucky when I stumbled upon Shock Top Honeycrisp Apple Wheat beer in the liquor store.  It still tastes like beer, but it also tastes a lot like apple.  I might actually slightly like it.  Maybe.  It still does taste like beer, after all.

Regardless, it doesn’t really matter what it tastes like straight from the bottle because when it’s mixed together with a can of sweetened condensed milk and drizzled over top of yummy things like pumpkin cake and Caramel Apple Milky Way bars you end up with a magic bar fittingly described as “disgustingly good.”

Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars | Shake Bake and Party

Other reviews:

“This is the best thing I’ve ever had!”

“I don’t normally like sweets but those magic bars are really good.”

“Oh My God!  This smells delicious!”

Many thanks to my coworkers for being my guinea pigs, although in this case I get the feeling I was the one doing them a favor.  Everyone was raving about these bars.

Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars | Shake Bake and Party

These bars were inspired by a recipe that I had pinned from The Domestic Rebel for Samoa Magic Bars.  I have yet to try the original recipe but Hayley’s stuff is always awesome, and how can anything soaked in sweetened condensed milk be bad?  There are quite a few magic bar recipes out there any everyone seems to go nuts over them, so I took the basic concept and ran with it.

Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars | Shake Bake and Party

Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars
Adapted from Samoa Magic Bars by The Domestic Rebel

Ingredients

1 box of Perfectly Pumpkin Cake Mix from Pillsbury
1 egg
1/2 cup butter, melted
1 cup Kraft Caramel Bits
1 and 1/2 cups Harvest Blend M&M’s, divided
1 cup chopped Caramel Apple Milky Way Miniatures (about 20 wrapped pieces)
1 14 oz can sweetened condensed milk
2 tbsp Shock Top Honeycrisp Apple Wheat Beer

Directions

1.  Preheat oven to 350 degrees.   Line a 13×9 inch pan with foil, spray the foil lightly with cooking spray and set aside.  (I used a metal, nonstick pan.  The baking times may vary if you use glass.)

2.  In a large bowl combine the cake mix, egg and butter until a soft dough forms.  Press the dough evenly in the bottom of the pan.  Bake for 10 minutes.

3.  While the dough is baking, mix the 2 tablespoons of beer and the can of sweetened condensed milk together in a small bowl.  If you haven’t done so already, now is also the time to chop your Milky Way bars into small chunks.

4.  Remove the pan from the oven and pour about 3/4 of the sweetened condensed milk/beer mixture on top of the cake.  Next, evenly cover the cake with the caramel bits, chopped Milky Way bars and 1 cup of the M&M’s.  Drizzle the remaining sweetened condensed milk on top.

5.  Return to the oven and bake for approximately 15-20 minutes.   I’m not sure you can tell that it’s done just by looking at it since it’s covered in melted candy.  I took mine out at 15 minutes and it was done.  You can leave it in a bit longer if you like,  just keep an eye on the condensed milk to make sure it doesn’t start to brown too much.

6.  Remove from the oven.  Let cool for about five minutes and then sprinkle the remaining 1/2 cup of M&M’s on top.  Allow the bars to set at room temperature until cool before cutting into bars.  I stored mine overnight in a covered container in the refrigerator before taking them in to work the next day, but according to the original recipe these will keep at room temperature in an airtight container for several days.  They won’t last that long though, so you don’t need to worry about it!

Pumpkin Caramel Apple Magic Bars | Shake Bake and Party

These bars are fantastic.  The apple beer brings a wonderful flavor to the sweetened condensed milk, and the pumpkin and caramel apple – each a great fall flavor in its own right – combine to make on hell of a sweet treat.  The recipe can also be made without the beer for those not old enough to imbibe and it would still taste fantastic!  This is definitely something to make to feed a crowd.  If I hadn’t taken this in to work to share I’d probably still be in a sugar coma on my couch.  It would have been worth it though… : )

The Obsession Continues – Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies

Hey all!  I’m back, and I brought more cake mix cookies!!  If you happened to miss my last post about these UH-MAYYY-ZING Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies that I made using cake mix, you should definitely go check it out!  Go ahead, I’ll wait… : )

…So you can see why I am totally digging cake mix cookies, right?  They are so easy to make, and every time I have made them the cookies are perfectly soft, chewy and full of flavor!  They have yet to disappoint, unlike some other recipes I have tried lately.

Even though it’s supposed to be almost 90 degrees again tomorrow here in NJ, I am in full on fall recipe mode.  I spent last weekend baking pumpkin and apple cake mix cookies (as well as a sweet treat for this month’s Spiked Recipe Challenge – Seasonal Beers) and I spend a ridiculous amount of time pinning pumpkin related everything to my Fall Pinterest board.  I can’t wait for crisp weather, crunchy leaves and cozy fires in the fireplace.

Fall leaves in Vancouver
Fall leaves in Vancouver (Photo credit: VancityAllie)

To help usher in my favorite season, I would like to introduce you to my Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies!  As I mentioned, these are cake mix cookies and I used another one of the new seasonal Pillsbury cake mixes I found at the grocery store a few weeks ago.

Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies

Let me tell you, this cake mix smells heavenly.  I mean, it’s got caramel in it – how could it not?  I used white chocolate chips in this recipe, but regular chocolate chips would be also be a delicious add-in.  I’ve ogled those chocolate dipped caramel apples on numerous occasions, haven’t you?

Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies

Same simple concept as the Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies.  Cake mix, pudding mix, oil, eggs = YUMMY COOKIES!

Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies (Once again inspired by and adapted from Kitchen Meets Girl’s Funfetti Cheesecake Cookies)

Ingredients

1 box Pillsbury Caramel Apple cake mix
1 small box instant cheesecake pudding mix
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs
3/4 cup white chocolate chips, divided

Directions

1.  Preheat oven to 350.  Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
2.  Combine cake mix, pudding mix, oil and eggs in a medium bowl until a dough forms.  Mix in 1/2 cup of the white chocolate chips.
3.  Form dough into balls and place 2 inches apart on cookie sheets.  Use the remaining white chocolate chips to press into the top of each cookie.
4.  Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, or until cookies begin to brown slightly.  Remove from oven, cool for 2 minutes and then move to a wire rack.

Makes about 24 cookies.

Caramel Apple Cheesecake Cookies

I ate quite a few of these and then had to take the rest to work before I ate them ALL.  Looking at these pictures now though, I wish I hadn’t.  I’m hungry and I could really go for a cookie…

I Did A Bad, Bad Thing – Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies

I recently discovered cake mix cookies.  I think I am obsessed.

I am in big trouble people.  Four, maybe five ingredients, mix it up in a bowl with just a spoon, bake and you have the most delicious, soft and chewy cookies in endless flavor combinations?  Like I said, BIG trouble, and it’s all because of Pinterest, Ashley at Kitchen Meets Girl and this recipe for Funfetti Cheesecake Cookies.

I pinned this recipe a while back and then a few weeks ago I decided to try it out and made a batch.  The next day I made two more batches to take into work.  These cookies are addictive, and while I sat stuffing them into my face my mind was going wild with all the possibilities.  Take any cake mix, and box of pudding, vegetable oil, 2 eggs and  some kind of chocolate chip type add-in and you have the easiest, yummiest cookies ever!

I knew I wanted to use the Pillsbury Perfectly Pumpkin cake mix I picked up at the grocery store.  I also had a bag of Heath Toffee Bits, and after my first taste of the aforementioned Funfetti Cheesecake Cookies I bought out Acme’s supply of JELL-O cheesecake pudding mix so I had tons of that.

Pumpkin Cake Mix Cookies

Pumpkin.  Toffee.  Cheesecake.  Do I really need to say anything else?

Okay, I will!

These cookies are THE BEST!!!!!  The pumpkin cake mix and cheesecake pudding go perfectly together, and combined with the bits of chewy toffee… well, it’s about as awesome as a bin full of puppies.

English: Puppies in a bin.
English: Puppies in a bin. (Photo credit: Wikipedia)

If you haven’t tried them yet, you MUST make a batch of cake mix cookies.  They come together so fast and disappear even faster!  You just mix up a few ingredients in a bowl, roll the dough into balls, and bake!

cake mix cookies

After 8-10 minutes you have this:

Pumpkin Cake Mix Cookie

And then once they’ve cooled you will eat them all a few and be transported to cookie heaven.  From zero to two batches of insanely good cookies in less than an hour?  Hell yeah.

Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies

Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies
(adapted from Funfetti Cheesecake Cookies by Kitchen Meets Girl)

Ingredients

1 box Pillsbury Perfectly Pumpkin cake mix
1 small box instant cheesecake pudding mix
1/2 cup vegetable oil
2 eggs
1 cup Hershey’s Heath Toffee Bits, divided

Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies

Directions

1.  Preheat oven to 350.  Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
2.  Combine cake mix, pudding mix, oil and eggs in a medium bowl until a dough forms.  Mix in 3/4 cup of the Heath Toffee Bits.
3.  I just grabbed blobs of dough and rolled them into balls, but you can use a cookie scoop if you prefer.  Place 2 inches apart on cookie sheets.  Use the remaining Toffee Bits to press some into the top of each cookie.
4.  Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, or until cookies begin to brown slightly.  Remove from oven, cool for 2 minutes and then move to a wire rack.

Makes about 24 cookies.

Pumpkin Toffee Cheesecake Cookies

The only thing I don’t like about these cake mix cookie recipes is that you can only squeeze 24 cookies out of a batch, but they are so easy to make that doubling up on the recipe is no problem at all!

I’ll be back soon with another cake mix cookie recipe.  Did I mention I was obsessed?

The Best Thing Since Sliced Banana Bread

I love banana bread, unless it has nuts in it.  I do not agree with the concept of putting hard bits of walnuts, pecans, etc. into soft baked goods.  That is a major food texture faux pas in my book.  There is nothing worse than slicing into a loaf of banana bread and finding it filled with squirrel food, or biting into a piece of delectable looking carrot cake only to have your teeth come crunching down on a stinking walnut.  It’s just wrong.

I am, however, not averse to adding other things to a nice banana loaf – chocolate chips, blueberries, and most recently coconut.  Last week I had some bananas about to go bad and a half used can of coconut milk lurking around in my refrigerator so I turned to Pinterest (my favorite recipe finder these days) in search of a recipe for coconut banana bread.  After looking through a few, I found a recipe that seemed pretty simple and didn’t require a trip to the grocery store for ingredients.  I whipped it up and in about two hours was enjoying the tropical fruits of my labor.

The bread was really good and I found myself thinking, as I often do, How can I add some booze to this?  I decided that the next time I made the bread, I would top it off with a glaze made from my new favorite – Malibu Sundae. Banana, coconut, chocolate, yes!  Since I can be a tad impatient, I made another loaf today.

Coconut Banana Bread with Malibu Sundae Rum Glaze

I’m trying not to eat it all before tomorrow.  The bread on its own is delicious (check out the recipe over at Fat Girl Trapped in a  Skinny Body) , but not overly sweet.  The addition of the rum glaze adds a perfect kick of boozy sweetness and it couldn’t be simpler to make!

Malibu Sundae Rum Glaze

1 cup confectioners sugar
2 tablespoons Malibu Sundae

Mix the confectioners sugar and rum in a bowl until smooth, then pour over whatever it is you want to glaze!  Let sit until the glaze has hardened, then have a slice…or two, but not three.  Definitely not three.  Cause that would just be too much.  Right?

Coconut Banana Bread with Malibu Sundae Glaze

 

 

The Seaweed Is Always Greener In Somebody Else’s Lake

I think The Little Mermaid is probably my favorite Disney movie – mostly because of the music.  That movie has an awesome soundtrack.

I was ten when it came out.  I had the cassette tape (might there be people reading this who don’t know what cassettes are – am I that old?!) and I spent hours belting out Part Of Your World along with Ariel.  I also spent hours perfecting my routine to go along with Debbie Gibson‘s Electric Youth on my swing set, but that is a story for another time.  This post is about The Little Mermaid!

Well, it’s actually about  the cupcakes I made for an adorable little girl who is having a Little Mermaid themed birthday party!  I wish that I were talented enough to make fancy Ariel and Sebastian figurines out of fondant to use as cupcake toppers but I’m not so I bought Little Mermaid cupcake liners and made little sea creatures out of melting chocolates.

cupcakes for Little Mermaid party

cupcakes for Little Mermaid party

cupcakes for Little Mermaid themed party

Little Mermaid Themed Cupcakes