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♥ Apr 5th, 2012
truebluemeandyou:

DIY Lemon Bars To Go. Bake in 1/2 pint Jars. I wish these had been posted at Christmas/holiday time because these would make wonderful hostess gifts, party favors or just wonderful gifts. At the very end she recommends doubling the filling recipe so read to the end! Tutorial and recipe from Lady Behind the Curtain here.
♥ Apr 5th, 2012
♥ Feb 13th, 2012
♥ Feb 13th, 2012
♥ Feb 9th, 2012
foodforjubilee:

How to Make Cake Pops (via Mister G and Me: Cake Pop Inspiration)
♥ Feb 8th, 2012
♥ Feb 8th, 2012
diy-htm:

How To: Bake a Brownie Inside an Eggshell!
I modeled my cupcakes in egg shells after Nicky’s egg shell cupcakes from Delicious Days.   My basic technique is similar to hers.  However, I used a different  cake recipe.  I went for a lemon and sour cream cake - light.Yield: 10 large egg cupcakes What you’ll need: 
9 large eggs (Only one will get used in the cake.  The rest are  just used for the shells.  I’m going to post a fantastic French toast  recipe soon that used up six of the eggs.)
1/2 C flour
1/4 tsp baking powder
1/8 tsp baking soda
a pinch of salt
1/2 C sugar
1/4 C unsalted butter, room temperature
1/2 tsp lemon extract
1/4 C sour cream
To prepare the eggs:
Carefully poke a small hole in the top of each egg.  I found that the easiest way to do this was to use the tip of a corkscrew bottle opener.
Once  you have poked a tiny hole, peel back the edges of the hole to expand  it a bit.  The holes need to be large enough to fit the tip of a piping  bag inside.  You can always make the hole larger when you are ready to  pipe so err on the smaller side during this step.

Turn  the egg upside-down and dump out the contents.  Keep the contents of  one egg separate to use in the cake recipe.  If you plan on using the  other eggs for baking, it might be helpful to store them in small  plastic containers in groups of two (otherwise it will be hard for you  to later tell how much of your big bowl is two eggs).  You may wonder  why there is a thermometer in the photo.  I used the tip of the  thermometer to help get all of the egg out of the shell.


Rinse the insides of the eggs out thoroughly over the sink.  Then,  immerse them in saltwater for thirty minutes.  At first, I couldn’t get  them to sink.  I realize that this is probably obvious to most of you,  but in case anyone else is science-challenged, I thought I would share Jonathan’s tip that the eggs need to be filled with the saltwater in order to sink.  
Rinse the egg shells in cold water and lay the eggs hole side down on a paper towel to dry. Prepare the cake batter (I used my favorite sour cream cupcake recipe with lemon extract instead of vanilla):
Mix the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt in a medium-sized bowl and set aside.
In a large bowl, mix one egg and sugar until light and creamy.
Add the butter and lemon extract and mix until fully integrated.
Mix in the dry ingredients until just combined.
Add the sour cream and mix until smooth.

Place the prepared egg shells into a cupcake tin.  Use aluminum foil to help them stand upright. Load the batter into a piping bag fitted with a large round tip.  Make  sure that the tip can fit all of the way inside of the egg hole.  If it  can’t, expand the hole a little bit at a time until it fits.  Fill your  eggs about 3/4 full with batter.  This is the tricky part.  If you  underfill the eggs, you won’t have a complete cake egg inside when you  crack them after baking.  If you overfill the eggs, cake will overflow  out of the egg during baking. 
 It looks ugly right after baking, but just remove  the excess cake and clean the shell with a damp towel.
 I found that it was best to let the cake overflow out of the top of the  egg and then simply pick it off (eat it) and clean the shell with a damp  towel before serving. Bake the eggs at 350 F for 23 minutes. 

Let cool, crack, and eat!
♥ Feb 8th, 2012
gastrogirl:

hot chocolate popcorn.
♥ Feb 8th, 2012
♥ Feb 8th, 2012
craftjunkie:

Pie Hearts {How to}
Found at: niftythriftythings