Sugar Delites sent out their August Newsletter with an awesome tutorial by Tami Utley! I posted below for your caking pleasure...you're welcome!
Gelatin Slipper
By Tami Utley
www.sugarartbytami.com
By Tami Utley
www.sugarartbytami.com
I use Knox gelatin. If you use a higher grade of gelatin you might need to adjust the amount of water, but don’t fret, this is not a fussy recipe so different proportions of water to gelatin will still get the desired effect.
I use a 2:1 ratio of water to gelatin. Put 2 T water into a microwave safe glass bowl and sprinkle 1 T gelatin into it. *Tip – if your gelatin is too yellow, add just a tiny touch of violet food paste color/gel to whiten it, however, you will find that the yellow won’t be noticeable anyway.
Let this sponge for 5 minutes.
Pop it into the microwave for about 10 seconds to melt the gelatin (some microwaves require less/more time due to power differences). Stir and remove any un-dissolved gelatin. Let cool a little, remove any foam and then heat again if needed in 5 second bursts to dissolve the gelatin completely. Let sit again for the bubble/foam to rise if necessary. You want the gelatin very fluid and runny so don’t wait too long.
While the gelatin is still warm , pour into the chocolate mold and coat the inside completely. At any time, you can re-heat the gelatin to liquefy it with a 5 second burst in the microwave.
Use a soft brush to paint up over all the edges of the mold and make sure the entire inside is coated. This is because the gelatin will shrink as it dries and will pull away from the mold possibly causing a wrinkle in your desired shape. Any bubbles in the mold can be brushed away quickly.
Pour the excess gelatin out and brush the excess off.
Let the gelatin in the mold sit for 2 minutes or so (depending on your weather and humidity) to firm up. Once you can touch the gelatin in the mold and it won’t stick, re-heat the gelatin in the bowl (about 5 seconds in the microwave) and re-coat the mold a second time. You will need to work a little faster, as the gelatin gets cool as it dries and will firm up faster on the second coat.
Pour off the excess and brush any areas needing touch up. Don’t continue to keep brushing the inside too long, as the gelatin will get sticky and rubbery. Turn the mold over to let the excess drip off. Let dry overnight or, use a fan on low, blowing over the mold to speed up drying time to a few hours.
If your gelatin starts to get ‘gummy’, ‘rubbery’ or sticky as you brush, it’s getting too cold and will ruin your piece. You can heat this up with a hair dryer to warm up the gelatin again. Or wait, re-heat the gelatin in the bowl and re-coat the mold. Any imperfections will shrink as the slipper dries so will most likely not be noticeable.
Once dry, the gelatin will release from the mold and will just lift out. Trim both sides of the slipper with a small pair of scissors.
You can leave the slipper closed at the top, but I marked mine with a felt tip marker and cut an opening on each slipper half. Clear tape can be used to hold the slipper together temporarily to mark it evenly.
Then pull the tape off to cut the opening.
Re-heat any leftover gelatin and paint it onto one side of the slipper and attach to the other half of the slipper. Let this dry a few minutes until the two sides stay stuck together. Depending on the weather, it may take more time to set.
Use piping gel to paint over the seam of where the slipper halves where joined together.
Pour rainbow disco dust over the gel to hide the seams. Use a soft brush to brush away any excess dust.
Take a look at these beauties!!! Cinderella shoe on a pillow cake? Can you picture it??? Jen :-)
This can also be done with the larger 8 ½” mold, however, there is a bigger chance of the gelatin getting a ‘wrinkle’ since the gelatin shrinks as it dries. Depending on where the wrinkle is, it can be hidden with the disco dust. It is also harder to cover the surface of the larger mold before the gelatin starts to cool too much and ‘gums’ up, so you must work much faster.
Thank you, thank you, thank you Tami, for this FANTASTIC guest tutorial! I'm sure everyone is ooohhhhing and ahhhhing out there reading this :-)
Sugar Delites carries both the large and small shoe molds. Here's links to both:
Large shoe mold ($6.00)
Small shoe mold ($3.00)
Here's a link to the rainbow disco (LOVE this stuff!)
Very awesome! Thanks to Tami Utley and Sugar Delites for sharing this with us!!!
13 comments:
This is amazing! thank you so much for such a brilliant tutorial.
Can't wait to try it x
Amazing! I can not wait to try this. Gelatin is one of my favorite mediums
Brilliant tutorial - am just in the process of trying it out for my little girls Cinderella themed birthday :-D x
Do you know where I can by such molds in Germany? My daughter wants a Cinderella-birthdy.
love your brilliant idea. Thanks sooo much. I wanted to make a isomalt shoe but the person I contacted wouldnt share the secret. Thank you for being giving and sharing the wealth. Lol best wishes. May the good Lord continues to inspire you so you can continue with amazing ideas to share with the public. Have a blessed day.
Thank u so much for sharing
Wonderful! Could you please tell me how big is the mold? I need one the size of a cupcake topper or a little big bigger :) thanks!
I don't know what I'm doing wrong but when it dries it is too shaky and it will not stand! May be I need a thicker gelatin?
thanks for the tutorial lm making a slipper now .how much do you cut from the inside shoe and what instrument did you cut with ? from cindy
I really wished this had worked for me. The molds didn't pop out - more like peeled out like gummy limp rubber gloves. I agree with Abby. I'll try again but had to improvise for the intended project. I'd appreciate any ideas to make it work. Everything went exactly like you demonstrated until time to remove!
Please advise where to buy large shoe mould. Thank you dhitimas@yahoo.com
I did not get the same results as you did. The gelatin was too runny and did not get hard. Also, what is the ratio for large shoe mold.
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