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Yum to the Oh!

November 24, 2008 by Sharon Zambito 14 Comments

That is hip talk for Yummo. I know, lame attempt. I may not be hip but I can sure make a mean cake ball.

 

Hail the cake ball in all its glory.

 

Cakes balls (also known as cake bites for the more demure) have been popular on the cake message boards for as long as I can remember. It’s a great way to use up the scraps you save in your freezer when you level and carve your cakes. What? You don’t freeze your scraps? Well, you must start to do so now so you can partake of this delightfully delicious delicacy.

 

 

I usually have a boat load of scraps in my freezer at any give time. Since we travel the globe on holidays (OK, we house hop, but traveling the globe sounds more glamorous), it is the perfect time to get those scraps out and do some rolling!

 

My son J said he would make them with me, but I got ditched for a playdate with a friend. So I was thrown into cake ball world all alone. No worries… I put a little music on, got a big fizzy Diet Coke from the gas station (fountain only of course!), and I went to town.

 

 

You will find many variations of how people make the balls. Some add icing or filling or liquid flavored coffee creamers to the scraps and then mash them all up. I find that makes a mushy ball with my cake recipe, and I don’t care for that. I find the cake to be moist enough that if I just squoosh and moosh the scraps together very well, they bind together perfectly and are wonderfully moist as is.

 

I roll the balls and dip them right away into melted chocolate. Some folks freeze/chill the balls before dipping, but when I do that the chocolate cracks from the cold. I just dip them right away and they hold their shape beautifully .

 

I use candy melts (also known as candy coating) rather than “normal” chocolate. Candy melts do not have to be tempered. Regular chocolate must be tempered or it will bloom (get terrible white spots all over it). Melts are not as high of a grade of chocolate, but they taste fine to me, plus you won’t see any tempering going on around these parts. ( Too lazy, um I mean overbooked). If the chocolate is a little old (or cheap), it might not melt to a very smooth liquid state. In that case, I add some melted paramount crystals to get it flowing nicely again. It also gives the shells a nice soft bite in the mouth and they do not crumble all in your hands.
So now I have about a bajillion cake balls in Tupperware ready to travel the globe with us on Thursday. Hope you guys try it out if you have not already.

 

YUM. OH.

Happy Thanksgiving Everyone!
Sharon
http://www.sugaredproductions.com/

 

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Filed Under: Baking, Candy, Holidays, Recipes, Thanksgiving and Fall, Tutorials

Comments

  1. SugarEd Productions says

    November 25, 2008 at 4:37 am

    BWAHAHAHAHAAH ADELE! You know I thought about teasing Suze in the blog? LOL

    Reply
  2. Custom Cakes by Brenda says

    November 25, 2008 at 10:55 am

    So, you don’t mix your cake scraps with anything? I’ve tried cake balls before and they were just too mushy for me:)Maybe I’ll give it another go.

    Reply
  3. Mata Family says

    November 25, 2008 at 12:16 pm

    Man…you even make cake scraps look perfect! I’ve always added a little icing- maybe I’ll try without now and see how I like that!

    Reply
  4. Fuji Mama says

    November 25, 2008 at 3:33 pm

    I’m impressed by your dipping–why can’t I get mine to come out looking like that? YUM!

    Reply
  5. Kim Bell says

    November 25, 2008 at 4:41 pm

    They look so wonderful Sharon!!! It is dipping time again, isn’t it! May they travel well on your Thanksgiving trek!

    Reply
  6. Warnell says

    November 25, 2008 at 4:44 pm

    Followed your link from foodgawker–love the easier looking cake balls, but what struck me most was that I also only drink fountain diet cokes AND drink way too much of those–mine can only come from the Wendy’s in my town–theirs is the best!!

    Reply
  7. Dawn says

    November 25, 2008 at 7:40 pm

    Oh yeah, I’m listening and loving this!
    Have you tried it with melted chocolate chips? Does it do ok?

    Reply
  8. Hillary says

    November 25, 2008 at 8:08 pm

    Great idea – sounds delicious and they look cute too!

    Reply
  9. javapot says

    November 26, 2008 at 1:26 am

    These look perfect! I agree that your chocolate dipping skill is very good.

    Reply
  10. Ingrid says

    November 26, 2008 at 5:41 pm

    Your cake balls came out perfect!!! Thanks for the tips. I’m gonna five a few of them a try!

    Happy Thanksgiving!
    ~ingrid

    Reply
  11. Jacque says

    November 30, 2008 at 5:06 am

    Hmmmm, you might be onto something. The few times I’ve tried making them icing mixed in, I just thought they were gross. Too slimy.

    I might give them another try, without any liquid or icing.

    Yours are mighty cute, you globe trotting babe!

    Reply
  12. Jenks says

    April 6, 2009 at 1:36 am

    Saw a pic on CC and had to come and read your blog. Now you’ve taken away my excuse to eat the scraps…I thank you and my waistline thanks you. I think I’ll start saving up and maybe this will be what shows up at the next office party.

    (aka Mommy_Cakes on CC)

    Reply
  13. Laura Lou says

    August 11, 2009 at 10:53 pm

    I love your cake balls! I have covered them with chocolate ganache. We call them ganache bites when we want to sound fancy, CAKE BALLS when we're just needing some chocolate! Thanks Sharon!

    Reply
  14. Suze says

    November 11, 2011 at 11:43 pm

    Lmao it wouldn't be a true dipping blog post without including me…and just for that I am going to try pulling a Julie and Julia move on you and duplicate all things dipped that you blog about this season…hehehe

    Reply

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Sharon Zambito

Sharon Zambito

An RN turned SAHM turned cake maniac. Owner of SugarEd Productions Online School. Join me for some caking, baking, and all around sweet fun :)

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