Redbud Marshmallows, dipped in Citrus Chocolate

Redbud marshmallows on their own have a very sweet, floral flavor. They’re a little overwhelming for me straight up, but when paired with a citrus & white chocolate topping, the floral and tang balance beautifully.

1 c. water, divided
3 packages unflavored gelatin
1 1/2 c. granulated sugar
1 c. redbud syrup
pink food coloring, if using
powdered (confectioner’s) sugar

butter (for greasing the pan)

For dipping:
10 oz. white chocolate chips
1 t. citric acid

sprinkles for decoration, optional

1. Add 1/2 c. water and gelatin to the bowl of stand mixer (whisk attachment). Stir briefly to combine.

(NOTE: If you don’t have a stand mixer, you can make marshmallows in a large bowl with a hand mixer — you just have to be willing to hold and beat it for 12 minutes. Prep the pan and spatula for the marshmallows ahead of time. Or you can even do them entirely by hand, as was traditional, if you have a strong arm!)

2. In a small saucepan (a bigger one will be heavy and hard to hold steadily at a later stage) combine water, granulated sugar, redbud syrup, and salt. Cover and cook over medium high heat for 4 minutes. Uncover and cook until the mixture reaches soft ball stage (240 degrees if you have a candy thermometer), approximately 8 minutes. Once the mixture reaches this temperature, immediately remove from heat; if it continues, it will swiftly turn into hard candy.

3. Turn mixer on low speed and, while running, slowly pour the sugar syrup down the side of the bowl into the gelatin mixture. (Be very careful with the sugar syrup, as it is scaldingly hot and will burn you badly if it gets on your skin.) Once you’ve added all of the syrup, increase the speed to high.

4. Continue to whip until the mixture becomes very thick and is lukewarm, approximately 12 minutes. The pink will turn white — add food coloring, if desired.

5. While it’s whipping, butter a large 9 x 12 pan and dust with powdered sugar. Prepare an oiled spatula.

6. Pour the mixture into the prepared pan, spreading it evenly (and swiftly) with an oiled spatula.

7. Dust the top with enough of the remaining powdered sugar to lightly cover. Reserve the rest for later. Allow the marshmallows to sit uncovered for at least 4 hours and up to overnight.

8. Turn onto a board, cut into squares and dust all sides of each marshmallow with the remaining powdered sugar, using additional if necessary. May be stored in an airtight container for up to 3 weeks, or frozen.

9. If dipping, melt white chocolate in microwave at half power for a few minutes, or over double-boiler, then stir in citric acid. (Alternately, you can use lemon extract + lemon oil for a similar effect.) Dip marshmallows and let dry on a sheet of parchment paper. Sprinkle edible decorations over top while chocolate is still wet.

NOTE: You *could* sprinkle edible redbud blossoms over the top, which would look very pretty, but I think the texture would be a little odd with the marshmallows, personally.

Redbud Syrup: https://serendibkitchen.com/2021/04/15/redbud-syrup/

Boxing

Kavi tells me that “boxing” videos are a thing on TikTok. I’m not deft enough to pack and record myself packing on video at the same time, but the spring Patreon Earth tier boxes are going out today, so here’s a set of photos — sort of like a time-lapse video? 🙂 (There’s some variation in the boxes, depending on what I have on hand, but this is basically what’s going in this tier.)

– tissue paper

– caramel chocolate, coconut rock, dragonfruit chocolate (with white pepper and citrus), ruby chocolate, passionfruit marshmallow

– unicorn hibiscus chocolate (with Celtic sea salt and pounded hibiscus)

– hibiscus & vanilla flower cookie

– coconut-cashew milk toffee crumble (nice on ice cream, yogurt, stirred into granola or cereal, or just eaten straight out of the bag)

– more coconut rock (this one is variable, filing up with extra sweets)

– pandan crinkle cookie (ditto variable)

– snowdrop soap (unscented)

– dried flower & resin bookmark

– photo mini bookmarks

– confetti! 🙂

Pandan Crinkle Cookies

Fun for Easter and spring! I don’t have a recipe for you yet, because I used pandan powder, but it didn’t give much green color (or flavor), so I ended up supplementing with food coloring. I want to try again with pandan extract, see if I get a better result so I can skip the food coloring.

But these are certainly cute nonetheless, and tasty, and Kavi was very impressed — we haven’t made crinkle cookies before, and it’s a dramatic moment when you open the oven door to see the crinkling. 🙂

Taste = Paramount

So, I don’t think I’ll be working with edible paper again anytime soon — it makes a dramatic effect, but it just bugs me that the paper doesn’t taste of anything. Taste = paramount!

Also, to make these look finished, you really should pipe icing around the edge, and I have slightly shaky hands, so my icing skills are never going to be professional level. Hopefully my Patreon peeps won’t mind if these are slightly wonky. 🙂

Edible flower paper circles found on Etsy.

(For the Earth tiers, you’ll be getting either a Holi cookie or a spring flower cookie — they’re both hibiscus & vanilla cookies with royal icing, so same flavors, just very different appearance!)

Throwing Colors

I originally meant these hibiscus & vanilla sugar cookies to be Holi cookies — hence the “throwing colors” decorating approach (nice to do with kids, as a little mess is just fine), so would’ve done a set of spring colors, including yellow and green too…

…but then I had this unicorn theme going for the Patreon boxes, and unicorn colors really are more pink-blue-purple, according to all the unicorn paraphernalia my daughter had, so I decided to stick with those…

…and not entirely coincidentally, pink and blue are also the trans colors, so isn’t it nice that these were finished just in time for trans day of visibility?

Happy day, my trans friends. You are all magical, in my book — not because you’re trans, but because you are living your truth, in a world that is not always accepting of those who differ from convention.

I wish you a long and happy life filled with lots of love, acceptance, and cookies.

*****

(Recipe: Stir in a teaspoon or two of hibiscus powder into your favorite sugar cookie dough — I like Sweetopia’s –– adding a nice little tang and pale purple color . Decorate with royal icing — I use Alton Brown’s recipe — divided and colored. I slathered on base colors with a spatula, then thinned the icing a little with hot water and flicked more color on with the same spatulas.)

Unicorn Chocolates

The Unicorn Garden treat boxes NEEDED unicorn chocolates. These particular unicorns have travelled a long way, from Sri Lanka to Ireland and finally to America. White chocolate colored with tropical hibiscus powder, then pounded hibiscus mixed in for a little extra tang, balanced with Celtic grey sea salt.

Surprising, fun flavor, I think. 🙂 White chocolate is a little dull on its own, but it picks up color so well, and then you can do interesting things with inclusions.

They were a little dull on initial unmolding, but first I gilded the horns, good, and then I dusted on edible gold for the whole top, and that made the detail of their funny faces really visible. Cuteness.