Teddy Bear Cake Pops
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My son just turned two, and we had a teddy bear picnic themed party to celebrate! I wanted to make some extra special treats for the kids, and thought teddy bear cake pops would be perfect! I don’t have much experience with cake pops, so I stuck to the basics. I used store bought cake mix and frosting because I was short on time, and didn’t know how difficult this project would be. It turns out that cake pops are pretty easy and fun to make, so next time I won’t hesitate to branch out with different flavors and frostings.
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Here is what the cake pop mixture looked like. I baked one box of cake mix in a 9×13 pan and then crumbled it up and added about 3/4 of a container of store bought chocolate frosting.
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Next I rolled the mixture into balls. These are about 1″ in diameter. I set them on a parchment lined pan to prevent sticking.
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I used 4-1/2″ lollipop sticks for these cake pops. To get the cake balls to stay put on the lollipop sticks, I dipped the end of each stick into the melted chocolate about 1/2″ deep. Then I immediately stuck the lollipop stick into the cake ball and placed it on the styrofoam block to dry.
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I used two 12 ounce bags of Wilton light cocoa candy melts to cover 48 cake pops. The Wilton melts worked wonderfully because they were the perfect consistency. With other brands, I usually have to add shortnening or paramount crystals to thin the coating; but with the Wilton melts I didn’t! Pouring the chocolate into a tall narrow glass like this pint glass is helpful because it allows you to get the most dips out of your chocolate.
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My technique for dipping each pop is to fully submerge the pop in chocolate and then pull it directly back out without swirling the pop around in the chocolate. I found that if I moved the cake pop around in the chocolate, there was a much higher chance that it would fall off of the stick. When I dipped the pop straight in and back out, I had almost no problem with cake pops falling off the sticks. Once I had the pop out of the chocolate, I would swirl it around right near the surface of the chocolate (as shown in the above picture) to get excess chocolate off.
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The cake pops dried surprisingly quickly (probably withing 10 minutes). You can see the change in sheen once the pops are dry to the touch.
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The next step is decorating the pops! This is the fun part! I used fondant for the decorations and colored three small pieces brown, black, and tan. I used AmeriColor chocolate brown, super black, and ivory gel pastes to get the shades that I wanted. For the muzzles I rolled out the tan fondant using my small fondant rolling pin with pink bands.
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I used the bottom of a standard decorating tip to cut out the circle that forms the muzzle or mouth area of the bear. The toothpick cut in half is used to make a small hole for the mouth.
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Decorating tips work great when you don’t have a small enough circle cutter for what you are doing.
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To make the teddy bear ears, I rolled a bunch of small brown balls of fondant and used a fondant sculpting tool to indent the center of each ear.
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I cut each of the indented ovals using an x-acto knife and used the top portion as an ear. Originally I cut these in half to make two ears, but I found that the ears were too small so I just cut them about 3/4 of the way to the bottom and re-rolled the excess fondant.
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The eyes and nose are just small balls of black fondant rolled into oval shapes. The eyes should be smaller than the nose and more oval in shape.
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Once you have the eyes, nose, ears, and muzzle all ready to go, things come together pretty quickly. Here is a plain cake pop with no decoration.
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Step 1 – Add the muzzle. My fondant was sticky enough that it adhered to the cake pop just by itself. If you are working with a drier texture of fondant, you could use melted chocolate or royal icing to stick the details to the pop.
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Step 2 – Add the ears. Put them on the cake pop so that you can easily see them when you take a step back.
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Step 3 – Add the nose. Again my fondant was very sticky so the nose easily stuck to the muzzle, but you could use a bit of water to get the nose to adhere.
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Step 4 – Create the mouth. I used a cut toothpick to make a tiny hole for the mouth. For the teddy bear pop that is smiling in the first picture of this blog, I just used a fondant sculpting tool with a flat edge. You could also use the tip of a ruler.
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Step 5 – Add the eyes. Here is where your teddy bear really comes to life!
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The only problem with these cake pops is that they are almost too cute to eat!
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I had a great time making these cake pops, and will definitely make more cake pops in the future, but as I learned at Hudson’s party, they do have one limitation, heat. The temperature was 82 degrees, and even in the shade it wasn’t cool enough for these poor bears!
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