The Unicorn Cookie Cups Baking Kit by The Cookie Cups, which comes in a pretty pink box with pink cooking equipment and packaging inside, is the fun at-home baking experience for children three and up to do with a parent or older sibling. The 17-piece kit makes .24 mini size cookie cups and contains the following: 1 apron, 1 measuring cup, 1 silicone baking pan, 1 mini scoop, 24 mini cupcake liners, 1 unicorn horn mold, 1 unicorn plate, 1 whisk, flour, sugar, sweet Belgian chocolate chunks, white chocolate, pink sprinkle mix, pink powder, marshmallows, and vanilla frosting.
One of several kits from the designed to inspire young children there’s also kits for making pizza, pretzel making kit, and their Rainbow Ravioli Making Kit. The latter is an 18-piece set containing the following:
The Cookie Cups, a bakery that sells gourmet cookies in the shape of mini cupcake(s), was created and is owned by self-described serial-entrepreneur Nicole Pomije. The kits are, in ways, a magical way to learn to cook and have funny farm. After all, who doesn’t love unicorns and rainbow ravioli?
This
Sunday, July 14th, the Avenue Family Network Auxiliary’s Annual Ice
Cream Social will be serving homemade cakes and pies accompanied by scoops of
ice cream on the verandah of the Whitcomb Senior Living Community from 10:30 to
4:30 p.m. Timed to coincide with the
Krasl Art Fair, this is the auxiliary’s 51st ice cream social, their
first being held Sunday, July 7, 1968.
The history of the
auxiliary stretches back even further to its founding 103 years ago to support
what is now known as The Family Avenue Network, Incorporated, formerly Child
& Family Services of Southwest Michigan. The name change of this 127-year-old
organization, long serving the community, is part of a new added focus, the
addition of a sexual assault survivor service named after Cora Lamping, who replaced
founder Dr. Amos Barlow after his retirement in 1906. Mrs. Lamping, as she was
known, believed that even short-term institutionalization could be harmful for
young children awaiting adoption and instead instituted a successful foster
care system where orphans were boarded with families and received social worker
visits to help with the transition.
Members of the auxiliary work hard to
support the more than 1200 individuals and families in Berrien, Cass and Van
Buren counties served by the following agencies: The
Cora Lamping Center for Survivors of Domestic & Sexual Violence, Harbor
House and Autumn House Adult Day Services, Shoremark Homecare Adult In-Home
Services and West Michigan Guardianship.
The ice cream social is their
major fundraising event and all the money raised goes to helping the above
organizations.
Who doesn’t love homemade pie and cake? Particularly when it’s for a good cause (remember calories don’t count in that case). And the desserts the auxiliary members whip up are often made from tried and true recipes, some handed down for generations. Here are several favorites including Jean Hadaway’s Cream Coconut Cake and a blueberry pie recipe from Cheryl Williams’s well-used The Pillsbury Family Cook Book.
“My great aunt gave me the cookbook in 1972 when I was engaged,” says Williams. “I’ve made this blueberry pie plenty of times and it’s always a hit with a scoop of ice cream.”
The second recipe is an easy one
that Russell’s nine-year-old granddaughter Molly Foster created.
“She really likes using the cookie dough for the base,” says Williams. “My Grands love to cook and bake so I try to make things I can teach them or have them help with. Four-year-old Emma Foster joined in, adding the mini chocolate chips and frosting the cake and sprinkling the white chocolate on it.”
Italian Cream Cake
½ cup
margarine
½ cup
shortening
2 cups sugar
5 egg
yolks
2 cups
flour
A cup
buttermilk
1 teaspoon soda
1
teaspoon vanilla
½ cups
nuts, chopped
3 ½
ounces coconut
5 egg
whites, stiffly beaten
Icing:
8 ounces
cream cheese
1-pound
confectioner’s sugar
` ½ cup
margarine
1 teaspoon
vanilla
Cream
margarine, shortening and sugar. Add egg yolks, one a time and beat after each
addition.
Add
flour, buttermilk, soda, vanilla, nuts and coconut. Fold in beaten egg whites.
Pour into 3 (nine inch) cake pans. Bake at 350° for 25 to 30 minutes.
Cool.
Make icing by blending above ingredients together and beating until smooth.
Spread between layers and on top and sides of cake.
Molly’s Chocolate
Overload Cake
Preheat
oven to 350°
F.
Use one package
of refrigerated chocolate cookie dough, softened.
Press evenly
into a greased 9×12 pan and bake 10 minutes. Remove from oven.
Mix a vanilla
cake mix according to directions, except use softened butter instead of oil and
add an extra egg. Gently fold a bag of mini chocolate chips into batter and
immediately pour into pan on top of cookie dough.
Bake
approximately 40 minutes or until toothpick poked in center comes out clean.
When done, remove from oven and cool.
Frost
with chocolate frosting and to with shaved white coconut or mini M & Ms.
Blueberry Pie
1 recipe for double-crust pie
1 cup sugar
3 tablespoons cornstarch
2 tablespoons flour
¼ teaspoon nutmeg
¼ teaspoon salt
4 cups fresh or frozen blueberries
1 tablespoon lemon juice
1 tablespoon butter
Preheat oven to 425° F.
Combine sugar, cornstarch, flour, nutmeg and salt in mixing
bowl. Add blueberries and lemon juice. Pour into 9-inch pastry-lined pan and
dot with butter. Roll out remaining dough. Cut slits in top crust for escape of
steam. Place crust over filling.
Fold edge under bottom crust; press to set. Flute. Bake at
425°
for 10 minutes, then at 375°
Ifyougo:
When: Sunday, July 14 from 10:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Where: The Verandah at the Whitcomb, 509 Ship Street, St. Joseph
FYI: For more information about the Family Avenue Network, visit
theavenue.ngo
On Saturday, July 20th from 11 a.m.
to 7 p.m., Round Barn Estate is hosting The Round Barn Artisan Market featuring
wine, food, shopping and live music by Steely James and Red Deluxe Brand. Admission is $5 per person. For more
information, visit roundbarn.com/events/
Jane Ammeson
can be contacted via email at janeammeson@gmail.com or by writing
to Focus, The Herald Palladium, P.O. Box 128, St. Joseph, MI 49085.