Cooking cakes with Pop Rocks / Space Dust
I want to build a cake with Pop Rocks / space dust. Has anyone got any ideas on how I would do this? If I add the Pop Rocks straight to my cake mixture, then I believe it'll just react. Any suggestions?
Best Answer
Never tried anything like this, but you asked for ideas...
Can you even frost the cake with them w/o them reacting? If they only react w/ water, you may be able to get them in a fat-based frosting. Especially if you use this for the middle frosting of a two-layer cake, this may work.
If you really want them in the cake itself, and they don't react with the baked cake (it has water still, I bet they do) you could make a double-layer cake, and insert them into the hidden surfaces (e.g., the bottom of the top layer and the top of the bottom layer). Just make some slits and put them in.
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Does popping candy work in cakes?
A sprinkle of popping candy incorporated into the buttercream will give your cupcakes an extra crackle and will surprise and delight your guests as their taste buds come alive!Will you explode if you eat Pop Rocks and soda?
The carbon dioxide within the Pop Rocks is released, which causes the fizzling sounds the candy is known for. While neither you nor your stomach will explode when you digest Pop Rocks and soda, the excess amount of gas in your stomach will need to be released. So be prepared to burp\u2026a lot!How do you keep Pop Rocks from popping?
I would try folding the pop rocks into butter cream frosting, or sprinkling on top. Hopefully the relatively low water content of the frosting will keep the pop rocks from dissolving before the cake is served.How do you use Pop Rocks?
When you put Pop Rocks in your mouth, your saliva dissolves the candy, allowing the pressurized carbon dioxide to escape. It's the popping of the pressurized bubbles that makes the sizzling sound and shoots pieces of candy around in your mouth.Galaxy Cake Pops | How to Make a Space Themed Cakepop SOLAR SYSTEM
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Answer 2
I was speaking to a chef at the weekend who makes chocolate with space dust in it, and this works ok because the chocolate doesn't have any water. You might be able to make chocolate chips which have space dust in them, mix these in to you mixture and hope that the cake sets before the chocolate melts and lets the space dust get into contact with the moisture in the mix.
Not sure if there is anything you can do to the chocolate which will raise the melting temperature, which would also help.
EDIT: I asked this question which might help.
Answer 3
As stated, moisture is your enemy in this endeavor. Do some tests to see what does and does not react with the pop rocks. Then if you find something that will be able insulate the pop rocks from the moisture involved in making a cake, experiment in coating the pop rocks to protect them. After this, you can go about your cake making being careful of the pop rocks.
My guess is that something fat based might coat the pop rocks without making them fizz. This might not end up in a very desirable end result though.
Answer 4
I've had success before making a rich chocolate torte, then putting the pop rocks in the base mixture. There is a light crackle lost initially but it's good enough to refrigerate and still have a decent pop that day and the next. I certainly surprised my guests with it!
Answer 5
Pop rocks is a candy made with carbonation, so that while it dissolves on your tongue, the embedded bubbles pop.
Any exposure to water will make the pop rocks into just an expensive brand of sugar. Same goes for thorough mixing, which would break down the candy and release the bubbles.
I would try folding the pop rocks into butter cream frosting, or sprinkling on top. Hopefully the relatively low water content of the frosting will keep the pop rocks from dissolving before the cake is served. Time is your enemy here, since it can absorb water from the atmosphere.
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