Amorphic Sugar Centerpiece with Flowers
- 5 cups or 1 kilo sugar
- 1 1/4 cup or 400 grams corn syrup
- 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons or 250 grams water
- Food color paste and assorted colors (chef used blue)
- 5 pounds of sugar
- 5 cups or 1 kilo sugar
- 1 1/4 cup or 400 grams corn syrup
- 1 cup plus 2 tablespoons or 250 grams water
- Food color paste and assorted colors (chef used green and red)
- This is an easy centerpiece you can make with sugar.
- It is always best to have a bowl of cold water available in which you can immerse your hands should you get any sugar on you.
- This will stop the sugar from burning.
- As always, it is a good idea to take a class from a professional on working with sugar.
- This is a skill that professional pastry chefs develop after years of experience.
- Working with sugar will burn your fingers so know before you start that your fingers will develop burn blisters.
- For the cooked sugar: Place the sugar, corn syrup and water in a saucepan over high heat.
- Insert a candy thermometer and cook until the sugar reaches 320 degrees F. Use a clean pastry brush to keep the inside of the saucepan clean as the sugar cooks or the sugar may recrystallize.
- To do this, dip a clean brush in cold water and brush the inside of the pan clean.
- Open the 5 pound bag of sugar and pour most of it into a deep flat casserole dish.
- Pour the cooked sugar onto the granulated sugar.
- Leave some gaps.
- Sprinkle more granulated sugar on top of the cooked sugar.
- Use a wooden skewer to mix in some color paste.
- Do not try to make the color uniform.
- The end result will be more interesting if the color is not uniform.
- Sprinkle more sugar on top.
- It is a good idea to wear gloves to protect your fingers from the heat of the cooked sugar.
- Use your fingers to move the granulated sugar around the cooked sugar.
- As it cools, the cooked sugar will harden.
- Keep an eye on it so it does not become too hard.
- You want to be able to mold it into the shape you want while it is still pliable.
- This takes some time.
- I made a free form shape that had a 90 degree angle.
- For the sugar flowers: Place the sugar, corn syrup and water in a saucepan over high heat.
- Insert a candy thermometer and cook until the sugar reaches 320 degrees F. Use a pastry brush to keep the inside of the saucepan clean as the sugar cooks or the sugar may recrystallize.
- To do this, dip a clean brush in cold water and brush the inside of the pan clean.
- Divide the cooked sugar between 2 heatproof large measuring cups.
- If you want to color the sugar with food colors, this is the time to do so.
- Add a few drops of red color to one container and green color to the other.
- Mix each with a wooden skewer.
- Use an offset spatula dipped in the red sugar to spread some sugar onto a silpat baking mat.
- Make 3- inch long smudges that taper off at one end, these will be the petals.
- You will need 5 petals to make 1 flower, so if you want more than one flower you will need to make the appropriate number of petals.
- Repeat the process with the green sugar.
- This time, use the offset spatula to fan the edges of the petals to resemble the texture of leaves.
- Have a flexible silicone muffin mold (or a metal muffin tin lined with parchment paper) on the work surface.
- When the sugar petals have cooled but are still pliable, set the petals inside the cavity of the mold.
- Dip each petal end into a little of the cooked sugar so you can "glue" the petals together.
- The depth of the mold cavity will help give the flower a three-dimensional look.
- Repeat this process with other flower petals to make more flowers.
- When you have the centerpiece base formed into the shape you would like, allow it to cool completely.
- Use more cooked sugar (which can be reheated in the microwave if necessary) to "glue" the sugar flowers onto the base.
- Add the leaves.
sugar, corn syrup, water, color, sugar, sugar, corn syrup, water, color
Taken from www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/amorphic-sugar-centerpiece-with-flowers-recipe.html (may not work)