Tuesday, March 8, 2011

Mardi Gras Cupcakes

Mardi Gras! These are Bailey Irish Cream Cupcakes with Baily Chocolate Ganache filling and Bailey buttercream! All the decorations are made of fondant, the balls on the jester's hat are metallic pearls, and the designs on the masks are painted with black food coloring. Also, I normally don't like to use non edible things for my decorations, but I couldn't resist using the feather for the first mask! I also gave the cake itself a Mardi Gras marbled look as well by coloring the batter purple and green and leaving some of the original batter color to make the 3 traditional Mardi Gras colors! Thanks Chi Hai for the suggestion! Anyways, these were definitely a challenge to make only because I had issues with the frosting, but alas, it's done! Enjoy these fun facts below about Mardi Gras!

Fun Facts:
Mardi Gras means "Fat Tuesday" and alludes to the over-indulgence of this day. The word "fat" may also be referred to the fattened ox that was paraded through town before being sacrificed at a mid-winter, pagan fertility celebration. Purple, green and gold are the traditional colors of Mardi Gras. Purple represents justice, green is faith, and gold symbolizes power! One of the most popular traditions of Mardi Gras is the King Cake, which is a coffee cake pastry with a plastic baby inside. Traditionally, whoever finds the baby in his or her piece of cake is said to have good fortune throughout the year and must provide the King Cake for next year's party.

Also, apparently the tradition of bead throwing didn't come about until the 1880s. One of the Krewes (an organization that puts on a parade or ball for the carnival season), originally dressed up as Santa Claus, and tossed out glass beads! It was a great hit and by the 1900s, beaded necklaces became the throw of Mardi Gras. Then around the 1970s, the glass beads got replaced with cheap plastic and aluminum beads, and earned the thrower a flash of flesh. The obsession with the flesh links back to the original celebration by the Romans. The Romans celebrated the Lupercalia festival in honor of the fertility and agriculture gods, and had Mardi-Gras like qualities that include drinking, feasting, and "pleasures of the flesh". Eventually, this holiday because adopted as a "last fling" of indulgence before the 40-day Lenten period of Penitence.

So next time you celebrate some with traditions, be curious and ask questions as to how they come about. It'll give you another perspective to the festivities and you'll be able to enjoy it like it's the first time!
Learn something new everyday don't we? Happy Mardi Gras!

5 comments:

  1. Honey sometimes I feel you work too hard on these, but when I see the outcome, it seems you should've had to work harder to make them come out the way they do. These are so great, from the color scheme all the way down to the small detais on the mask, it all comes together perfectly. You're so talented and I'm so happy to see it show in everything that you do. Love you!

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  2. Ditto... I agree with Khoa! Except I don't normally call you Honey.

    I think this one is my favorite post because it gave me a little history lesson... You know I <3 New Orleans so of course my fav cupcakes are the Fleur de Lis!!! Next would be the cute little masks with the feathers! I was totally trying to figure out whether or not I can eat those feathers before I read your post... good thing I didn't actually have the cupcakes sitting in front of me, I might have choked! =P

    Good job, keep it up! When you come back with Europe, I expect European landmark themed cupcakes!

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  3. haha Alvina, I knew you'd appreciate that!! yay for someone actually ready my entries!! =P

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  4. Hi, your cupcakes are so pretty! how did you make the masks?

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    1. Thank you so much! I made the masks out of fondant and just shaped them myself and used small feathers for the accents, and an edible black marker to draw in the details. =)

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