Birthday bug cake

Kids' party recipe for 16 people, takes only 20 mins; recipe has cake, white chocolate, vanilla, chocolate button, chocolate button, chocolate, hundreds and thousands, candle, icing and candle.

Birthday bug cake

Birthday bug cake

Recipe by Chef Soomro Course: Kids party
Servings

16

servings
Prep time

50 mins

Ingredients

  • Chocolate: 2 chocolate sticks (I used Matchmakers)
  • White Chocolate: 100g white chocolate (I used Milkybar)
  • Hundreds And Thousands: hundreds and thousands
  • Vanilla: Basic vanilla buttercream mix (see Easy vanilla cake recipe below)
  • Chocolate Button: 12 giant chocolate buttons, 6 cut in half
  • Icing: red (or whatever colour you like) writing icing tubes (I used Asda)
  • Cake: Easy vanilla cake and syrup mix (see recipe below)
  • Candle: multicoloured candles

Directions

  1. Bake the Easy vanilla cake in a greased, lined deep 20cm cake tin as in the basic recipe; drench with syrup and leave to cool. Leave the oven on.
  2. Break the white chocolate into cubes into a microwaveable bowl, and heat on High for 1 min (or melt over a pan of simmering water). Stir, then leave any remaining lumps to melt in the warm liquid chocolate. Once just-warm, beat the chocolate into the buttercream.
  3. Start the butterflies. Put the whole giant buttons on a flat baking tray on non-stick baking paper, then put into the oven for 20-30 secs or until the chocolate looks shiny. Take out, scatter with hundreds and thousands, then leave to set completely before cutting in half with a large non-serrated knife. For the ladybirds, pipe dots of icing all over the already cut giant button halves, then leave aside to dry.
  4. Spread the buttercream over the cake, then start to arrange the butterflies. Cut each Matchmaker into 3 - these will make the bodies. Press onto the cake, then stick four giant button halves around each body to make 'wings'. For the ladybirds, place two spotty button halves together, then use a small button for the head. Scatter more hundreds and thousands all over the cake, then poke in the candles.