Rascally Rabbits! (Cupcake Recipe and Decoration)

by codename-3c in Cooking > Cupcakes

4688 Views, 23 Favorites, 0 Comments

Rascally Rabbits! (Cupcake Recipe and Decoration)

8069034814_29284e0928.jpg
8068990337_785a7ede03.jpg
This Instructable is for my Rascally Rabbits cupcakes, an idea I came up with a while ago when helping a friend brainstorm cupcake decoration ideas and I finally got around to making them! 

For these cupcakes I used the base recipe for Strawberry Chocolaty Cupcakes from the Hamyln 200 Cupcakes book and some simple buttercream icing. The recipe below is enough for 12 large cupcakes and a generous amount of icing for each.

For the Cupcakes you'll need:
  • 75g cocoa powder (I used Bounville to make them extra chocolaty!)
  • 225 ml boiling water
  • 125g lightly salted butter
  • 275g light muscavado sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 200g plain flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
For the buttercream icing you'll need:
  • 150g unsalted butter
  • 250g icing sugar
  • 50g cocoa powder
  • 3 tablespoons of hot water
For the decorations you'll need:
  • Grey fondant
  • Orange fondant
  • Green fondant
  • White fondant
  • 3 Cadbury's Flakes
  • 1 small Bournvile bar
  • Black icing pen
  • Balsa Wood
  • Cocktail sticks
  • PVA Glue
Tools and things:
  • Cupcake Cases (I used Buffin cases, halfway between a bun and a muffin, also the only ones I could find in brown)
  • Weighing Scales
  • Measuring spoons
  • Mixing bowls
  • Hand held electric mixer
  • Metal spoons
  • Muffin Tin
  • Wire rack
  • Cupcake decorating tools (Or cheap kids modeling tools from an art shop) 
  • Parchment paper / grease proof paper
  • Sharp knife
  • Piping bag
What I was listening too (I love my baking beats):
  • CAKE - Comfort Eagle / Fashion Nugget

The Cupcakes

8068987520_10b0f76484.jpg
8068988484_2803ff8b80.jpg
8068989116_c1229c076c.jpg
8068993775_3d07981b19.jpg
8068994599_a9790ae6a8.jpg
8068995337_269b454ce8.jpg
8068995955_0f5ec338d7.jpg
8068992930_24f96c4b8c.jpg
8068993550_7ffc9d4a24.jpg
8068998249_72ed2bca05.jpg
8068998963_21490fee15.jpg
8068999597_8f753b7180.jpg
8069000253_1593116917.jpg
8068996784_edea3d463c.jpg
8069001537_8dfc10939b.jpg
8069002161_3b780a47c1.jpg
8069003335_4bd1c16348.jpg
8069003751_399b84a223.jpg
First thing's first, you need a base to decorate. As I said in the intro, I used a recipe from my Hamlyn cupcake book. Because I want my icing and cupcake to look like the soil underneath my rabbits I decided to go for a totally chocolaty recipe! The original idea had carrot cupcakes, but I thought the sweetness of the icing and the fondant would clash with the carrot cake flavour. And of course you can choose your favourite cupcake recipe instead if you'd prefer! 

To start the cupcakes, line a muffin tin with 12 large cupcake cases, I chose brown to keep with the soil theme, and put the tray to one side. Set your oven to 180C so it can be preheating while you make your cupcake mix,

Sieve the cocoa powder into a heat proof bowl or jug, and add the boiling water. Whisk until completely smooth, and then leave aside to cool.  

Add the muscavado sugar and the butter to a bowl and using an electric mixer, blend together until smooth. Beat the eggs and gradually add them to the sugar and butter, blending again until smooth. 

Sieve the flour into the bowl and then using a metal spoon stir it into the mix. Don't forget to add the baking powder here, the book actually forgets to mention it, and I didn't remember it until I was dividing up the mixture. 

Add the now cooled cocoa mix and blend. Make sure you scrape around the edges, so there's no pale mixture left. 

Divide the mixture as equally as you can among the paper cases and put into the oven for 25 minutes. Remove when firm to the touch but still soft and springy underneath. Place them on a cooling rack in the tray for 10 minutes and then remove them and allow them to cool completely.

Now you have your base for your decoration, you can start on that while these cool! 

The Icing and the Dirt

8069004873_27c77d3069.jpg
8069005545_2f2bb2367d.jpg
8069006089_f2d87dea2a.jpg
8069002810_3753360e78.jpg
8069007323_65e4775242.jpg
8069009000_1bf4b8610b.jpg
8069009660_f2a4de7e42.jpg
8069010304_11180710f7.jpg
8069015321_93ab4acbb4.jpg
8069016287_017744c38a.jpg
8069012748_dcd423faf8.jpg
8069013458_cb9c8bb9d1.jpg
8069014182_ae4e739416.jpg
To make the buttercream icing, blend the butter and the icing sugar together in a bowl until smooth and creamy. Add the cocoa powder, and blend again. Finally, add 3 tablespoons of hot water and blend for the last time. Because this icing only takes about 10 minutes to prepare, you can transfer it to a jug and cover it with clingfilm so it's ready to use later. 

For the "dirt" or "topsoil" on your cupcakes, take your Cadburys flakes and crush them while they're still in their packet (be carefull as those packets like to open by themselves!) and empty them into a mixing bowl. Crush any extra large lumps with the back of a metal spoon, but leave some lumps for effect. The take the bar of Bounville and grate it into the mixing bowl, the idea of this is to break up the solid colour of the milk chocolate with some dark chocolate. Subtle, but effective. 

Fill a piping bag with icing, and attach a large nozzle. Use this to pipe rows out onto the cool cupcakes, like rows of soil in plowed land. Then, one by one, take the iced cupcakes, and dip them into the chocolate in the bowl, be careful not to apply too much pressure or your icing might ooze over the edge and undo all your lovely piping. You may have little gaps in your soil cover, but you can just sprinkle on some extra chocolate once your cupcake is the right way up again! 

Now that you have your soil, it's time to plant some veggies in it! 

Carrots and Cabbages

8069007881_8a60c42369.jpg
8069008433_0bf20c335e.jpg
8069005034_2034114bc7.jpg
8069005630_233ddc44ba.jpg
8069010277_79ed6c26ec.jpg
8069006748_360f2ef012.jpg
8069007274_a63b265022.jpg
8069007804_f03981725b.jpg
8069008362_ae4315a90f.jpg
8069019931_a5ca6ef67d.jpg
8069015022_13014030bb.jpg
8069020625_6561a296e2.jpg
8069021409_831a8b66d7.jpg
8069022145_8d57e62a6f.jpg
8069022777_d65e1ac255.jpg
8069019130_983019c16f.jpg
8069023845_db1b30ec2d.jpg
8069020358_45ec9f2825.jpg
Lay out some parchment paper, or in my case I covered my two chopping boards in it to make mini work surfaces for myself. Slice up your block of orange fondant into a few 4 mm thick slices. You don't need to slice the whole thing like I did, unless you plan on adding a lot of carrots.  

Dust a small part of the board with icing sugar. take a small bit of green fondant and roll it out about 1 mm thick. (I didn't have a small enough rolling pin so I used a shot glass dusted in icing sugar). Cut small triangles about 1 cm long out of this, these will be your greenery on top of your carrots. 

With the orange fondant slices, cut up into equal parts (I cut em into triangles again, and got about 4 to 5 out of each slice). Roll these parts into a ball, them elongate into a carrot shape. If you find your fondant is cracking, roll it out using your rolling pin or glass, and roll back into a ball, this should soften it a little and stop cracks forming. Add a hole on top for the greenery, and put indentation lines like a real carrot around the outside. Pinch the two ends of the greenery bits together, and insert into the hole in the carrot. If you like you could mix up a small amount of royal icing and use it as a glue here. 

Depending on how deep you want your carrots to go into the soil, you might need to trim some of them. You can also add ones with bites taken out of them etc. If you need to use your modeling tools to make a little hole in the icing to stick them into, and re draw in the lines in the soil. 

For the cabbages, I did mine like the fake wax cabbages they make in japan for food displays. Start by taking a 2 mm thick slice of fondant, again dusting the work surface and the rolling pin / glass and rolling it out to about 1 mm thick. At the bottom of the strip start to bunch it up and move up the strip, rocking back and forth gathering the fondant around itself. Then, take another thin slice, and roll it out into an uneven circle, add a little water or icing to the center of the circle to make it tacky and wanting to stick. Place the first part of your cabbage into the center of the circle and gather the circle up around it, Don't worry if it crinkles and folds, it adds to the effect. You'll most likely need to dig a little hole in the soil to plant your cabbage, otherwise it'll roll away on you!

Repeat these steps until you have your cupcake patch filled with as many carrots and cabbages as you desire. Now you need some Rascally Rabbits to come gobble and steal these veggies! 

Those Rascally Rabbits!

8069025347_64f52c2536.jpg
8069021734_404fdb9cff.jpg
8069022350_dafd839460.jpg
8069030594_799fabd0ae.jpg
8069023078_afb1fd8c69.jpg
8069023750_ba9d176cdd.jpg
8069028419_ef2dcffd81.jpg
8069024802_7f8cf7962e.jpg
8069029561_c1550bf245.jpg
8069031204_61d7381a47.jpg
8069030199_752cfc780c.jpg
8069026492_d6271abdaa.jpg
8069029872_3e9f86f41a.jpg
I have 3 different types of rabbit on my cupcakes; one diving into a hole with a carrot in tow, one stuffing his face with a carrot and one who has dragged a carrot over from another cupcake.

To make the rabbit jumping into a hole,  start with the bottom half of an egg shape, you could just make an egg shape and chop off the top. Make 2 little sausages, flatten the slightly and make them taper and the end. Use some icing mixed with black food dye to make grey glue to stick the sausages to the egg, to make a body with kicking feet. Take a small ball of while fondant, prick and prod it to make it look textured and fluffy  and stick it to his bottom the same way. You can then add details like the paw pads using a icing pen. 

For the Rabbit popping out of a hole and stuffing his face, start with a ball again and stretch and flatten it out at one end. Because I wanted this bunny to look like he was chewing, I pinched one cheek out a bit so it looks like it has something in his mouth. Then take a sharp knife of a modeling tool, and cut the stretched flattened bit in half to make ears, round these off with your fingers or sculpting tools. Then take a smaller ball to make the top half of an egg shape (or use the ones trimmed from the first rabbit) and flatten the top a little. Use icing to stick the rabbits head to his shoulders and place him in a hole. You can also add front paws by making the same shapes for the back paws for the first rabbit and having them protruding from the hole. I added some orange fondant crumbs to his face (drawn on with the icing pen) so he looked like he was eating the carrot in front of him.

Then the last rabbit is totally above ground so he's a combo of those two rabbits. Make a full egg shape, add slightly smaller foot shapes (because he'll be sitting on them) and attach them with icing. Add a head and two arm shapes with icing also, and don't forget his fluffy tail! 

Now that you have your Rascally Rabbits, it's time to find out whose garden this is anyway!

Sign Posts and Finished Piece

8069031343_e2c2c00491.jpg
8069027740_9f28e1fff9.jpg
8069032469_09b79c6a6f.jpg
8069029066_42ab3bbcfd.jpg
8069029872_3e9f86f41a.jpg
8069031204_61d7381a47.jpg
8069030594_799fabd0ae.jpg
8069031856_9dd824dc49.jpg
8069032550_1be32b3028.jpg
8069037531_aea31a8c04.jpg
8069034814_29284e0928.jpg
8068990337_785a7ede03.jpg
To make sign posts for your garden, cut up rectangles and strips of balsa. You can then bevel the edges with a scalpel if you don't want a clean crisp look. Write labels for your veggies on the sign posts, and give your garden a name on a larger one. 

Now you know mine is Mr McGregors Garden, can anyone name the 3 rabbits in the garden? and their brother who's probably at home with a tummy ache?

Glue the posts together with non toxic PVA and add cocktail sticks so half their length is hanging over the end of you posts. This means you only have to worry about sticking the cocktail stick part into the cupcake and prevents you from making big holes in it!

Place your signposts and Ta-Da! Your vegetable garden is finished!  You can see from my photos I added extra bits like a rope made out of twisted brown icing for the diving rabbit, and a hole where there's a cabbage missing, but a leaf or two left behind with bite marks. You can get really creative with your rabbits and the amount of destruction they cause is entirely up to you!