Fondant

Recipe adapted from LaVarenne Pratique, by Anne Willan,

Rated: 3 stars out of 5Rate This RecipeRead users' reviews (20)

Browse Reviews by Keywordnew!

Loading review filters...

COMMENT ON THIS PROJECT

    

Sign in

All fields are required.

E-mail Address:

Password:

Remember me on this computer

Signing in

Please enter your email address and we will send your password

E-mail Address

Your password has been sent and should arrive in your mailbox very soon.

Not a member?

Sign up for My Food Network to share photos, show off your style, and connect to an enthusiastic and helpful community.

It's free and easy.

Review This Recipe

You must be logged in to review this recipe.

Average Rating:

Total Reviews: 20

Showing 1-10 of 20

Sort by:

Newest
  • on July 15, 2011

    Flag

    I made this recipie and it worked great! I added a few drops of pepperment extract and dipped in chocolate. Just so you know: When it says to use a marble slab, GRANITE DOES NOT WORK! If you did use granite and you can't get the stuff cleaned off, use hot water on a rag. It takes some time but it came all the way off. (luckily
    To get the sugar stuff off of your pot, soak the pot in hot water. It came off easily.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on December 28, 2010

    Flag

    I would have given this recipe a higher rating had there been clearer instructions. I'm sure Emeril touched on the finer points when demonstrating on the show.

    There are many types of fondant. Most people think Rolled Fondant and Fondant are the same thing. They are not. This recipe can be used as a starting point for Rolled Fondant which I see many of the people who commented are looking for.
    If you are very skilled, you can manipulate this recipe to act like Rolled Fondant but for ease of use, Rolled Fondant needs more ingredients...specifically and typically; fat, natural tree gum, and gelatin or agar agar.

    The breakdown goes even further when talking about different fondants. This recipe is for "cooked fondant" as opposed to "uncooked fondant".
    Cooked fondant uses heat.
    Uncooked fondant generally uses liquid and very finely ground sugar to achieve a similar consistency. Royal icing is an uncooked fondant.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on December 12, 2010

    Flag

    Some clarification for everyone. This is English fondant, not the rolled fondant that you use to decorate cakes with. This is the kind of thing that you find in the center of a peppermint patty. A stiff sugary paste for inclusion in confections. If you want to roll out fondant to cover a cake, search "rolled fondant" and use that recipe, it works great.
    I use this recipe, and kneed in some peppermint flavoring for some fantastic peppermint patties. When making this type of fondant, be patient when kneading it together, it will be gooey and thin for a while but then will very suddenly stiffen up and you should be able to ball it up in saran wrap for the fridge. It will be very sticky until you cool it down, and even then it will be sticky when you are using it.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on July 20, 2010

    Flag

    This recipe was the worst I have ever made! I was with my homies and we tried this recipe and it burnt my pan and now i have to throw it away and made my house reek! Before you make this recipe, do yourself a favor, don't! IT was terrible! I am not joking! It says in the recipe to make a soft ball shape! How on earth can a goop turn to a ball! Yeah! I dan't think so!

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on July 06, 2010

    Flag

    I made the fondant exactly the way the recipe said and it was horrible! I would have had better luck using my three year olds playdoh then this fondant!

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on May 27, 2010

    Flag

    this recipe is a joke it came out nothing like fondant. i wasted about an hour or so making and then trying to fix this recipe. its impossible.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on May 17, 2010

    Flag

    If you're having trouble with this recipe, I can help! Well for one, leave the fondant OUT of the fridge in room temperature. After you take it out of your fridge, it will droop and become more liquid-y. Also, I have an awesome recipe for fondant that isn't just "hard sugar". Use one pound of either milk or white chocolate and 3/4 cups of corn starch. Melt the chocolate over a double-broiler and incorporate the corn starch. MIX THOROUGHLY. Then let it sit out, covered tightly in one way or another, for approximately a day. Can you say problems-be-gone?
    Note: DO NOT use dark chocolate. It'll only make your cake bitter.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on January 13, 2010

    Flag

    I found this recipe to be okey if you add more cornstarch and powder sugar while kneeding the dough it will not be so sticky.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on January 08, 2010

    Flag

    it took a LONG time for this to come together into dough for me. for people who found it sticky - you need to keep working the mixture and eventually it will become more of a dough. still, it wasn't as elastic as i would have expected and therefore was a bit difficult to shape and cut out. i don't have much experience with fondant but i assume that something with a marshmallow or gelatin base may have more of an elastic quality to it.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
  • on January 05, 2010

    Flag

    Not even close, find another recipe.

    people found this review Helpful.
    Was this review helpful to you? Yes | No
« Previous 1 2 Next »
Advertisement

Free Recipe of the Day Newsletter

Let Food Network chefs plan what's for dinner, with quick and easy recipes delivered to your inbox daily.

© 2013 Television Food Network G.P. All rights reserved.