Homemade Marshmallow Chicks
They delicious Homemade Marshmallow Chicks are covered in white chocolate and sprinkled with sugar. They are the perfect festive candy for Easter!
Homemade Marshmallow Chicks Are Perfect For Easter
Peep, Peep!
You know how much I love making (and eating!) homemade marshmallows. So would you be surprised to learn that I don’t like those famous marshmallow Peeps? I don’t think I’ve ever eaten a whole one, not even as a kid. I tried really hard to like them when I was young, I really did. But I always ended up trading them off for somebody else’s Easter basket confections. Probably for some chocolate marshmallow bunnies. Much more my style.
Can you see the yellow Peeps in my basket?!
So, in an attempt to make up for lost time…I’ve come up with a way that guarantees my own indulging in some yellow chicks this spring. Homemade Marshmallow Chicks. Aren’t they adorable?! I dipped them in white chocolate, tinted a springy yellow. Then, per Tessa’s request for some feathers, I sprinkled them with a bit of yellow sugar. Adding some little blue eyes and glossy orange feet, we birthed a whole flock of sweet little chicks.
Now these are my kind of Peeps!
Homemade Marshmallow Chicks
They delicious Homemade Marshmallow Chicks are covered in white chocolate and sprinkled with sugar. They are the perfect festive candy for Easter!
Ingredients
- FOR THE MARSHMALLOWS:
- powdered sugar, for coating pan
- 2/3 c. water, divided
- 3 (1/4 oz.) envelopes unflavored gelatin (found by the Jell-O at the grocery store)
- 1 c. granulated sugar
- 1 c. light corn syrup
- pinch of kosher salt
- 1 tsp. vanilla
- FOR THE WHITE CHOCOLATE COATING AND DECORATION:
- 6 oz. good quality white chocolate (You could also use candy melts, which is a little sturdier, but not as tasty.)
- yellow candy coloring (not icing coloring)
- yellow tinted sugar
- small round blue nonpareils
- FOR THE GLAZE ICING FOR THE CHICK’S FEET AND BEAK:
- 1/2 c. powdered sugar
- 1/2 T. milk
- 1/2 T. light corn syrup
- orange icing coloring
Instructions
- Lightly spray the inside of an 9'' x 13'' pan with cooking spray. Generously coat with powdered sugar and set aside.
- Pour 1/3 cup of the water into the bowl of a stand mixer. Sprinkle the gelatin over the water and stir briefly to incorporate. Let stand for about 10 minutes, or until the gelatin has softened.
- In a saucepan, off the heat, combine the remaining 1/3 cup of water and the granulated sugar, corn syrup, and salt. Place the pan over medium-high heat. Clip a candy thermometer on the inside of the pan, making sure it doesn’t touch the bottom. Cook the mixture without stirring until it reaches 240° F. Brush down the sides of the pan with a pastry brush, dipped in water, to gently wipe away any sugar crystals.
- With your mixer on low speed, very carefully add the hot syrup to the softened gelatin. Add the vanilla and increase the speed to medium-high. The mixture will start out clear, but quickly turns very white. Beat for about 8 minutes, or until the marshmallow gets very thick and sticky, and starts to pull away from the sides of the bowl, in string-like pieces. This will really give your mixer a workout.
- Spread the mixture into the prepared pan using a lightly oiled spatula. With wet hands, press the batter evenly into the corners of the pan. Just keep rewetting your hands to help with the stickiness. Set aside for at least 1 hour, or until the mixture is firm and cool.
- Run a wet knife around the edge of the cooled pan to loosen the marshmallow. Remove the marshmallow from the pan, onto a sheet of parchment paper.
- Dip your small chick-shaped cookie cutter (mine measures 1" wide by 1-1/2" tall) into a shallow bowl of water and then cut the slab of marshmallow into chick shapes. This is a sticky job, but just have patience. It’s worth it! It helps to dip the chick cutter into the water in between cuts. Repeat this process until the whole slab of marshmallow is cut.
- Using the microwave, carefully melt the white chocolate in a glass, taking special care to not let the white chocolate get too hot. It's best to partially melt the white chocolate and then just stir it until completely melted, then color with candy coloring to your liking.
- Drop a marshmallow chick into the colored white chocolate and dunk with a fork to completely coat. Pick the marshmallow up with the fork, allowing excess white chocolate to drip off while lightly tapping the fork to coax more of the excess off. Then slide the fork out of the glass, scraping the underside of the tongs along the rim of the glass. This will scrape off any remaining excess white chocolate, so you don’t have a pool of it form around your chick as it cools.
- Set the white chocolate coated chick on parchment paper. Then, while the coating is still wet, place a blue nonpareil for the eye and sprinkle a bit of yellow sugar on the body, staying away from the chick's feet. Let the chicks cool and completely set up on your kitchen counter. It may help to let them sit in the refrigerator for awhile.
- Sift the powdered sugar into a small bowl and add the milk and corn syrup. Stir until well incorporated. Then color with orange icing coloring to your liking. If the icing is too stiff, add just a little more milk. If it's too thin, add a bit of powdered sugar. Pour colored glaze icing into a pastry bag fitted with a small round tip. Pipe on a little orange beak and a line across the chick's feet. This glaze is easy to manipulate and "stretch", using a toothpick, if needed. Let dry completely.
- Store in a single layer in an airtight container. The white chocolate will have a softer set than if using candy melts.
Nutrition Information:
Yield: 20 Serving Size: 1Amount Per Serving: Calories: 322Total Fat: 11gSaturated Fat: 6gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 4gCholesterol: 7mgSodium: 55mgCarbohydrates: 57gFiber: 0gSugar: 56gProtein: 2g
Nutrition information is automatically calculated by Nutritionix. I am not a nutritionist and cannot guarantee accuracy. If your health depends on nutrition information, please calculate again with your own favorite calculator.
If you liked these chicks, be sure to also check out my Chocolate Marshmallow Bunnies!
Oh my goodness! How adorable! I’ll definitely have to do an upcoming feature on this!
Oh I just LOVE these! I’d choose these over store bought any day~!
Thank you, Jackie!
VERY CUTE!!
Thank you, Patsy! :)
Your chicks are “over the top” adorable! I’m smittten!
Thank you, Sue!
I LOVE this! Posting it on my Facebook page.
I never liked peeps and never bought them for my own kids. What do you do with the scraps of marshmallow when you have finished cutting out the chicks?
We eat the scraps plain, dusted in powdered sugar to keep them from sticking together. Or dip them in leftover white chocolate. Doesn’t matter the shape, they’re still fabulous!
I burned myself out on Peeps back when I was 9 – something about making myself sick on them. BUT – that has not deterred me from my absolute love of real marshmallows, particularly ones made at home!! And not to mention that these are just flippin’ adorable and covered in chocolate to boot! Precious, just precious.
Thanks bunches, Megan! :)
These are absolutely perfect. So adorable. Love them!
Thank you, Lora!
You are adorable and so are these deliciously cute chicks. I do not like Peeps either. But, I cannot wait to make these!
I cannot get over how adorable these are!! Way way better than the store bought kind. And I would know…I’m sort of an expert on them.
Gorgoeous little chicks! I happen to love Peeps, and I prefer them a little on the stale side :)
Ha! I know there are plenty of Peeps lovers out there, hope I didn’t offend anyone! But I agree with you…the staler (is that a word?!), the better. ;)
I LOVE peeps. And now I need to attempt these, so many options for all the seasons with these.
Hi Mellissa, nice to hear from you! These are a fun little project, let me know if you give it a try!
Oh my goodness, these are the cutest marshmallows I’ve ever seen!! Love this!
Thank you so much, Katrina!
Wow, Brenda, I’m blown away!! So stinkin’ cute!!
Thank you, thank you!! xoxo
HOW PRECIOUS!!! :)
These are so cute. Do you think that honey can be substituted for corn Syrup?
Hi Kristin! You made me curious about using honey instead. I found plenty of info telling not to substitute the corn syrup in marshmallow making. But I did find this one that looks promising: http://zscupoftea.com/2010/07/21/honey-sweetened-marshmallows-scd-gfcf/ – please let me know if you try it!
My friend would love these! She always stashed away a few packages of peeps during Easter time, it was her guilty pleasure.
I’ve never been a fan of peeps either. I’m not sure what turns me off from them. Maybe I just like my chocolate easter bunny more :)
These little chicks are some of the cuttest things I have ever seen!And the bunnies you have at the bottom, precious <3
So totally precious! I am compelled to Pin this!
These are absolutely adorable!!
Thank you!! :)
These are awesome Brenda! I have never liked Peeps but I’m head over heels in love with how cute these are! You are so creative! :)