Do you have a Babycakes Cakepop Maker and are looking for info on how to make cake pops with it? If so you’ve come to the right place. Pull up a chair, grab a cake pop and let me show you how to use your cake pop maker!
Using A Machine To Make Cake Pops
One of my Mother’s Day gifts this year was the Babycakes Cake Pop Maker.
I will admit, my first thought was “I bet this won’t work”. Cake pops require baking and destroying a cake, mushing it with frosting, and forming all of the pops by hand.
It just won’t work if you don’t do it the way Bakeralla does it. I thought the cake pops would be dry, they will fall off the stick and probably won’t even taste good. It will be yet another kitchen gadget that will collect dust.
While I had my doubts, I also have to admit that I don’t LOVE the traditional cake pops (please don’t judge me!). I don’t know why – it’s frosting and cake – what’s not to love – but the flavor has just never been that great to me. I do love making Oreo truffle pops, but the true cake pop I’m only luke warm on at best. So part of me wondered if this little machine could create cake pops I’d like more. Maybe???
Babycakes Cake Pop Maker
I am very happy to report that I was extremely impressed with the Babycakes Cake Pop Maker. This sweet little machine won me over in less time than it would have taken me to bake a cake (much less the time spent letting it cool, mixing it with frosting and forming into pops).
Let me share my batch of cake pops using the Babycakes Cake Pop Maker.
My cake pop maker came with the machine, sticks, a fork, a syringe for fillings and a cake pop stand. I decided to use their vanilla cake pop recipe. It was a bit thicker than cake batter from a mix, it was incredibly tasty straight from the bowl and it was delicious when baked. It had a texture that reminded me of pound cake.
Between my husband, daughter and myself, quite a few pops never saw a coating of chocolate. Those little cake balls are great on their on.
How To Use Your Cake Pop Maker
After mixing up my batter, I decided to follow their tip of putting the batter into a bag, and piping it into the machine I’m sure you can use a pastry bag, but a large Ziploc did the job nicely.
Whenever I need to fill a bag like this, I use a heavy mug to hold the bag for me while I scoop in the frosting or batter. After filling the bag, I snipped the end off and was ready to start cooking.
Piping the batter in was easy, I think spooning it in would be harder and probably a bit messier. My first batch I didn’t use quite enough batter, so they were not perfectly shaped, but they were certainly close enough.
The other thing I learned with my first batch was that I jumped the gun on thinking they were done, and cutting one open revealed that they were not. The 4-5 minutes recommended baking time was pretty accurate.
Look how cute they are! The machine does get very hot, and they include a special fork for you to use to get the cake pops out. I ended up just popping them out with my hands, but the fork works well (and is no doubt safer!). The included cake pop stand is perfect for cooling your cake pops.
They cooled quite quickly. I am going to order some additional cake pop stands, but for the time being I used an empty egg carton to hold my cake pops after they cooled off.
My daughter suggested we fill them with buttercream frosting. I figured it was worth trying. I whipped up a small amount of buttercream, filled the syringe, and we injected buttercream into about half of our cake pops.
Dipping Cake Pops In Chocolate
After making all of my cake pops, I stuck them in the freezer for a few minutes while I melted my chocolate to dip them in.
For my chocolate, I used Wiltons Melts, which will set up better than using chocolate chips. I dipped each stick into the chocolate and then into a cake pop. To be honest, I was worried how the cake pops would do on the sticks, since they aren’t as moist as the frosting style cake pops.
I am happy to report I actually found them easier to handle on the sticks. Not a single one fell off a stick, while I usually have a few of when I make cake pops.
After putting them on the sticks, I stuck them back in the freezer. Freezing them, and dipping them while cold, helps the chocolate set up quickly.
Someone asked what the trick was to prevent the chocolate from dripping down the stick was. For me what works best is a combo of making sure the cake pops are cold and keeping the chocolate from getting too thick. To do this I pop it back into the microwave for a few seconds as needed.
Then after I dip the pop in chocolate, I tap, tap, tap to get off as much excess chocolate as possible. After that I sort of twirl the the cake pop until the chocolate has started to set, then put it into the cake pop stand, or block of Styrofoam. That said, I always have a few that drip. Really I don’t worry that much about it.
The Verdict
For me, I found these far easier to dip than traditional cake pops. They never felt wobbly on the stick, not one came loose from the stick, and they are so perfectly round – something I never achieved with other cake pops.
How do they taste?
Personally, I LOVE them. No, they are not dry – they were moist and delicious. They do not have the same consistency of the cake and frosting cake pops, but these suit my taste a bit better. It tastes like cake – and to me that’s a very good thing.
CAKE POPS WITH THE
BABYCAKES CAKE POP MAKER
Vanilla Cake Pop Recipe For Babycakes Cake Pop Maker
Equipment
- Cake Pop Maker
Ingredients
- 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking powder
- 1/4 tsp salt
- 1/2 cup butter softened
- 1 cup sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla
- 1/2 cup milk
- Glaze, chocolate or coating of choice
Instructions
- Combine flour, baking powder and salt. Set aside.
- In a separate bowl, beat together butter and sugar until light and creamy. Beat in eggs and vanilla.
- Alternately blend in flour mixture and milk into butter mixture, beginning and ending with the flour mixture.
- Fill each cooking reservoir with about 1 tablespoon of batter.
- Bake 4 to 5 minutes or until a toothpick inserted into a cake pop comes out clean. Allow to cool completely prior to glazing or coating.
Nutrition
Disclaimer
Nutrition information is estimated as a courtesy. If using for medical purposes, please verify information using your own nutritional calculator. Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.
I also have a chocolate cake pop
recipe for the Babycakes Cake Pop Maker!
I think there is plenty of room for all of the different kinds of cake pops, but I think these will be the ones I make most often. They were so much quicker and easier, and I enjoyed the process more because of it.
I am also excited to see what else I can make with this little machine – and will be sharing one of my favorite desserts with you later this week – it involves donut holes, and this will be perfect for creating them.
Cake pop anyone?
Check out my other cake pop posts by clicking here!
Michelle says
Hi, i just bought one of these cake pop makers and was looking for some creative ideas for my 2yr daughter who was just diagnosed with an egg allergy. Do you have any recieps you can share? This is all new to me.
Sne says
Hi Christy,
Your cake pops look so good, I love the idea of cake pops but the mixing in the frosting way is too sweet (for me) and looks like this will be a better option. When I read some reviews before, cons included pops starting to bake before every hole was filled. Is this because they pre heat? Do you have to preheat or you fill when cold and then bake it?
Thanks.
Stephanie says
I read this article about the Babycakes Cake Pop maker and it inspired me. So I tried mine out for the first time today and it was an epic fail! They were not round at all. Just half circles and super small. Your’s are perfectly round. What am I doing wrong? I used a box cake mix. Could that have been the problem?
Christi says
Stephanie, two things – yes, the box cake mix. I love love love the recipes that Babycakes has – delicious and very well suited for the machine. It’s a much thicker batter than you get with a mix. Second, not having enough batter in the wells will create a less than ideal shape. I’d try it again with their vanilla recipe – it’s my favorite. It’s almost more of a pound cake than regular cake. And I promise, really no more work than making a mix. I think a recipe created for the machine works better than a mix (which has a lot of variables based on brand, flavor…). Good luck!
saimah says
Thanks for your review. I bought this a few weeks ago with the $10 kohls rebate and i have yet to try it out. I think the traditional cake pops are pretty gross, and a big mess to make, so I am looking forward to trying this little machine. I would love to make cheesecake pops in these, has anyone tried that?
Meredith says
I have this machine.. and of course making the actual cake balls are the easiest part of the whole process. Then comes the dipping.. and thats where I lose all sanity. What kind of melting chocolate did you use? I got candy melts from Hobby Lobby and its so thick that my pops just slide down the stick or come off in the chocolate when im dipping them upside down.. help!
nancy says
I haven’t read the 169 comments that precede mine, so I’m hoping someone else has already pointed this out. While the egg carton seems like a good idea because of the shape, it should NEVER, EVER be used to store or hold something that is going to be eaten. Salmonella lives on the outside of the eggs, and therefore on the egg carton. You could make someone sick or even worse. If you are a bakery you would be promptly fined for this practice and possibly put out of business. Don’t do it
Lisa says
I made cake pops last night from total scratch and rolling them by hand… I had a hard time getting them not to crack… I am headed to go by this cute little gadget as soon as im off work. I am making them for my 2 year old nephews bday party which is mickey mouse themed. I am thinking about purchasing fondant to make the ears and such does anyone have any other suggestions?
Liz says
I just bought one tonight and had a blast! I used a boxed cake mix, but then I added a cherry and some mini choco chips to the batter before closing the lid to bake. Didn’t turn out perfectly round, but they were SO YUMMY!
Sarah says
I love this machine! Regular cake pops are not really my thing, but these rock. I used pillsbury super moist white cake mix, wilton light chocolate candy melts for half of the pops, and dolci fruitta (sp?) white chocolate melts for the other half. Per some of the reviews on the baby cakes website I changed the box mix ingredients to one less egg and cut 1/4 of the water + sub milk. So the box originally said 1 cup water, 1/3 cup oil, and 3 eggs. I used 3/4 cup milk, 1/3 cup oil, and 2 eggs. They turned out great! So delicious. A tiny bit of shortening helped keep the candy melts thinned properly. The ziplock bag or a pastry bag for piping into the machine is a must.
Julie says
Thank you so much for this detailed review!!!! I bought this babycakes machine for my daughter as well as the mini cupcake machine. I love the helpful pictures!!! I am wondering if “cake mixes” can be used in leiu of the 12.00 box at Kohl’s?…..