Let’s talk cake pops. Cake pops have without a doubt become one of those most popular sweet treat trends in years. We have the wonderful Bakerella, Angie Dudley, to thank for introducing us to such a fun treat. Whenever I show up at a party or get together with cake pops, they are always very well received and very much enjoyed.
While cake pops are certainly a fun treat to share and eat, they can be a challenge to create. I am by no means an expert cake pop maker, but I have spent some time making cake pops using three different methods, and thought I would put that information together in one post, as well some great resources on other sites to help you in creating cake pops.
My Three Different Methods Of Making Cake Pops
I have three different methods I use to make cake pops. In the photo above you see my cake pops (left to right) made using:
- Babycakes Cake Pop Maker,
- My Little Cupcake Cake Pop Mold
- The “original” method, using a baked cake and frosting mashed together and shaped.
My preferred methods are with the Babycakes Cake Pop Maker or the My Little Cupcake Mold. If I need to make a lot of cake pops, I always go with my Babycakes.
If I’m making a small batch and want to spend a bit more time decorating to them, I go with the My Little Cupcake Molds. A big plus to the My Little Cupcake method is that you can do it without baking anything.
And that leaves us with the original method. I have been pretty honest that I just do not love the original method. I don’t know why – I mean I love cake, I love frosting, but together, it just doesn’t do it for me. I will say that original cake pops made with homemade frosting taste worlds better to me than canned frosting. The plus side of this method is you don’t have to buy any equipment. The downside to me is having to bake a cake first to make them, and I’m often so pressed for time, that this extra step is enough to make me go another way.
Because there is so much to share about each method, I’m going to break each one into it’s own post…
1. Babycakes Cake Pop Maker – Tips, Tricks, Advice and Ideas
2. My Little Cupcake Cake Pop Molds – Tips, Tricks, Advice and Ideas
3. The original method – Tips, Tricks, Advice and Ideas for making cake pops (coming soon!)
Dipping And Decorating Cake Pops
One thing each method has in common is that once the ball or shaped cake is prepared, it needs to be dipped in chocolate and decorated, so we will spend the rest of this post focusing on that aspect.
I have written a fairly extensive post about the different types of chocolate you can use for dipping your cake pops (and other items) in, and you can check that post out here. I find each brand of chocolate coating to be quite different, and if you want to know my take on them, make sure check out this post that goes in to much more detail about melting and working with chocolate.
Getting Cake Pops Onto The Stick – And Keeping Them There
First things first when it comes to decorating your cake pops – you need to get them onto a stick. You can get your sticks in different sizes, with 4 inch, 6 inch and 8 inch being the most common. I tend to use the 6″ or 8″ sizes. No matter what kind of cake pops I am making, I always dip my stick into the melted chocolate, and then put my cake pop on it, and then let the chocolate set, usually in the fridge or freezer.
Skipping this step has never, ever, worked for me, and almost always results in my cake pop jumping ship and taking a swim in the chocolate. I never make cake pops (or chocolate covered marshmallows, or cookie pops or ANYTHING on a stick) without doing this.
After I have all of my cake pops on sticks that have been dipped in chocolate, I then put them in my freezer. Chilling them helps set the chocolate and make the stick, chocolate and cake all come together like a happy little sugar filled family. Chilling the cake pops also helps set your chocolate more quickly when you dip the cake pops (so you don’t spend 20 minutes waiting for each cake pop to quit dripping chocolate).
Cake Pops Cracking
The challenge I find with chilling the cake pops is that there seems to be a fine line as to how long to chill them – as having them too cold often results in the chocolate cracking after dipping. I try and make sure my chocolate isn’t too hot, and that my cake pop isn’t too cold – letting it warm up a bit after taking it out of the freezer, even just a few minutes.
Another way I deal with this issue is that I do a “first dip” into chocolate, not add sprinkles, and let it sit. I then redip them in a second layer of chocolate, and decorate. Kind of like a crumb coat in frosting a cake. This sort of seals the crack into the first layer, leaving the second and outer layer looking nice and pretty, and yay – more chocolate! This is also an option if you make your cake pop and the chocolate hardens before you get the sprinkles on it. Just dip it again!
My other solution is my solution to many decorating challenges – I just completely coat them in sprinkles. I find sprinkles hide a lot. For as much as I bake, I am not a decorator, I’m just really good at liberal use of sprinkles. If you notice a big crack after you’ve already added your sprinkles, you can add more chocolate, either by drizzling it on or even using a toothpick, and then topping it with sprinkles. Or go for an artistic drizzle of chocolate all over, which will help hide the cracks.
I won’t lie – often many of my cake pops have cracks in them. For the most part I think most people are more than thrilled to eat a cake pop despite it having a crack in it. I try not to sweat it, and tell myself that a cake pop with a crack beats no cake pop! But sometimes we want them to be just right. Here are some other sites that you can check out for more tips and advice on the chocolate on the cake pop cracking issue…
Prevent Cracks In Cake Pop Shells from Honeycomb Events & Design
Why Do Cake Pops Crack from Beki Cook’s Cake Blog
Cake Pops, Balls & Truffles: Troubleshooting & FAQ from Veronica’s Cornucopia
Tricks Of The Trade from The Cake Pop Connection
Chocolate Coating Cracking from Chocolate Candy Mall
Cake Pops Falling Off The Stick
Dipping my cake pop sticks into the chocolate, then putting them into the cake pops and letting the chocolate set has helped this problem for me immensely. I do have a few other things that help with this issue.
1. Don’t make the cake pop too big. I’ve seen some giant cake pops. They look delicious, but I feel like they are flirting with gravity. I keep my cake pops on the smaller side. For those that have seen the cake pops at Starbucks, mine are always smaller than that size, and are never as big as a golf ball. Too much weight on that tiny stick has the potential to create problems.
2. When dipping the cake pop into the chocolate, dip it in and get it out – don’t twirl it around. Sometimes half of my cake pop is dipped and the other half I spoon the chocolate over while it’s in the bowl. Twirling it in the chocolate increases the chances it will stay in the chocolate. 🙂
3. I never tap the stick on the side of the bowl too hard when trying to get the excess chocolate off. Too hard of a tap and bam, cake pop in bowl. I tend to do a very gentle tap or two on the side of my bowl, and then twirl my cake pop, slowly and constantly, over the bowl to let the excess chocolate drip off. I also twirl my cake pop slowly. I’ve seen some videos of people whipping their cake pops around, and that’s not worked out well for me.
4. Holding on to the cake pop until the chocolate is close to set. Once the chocolate sets, usually the cake pop and stick are pretty good friends. When I rush it and stick my cake pops into my holder or styrafoam too fast, this is when I’ve sometimes had a problem.
Here are some other sites you can check out with information about preventing your cake pops from falling off of the sticks…
Common Cake Pop Issues & Tutorials from Miss Candiquik
Cake Pop Tutorials and Q & A from Not Rachel Ray
How To Get The Sticks To Stay In The Cake Pops from Babycakes
FAQ from My Little Cupcake
Cake Pops Tutorial from Mandy Walls Photography
How Do I Get My Chocolate Smooth And My Sprinkles To Stick
For me, many of the tips listed above help lead to a smooth and even coating on my cake pops. Another helpful tip is to use paramount crystals. This helps to thin out the chocolate. I talk about paramount crystals more here.
I have an “always keep moving” thing when I make cake pops – the slow twirling of the cake pop until the chocolate sets. It’s a bit of a balancing act to find when to add the sprinkles and when to put the cake pop down. If you put the sprinkles on too soon, they can slide off and take the chocolate with them. Wait too long and they won’t stick. There is definitely a sweet spot time wise to adding the crystals, and I think a lot of it just takes some practice and patience to find what works.
I like to stick to lighter sprinkles when I make my cake pops, the ones that weigh the least, such as sanding sugar, sugar crystals, jimmies and the like. In find the sanding sugar and sugar crystals are the easiest. When I see cake pops decorated with M&M’s and chocolate chips, honestly I have no clue how they are doing that, though I’m pretty sure it probably requires more patience than I have.
I do not submerge my cake pops in sprinkles. I tend to hold the cake pop over a bowl, and sprinkle on over it, catching the excess sprinkles. Often this is more dumping on sprinkles than it is sprinkling them. While this video is of me making pretzels, you can see my dumping sprinkles on technique, if one could call it that. Obviously my strong tapping of the pretzel on the bowl is not what you would want to do with your cake pops. 🙂
Here are a few videos that might be helpful…
Easy Cake Pops Recipe – How To Make Cake Pops The Easy Way
How To Make, Dip And Decorate Cake Pops
I will be going into more detail in upcoming posts about the different ways I create the actual cake part of the cake pop, but hopefully some of the information here can be helpful. Make sure to check out the great links and videos – they are really helpful!
Do you have any tips or tricks you’d like to share?
gabi says
i love making cake pops but the one time my oven brakes i have to make cake pops
Katie Noelle says
If you find that your candy melts/chocolate is thick or gloppy (especially with melted chocolate chips), add a little crisco! Crisco is my answer to everything. It works with just about every issue you may have! Just add a 1/4-1/2 teaspoon of crisco and the consistency will be a lot smoother and easier to dip!
jimena says
hi i have a problem make cake pops, i do all the steps and finally the chocolate coat breaks in the cake pop. i really dont now what iam doing wrong.
Kay says
i was lucky enough to read your post before I even used my Babycakes cake pop maker and everything came out perfect on the first try! thanks! 🙂
Chris says
I came to your site looking for some troubleshooting ideas, which I have gotten a lot, thanks. Then I saw your pops w/ the sprinkles w/ the cancer ribbon….can you tell me where you got those? I do the Relay for Life and would love to sell some pops w/ these on them.
Thanks.
asmaa moussa says
wow, that is the best guide ever.
I made my first cake pops few days ago but I made all these mistakes. with the help of your guide, I’ll guess I’m making another batch tomorrow. only better one.
Beki Cook's Cakes says
Thank you so much for including me in your Cake Pop info.!
I loved your chocolate post.
– Beki
CantStopBaking says
These are great tips! thank you so much.
Sugar Mama Bakeshop says
Whoa! This was super super helpful. I’m brand new to cake pop making and have only tried the traditional mashing route… I agree. Not a fan. But they are SO popular. I’m considering investing in a babycakes maker. Thanks for sharing all of this info 🙂
Marjorie (Sugar for the Brain) says
Thank you so much for this! My first try at cake pops was quite a mess and this should help for the next try 😉