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Unicorn recipes

Unicorn recipes

1 Unicorn Toast

The unicorn toast phenomenon that is took over the internet is actually Adeline Waugh from Vibrant & Pure.

Unicorn Toast. Vegan with all natural food coloring options, from actual food! Swirled with coconut milk yogurt or dairy free cream cheese. Creative & fun breakfast or snack! #unicorn #toast #vegan

 

Food is way more fun when swirled with pastel rainbow shades and unicorn sparkles.

HOW TO MAKE UNICORN TOAST:

  1. In small bowls, swirl 1-2 tablespoons plain coconut milk yogurt (depending on how many pieces of toast you want), with a natural food.  A little colouring goes a long way so use less and you can always mix in more until you reach your desired unicorn colour.
  2. Add spoonfuls of the rainbow dyed mixtures to toast, switching colours until you’ve covered the whole surface.
  3. With a smooth knife, blend and swirl each colour together!
  4. Add coloured sprinkles.
  5. Top with banana sliced, kiwi, or any fruit for extra decoration.

2. Unicorn Porridge

  1. Cook the porridge
  2. Add a drop of 3 or more food colouring and swirl
  3. Add some sprinkles or fruit topping.

3. Unicorn Cupcakes

This is a BBC food recipe.

Ingredients

For the cupcakes

  • 150g white caster sugar
  • eggs
  • 100g butter, melted
  • 150g self-raising flour

For the vanilla syrup

For the buttercream

  • 200g butter

    , softened

  • 300g icing sugar
  • 4 tsp milk
  • few drops vanilla extract
  • food colouring ( we used pink, green and blue)

To decorate

  • selection of sweets and sprinkles (we used hundreds and thousands, chocolate buttons, white chocolate stars, Smarties and coloured sugar).

Method

  1. Heat oven to 180C/160C fan/gas 4 and line a 12-hole cupcake tin with paper muffin cases. Put all of the cake ingredients into a bowl and whisk with electric beaters for 3-4 mins until light and pale. Divide the mixture evenly between the cases and bake for 20 mins or until a cocktail stick inserted into the centre of one of the cakes comes out clean. Leave to cool on a wire rack.
  2. Mix together the maple syrup, vanilla extract and 1 tbsp water. Use a cocktail stick to poke a few tiny holes in each of the cooled cupcakes then drizzle a little bit of the syrup over each one.
  3. Beat together the butter, icing sugar, milk and vanilla until smooth and pale. Put half the buttercream in one bowl and leave as it is, then divide the other half into 3 bowls. Use the food colouring to dye one pink, one pale green and one pale blue, then transfer them all to one large piping bag fitted with a large star nozzle, including the plain. Pipe swirls on top of the cupcakes – as the buttercream comes through the bag, the colours will start to blend and change as you pipe. Decorate the tops of the cupcakes with your favourite sprinkles if you like.