Click here for an audio version of the blog post that follows.
Staying home makes me hungry, whether it’s to keep safe from disease, the weather, or working on my novels-in-progress! How about you? And when I get hungry, my first thoughts are of sweets! Cute ones are all the more enticing…
Robbie Cheadle is a writing dynamo! Go to her main page for the extensive catalog of books, stories, and videos she’s published out of Johannesburg, South Africa. She writes for all ages; there are her “Sir Chocolate” children’s books (co-authored with her son, Michael Cheadle), her middle-grade “Silly Willy” series, her preteen/young adult fictionalized bio about her mom’s World War II childhood in England, her supernatural and horror stories for adults and young adults, and her poetry!

How to make fondant (sugar dough/paste) peonies, by Robbie Cheadle
My husband’s birthday is approaching, and I wanted to make something special to mark the day, especially as we are likely to still be in some form of COVID-19 lockdown. I decided to make peonies in a dark pink and dust the outer petals with edible gold.
Making the peonies was quite a challenge, as I wanted to get the shape right. Peony petals curl inwards, which means that each layer must be allowed to dry completely inside a correctly sized bowl-shaped container. I made these containers out of tin foil, which I pleated and folded to fit the four different stages of the petals.
You will need…
- Fondant coloured dark pink
- A large fondant rose cutter
- A large and a small ball tool
- Edible sugar glue
- Peony petal cutters in three sizes (standard pack)
- Edible dark pink food colouring powder
- Edible gold dust
- Two medium-sized paintbrushes
- A flower veining tool or toothpick
Process
Mix a quantity of dark pink fondant and place it in a lock zip plastic bag. Take a small amount and roll it out as thinly as possible. Use a thin layer of cornflour on the surface of the fondant when you roll it out to prevent it from sticking. Cut out two rose shapes using your large rose cutter.
Use a ball took or toothpick to frill and flute the edges of the two rose shapes and use the flower veining tool or toothpick to texture the petals. Place in a small silver foil container pleated to round the petals. Allow to dry to the texture of leather.
Roll a bud from fondant with a fatter base and narrower tip. Use a bit of sugar glue to attach it to one of the rose shapes. Paint a small blob of sugar glue on the bottom part of each petal on both sides and wrap the petals around the bud. Use a toothpick to separate the petals and create a rosebud shape. Use sugar glue to attach the enlarged bud to the other rose shape.
Wrap the other shape around the enlarged bud. Leave to dry overnight.
Roll out more dark pink fondant and cut out six peony petals using your smallest peony petal cutter. Frill and flute the edges using a small ball tool or a toothpick. Use the toothpick for flower veining tool to texture the petals.
Place them upside down in a sliver foil container and allow them to dry to the texture of leather.
Dab sugar glue along the bottom half of both edges of the petals and place them around the bud, pressing them firmly into place with your fingers. When all six petals have been placed around the bud, place the flower into a piece of silver foil shaped into a cup. Leave overnight to dry. Your flower will look like this…
The following day cut out six middle-sized peony petals and repeat the steps above. Place in a slightly larger silver foil cup and leave to dry overnight.
Repeat the above process on days three and four, using the large peony petal cutter and slightly larger silver foil cups.
Once the peony is completely dry, use a medium-sized paintbrush dipped into dark pink food colouring power, and smudge it into the centre of the peony. Dip a medium-sized paintbrush into edible gold shimmer dust and paint over the outermost petals until they shimmer and shine.
Your peony flower is now complete.

For step-by-step instruction on how to make more of our fondant artworks, for recipes, and for free audible readings of our free Sir Chocolate books, please visit our YouTube site.
Our YouTube site is a community service project that my two sons and I have started to bring readings of our free Sir Chocolate books and simple recipes to children and their parents to help keep children entertained during the Covid-19 pandemic. Our step-by-step creature videos can be made with children using playdough or fondant.
These are trying times worldwide — perhaps my other posts here and here and here and here and here and here and here will lift your spirits a bit?
Has your eating changed since COVID19?
Discover more from Happiness Between Tales (and Tails) by da-AL
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How did you know that the peony is my favorite flower?
And my grandkids loved the Silly Willy stories when they were little – so much fun to read.
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🙂
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Wow–those are so pretty! The only way my eating has changed is that I’ve been experimenting with homemade granola bars–not quite as pretty or exciting as these lovely flowers, but good for breakfast:-)
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I am glad you liked these flowers. I must have a go at making granola bars, I like them too.
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Yes, I have a gluten allergy so it’s nice to be able to make them myself and not worry because I know what’s in them!
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A really amazing art… edible is unimaginable.🤔
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We don’t actually eat them generally, as they are very sweet. My sisters kids sometimes eat them.
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I would be more like your sister’s kid, pretty, decorative food has always delighted my taste. Hope too that you and yours keep safe! Best regards! 💕☕️☕️
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Ah, it looks so simple, but Robbie has the talent that makes it so! Thanks for sharing this lesson 🙂
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Thank you, Barbara. I enjoy the exactness and detail of fondant art.
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yes indeed 🙂
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Wonderful step by step instructions from Robbie… Her fondant work is always so brilliant.. Very life like.. And you asked the question has our eating habits changes.. Yes I am baking more than I would normally, though I have been good this past two weeks and not baked… Then hubby bought me some chocolate.. LOL…. My waist line thanks him.. 🙂
Hope you are well dear Da-Al.. And thank you Robbie for this wonderful step by step of how to make them… 🙂 ❤
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Thank you for visiting and commenting, Sue, I laughed about your waistline. I have also been baking more bread and “useful” foods now that everyone is at home. I am not a big fan of store bought bread. It makes no difference to Terence or my waistlines and Greg is a thin as a rail. Michael is a bit tubby but still much slimmer than in the past so maybe he snacks at school and I don’t know about it. I am delighted you enjoyed this post.
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Bread, i did bake in the beginning of the lockdown.. But I didn’t let it rise for a long enough time… Hubby was not impressed, LOL… as I made cobs, or babs, don’t know what term you use over there.. and they were heavy and more like rocks.. LOL…. Yes I do have my disasters… haha…. I gave away my bread making machine to family only months before as I wasn’t using it often…. It made super loaves.. 🙂
Haha to the snacks at school…. 🙂 ❤
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I love my bread making machine, Sue. My mom has also bought one now so we can take turns baking bread.
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Wonderful…. I gave mine my daughter in law who said she was making bread… But I think the fad has now died a death.. LOL…
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thank you, Sue 🙂
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🙏💚
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