Edible Moss-Spring Woodland Cake

Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois ChocolateThis edible moss is perfect for cookies, cakes and cupcakes. I perfected this technique for a special woodland themed cake I made for my birthday. I love making meringue mushrooms and discovered an easy way to make chocolate “logs” but really needed some edible moss to bring it all together.  All the details of putting together this cake are below but if you’re just here for the edible moss recipe, scroll to the bottom!

The Bunny Cake With No Bunnies:

Most years my birthday is well after Easter.  So usually by the time I’m thinking birthday cake, I’m so over bunnies and eggs and pastels and spring.  But not this year!  So I thought I’d kill two birds with one stone and make a birthday cake that was also Easter-y!  I had dozens of my favorite bunny cookies and thought I’d make a pastel cake adorned with pink and white bunny cookies, pastel watercolor buttercream and a white chocolate sail.  And then I accidentally made this.  My creative process is what some might call chaotic, but I prefer the term “experimentally unhinged”.

Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois ChocolatePart of the problem is my obsession with Earl Grey flavors.  I pretty much want them in everything, and it’s my birthday for crying out loud.  There has to be Earl Grey.  Well, getting nice light, bright pastel hues when you’ve steeped everything in tea is no small feat.  I actually think it’s impossible because every time I try everything looks like it sat in front of a window at your grandma’s house for 40 years.  Is there a color called “old doily”?  That’s what everything looks like if you steep it in tea.
Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois ChocolateThe other problem is that I don’t really like pastels.  And it’s my birthday for crying out loud.  But I do like chocolate.  And chocolate cake plays nicely with tea.  And so does chocolate ganache. Six layers of chocolate cake with Earl Grey ganache?  Yes please! So I started to form a new plan that involved a more natural scene for my bunnies.  I’d use the white bunny cookies!  And also add some meringue mushrooms.
And maybe some cocoa dirt!  First I made the mushrooms.  After some trial and error, which was mostly error, I got some very cute button mushrooms and some sassy red amanitas.  I used a bit of pearl sugar for the spots on the amanitas and a bit of cocoa to accent the tops of the button mushrooms.  Yay!
Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois Chocolate Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois Chocolate

Making The Edible Moss:

But cocoa dirt on chocolate frosting was no not making me feel feelings of delight.  I’m pretty sure it would have looked dull and blah and yuck.  Which is not what you want on your special day.  You want everything to be squee-level delightful.  So I decided to make some coconut moss (recipe below).  It’s super easy to tint coconut and I had a bag of finely shredded unsweetened that worked out perfectly.  I dyed it two colors to make it look more “mossy”, then combined them.

Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois Chocolate
Unfortunately when I put the white bunny next to the mushrooms and moss, I was just not feeling it.  So I made some mossy bunnies and eggs.  They are adorable and elegant and delicious.  But they just didn’t look right with the other elements.  So my bunny cake has no bunnies, pobrecita.  But it does have charming dark chocolate logs and bark.
I made that by spreading melted chocolate on my faux bois (woodgrain) texture mat, letting it cool a bit, then rolling it into a tube lengthwise and securing it with rubber bands.  After a few minutes in the freezer I had some lovely woodgrain logs to add some height and texture and fancy-ness to my cake.  I also made some irregular mossy pieces by sprinkling melted chocolate with my edible moss.
Edible Coconut Moss Woodland Cake Meringue Mushrooms Faux Bois Chocolate

Assembling The Cake:

Putting it all together was easy.  The only tricky part was cutting a few of the mushroom tops into conks and fitting them to the curve of the log.  There’s a fungus among us!  Somehow I managed to stick my arm into the front edge of the cake while I was moving some of the moss around.  Halfway through taking pictures I decided that the tall log on the top needed some company.  I think it looks better that way, but you tell me!  This cake was so cute it felt sort of mean to eat it.  But we got over it real quick when I remembered that I’d brushed all six layers with Earl Grey simple syrup.  Because #earlgreyeverything.  This was so rich and flavorful that we managed to get 12 servings out of it, even though it was a tiny 6 inch cake.
Edible Moss Woodland Cake

More Earl Grey, Meringue and Woodgrain Treats From Bakers Brigade:

Print Recipe
Edible Coconut Moss
This edible "moss" is great for making bunny cookies, mossy eggs, a woodland cake or anywhere else you want a mossy effect. Just sprinkle on freshly iced cookies or frosting and press lightly to get the moss to stick.
Edible Moss Woodland Cake
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Servings
cups
Ingredients
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Servings
cups
Ingredients
Edible Moss Woodland Cake
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 300 degrees.
  2. In a quart-sized ziploc bag, combine 2 tablespoons of water with the Moss Green food dye, mixing it well to dissolve the dye. Add 1 1/2 c. coconut, seal bag and shake and knead until coconut is uniformly colored. You may add more diluted dye as needed to achieve the color you want. Repeat this process with the Juniper Green.
  3. Line a baking sheet with parchment. Spread the Moss-colored coconut on half of the sheet and the Juniper-colored coconut on the other half. Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until coconut feels nearly dry to the touch. You may want to also pulse the coconut in the food processor a few times if your coconut is not finely shredded. You want very small pieces, but not a meal or powder. Mix the two colors together and you're ready to go.
  4. Keeps up to a month in an airtight container.
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4 thoughts on “Edible Moss-Spring Woodland Cake

  1. Perfection! Can’t wait to use it on a mushroom cake!

    I’m wondering how long the meringue mushrooms would be ok on the cake? If they’d deflate if on the cake overnight if I assembled it the day before eating, and kept it in the fridge..

    1. That would work fine! In my experience, it takes quite a while for the meringues to break down, they sort of dissolve rather than deflate, and it’s directly related to how much moisture they come into contact with.

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