My Perry the Platypus Cake

Since my approach to a Perry the Platypus cake was different than the others I’ve seen around the internet, I thought I’d share. But first –

Oh, Perry, you look like a bluebeeeerry...

How stinking cute is that? (And the cake’s not bad, either. Bazinga!)

So for the body shape I baked a cake mix in two loaf pans and stacked the layers atop each other à la last year’s Mystery Machine cake. (I didn’t raise it off the tray, though. Perry’s resting.) I used a Yellow Cake mix and added about 45 drops of blue food coloring to the batter, which means that when we cut pieces out of the cake they were a convincing Perry teal. Greg suggested that this was somehow morbid, but I replied that it wasn’t nearly as morbid as red velvet cake would be. Haha.

SO! For the bill,tail, legs, and eyes I decided to use sugar cookies instead of fondant. (I’ve never used fondant before, and it seemed safer not to experiment the day of the party.) I used this recipe, which I highly recommend. The cookies barely spread at all, meaning that you can cut the shapes you need out of the dough and it will still be the right size once it’s cooked. Also, since it doesn’t puff or spread, details impressed into the dough will still be sharply visible after cooking. Finally, the recipe is intentionally not very sweet, so that when it’s used with frosting the results won’t burn your tongue with the sugar. I like it.

I just traced out the shapes I needed on some paper, cut them out, laid them on the rolled-out dough (TIP: flour the dough a bit before you lay paper on it. Sigh.) and cut around them with a knife. To keep the bill from falling off, I made it with a long thick piece to be stuck in between the cake layers. Also, I decided to stack two cookies together for the bill, so I cut out two of those. It seemed to work well.

Um... delicious?

You may notice that the cookie on the bottom is – as my grandmother would say – ‘darkly brown,’ while the cookie on top is not. See? Being a blogger isn’t all link parties and artful balloon clusters. Sometimes it’s hiding a burned cookie with frosting and then admitting that you did that on the internet.

Here’s a shot of the back leg cookie-shape and how I stuck it on the cake.

You can see how imprecise and rough my shape was. Stuck on a cake and covered in frosting, you can’t tell. Since these are the back legs, I only covered half with the blue frosting.

And here we see both legs attached!

Then it was time for the orange frosting.

I had thought that the tail would stand up, no problem, but as I watched, it slooooowly began to bend in the middle, then to crack. Desperate to avoid baking a third batch of platypus body parts, I quickly removed it and cut a piece of cardboard to support the tail. Whew.

Then, once orange frosting has been applied to the bill, the tail, and the back feet, all that remains is the eyes. The eyes were just little oval cookies covered in white frosting with dried blueberries stuck on for the pupils. Easy, peasy.

The main thing, though, is that he loved it to pieces.

Games for an Agent P Party

Before I get completely distracted by shiny objects (like new online crochet mags?) let’s get some more birthday party posting up.

So let’s say your kid has fixated on a birthday party featuring Perry the Platypus. Aside from plastering pictures of the secret agent around your party, what can you do?

We had three Perry the Platypus/Agent P-themed games and activities at our party. First:

BEHOLD! The FUN-AWAY-INATOR!!!

the $2 piñata. What you see before you is Doofenshmirtz’s FUN-AWAY-INATOR, programmed to steal toys and candy from the Tri-State Area, so no one can have any fun. I made it from a paper bag and some crepe paper, following the tutorial on Infarrantly Creative. Of course, I decided not to ruffle the crepe paper (I decided that ruffles and “-inators” did not mesh well) but it still looked gorgeous. We cut two robotic arms out of shoebox cardboard and taped them to the bag, then wrapped them carefully with crepe paper as well. As you can see, it looks awesome.

The tutorial did not give any suggestions for the bottom that I saw, but I just stuck some more crepe paper on it. No problem.

The one thing that took me by surprise was how much glue this needed. I mean, if I had thought about it I would have realized that basically making a line of glue around and around a paper bag an inch apart all the way up would use a lot of glue, but I didn’t. Just make sure you have plenty of extra glue sticks when you sit down to make it.

Also, this is REALLY sturdy. I was worried that the kids wouldn’t each get a turn to hit it, but I shouldn’t have been concerned. Five kids each took three turns of three hits each (with a cheap plastic bat, admittedly) and my husband still decided to “help” a little to speed it up.

Okay. We also played Doofenshmirtz and the Secret Agents. Each kid at our party got a ‘Secret Agent Hat’ so they could be secret agents. For the game, we got out one of Greg’s long-sleeved white dress shirts to be the ‘lab coat.’ One child was Doofenshmirtz, and the rest were secret agents who danced around while Greg played the Agent P theme song over the stereo.

When he stopped the music, ‘Doofenshmirtz’ would whip around and try and catch the secret agents with their hats on. (The secret agents, of course, tried to get their hats off fast enough that he wouldn’t know they were agents, and think they were just animals.) Then we went again. The last agent standing got to take a turn as Doofenshmirtz. This game was a fantastic hit.

Then of course, we played “Put the Hat on Perry.”

It’s basically just pin the tail on the donkey, but with hats and a platypus. Also, no pins. We used tape. The kids (4-7) were just the right age for this game – old enough to do it blindfolded, but young enough that the results were comical. Everyone laughed and had fun.

So there you go! Help Perry find his hat, hide from Doofenshmirtz, then destroy the Fun-away-inator and restore fun to the Tri-State area. It was fun!

Monday Morning Link Party: III

Good morning, Monday! Around here, everything is sunshine and rainbows!

And why is that, you may ask? (Well, I’ll tell you.) It’s because the first issue of Crochetvolution is UP and it looks beautiful. Pardon me while I wipe this tear. Please go see it. Have a look around. (Also, would it kill you to submit something? But I kid.)

What’s that, you say? A link party?

These beach pictures from Made sure made (see what I did, there?) me miss Japan. Hard.

Also, I love these stamps from Make Grow Gather.

I don’t think I have ever, in my life, seen an easier way to make stamps. I’m going to have to try this with my kids. They’ll go nuts.

This succulent garden (from By Stephanie Lynn) makes me wish I could have plants without killing them very, very dead.

Although… succulents are supposed to be very sturdy…sigh. Nope. I am specifically disallowed from buying any more plants until the daytime highs get consistently below 95 degrees. At least.

Finally, I’d like to direct your attention to the seamless amigurumi join from PlanetJune.

If you’re not familiar with June, she is some sort of amigurumi genius (and apparently, has an unexpected and delightful accent). After I followed the link to the seamless join, I decided to have a look at her tutorial for an invisible decrease. I’ve seen it floating around but kind of dismissed it as a high-falutin’ new-fangled method for something I already knew how to do perfectly well, thank-you-very-much. Besides, I didn’t feel like taking the time to learn a new technique. Well…now I just feel silly for waiting so long to learn it. It took about five seconds for me to understand exactly what to do, and it is an incredible improvement over conventional decreases. Go check it out.

But first! Link up!

  • I’d love to see something interesting. It can be something you posted or something you ran across, but please link to the specific post instead of a website.
  • Feel free to link to as many as you like!
  • Have a recipe? A tutorial? A finished project? Philosophy on life? Anything? I’d love to see it.
  • Ads, links to shops, products, giveaways and spam will be deleted.
  • Don’t forget to check out the other links and show everyone some love!