How To Make Lego Cake Pops

How to make Lego Cake Pops and Lego Marshmallow Pops. Easy fun food recipe ideas for a Lego birthday party. Kids will love these edible minifigures!

, for my son’s Lego Birthday Party, nobody had seen anything like them. It’s amazing to see them ALL over the internet years and years after posting this. So I am proud to call these the

Lego

It is pretty cool to see so many boys enjoying these treats at their own birthday parties and why I started a blog about my creative ideas in the first place. is to help others become more creative. It makes me smile knowing that something as simple as a yellow cake pop with Lego Mini Figurine faces drawn on them has made so many kids happy!

Lego Cake Pops Fail

I love coming up with creative kids birthday party ideas and I hope you enjoy this idea! If you make Lego Pops, please share a photo on my Facebook Pageor tag me on Instagram.Thanks!

Place the craft styrofoam into a bowl, bucket or cute box, then stick the cake pops into the foam. Cover the foam with candy or shredded paper. I used M&M’s for these Lego Cake Pops.

Lego Marshmallow Pops are a much faster version of the cake pops. I made several of these pops as a test, and they turned out super cute!

Lego Birthday Cake

Slicing off the bottom of a large marshmallow and cutting a circle out of it with anicing tip for the top worked great.

NOTE:LEGO® and the Brick and Knob configurations are trademarks of the LEGO Group of Companies which does not sponsor, authorize or endorse this product. Photos by Amy Locurto. This post contains affiliate links.

Calories: 256 kcal | Carbohydrates: 38 g | Protein: 1 g | Fat: 11 g | Saturated Fat: 7 g | Sodium: 81 mg | Potassium: 10 mg | Sugar: 36 g | Calcium: 1 mg | Iron: 1 mgIt is no secret that all boys (and men) love Legos! So when the question “What would you like for your birthday theme this year?” arises, Legos is generally shouted from the roof tops. For the last two years I have made these adorable Lego Head Cake Pops for Liam’s (my youngest son) birthday, and I am sure this year was not my last! You may be wondering to yourself, how hard are those to make?! No worries, I have zero experience as a cake decorator and don’t even desire to be one. However, if I can do it, so can you. All you have to do is believe in yourself and use your Lego imagination!

Lego Cake Pops

This year I did something different! As I was preparing all the supplies needed to make these fun Lego Cake Pops I thought it would be fun and unique to have you instantly see the process and join in on the fun. Therefore, I hosted a spur of the moment, step by step #livetutorial on Instagram.

-

Was our very first #livetutorial on our Instagram page and there will definitely be more live tutorials in the future! Therefore, stay tuned and don’t forget to follow us so you won’t miss out on all the fun! Below are the photos I shared during the live tutorial. All these photos were taken with an iPod camera and were not edited or filtered, so you are getting to see the real deal!

Tips on making Lego faces- Practice your desired Lego faces on paper first. Then place a small amount of decorating gel on a plate, dip a toothpick into the gel, and then gently create Lego faces. You just have to work with the gel, but it doesn’t take long to get the hang of it. Practice on a few cake pops before conquering all of them. If you mess up, no worries, just eat it (just kidding). Take a water dampened Q-tip and gently rub off the gel and wait for it to dry until you try again.

How To Make Cake Pops

I am the mother of three beautiful children including Christian and I am very grateful for the opportunity to serve you through Poppy Avenue Boutique. I am currently living my work in De Pere, WI as we build this business from the ground up. We have so many fun things in store and we are so excited to share them with all of you. If you cannot already see we are huge fans of good coffee and conversation. I love to shop small and support small business communities. My passion is clean food & beauty, adorable fashion, and Jesus. Without all off these interests in my life I would not be where I am today.

Do you love our posts? We do to! You want to feature us? YAY! We would love for you to! However, we only allow one photo with a direct link back to Cherished Bliss to be used when featuring our work. You may not use more than one photo or a post in it's entirety without direct written consent from Cherished Bliss. You may not crop or edit any of the photos that belong to Cherished Bliss. We also ask that you do not remove or add any watermarks to our photos. You may write a brief description in your own words when featuring our work, but you may not copy any of the steps in our tutorials, or in our recipes. All of our posts are copyright protected. If you have any questions concerning our Content & Photo Sharing Policy, you may contact us at ashley. gmail com. Thank you!Having a little girl, I’m all about princess tutus and dolls. She’s not a cotton candy pink girl, but she’s not a Tom Boy either. Anyway… I have a hard time with boy gifts and ideas.

-

You’ll need to make you cake pop batter and either buy yellow candy melts or tint your white chocolate yellow. I prefer to tint my candy coating. I used a little less than half a 9 x 13 cake and got 17 pops.

Lego Pirate Cake |

Once they are dry, add the features. I googled “Lego Faces” and found a ton of images to base the faces off of. I had no idea there were so many different ones!

I was not happy with the rounded button top, so I tried to shave down the candy around the M&M. I made more of a mess, so I stopped trying so hard to make them “perfect“. They’ll only be gobbled up anyway…

I used the Wilton Cookie Icing and a toothpick to draw on the features. It does take a steady hand, and you can always add a bit more to the design. It’s hard to remove it later.

-

Lego Head Marshmallow Pops Recipe: Lego Cake Pops

I only made a dozen faces, to the rest of the pops, I just added Lego Candy pieces to the tops. If you’re not adventurous enough to make the full faces, the plain pops with the candy will work perfectly as well!

Images, text and all other content Copyrighted©Karyn Granrud, Susanne Queck and Wunderlander Verlag LLC, or ©Pro Stock Media via Canva.com. Unlicensed republishing permitted. As an Amazon affiliate, we earn on qualified purchases.

I'm Karyn, a mom and wife, and I founded this little baking blog. Baking and making desserts have been my passion since I was a kid. I love experimenting with different flavors and sharing delicious recipes with all of you. Read more.

Easy Lego Cake Idea For A Lego Birthday Party