Self-taught baker Roxie Star is a tech worker by day, but by night she bakes adorable cakes and treats. (Roxie Star / via Tribune News Service)

Self-taught baker Roxie Star is a tech worker by day, but by night she bakes adorable cakes and treats. (Roxie Star / via Tribune News Service)

This self-taught Seattle baker makes adorable treats

The Microsoft employee expresses her love of color and design in her hot-cocoa bombs, cupcakes and cakes.

  • By Jackie Varriano The Seattle Times
  • Monday, January 31, 2022 3:49pm
  • Food & DrinkLife

By Jackie Varriano / The Seattle Times

SEATTLE — Every Friday night Roxie Star finishes up work and heads to her downstairs kitchen to play. In front of a sleek white and gray tiled kitchen background, Star creates YouTube videos filled with a rainbow of colors and kawaii-style (cute) treats ― Fruity Pebbles hot-cocoa bombs, koala-shaped cupcakes and cakes, intricately frosted on the outside and bursting with orbs of color on the inside.

Since the pandemic started, hot-cocoa bombs have captured her creative energy — hollow globes of chocolate filled with cocoa mix and mini marshmallows. Place the bomb into a mug of steaming milk and the chocolate melts away, the marshmallows bobbing to the top. For Star, these cute chocolate treats were a way to connect with her nieces and nephews.

“My nieces and nephews really love them,” she said. “It’s a great way to connect with these little people and find excitement within them.”

Star’s version of hot-cocoa bombs are almost too cute to melt. They’re shaped like baby blue seals, chubby Pusheen cats, and heart-shaped geodesics with Hello Kitty bows.

“I love color and expression and I’ve always been really interested in design,” she said. “It has nothing to do with my day job (at Microsoft) but it’s an extension of myself.”

Star patiently gives her 2,600 subscribers on YouTube and 19,000 followers on Instagram tutorials, brushing melted chocolate into silicone molds or frosting a rainbow cake with practiced ease, but she’s only been baking since 2017.

“I really couldn’t cook. I couldn’t bake. I didn’t really see the excitement in it,” Star said during a recent phone call. It wasn’t until she baked a pie from scratch that she saw the satisfaction of seeing a project through from start to finish.

When she first started searching for something to throw herself into outside of work, she spent hours online watching videos and hours at the library reading patisserie books, posting her results on Instagram.

“I found support in the community (there). I remember getting five likes for the first time and that was just as exciting as getting 5,000 likes. It feels like people are supporting my journey as a self-taught baker,” Star said.

While cakes are her favorite, she’s been having a blast with hot-cocoa bombs, a project she called “easy and approachable.”

She’s found half-sphere molds locally at a dollar store, but says they can also be found online, at craft stores or at the Home Cake Decorating Supply Co. in Maple Leaf. After candy melts are poured into the molds, the bombs can be filled with a scoop of your favorite cocoa mix plus everything from marshmallows and edible glitter to sprinkles and mini chocolate chips.

“I have been so excited about finding different marshmallows,” Star said. “It’s just a delight.”

The project is scalable — once the ingredients are amassed it’s easy to make one, two or even a dozen bombs.

“It’s not too time consuming and the outcome is just so fun — especially if you’re surprising someone,” Star said.

Winnie the Pooh hot-cocoa bombs

“Hot-chocolate bombs are chocolate spheres that are filled with anything from cocoa mix, marshmallows, candy, cookies, sprinkles, edible glitter and more,” Roxie Star says. “These are cocoa bombs designed to look like one of my favorite characters — Winnie the Pooh. They open up when introduced to a hot beverage, like milk and coffee, which can be a delightful surprise.”

To make these, you need:

• Silicone half-sphere mold

• Plastic spoon or pastry brush

• Microwave-safe bowl

• Piping bags or zip-close bags

6 to 12 ounces red candy melts

6 to 12 ounces yellow candy melts

3 ounces black candy melts

Hot-cocoa mix

Marshmallows

Edible glitter (optional)

Sprinkles (optional)

Place candy melts in heatproof, microwave-safe bowls. Microwave each at 50% power in 30-second intervals, stirring between each interval. This takes about 1½ to 2 minutes depending on your microwave.

Fill 3 silicone molds with about 1 tablespoon of red candy each. Fill the other 3 with yellow for Winnie the Pooh’s face. Use the back of a plastic spoon to spread around the chocolate or melt until it’s completely coated.

Refrigerate for 10 to 15 minutes. With the leftover yellow candy, pipe small circles on a piece of parchment for the ears and set aside.

Spread a second coat of chocolate or melted candy between all of the wells. It’s best to make the rims thicker. Refrigerate 10 to 30 minutes or until it’s firm to the touch.

Release the half-spheres by pulling around the mold edges to help release the chocolate. Then press your finger in the center of the half-sphere and carefully push out.

Clean up the bottom hot-cocoa bomb half by microwaving a plate for 2 to 4 minutes and then hold it near the hot-cocoa bomb half to gently melt and shape it.

Melt black candy and place in piping bag. Then pipe Pooh’s face on the yellow half-sphere hot-cocoa bombs.

Fill the red half-sphere with hot-chocolate mix, marshmallows, sprinkles and edible sprinkles. Now gently melt the yellow half-sphere (the one that has a face) using the warmed plate and place it atop the filled hot-cocoa bomb half to close.

Now melt the ears using the warmed plate and attach to the yellow sphere. Allow everything to set.

Talk to us

> Give us your news tips.

> Send us a letter to the editor.

> More Herald contact information.

More in Food & Drink

It may be hard to stick to your food budget, but there are many ways to be resourceful with what you have without feeling as though you have your head just above water. (Chris Gash/The New York Times)  — FOR EDITORIAL USE ONLY WITH NYT STORY SLUGGED GROCERY SPENDING TIPS BY KRYSTEN CHAMBROT FOR MAY 16, 2024. ALL OTHER USE PROHIBITED. —
9 Tips to Stretch Your Food Budget

These expert hacks can help you lower your grocery bill.

Tony Cladusbid, co-owner of the Beaver Tales Coffee franchise, watches over the canoe racing at the Penn Cove Water Festival on Saturday. (Photo by Sam Fletcher)
More than coffee: Swinomish Native shares family history and wisdom

Tony Cladusbid is the co-owner of Beaver Tales Coffee in Coupeville. He recently changed his name to honor his heritage.

FILE — Newly filled bottles of Sriracha hot sauce at Huy Fong Foods in Irwindale, Calif., on April 28, 2014. Huy Fong, the maker of the most popular variety of Sriracha sauce, told distributors in May 2024 that it would halt production of all its products until at least September, rekindling fears of another prolonged shortage of the beloved condiment. (Emily Berl/The New York Times)
Another Sriracha shortage may be on the horizon. What happened?

Huy Fong Foods, the producer of the most popular variety of Sriracha sauce, has faced several supply glitches over the years.

Pablo Garduno and the team at Barbacoa Judith’s churn out pit-roasted lamb tacos by the dozen at the Hidden Gems Weekend Market on Sunday, April 28, 2024, at Boom City in Tulalip, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Eating our way through Tulalip’s Hidden Gems weekend market

Don’t miss the pupusas, pit-roasted lamb tacos, elotes and even produce for your next meal.

With a few simple steps, you can rein in your spending at the supermarket. (Chris Gash/The New York Times)
Budgeting Is a Must at the Market

By Krysten Chambrot / The New York Times Company Shrinking products, rising… Continue reading

A giant seven-dollar apple fritter eclipses a plate on Wednesday, April 17, 2024, at Karl’s Bakery in Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
$7 buys an apple fritter the size of your head at Karl’s in Everett

The fritter spills over a dinner plate. The bakery’s owner: “I would imagine it would exceed your daily calorie allowance.”

Andy's Fish House cooks put together a three piece fish and chips order on Thursday, March 19, 2020 in Snohomish, Wa. (Olivia Vanni / The Herald)
Dive into the county’s best fish and chips

Buoy oh buoy! Herald readers voted this seafood restaurant the best spot for maritime munchies.

Craig Chambers takes orders while working behind the bar at Obsidian Beer Hall on Friday, April 12, 2024, in downtown Everett, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
Obsidian Beer Hall takes over former Toggle’s space in downtown Everett

Beyond beer, the Black-owned taphouse boasts a chill vibe with plush sofas, art on the walls and hip-hop on the speakers.

Owner Fatou Dibba prepares food at the African Heritage Restaurant on Saturday, April 6, 2024 in Everett, Washington. (Annie Barker / The Herald)
Oxtail stew and fufu: Heritage African Restaurant in Everett dishes it up

“Most of the people who walk in through the door don’t know our food,” said Fatou Dibba, co-owner of the new restaurant at Hewitt and Broadway.

Featuring a pink blush over a yellow background, WA 64 combines qualities of Honeycrisp and Cripps Pink (aka Pink Lady) for a firm, crisp, sweet and tart bite. A naming contest for the new apple runs through May 5, 2024. (Photo provided by Washington State University)
Hey Honeycrisp, this new breed of apple needs a name

Enter a naming contest for WA 64, a hybrid apple with the same baby daddy as Cosmic Crisp.

Binita Shrestha, new co-owner of Boston’s Restaurant & Sports Bar, sits in her restaurant on Monday, March 18, 2024, in Smokey Point, Washington. (Ryan Berry / The Herald)
New pizzeria owner took the scenic route from Nepal to Marysville

Binita Shrestha “wanted to be everything.” At 50, she can check off Korean beauty pageant contestant and restaurant franchisee.

Owner Andy Plumlee stands in front Popsies in Oak Harbor. (Photo provided by Whidbey News-Times)
Popsies offers kaleidoscope of popcorn flavors on Whidbey Island

Two years after taking over the business, Andy Plumlee opened another store in the Anacortes Marina on Monday.

Support local journalism

If you value local news, make a gift now to support the trusted journalism you get in The Daily Herald. Donations processed in this system are not tax deductible.