I’ve always loved birds. When I was a child, my grandmother on my mother’s side—Evelyn, a bird lover herself—taught me about them. I learned a lot from her about the different kinds of birds and their habits—which ones got along, for example, and which ones didn’t.

My favorite bird ever has to be Freedom, a baby cardinal I saved and raised. As it happens, I found Freedom two days after the attacks on September 11, 2001, hence his name. His mother was nowhere to be found, and I figured she had to be dead. So I took the little guy in and fed him with an eyedropper. He grew strong and tame, and became part of the family.

A male Northern Cardinal perching on a woven pouch with blue beads and feathers.
Freedom

Freedom was smart, too. He responded to my voice, and my voice alone. Plus, he knew the sound of my footsteps! When I’d approach his covered cage in the morning, he’d get really excited.

My mother, Carol, and my father, Jack, loved to bird-sit Freedom when I’d have to be away from home. He never failed to put a smile on my dad’s face.

Jack Simons wearing an orange cap beside a garden bed of sunflowers and tomato plants.
Jack Simons

“That bird would steal my earrings,” my mom will tell you to this day. “I’d feel him tugging at the bobby pins in the back of my head!”

Because I loved birds so much, I encouraged my parents to feed the wild ones outside their home. One fine day, we were in the backyard with two huge bags of birdseed… which we dropped all over the grass by accident. We scooped up as much birdseed as we could, and tossed it randomly in my mother’s small flower bed.

Well, lo and behold, a bunch of huge sunflowers grew back there. They eventually grew taller than my dad.

“We couldn’t have done that if we tried,” my mom said.

The sunflowers got so tall that we eventually had to screw hooks in the siding and tie the flowers up to the house with strips of nylon stockings.

Of course, the wild birds swooped in and fed off the sunflowers.

Those memories are the inspiration for this month’s project. The sunflower decoration makes a brownie “pop.” It will do the same for a cupcake, too. As always, feel free to be as creative as you like.

Freedom wouldn’t have it any other way.

Sunflower Brownie

Learn how to make a stunning gumpaste sunflower decoration to top your favorite frosted brownies. A fun and creative baking project for spring and summer.

Beginner
A brownie topped with yellow frosting piped into a sunflower shape with dark sprinkles in the center

Supply List

Your favorite brownies, frostedGumpasteEdible color (yellow)Edible petal dust (orange)Sunflower cookie cutter4" cookie cutterFondant forming cupsPiping gelChocolate sprinklesCake toolsWide offset spatulaSilicone matSmall rolling pinCornstarchPaint brushes

Instructions

  • Roll out gumpaste thinly. Tip: use corn starch.
  • Cut sunflower out of gumpaste using a sunflower cookie cutter. Tip: dust the cookie cutter with corn starch.
    Hand pressing a sunflower cookie cutter into rolled gumpaste on a mat.
  • Lift sunflower off mat with offset spatula and place in fondant forming cup.
    Cut gumpaste sunflower shape on a green silicone mat.
  • Let dry overnight.
  • Remove the sunflower from the cup with a cake tool.
    Hand painting yellow edible color onto a gumpaste sunflower.
  • Paint the sunflower with edible paint.
  • Dust the sunflower with edible dust.
    Hand touching the petals of a dried painted gumpaste sunflower.
  • Add piping gel and sprinkles to the center.
    Gumpaste sunflower with chocolate sprinkles in the center.
  • Cut circles from a prepared pan of frosted brownies.
    Hands using a round cutter to cut circles from frosted brownies.
  • Add sunflower with piping gel.
    Hands pressing chocolate sprinkles into the center of a gumpaste sunflower.

Notes

The sunflower needs to dry overnight before adding to the brownie.

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