Clay Extruder?

Decorating By ladybuglau Updated 2 Aug 2008 , 6:51pm by Bohnlo

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ladybuglau Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 4:13pm
post #1 of 12

I've seen clay extruders mentioned alot in posts, and I probably need one, since I can't seem to roll out a smooth "snake" of fondant, they're always uneven or bumpy. My questions is this- Is there something I can used with my cookie gun to do the same thing so I don't have to buy another pricey apparatus?

11 replies
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tiggy2 Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 5:31pm
post #2 of 12

Do any of the discs on your cookie press gun have just one hole in them or maybe one with several holes you could put tape over all but one?

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PinkZiab Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 5:36pm
post #3 of 12

I realize that what's cheap to one may be pricey to another, but you can get a decent clay gun for about $25.

But yea as the above post says as long as your cookie gun has a die for the shape you want to extrude, you can definitely use that.

By the way the best tool for smooth hand-rolled snakes is a fondant smoother icon_wink.gif I don't even use them for smoothing my fondant, only for rolling decorations! lol

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dragonflydreams Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 5:48pm
post #4 of 12

. . . here is another thread discussing clay guns . . . maybe some info. worth reading too . . . http://forum.cakecentral.com/cake-decorating-ftopic-224741-0-days0-orderasc-.html

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cassi_g16 Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 6:30pm
post #5 of 12

I saw on a video on youtube a woman (she is also a member on here) used a flat piece of cardboard and used it over the snake instead of here fingers and it made a nice smooth consistent snake. She also used what looked like a plastic dowel along side the snake to use as a guide and rolled the two side by side.

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emrldsky Posted 30 Jul 2008 , 7:41pm
post #6 of 12

I have the Makins Clay Extruder gun with lots of different discs and I LOVE IT! icon_smile.gif

And the video is by toedna1:


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ladybuglau Posted 31 Jul 2008 , 8:16pm
post #7 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by tiggy2

Do any of the discs on your cookie press gun have just one hole in them or maybe one with several holes you could put tape over all but one?




noooooo, I wish it did! just the shapes to make heart, diamond, wreath etc. cookies
$25 isn't bad though, the ones I saw when I did a google search were like $400! I stopped looking after that, lol I don't need nearly enough fondant snakes to justify that kinda $$$ icon_eek.gif

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MessiET Posted 1 Aug 2008 , 8:57pm
post #8 of 12
Quote:
Originally Posted by cassi_g16

I saw on a video on youtube a woman (she is also a member on here) used a flat piece of cardboard and used it over the snake instead of here fingers and it made a nice smooth consistent snake. She also used what looked like a plastic dowel along side the snake to use as a guide and rolled the two side by side.




The member you mention is tonedna. She has very good instructional videos on YouTube. You should check them out. The video where she shows how to make the fondant pearls is the one where she uses a dowel and board to roll a "snake". HTH

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Chef_Stef Posted 2 Aug 2008 , 5:50am
post #9 of 12

I found a light-duty one for $9.95 at Michaels that is just a syringe-type model where you push it through with your thumb on a depressor. It came with lots of shapes that I won't need, but it had two sizes of round, even though they're not very big--they worked for what I needed, and it was easy to use.

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Bohnlo Posted 2 Aug 2008 , 6:12am
post #10 of 12

Does the fondant/gumpaste have to be really really soft, as I have tried and I just can't get it to come out of the extruder easily.

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margery Posted 2 Aug 2008 , 6:22am
post #11 of 12

the more crisco you cut in the softer it will be for the extruder (i learned that from my dear cc friend wendy)

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Bohnlo Posted 2 Aug 2008 , 6:51pm
post #12 of 12

Thanks, I'll try the crisco and see if that works for me. icon_biggrin.gif

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