Easter – Make Your Own Chocolate Cross

by Corrie @ "Cents"able Momma on March 10, 2009
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As a mom of 2 young boys, I try to make sure that we are celebrating Easter for the right reasons. Although we give the boys Easter baskets, decorate Easter eggs, and have an Easter egg hunt, I want them to know that we are celebrating the fact that Jesus rose from the dead rather than the other things.

One of the ways that I try to reinforce Christ in Easter is by giving my boys a chocolate Easter cross rather than an Easter bunny. When I first thought of this idea, I was unable to find any chocolate crosses in the store (last year, they could be found in a few stores). So, I bought a chocolate mold from Ebay and made my own! For a couple of dollars spent on the mold the first year and a couple more on chocolate melts each year, I’m able to give my boys an inexpensive gift. As you can see from the picture on the left, my now 2 year old enjoyed his cross immensely last year!

If you’re interested in making your own chocolate cross this year, you can read my tutorial on making chocolates here. Believe me, the cross is very easy to make. You basically just melt the chocolate and pour it into the mold.

If you need a chocolate cross mold, there are many available on Ebay.  You can pick up chocolate melts at JoAnns or Michaels using the 40% off coupons that they always have in the Sunday paper.

I know that Easter is still about a month away, but I wanted to give you time to order your molds without the stress of hoping they came in time for Easter. I plan on doing a series on Easter ideas in about a week or so.

What do you do for Easter? Do you give your kids chocolate Easter bunnies or something else? How do you reinforce the message of Christ in your home? For more Easter ideas, visit Keeping the Kingdom First.


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{ 13 comments… read them below or add one }

Kelly March 10, 2009 at 11:39 pm

What a great idea!

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Dave @ Home School Dad March 11, 2009 at 2:24 am

Great Idea. I think I will try it with the kids this year.

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Cindy March 11, 2009 at 3:01 pm

What a good idea. We try to make the day Christ-focused in a few ways. We try to refer to it as Resurrection Day instead of Easter, though no one gets bent out of shape if one of us says Easter instead. We make Resurrection Cookies every year, but we have yet to get them to turn out the way they should, lol! We do give candy, including chocolate bunnies, and we get each child a little stuffed bunny or chick or something. I don’t have a cross mold, but I saw an idea on another blog about spreading melted chocolate into a pan and cutting it with a cookie cutter. I have a cross cookie cutter, so maybe we’ll do that this year.

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Corrie at "Cents"able Momma March 11, 2009 at 3:40 pm

Thanks for the ideas, Cindy. That’s an interesting idea to call it Resurrection Day! We actually make resurrection buns each year, which I plan on writing a post about. Resurrection cookies sound like fun…plus you could use your cross cookie cutter to make sugar cookies in the shape of a cross, too.

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Jodi March 11, 2009 at 4:28 pm

That is a great idea! My daughter always makes chocolates for everyone for Christmas (ornaments, santas, etc.). She could do the crosses for Christmas too! Thanks for the idea!

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Tiff March 11, 2009 at 5:12 pm

Great idea! I will definitely try this out. I also want to do those “empty tomb” cookes…I keep saying I am going to and always forget.

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Ladydi March 11, 2009 at 9:46 pm

Here is a good way to focus on the meaning of Easter my daughter who is 22 still talks about these as not only do they re-enforce the meaning or Easter but they are a bit of a mystery.

Resurrection Rolls:

1 package refrigerator crescent rolls
8 large marshmallows
ground cinnamon
butter

Take 1 crescent roll, this represent the tomb. Lay it out flat and put a little butter on it, not much. The butter represents the oils that were poured on Jesus.

Next sprinkle some cinnamon on the the butter, the cinnamon represents the spices.

Finally take a marshmallow and place it on the crescent roll. The marshmallow represents the body of Christ.

With the butter, cinnamon and marshmallow on the crescent roll, take the roll and wrap it around the marshmallow and seal it closed.

Bake in the oven as per package directions. When finished this is what you should have left.

An empty tomb, the body of Christ, the marshmallow will have melted away leaving a nice aroma of oils and spices, butter and cinnamon.

And it tastes great too!

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Corrie at "Cents"able Momma March 11, 2009 at 10:16 pm

Thanks for the great recipe, LadyDi! We make those rolls also, and I plan on doing a post in the coming weeks on those rolls and what a great illustration they are even for little kids.

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Whitney Child0fGod March 12, 2009 at 2:01 am

hey there.

wanted to mentioned that i wholeheartedly agree and God bless your family for not polluting the holy resurrection with easter bunny nonsense… kinda like santa claus and Christmas, huh?? *smh*

God bless you sis.

entrecard,
whitney

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Susan March 12, 2009 at 7:51 am

This is an awesome idea!! Thank you so much for sharing!

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Christina March 26, 2009 at 6:25 pm

Was googling easter cross molds and it dropped me here :)

My mother always gave us chocolate crosses in our easter basket. The only problem I had with it was the chocolate wasn’t nearly as tasty as the easter bunny ones! It was a bit cheap.

I’m expecting my first baby and for some reason thought about this for celebrating easter…I really want to do it this way, too! However, I’d like my child to not feel like he’s missing out on good chocolate because mommy decided to do things the Christian way.

So I thought about making my own :)

Other ideas my mom did to reinforce Christ in Easter was give us a Christian gift in the basket that she gave us before church every easter (we weren’t allowed to eat the small amounts of candy before church). I got a precious moments puzzle one year; one brother got a children’s bible (which consequently had my brother hating the bible for a period after he discovered Jesus died on the cross…he was so upset!); Veggie Tales would frequently show up in the Easter Baskets for the boys as well as Christian novels for my sister and I as we got older. Sometimes Christian music would be in the basket and Adventures in Odyssey!!! The last gift I really remember getting was a really nice Study Bible with my name engraved on it. That Bible has only recently been replaced as I kept losing the psalms from it!

My mom also did pasanki easter eggs and would make several to hide in the yard that would have our names on them and some christian art or message. The goal was to find “our” egg =p

Those are some ideas from my home growing up…that I hope to carry on with my own kids :)

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CaptPoco October 8, 2009 at 2:25 pm

What a nice tradition!

I wonder if anyone here has heard the Tom Waits song “Chocolate Jesus” or seen the “My Sweet Lord” exhibit. They both caused a big furor (at least on TV news). People said that they were part of a “war on Christians” or that they were insensitive. Personally, I am heartened by the number of people who follow this tradition and I think that, yes, it does teach kids about the Bible and Jesus. It’s always refreshing to see what regular people think about religion, as opposed to some dim-witted televangelist or corrupt religious official.

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Leonel @ Easter Chocolate February 12, 2010 at 2:08 am

I love this idea, I will definitely try this with my two boys!

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