Maybe you've got your venue and entertainment picked out. But do you have all the equipment you need for your party? If not, Party Fun 411 links you to all the equipment rentals you need, such as Yonkers a chocolate fountain rentals.
See above for featured listings of Chocolate Fountain Rentals, Rent A Chocolate Fountain, Chocolate Fondue, Chocolate Fountain, Chocolate Fountain Service, Chocolate Fountains, Chocolate Fountains for your Weddings, Parties, and Events. We offer local and national listings of Chocolate Fountain Rentals, Chocolate Fountains, Chocolate Fountain Rental, Chocolate Fountain Rentals, Chocolate Fountain, Rent A Chocolate Fountain and many more.

Share/Save/Bookmark

Did you drool when watching "Willy Wonka and the Chocolate Factory," wishing you could have your very own chocolate factory? You may not be able to have a chocolate factory, but wouldn't it be cool to rent a chocolate fountain in Yonkers for your corporate event or party in Yonkers, NY? With a chocolate fountain at your party or wedding, guests can dip sweets or fruit and other goodies into a chocolate fountain to create their own decadent chocolate goodies. ? Discover where you can find chocolate fountain rentals for your Yonkers event!
Yonkers Chocolate Fountain Rentals may also serve the following areas: Mount Vernon, Alpine, Norwood, Dumont, Pelham, Englewood Cliffs, Palisades, Closter, Greenville, Tenafly, Haworth, Dobbs Ferry, Bronx, Scarsdale, Eastchester, Cresskill, Harrington Park, Ardsley, Tappan, Hastings On Hudson, Ardsley On Hudson, Irvington, Wykagyl, Tuckahoe, Northvale, Larchmont, Demarest, Bergenfield, New Rochelle, Bronxville, Englewood, Sparkill, New York, and Westchester County.
Yonkers Factoid:
The former New York and Putnam Railroad running through the middle of Yonkers has been converted into bicycling and walking paths going north along the Saw Mill River to Elmsford and south to Van Cortlandt Park.  Yonkers Chocolate Fountain Rentals

Chocolate Fountain Rentals News and Information
  • Mama's Banana Bread
    • My family absolutely loves when I make this! It looks complicated, but it's really not. I got this out of a Paula Deen magazine. Just a few hints...I use flexible cookware when I bake and the first time I made this I had to use 3 regular sized loaf pans. The next time I used two flexible bunt pans it turned out great! I couldn't find one on here that used brown sugar in place of white. So I thought I would share this one. I don't know how many servings this makes, all I know is that it will feed my brood and then some. Please let me know what you think! -- posted by Heartspell
  • Butter Finger Workout
    • Many a recipe has passed through my kitchen, but none have driven me as crazy as this one! Most times, I can find an easy solution to a baking or cooking problem. Not this time.Butter Finger is a crunchy yet crumbly confectionery concoction that someone probably made up to frustrate their daughter-in-law. However, it is also terribly delicious and once you have offered it to anyone, they will ask for it again.Butter finger is made with a basic water, sugar and corn syrup candy base. The hard part comes after the syrup is made! The candy part is pretty straight forward.Have a cookie sheet or heat safe board prepared with parchment paper. You’ll also want to have a second sheet of parchment and your oven mitts handy, just trust me on that!Place 1 cup of peanut butter somewhere warm. You can use a double boiler, not too hot, or a nearby microwave on a low setting. This peanut butter must be warm when the candy is ready. This cannot be emphasized enough.Measure 1/3 cup of water, 1/3 cup of corn syrup and 1 cup of sugar into a medium size pot. Stir it up and place your candy thermometer. Once it reaches 310F, remove it from heat.Quickly! Stir the peanut butter in as you run to the cookie sheet. Don’t stir it briskly! Do stir it effectively!Get this stuff out of the pot and onto the sheet as fast as possible! Flatten it as much as you can before it becomes crumbly. This is where the oven mitts and second sheet of parchment come in.Now, if you can’t get it really thin, don’t worry. The next step is to grab an oiled pizza cutter. You can use a knife but a pizza cutter is faster and easier and you are rushing against time! If your candy is fairly thick cut it into narrow strips. If it’s fairly thin, cut into strips about one and half inches wide.Let your butter finger cool while you regroup!Melt chocolate, doesn’t matter what kind, in a double boiler. Grab a sheet of parchment. The next step is to dip your pieces in chocolate. As you dip each piece, place them on the parchment. After they set you can easily remove them without losing the chocolate bottom. I always leave one corner bare. It gives people something to hold onto without getting their fingers chocolaty and, when there’s a lot to choose from, it helps them know what their grabbing. Life doesn’t HAVE to be like a box of chocolates!This is probably the most difficult thing I make, but it’s also one of the most popular. Someday, I am sure, I will find the easy way. For now, it’s a labour of love for those that support me in my home baking endeavour. More incredible chocolate recipes
  • Between Chocolate and Love
    • a little love and chocolate now and then doesn't hurt. One just have to deal with it in right amounts...