What are you favorite recipes for blood? Whether you like it for photo shoots or Halloween or the bedroom, what do you like to use?
What are you favorite recipes for blood? Whether you like it for photo shoots or Halloween or the bedroom, what do you like to use?
I am so confused... I thought there was going to be food involved.
same here i was gona mention my grandmas blood pudding recipeOriginally Posted by ForrestBlack
I use to use this weird mix of water, oil, paint, and ink...never really put it on a living creature though (not sure how safe it is) but it gave me a wildly nice red to play with. These days....photoshop! haha...just easier since you can screw around with other liquids and materials that look nicer than real blood on flesh and things. I like stylized blood over real blood...it's just not as fun.
Though their is that urban legend of homeless and runaways used for their blood and bodyparts for assorted things...not sure how "legend" that really is.
Realistic Looking Mint Blood
2/3 cup Corn Syrup
1/3 cup Water
5 Tablespoons Corn Starch
3 to 5 Teaspoons Red Food Coloring
2 or 3 Drops Green Food Coloring
1 Drop Peppermint extract, if desired.
Mix the Corn starch thoroughly with the water. Add the Corn Syrup. Mix well. Add red food coloring into the mixture, using only 3 tsp at first. Then add a couple drops of green food coloring to take the 'pink' edge off the red coloring. If the mixture is too light, add one or two teapoons more red food coloring. Add an extra drop of green food coloring if the mixture gets too pink again (Real blood is slightly on the dark red to reddish brown side, when its not fresh from the heart). Add one drop of Peppermint extract if you wish a fresh minty blood mixture. The concoction tastes quite pleasant, and can be used as makeup or a "Glass of Wine" for your vampire to drink.
I've also been informed that Milk can be added (instead of or with the cornstarch) to keep the blood from being too transparent. White glue was also given as a suggestion, but if you go that route I wouldn't suggest using the mixture on or in your mouth.
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Clear Blood for Wine Glasses
Real blood is foggy or opaque, but clear liquid looks better in a wine glass. Try this recipe:
1/2 cup Grenadine Syrup
1/2 cup Corn Syrup
1 to 3 Drops Green Food Coloring
Mix the Grendine and Corn Syrup through eachother. Add green food coloring one drop at a time, mixing thoroughly after each, until the 'pink' edge has been taken off the mixture. Pour into a wine glass, and swirl. The concotion looks very good under bright light, and moves with the viscosity of thick blood. If you plan to drink it, though, I recommend you cut it half-half with water.
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Chocolate Blood
I was promised the recipe years ago, but only came across it quite recently. It was worth the wait. The mixture may seem odd, but it tastes pretty good, looks surprisingly like real blood, splatters like real blood, dries like real blood, and had several people asking me if I was really okay after that staged fight....
1/2 cup water
1 tablespoon cocoa powder
3 or 4 tablespoon corn syrup
1/2 to 1 teaspoon red food coloring
2 drops yellow or green food coloring (optional)
Mix the cocoa powder thoroughly into the water before adding the other ingredients - it may help to use warm water. After adding the rest, blend the concoction well, and then wait for it to settle a bit. Either skim the bubbles & chocolate scum off the top with the edge of a kleenex, or pour the mixture into another container. The longer it sits, the more the cocoa tends to settle to the bottom, which oddly mimicks the effect of real blood seperating.
If you splatter this mixture onto cloth, it makes neat two-part marks which dry into pretty convincing bloodstains. If you let it run from a victim's mouth and then let it dry, the blood darkens and cakes to the skin in much the same way real blood does. I can also say from personal experience that any washcloth used to wipe down the 'bloody' face afterwards looks remarkably realistic, too.
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Gore Blood
2/3 cup Oriental 'Cherry' Dipping Sauce
1/3 cup Water
1/2 Teaspoon Red Food Coloring
2 or 3 Drops Green Food Coloring
Mix the Cherry dipping sauce with water, thoroughly enough to thin down the sauce into a gooey consistancy. Add food coloring. Stir again, and let the sauce sit, preferably in a fridge. When needed, take it out and spoon it onto areas where 'gore' effect blood is needed. The blood will drip in glops & globs, but doesn't puddle out like watery blood does.
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Buckets o' Blood
1 Liter Corn Syrup
5 Liters Water
2 or 3 Tablespoons Red Food Coloring
1/2 Teaspoon Green Food Coloring (optional)
A slosh of milk
Get a large pail to mix this all together. If you do not like the consistancy you can either thin it with more water, or thicken it with sugar or corn syrup. The exact amount of food coloring you require will depend on the brand you buy, so you may need to play around with the measurements. If you make it too dark, just add more water again. Adding some milk will reduce the translucent of the mixture (real blood isn't see-thru, but if you want clear blood, leave the milk out of the recipe). Don't add too much milk or the blood will look pink!
The final product should splash like water, but be slightly shinier, and not soak into cloth quite the same way water does, leaving more of it on the outside of clothes so they look suitably bloodied. NOTE: This will stain clothing, so don't get it on anything important.
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Buckets o' Blood 2
This is great for the 'hands-on' type of blood, and (from what I hear) also works well in bath-tub sized proportions.
1 package plain gelatin or 1 package red colored JellO
2 bottle red food coloring (especially if using plain gelatin)
1 tbsp green food coloring
1 - 5 gallons of water (depending on desired consistancy)
Directions are simple: Follow the instructions on the side of the jello package, but double or quadruple the amount of water needed, and don't add any sugar. Doubling the water gives you a very slimy, gloopy jello which doesn't look a lot like blood, but can be fun to get kids to stick their hands into at hallowe'en parties. If you use 5 gallons of water, you're going to have quite a thin runny blood, great for pouring over bloodied bodies in bathtubs or splashing on walls (especially if you can hose down the walls after - I wouldn't recommend this in your livingroom or parent's bedroom). You can play around with the recipe to get the desired consistancy - gelatin is reasonably cheap and available in almost any grocery store.
---For the bathory scene I got stage blood and diluted it. BAD IDEA. Next time I try I am going for the buckets of blood reciepe.
(found these on the Raven's fake blood page...)
Sun
same here but i do have a recipe for fake blood i use it for drama corn syrup and red food coloring(lots of it)Originally Posted by ForrestBlack
i use karo and red food coloring and sometimes add chocolate syrup to make it more translucent and darker
my recipe for 'fresh' blood, with the right kind of 'drip trail'...
1 mug hot water
2 generous teaspoons instant coffee
5 generous teaspoons sugar
a short teaspoon of red food colouring
a drop of yellow food colouring
mix the whole lot together. a recipe so effective that it got my husband followed by police when he went to a fancy dress party
if you need to show the blood clotting, then add a bit of no refridgerated geletin or a bit of jelly/jello (usually 2-3 cubes for a mugful) and watch it go nice and gloopy. it always works for me anyway. it's a nice blood to spit too.
Last edited by vixta; 08-03-2005 at 05:49 PM. Reason: jelly = jello
Same here.Originally Posted by ForrestBlack
I like black pudding:
1lt (1¾ pints) Blood (Pig, Lamb or Goose)
340g (12oz) Shredded Suet
300ml (½ pint) Milk
50g (2oz) Oatmeal
3 Medium Onions, chopped
1 tbsp Salt
½ tsp Mixed Herbs
½ tsp Cayenne Pepper
Pinch Nutmeg
Pre-heat oven to 160°C: 300°F: Gas 2.
Mix all of the ingredients together thoroughly, making sure that the seasonings are evenly distributed.
Next fill the large sausage cases, see: Sausage Making Basics for advice on doing so.
Place into an ovenproof dish with a cover, standing in a larger dish half filled with water.
Bake for 1½ hours.
Allow to cool.
Fry with bacon and eggs for breakfast or use as a part of a Mixed Grill.
I thought black pudding was originally cooked in a kidney or liver or something. It looks like a swirled donut (lol)
I think im gonna puke
hey that recipe is almost identical to my grandmas except she only uses pigs blood and she tosses in some habaneros into the mix
i use real blood......well used too.....
guess i'm not cool,haha....
Thurbane, that blood pudding looks pretty good, but Ill keep My haggis, nothin like tha taste of boiled sheep innards in the stomach and a pint of Dewars to wash it down and I usually use a recipe like sunkarma put for the first item at halloween, a good dark looking mix for leaking down tha chin is a good effect when some kid knocks at the door
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