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Lifestyle

This DIY Food Art Will Make Any Meal Instagram-Worthy

This article is written by a student writer from the Spoon University at SCU chapter.

Ever find yourself scrolling through your Instagram feed and seeing photos of artsy smoothie bowls? All it takes is a little bit of creativity and fresh ingredients to beautify any food.

Take your meal to the next level – your food will be both more photogenic and seem that much tastier. Here are some easy techniques so you can turn any food into art.

1. Kiwi Flower

food art

Photo courtesy of @irungracepace on Instagram

Use a small knife to make cuts in the kiwi in the shape of a hatching egg. Make sure that the cuts reach at least the center of the kiwi so it’s possible to pull the two halves apart. Gently separate the slices and throw your kiwi on top of oatmeal, yogurt, or smoothies.

You can also adjust the width of each slice to change the look, and try this cutting method on other fruits.

food art

Photo courtesy of @irungracepace on Instagram

2. DIY icing bag

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

Simply fill a ziplock bag with peanut butter – or any type of nut butter/sauce with similar consistency as icing, cut a hole in a corner, and draw.

This looks surprisingly fancy compared to your usual dollop of peanut butter. You can also customize the thickness of the icing by cutting a bigger or smaller hole.

Try different designs – the possibilities are endless.

DNA Strand:

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

Swirls:

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

3. Animal faces

food art

Photo courtesy of @irungracepace on Instagram

Here are some bears that you can make with peanut butter, bananas, soy yogurt, and blueberries on rice cake (I used a special food cutter from Daiso to get the bananas into the shape of bears and stars).

This idea is inspired by Cassey Ho (Blogilates), who posted a photo of a similar bear toast on her Instagram.

You can also make other animals out of food if you’re really feelin’ the theme.

food art

Photo courtesy of @irungracepace on Instagram

4. Melon bowls

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

Smoothie bowls don’t have to be in a typical bowl. Try filling a melon with your treat and enjoy some next-level freshness.

Simply filling a half empty or empty melon bowl makes your food look much more delicious. Smoothies, oatmeal, and soy yogurt are good combinations that go great with any melon, and the melon will also add extra flavor.

Other melon ideas:

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

Cut a melon like a pizza and fill with toppings.

If you don’t want to be mainstream with a circle, try making other shapes such as an octagon:

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

You can also try this fruit bowl concept with other fruit such as pineapple:

food art

Photo courtesy of @irungracepace on instagram

4. Mango Hedgehog

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

Make two cuts through the long side of the mango, each surrounding the seed. Score the mango in a grid shape, then flip it over and you have a hedgehog.

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

5. Strawberry Art

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

Strawberries are one of my favorite foods to use for food art because there are so many ways to cut them and look great with almost every type of breakfast food.

You can cut them into vertical slices, then cut the pieces in half, and arrange them into your own designs. Try them on some strawberry beet pancakes for a decadent breakfast.

Cutting the strawberry horizontally will also give you circles:

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

6. Other great toppings

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

Toppings often add detail and texture to your food, giving it more character and some aesthetic balance. Some toppings that look and taste great include: chia seeds, flax seeds, pretzels, nuts, hemp hearts, cereal, coconut flakes, cacao nibs, and hot chocolate powder.

If you don’t have a powder, then you can always mash up cereal or a cracker with that color to make a topping in the color of your choice.

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

7. Accessories

food art

Photo courtesy of @graceful.food on Instagram

You can find cool accessories at the dollar store or birthday section in the grocery store, like these musical notes from Daiso.

Cookie/mini food cutters are also great to use to make everything you eat more adorable. 

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

Just a simple cookie or food cutter that you can get at the grocery store enables you to customize fruit into unique shapes. The texture works best with hard fruits such as apples, pears, and peaches.

Try using green apples to make little flower cutouts. Looks like confetti but tastes way more delicious.

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

In addition to the cookie cutter, there are also food cutters that are specifically meant to cut seaweed for bento art. These little tools might also be perfect for making your own super cute sushi rolls.

food art

Photo by Grace Ling

I started my food art adventures a little under a year ago, and since then, I’ve been making time to try to make one every day. These are just some techniques that I have discovered since then, but the key is to have fun and spend just a little extra time for a seriously gorgeous meal.

I'm Grace! My dream job is to be an Olympic runner, video game/web/UI designer,  professional blogger, food/anime artist. I'm a sophomore Bioengineering major and looking into pursuing a masters in Computer Engineering. I run for the track and cross country team and research for the bioengineering lab. I also have my own lifestyle/running blog (irungracepace.tumblr.com), Instagram accounts, and youtube that I have been active daily on since 11th grade.