Tips on decorating sugar cookies
Many bakers ask for tips and instructions on decorating cookies.
Well thats a tall order because there are as many ways to
decorate cookies as there are cookies! Here are a few guidelines
for novices and experienced bakers alike to help you generate your
own ideas for cooking decorating.
Decorating cookies before baking
Cookies can be decorated before baking with materials
that withstand the heat of baking. Some things that you can place
on your cookies before baking are:
- colored sugars or natural sugars such as pearl sugar
- jimmies, non-pareils, silver and gold dragées, and other
sprinkles
- raisins and dried fruits such as cranberries
- nuts
These items can be placed on top of almost any cookie
to dress it up a bit and give it a more festive appearance.
Paint a masterpiece
You can also paint your cookies before baking them. Make an edible
food paint out of an egg yolk mixed with a few drops of food coloring
and paint the cookies with a clean paintbrush. The paint will dry
while baking and give the cookie a colorful, glazed appearance.
This is a fun activity for kids!
A bit of trompe loeil
The folks at Better Homes and Gardens have a creative recipe for
Colored
Cream Dough which is a dough of frosting consistency that can
be piped onto cookies with a pastry bag fitted with a writing or
star tip, and then baked. The result is a cookie that looks like
it has been frosted but the frosting is baked on and hard.
Decorating cookies after baking
Decorating cookies after baking them requires that
you apply some kind of liquid-based substance that will adhere to
the baked cookie, or that will act as a glue to attach other items.
Usually, this takes the form of frosting, icing, or melted chocolate.
Frosting vs. Icing
There is a big difference between frosting and icing. Frosting is
thick and holds shapes like rosettes and shells like those you see
piped around the edges of a birthday cake. It remains soft to the
touch and has a creamy texture, and most people think it tastes
better because of the creamy buttery flavor. Icing, on the other
hand, is a thinner, more liquid substance, and as it dries it thins
out, becomes very smooth across the surface of your cookie, and
hardens. This is the icing to use for the most beautiful, professional
results.
Working with frosting
You can use frosting in two ways. One way is to simply use a knife
or rubber spatula to spread the frosting across the whole surface
of your cookie. The other way is to place the frosting in a pastry
or decorating bag fitted with a small tip and piping out thin lines
or rosettes of icing onto the cookie. Either way, once the frosting
has been applied to the cookie you can then further embellish it
by using colored sugars, non-pareils, or any of the decorating items
mentioned in the Decorating Before Baking section above. We have
a delicious recipe for Buttercream
Frosting. See detailed
instructions on piping frosting.
Working with icing
Icing is a little more difficult to work with but its smooth surface
produces the most beautiful results! Icing should always be piped
onto a cookie because it will run off the edges if spread with a
knife. Once iced you can apply silver dragées, or other sprinkles
just as mentioned with the frosting above, before it hardens. We
have an excellent recipe for Royal
Icing. There is also a recipe for Powdered
Sugar Icing that dries less hard than Royal Icing and has a
shiny surface. Martha Stewart's website features an excellent article
on how to pipe icing onto cookies for professional-looking results.
Melted chocolate
Just about any cookie can be embellished simply
by dipping it in chocolate or drizzling chocolate over it. You can
even dress up the everyday chocolate chip cookie for gift-giving or
serving at parties. Melting chocolate is a simple process, but a few
rules must be followed in order to make it a success. For Easter,
try using white chocolate tinted in pastel shades with food coloring.
Use the gel, paste or powdered kind of food color, because the liquid
drops may make the chocolate seize up..
What you need
You can either use chocolate chips or baking chocolate (the kind
that comes in 1-ounce squares) and the same process applies whether
you use dark chocolate or white chocolate. A small amount of shortening
should be added at the ratio of 2 tablespoons shortening for 1 cup
of chocolate chips or chopped up baking chocolate.
Double boiler
Place chocolate and shortening in the top half of a double boiler
or in a metal bowl that has been placed on top of a saucepan filled
with hot water. The water must be very hot, but not boiling, because
the steam generated by boiling water could get moisture into the
melting chocolate which makes it curdle. Allow the chocolate to
melt over the hot water and stir it occasionally until it has achieved
a liquid consistency.
Microwave
Place your chocolate and shortening in a microwave safe bowl and
microwave it on medium power for 1 minute. Stir. Continue microwaving
20 seconds, stir again. Keep doing this until the chocolate is almost
melted. Remove it from the microwave and stir it until completely
melted.
Dipping
Dip one end of your cookie, or half the cookie, or even the whole
cookie into the melted chocolate. Set the cookie on a wire rack
to let the chocolate harden. If you wish, you can sprinkle chopped
nuts, coconut, or non-pareils over the melted chocolate before it
hardens.
Drizzling
Scrape melted chocolate into a ziplock baggie. With a sharp scissors,
snip off a very small corner of the baggie. Drizzle top of cookies
with zig-zags of melted chocolate. Cool until chocolate is set.