(Although, as I was stuck in traffic yesterday, HAPPY was a definite struggle.)
These cookies are HAPPY. {Start humming Pharrell Williams here; better yet...let's all watch the video. I'd like to live in there.}
It's funny...for a girl who has probably 500+ cookie cutters, I was stuck with a capital S when deciding on cookies to make for a bake sale. Some dear friends of ours are heading to Haiti on a mission trip over spring break and a bake sale was part of their fundraising efforts. I signed up to make 4 dozen cookies and couldn't think of a single design.
What to make? What to make? My fallback cookies are hearts, but the bake sale was right after Valentine's Day and I didn't want people to think they were leftovers. (You could probably say that I over-think things.)
I looked though my cookie archives (which I desperately need to update), I scoured Pinterest, I spent DAYS thinking about what cookie to make. Clearly, I need more hobbies. Anyhoo...I started looking at invitation and stationery websites because I think they always have pretty and modern design ideas. On Minted, I came across this set of garden party decor, and BINGO, inspiration.
I originally planned for only the white with dots and the solid pink cookies, but then I could tell I was running low on white icing and this happened...
Here's what you'll need to make some Happy Cookies that would make Pharrell proud:
- the perfect cut-out cookie recipe
- cookie cutters: circles, squares, whatever. I really like scalloped cookie cutters. You can find some here and here.
- royal icing
- gel/paste food coloring: Bright White, Turquoise, Electric Pink, Super Red, Egg Yellow, Avocado
- disposable icing bags
- squeeze bottles
- couplers and icing tips: #2, #3, #1, #14 star, and #349 leaf
For the dots, thinned icing was dropped right on top of the wet base coat. See this post for more details.
To make the flowers:
- big roses: pipe a swirl using the #14 star tip
- rose buds: pipe a dot with a #3 tip. Use a #1 tip to add a swirl on top
- leaves: use a #349 leaf tip. Practice on a plate of sheet of waxed paper first, releasing the pressure on the piping bag as you pull out and away.
Always let cookies dry 6-8 hours or overnight UNCOVERED.
I think these are my new go-to when I can't think of any other cookie designs to make. :)
Hoping your day is filled with a big dose of HAPPY! ♥
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar