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Showing posts with label the basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label the basics. Show all posts

Meringue Powder . . . Works for Me Wednesday

    Using meringue powder is not the only way to make royal icing, but it's what I use to make mine.

    When I first started decorating cookies, I used raw egg whites in my royal icing, but I started getting nervous.  Not nervous for me, but for other people who might eat the cookies.  About 9 years ago, I discovered meringue powder and I haven't looked back.

    Does the brand of meringue powder matter?  Yes.  These are 2 of my favorites:

    • Williams-Sonoma brand (made by CK)
    • Ateco, available at bakery supply shops or Amazon
    I also like:
    • AmeriColor
    • CK
    There is another brand that is more widely accessible.  I won't mention the brand here because I think they do a lot of things really well, but I don't love their meringue powder.  Actually, I used it for years before even realizing there WERE other brands.  Once I bought one of the brands above from a bakery supply shop, I immediately tasted a difference and saw a better consistency with my icing.

    {That said, if you are experiencing a cookie decorating emergency, you have my blessing to use the other stuff.} ;)

    Gail of One Tough Cookie uses powdered egg whites with fantastic results.  She even has a vlog post about it if you want to learn more.

    What do YOU use to make royal icing?

    {Psst....here is the royal icing recipe I use if you're ready to make some of your own.}Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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White, yes, WHITE Food Coloring . . . Works for Me Wednesday

    After last week's WFMW post, I realized that I needed to let you in on a little cookie decorating secret.  A secret called....white food coloring.

    White food coloring is one of those things I saw in the bakery supply store for years and thought, "Royal icing is white. Why would I ever need that?" 

    Then, it happened.  My beautiful WHITE outlined cookies turned, well, off-white.  The cookies I spent 5 hours decorating.  The cookies I needed to mail to a friend THAT morning weren't white. *sob*

    I have no idea why royal icing turns off-white sometimes and not others.  All I know is, I'm not risking it any longer. I use it EVERY time I need white icing.  Just use it like you would any other food color.

    Another hint: I put in the amount of AmeriColor Bright White that I think is enough, and then I add a little more.  Trust me, more is more here.

    It's not only for royal icing and cookies, either.  Cheryl used it on her Snowy cupcakes earlier this week....they are so cute!


    Where to get it?
     works for me wednesday at we are that family
    Have YOU ever used WHITE food color?
    Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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7 Food Colors I Can't Live Without : Works for Me Wednesday

    OK...new year, time to get back in the swing of things!  I'm going to try to be better about posting Works For Me Wednesday tips (to tell the truth, I ran out of ideas), so if there is anything you are wondering about, please leave it in the comments. :)

    Food coloring: I use AmeriColor Gel Paste food coloring for ALL of my food coloring needs (that sounds funny).

    I have a shelf full of, let me count....thirty-one bottles of color.  Hey, just like Baskin-Robbins.  Anyhoo....

    These SEVEN are the ones I cannot live without:

     I have large bottles of Bright White, Super Red and Super Black....
     

     In the smaller bottles, Deep Pink, Chocolate Brown, Egg Yellow and Leaf Green....
    So, if you are just starting decorating cookies, those 7 are the colors I would start with.

    ***update: In the comments, Megan pointed out that I don't have a blue listed.  Although I don't use blue all that often, you definitely need one in your arsenal. I use Sky Blue. Thanks, Megan!***

    Where to buy AmeriColor Gel Paste Food Coloring?  Lots of places.
    Remember to leave a comment to suggest a topic for a future WFMW!
    works for me wednesday at we are that family
    {Works for Me Wednesday is hosted by We are THAT Family....my real-life next-door neighbor!}

    Oh! I'm guest posting over at Confessions of a Cookbook Queen today! Go meet Kristan!  She's a hoot! (And there's chocolate.....)Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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Tips for Using Cookie Cutters . . . Works for Me Wednesday

    works for me wednesday at we are that family
    I've been getting a lot of questions about cookie cutters lately.

    So, today we're talkin' cookie cutters...

    There are 6 "tricks" I use and they are really simple.

    1. Flour the cookie cutter.  I keep a little salad plate of flour right by my rolling area and dip my cookie cutter in it between cuts.  This keeps the cutter from sticking to the dough and stretching or tearing the shape. 
       
      2. Flour the rolling surface, and the rolling pin, and the dough.  As you can see from the picture, I flour everything!  I think cooking shows have scared us away from flour when rolling cookies.  Here's what I do....I sprinkle a liberal amount of flour on the rolling surface and spread it out with my hands.  Then, I run my rolling pin over it to coat the pin. Finally, I take a chunk of dough in a ball shape and roll it across the surface.  I knead this in to get rid of the super "stickiness" of the fresh dough.  This is the recipe I use and it works just fine with a generous dusting of flour.

        3. I love using my marble cutting board, but if you don't have one, roll the dough on a sheet of wax or parchment paper.  Whether using marble or wax paper, I keep it dusted with flour...even if I have to re-coat it every so often.  I find the cut shapes come off the wax paper easier than my counter top.  

        4. Once all of the shapes are cut from one rolled piece, gently lift off the excess and put it back in the bowl.  Now, the cut shapes will lift easily to the cookie sheet and the excess dough can be re-rolled. 
         
        5. To re-roll dough, knead it into the fresh dough to make it all cohesive. Then, just re-roll as normal. 

        6. To help the cut-outs from spreading, place the cookie sheet in the freezer for 5-10 minutes before baking.
          If you don't have a cutter in the shape you need, make a template to hand-cut the cookie dough.

          And I've gotten a LOT of emails about this week asking where I get my cookie cutters.  The truth is, I get them anywhere I see them....the bakery supply store, craft store, grocery store, foodie shops. Here's a short list of places to find great cutters online:
          {Portions of this post first appeared on as a guest post on Muthering Heights.}
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          This Does NOT . . . Work for me Wednesday

            Baggies are not an acceptable substitute for piping bags.
            There I said it.


            There are books and TV hosts out there who will tell you, just snip off the end of a baggie when piping icing...it works "just like a pasty bag." Well, they lie.


            When I made Cheryl's' cookies, I ran out of piping bags. {The HORROR!} We were down to one car for the week, my husband (WITH THE CAR) was out to dinner with customers and it was 8:00 at night. I was desperate. I reached for the baggies. I even used my couplers and tips with them.

            They tore, they bulged, they flopped, they were unruly....I may have said a bad word.

            Trust me...if you're going to decorate cookies, make it easier on yourself, go for a piping bag.

            Whew! Rant over...now go visit some happier tips over at We Are THAT Family. But tell me, are there baking tips that *don't* work for you?

            More Bake at 350 WFMW tips can be found here.Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          Royal Icing 102 . . . or 201 . . . or whatever comes after 101

            If you've been reading the blog for a while, you might have seen my post titled "Royal Icing 101." This is how I made royal icing for years...and it worked well...most of the time.

            Sometimes, though, I had problems with my icing. Some days it looked dull; sometimes the piping cracked; sometimes the flood icing was filled with little holes.

            So, I've done some reading and some experimenting and I've made some changes. Who knows...maybe in 6 months, I'll be doing a post called "Royal Icing 103" (or 301, or whatever), but here's what is working for me these days.

            Royal Icing
            (This will cover 2-3 dozen 3.5 inch cookies in 2 colors; I usually double this recipe.)

            4 TBSP meringue powder
            scant 1/2 c. water
            1 lb. powdered sugar
            1/2 - 1 tsp light corn syrup
            few drops clear extract (optional)



            Combine the meringue powder and water. With the paddle attachment of an electric mixer, beat until combined and foamy.



            Sift in the powdered sugar and beat on low to combine. (Do NOT skip the sifting!)


            Add in the corn syrup and extract if desired. ( I think the corn syrup helps keep the icing shiny.)

            Increase speed to med-high/high and beat for about 5 minutes, just until the icing is glossy and stiff peaks form.


            (You should be able to remove the beater from the mixer and hold up and jiggle without the peak falling.) Do not overbeat.

            Cover with plastic wrap touching the icing or divide and color using gel paste food colorings.

            This "stiff" icing is perfect for outlining and even for building gingerbread houses and monogramming. To fill in your cookies, add water to your icing a teaspoon at a time, stirring with a rubber spatula, until it is the consistency of syrup. This technique of filling a cookie with thinned icing is called "flooding."

            Here are some f.a.q.'s regarding royal icing:
            {Be sure to check last week's post with cookies f.a.q.'s...I will be updating that post periodically...and check back for next week's troubleshooting post.}

            Do you ever add anything to your royal icing to improve the taste (lemon juice, almond extract....?).

            Yes, I typically use a few drops of pure almond extract when I am making my vanilla-almond sugar cookies. Just keep in mind that any colored extract, such as vanilla, will tint the icing.

            What is a "scant" cup?

            It's a measuring cup not filled all the way up to the top. Take a look at the picture above....I took it just for you!

            Why does my piped icing...you know...the outline...or maybe just some piping done on gingerbread men...well...why does it dry up and just fall off in little bits.

            I think this is from overbeating. It's happened to me, too. Try to beat it until it's glossy and just coming to a stiff peak. Also, use the paddle attachment of your mixer. (This is a really common question...I'll put it in the troubleshooting post as well.)

            How do you know the perfect consistency for icing when flooding?

            Once your colors are mixed, add water a teaspoon at a time to thin it for flooding. Stir the water in with a rubber spatula, rather than beating it. Hold your rubber spatula over the bowl and let some icing fall back into the bowl. The ribbon of icing should disappear into the rest of the icing in about 2-3 seconds, counting "one-one thousand, two-one thousand."

            When decorating wet on wet, how do you do it so the colors don't bleed into one another?

            I typically work about 6-8 cookies at a time. I flood all the cookies in the base coat, then go back and add the dots. This gives them a minute or so to rest. It seems to stop the bleeding. Sometimes, it still happens and that's when I have to remind myself not to stress and that it's "just a cookie." (Sometimes a glass of wine helps.)

            How exactly do you mix your icing colors when you need several colors and piping and flood?

            I divide my icing into how many colors I'll need, whether it's for piping or flooding. (IE...if I need red for outlining and flooding, I make one big container of red.) Then, I tint them with food coloring. If I need a color for both piping and flooding, I go ahead and fill a piping bag before adding the water for flooding. Here's a link with more details on icing prep.

            If you make your icing ahead of time, do you separate into flood and piping then or wait until it's time to decorate?

            I wait until it's time to decorate.

            How do you get your writing to look so even and not slanted?

            Practice....lots and lots of practice! And sometimes, it's still crooked! ;) Try practicing on a plate or a piece of wax paper before trying it on your cookies.

            Do you have any suggestions for folks like me with not a lot of room to spread out the cookies to dry?

            Try stacking your cookie sheets with the drying cookies on top of each other...like some horizontally and some on top vertically allowing some space for air circulation. Does that make sense? The sides of the cookie sheets will support the second layer. You may have to add some drying time here. I've been known to have cookie sheets on every flat surface of my house, including the guest room bed!

            I've always wondered...if the cookie is left out overnight, won't it get stale?

            Nope, the royal icing needs that overnight time to dry thoroughly and the icing kind of "seals" the cookie from getting stale.

            Does royal icing taste as good as cream cheese frosting?

            Nope...not in a million years. Cream cheese icing I would eat with a spoon, royal icing not so much. It can taste good, especially if you use Williams-Sonoma, Ateco or AmeriColor meringue powder, but it will never compare to frosting. Make sure you use a sugar cookie recipe that you like. The cookie is the real star here.

            Where can I buy meringue powder?

            Meringue powder can be found in craft stores and even in the WalMart craft section. The brands that I recommend are normally only found in baking supply stores or online. I recommend Williams-Sonoma, Ateco and AmeriColor. These 3 are vastly superior to the craft store brand in taste and performance.

            How do you get the same color, when you made less icing than you needed?

            I always try to make more than I need to avoid that problem....otherwise, I really just cross my fingers.

            When you make your icing beforehand, do you refrigerate it or leave it out?

            Refrigerate it.

            How long can you keep royal icing in the fridge before you need to toss it?

            I've heard up to one week, but I am never that organized to have it made that early.

            In what type of container do you store it (pastry bags or Tupperware or ??)

            I put it in Tupperware type containers with plastic wrap pressed down onto the icing to keep it from drying, then with the lid on top of that.

            I've always wanted to ask - "the consistency of syrup" - do you mean cheap syrup or real maple syrup? Seriously, I have both and they are so different. Stop laughing at me. I have consistency issues. Stop laughing!

            I love this question, Brigid! The consistency of the good stuff. :) (See the question a few above on consistency.)

            How do you know for sure when the frosting is dry enough to put more raised-style frosting on top?

            I usually wait at least an hour.

            How do I make red icing?

            AmeriColor Super Red food coloring!!! Here's more info on red icing.

            How do I make black icing?

            AmeriColor Super Black food coloring (noticing a trend?). Here's more info on black icing.


            I'll try to update this list as questions come in, so please check back! Thanks, guys, for the questions...I hope this helps! If you have any Royal Icing tips, please share!!! I'd love to hear them!

            {Visit Works For Me Wednesday for more tips at We Are THAT Family.}

            Related posts:

            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          Disposable Pastry Bags...Works For Me Wednesday

            You know from a previous WFMW that I love squeeze bottles for flooding cookies (filling in the outlines). But here's what I use for piping outlines and adding details...
            Disposable Pastry Bags!

            Why are these great? No washing! You may have seen these...
            ...but they require washing and drying after each use. Messy and aggravating!

            Some recommend using baggies for a piping bag. I don't. I think they are hard to control, not all that sturdy, and the tip has to be cut off just right.

            Disposable decorating bags work for me.
            icing bag prep 1
            Insert a coupler, cut off the end (most say to cut it further up the coupler, I like to cut off less of the bag, that way there's less of a chance of leakage),
            icing bag preps 2
            ...add a tip and secure with the coupler ring. Now, if you want to change tip sizes, just unscrew the ring, change the tip and re-secure.
            {Here's a great link with more details on how to use a pastry/decorating bag.}

            Disposable bags are sold at bakery supply stores, craft stores and even WalMart. I buy mine in the box of 100 at Michaels. I cringed the fist time I saw the price, $19.99. I always wait for my 40% off Michaels coupon from the Sunday paper. With the coupon, the bags come to about 12¢ each. (OK...even at full price, they are only 20¢ each, but I feel better using a coupon.:)

            Be sure to hop on over to We Are THAT Family for more WFMW tips! I learn something new every week. Here are a few of my previous entries:
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          Royal Icing 1 0 1 . . . .Works For Me Wednesday


            For cookie decorating, I use Royal Icing. I've seen cookies decorated with fondant and just recently heard of rolled buttercream, but Royal Icing works for me.

            Royal Icing is an icing that dries hard and opaque, so cookies can be stacked and icing stays pretty when cookies are packaged. It's easy, too...it only takes 3 ingredients: meringue powder, water and sugar (flavoring is optional).
            To start, you'll need meringue powder. Ateco and Williams-Sonoma are my favorites...I think I've tried them all. :) Ateco is a little hard to find, so any meringue powder will work. Follow the instructions for Royal Icing that come with your meringue powder. Here's a recipe to try with any meringue powder:

            Royal Icing
            (this will cover approximately 3 dozen 3.5 inch cookies)

            1 pound powdered sugar
            5 TBSP meringue powder
            scant 1/2 c. water
            a few drops of extract (optional)

            Combine the meringue powder and water with a whisk attachment using an electric mixer. Beat until peaks begin to form. Sift in the powdered sugar and beat on low to combine. Increase speed to high and beat until stiff peaks form. (You should be able to remove the beater from the mixer and hold up and jiggle without the peak falling.) If using an extract, add it then beat for a few more seconds to incorporate.
            Cover with plastic wrap touching the icing or divide and color using gel paste food colorings.

            {The most important step: sift the powdered sugar! Believe me, I've tried to shortcut this step...it doesn't work. My favorite powdered sugars are Domino and C & H, but as you can see from the picture, any will do. Imperial is easier to find in the 1 pound boxes.}

            This "stiff" icing is perfect for outlining and even for building gingerbread houses and monogramming. To fill in your cookies, add water to your icing a little at a time until it is the consistency of syrup. This technique of filling a cookie with thinned icing is called "flooding." Click here for more details.
            Happy cookie decorating!

            Be sure to check out all of the Works for Me Wednesday ideas at We are THAT Family.

            ♥♥♥Don't forget the CHOCOLATE GIVEAWAY going on right now!!! TWO Bake at 350 readers will win!♥♥♥

            More WFMW posts:
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          My Main Squeeze . . .Works For Me Wednesday

            Flooding* cookies with icing can be a messy affair. That's why I love squeeze bottles!

            *{Flooding is just a fancy term for filling in a cookie with thinned icing.}
            For piping outlines and details in royal icing, I use pastry bags. When I'm ready to fill in the cookie outline, I thin the icing and transfer the (flood) icing into squeeze bottles.
            Why not use a pastry bag? Using a pastry bag for flood icing can lead to this:
            Not pretty! Plus, those drips out of the top of the bag can plop down right on an already decorated cookie!!!
            {I know, I used to do it this way!}
            Now, I use these...(they come in a larger size, too)
            ...and I'm left with this....I like that. Much less messy!
            Squeeze bottles can be found in the candy making section of most craft stores and sometimes in the craft section of WalMart.
            Spend a few minutes (or an hour or two) checking out all of the great Works For Me Wednesday tips at We Are THAT Family.
            My previous WFMW posts:
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          Perfectly RED Icing...Works For Me Wednesday

            The theme for this week's WFMW is "greatest hits." Looking back over my old blog posts (back when I was my only blog reader!), I came across a post on making red icing. This was a HUGE headache for me when I was first starting to make cookies.

            Red icing is probably the most difficult to make. It looks too pink, too orange, or too dark. I've fallen in love with AmeriColor's Super Red gel paste coloring. It doesn't take as much to get a nice red and doesn't have the off-taste like some others (Wilton, at least to me).

            All icing will darken over time and while drying, but it is especially true with red. Try to make your red icing at least a day in advance, cover with plastic wrap, pressing down onto the icing, cover and refrigerate. Bring to room temperature before using and just give it a stir.
            When making red, aim for a little lighter than you'd like on your final product. Believe it or not, the icing above turned into a perfect, bright red on my cookies. If the icing is a true, deep red before it goes on the cookies, it can turn extremely dark once dry...close to black. (If your icing is too dark or looks perfectly red before putting it on your cookies, stir in some white icing.)

            Red icing can also change in high humidity. If it's humid and you notice your cookies getting splotchy once dried, don't panic. The icing will eventually even out in color.


            Go on over and check out the other "greatest hits" on Works for Me Wednesday hosted by We Are THAT Family.

            My other WFMW posts:
            Some RED cookies:
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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          Frozen assets

            My frozen assets! I love that sugar cookies can be frozen!

            I have a lot of cookies that I want to give and mail next week, but I knew I wouldn't have time to do it all at once. So, last night while watching The Year Without a Santa Claus and Rudolf the Red-Nosed Reindeer and the Island of Misfit Toys (not recommended, BTW...stick with the original), I baked cookies...over 70 of them.
            The cookies were bagged in gallon-size freezer baggies, between layers of wax paper (did you know Thomas Edison invented that...what a great guy!). Then, these were placed in freezer-safe plastic containers and will be ready when I am ready to ice them.
            To thaw, just take them out of the freezer about 2 hours or more before decorating. (Do not refrigerate.)
            Cookies already decorated with royal icing can also be frozen! This is great if you're planning a big party, just make your cookies in advance and pop in the freezer. Again, take them out a few hours before you need them, and you are all set. If you've bagged them, leave the cookies in the bags to thaw.
            Source URL: http://soniceview.blogspot.com/search/label/the%20basics
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