The Denver Post

HERE ARE SOME WAYS TO DECORATE HOLIDAY COOKIES

Tips for decorating sweet treats for holiday gatherings

- By Susan Clotfelter

If one person on the planet got to hold the title of “most obsessed with cookie decorating,” Monica Signer would volunteer to be that person.

Signer, who lives in Berthoud, translates business needs into software requiremen­ts for a living. Her passion, cookie decorating, uses a whole different part of her brain.

This holiday, she is on a quest to create a complete gingerbrea­d scene. A trip to Austria and Switzerlan­d last Christmas — known for its snow-covered mountains and beautiful villages — and “The Great British Baking Show” served as further inspiratio­n for her sugary task this winter. Who can’t relate to wanting to hop right into the kitchen after every GBBS episode?

The day after hosting 12 people at her home to decorate cookies, she was busy creating a thimble-sized Abominable Snowman face (yes, the one from the 1964 “Rudolph” special) out of royal icing. Copying the

face from a full-sized Abominable design on her phone made her giggle like the 9-year-old she’d hosted in her kitchen the day before.

For Mary Richmond, who owns The Cookie Sheet with Diane Bellamy, decorated cookies are about the delight they create before her customers even eat them — in fact, before her customers even see them. She recently created a “milk and doughnuts” set of cookies for a first birthday party with milk bottles, doughnutsh­aped cookies and sippy cups. Easy, right?

While the thought of a giant gingerbrea­d landscape or a themed cookie platter may seem incredibly intimidati­ng to most, we feel our creativity and willingnes­s to try come alive during the holiday season.

The concept isn’t too hard: cut, bake, cool, decorate. And with foolproof tips from Signer and Richmond for the most whimsical, beautiful, enticing decorated cookies, you’re sure to be the hit of every engagement this month.

The dough

The goal: A smooth, dense dough that doesn’t crack when rolled out to l inches thick. It should neither spread nor rise much when baked.

The challenge: Each batch you make may be different depending on humidity and how dry your flour is. Signer found that a dry, cracking gingerbrea­d dough could be helped by increasing the molasses (not the fat or water) by 20 percent.

Expert tip: Richmond votes for a butter shortbread recipe rather than a sugar cookie dough. “Sugar spreads, it will sag, it will not come out. I will stack shortbread against any recipe; it’s delicious and it keeps its shape,” she said.

The roll

The goal: Fast, efficient dough production and cutting.

The challenge: Keeping your countertop safe while also not wrecking your back stooping over the dining-room table. Signer recommends combining two special tools — a silicone rollout mat that doesn’t slide on the countertop, and reusable, copper-colored nonstick baking sheets. The silicone will adhere to the counter, the copper mat will grip the silicone, and you can cut the dough on the copper. Remove your excess dough, then lift the copper baking mat onto the sheet pan to bake the cookies. This means you don’t have to lift cut cookies to transfer them.

The newcomer’s tip: Many cookie recipes call for refrigerat­ing the dough. Signer found this didn’t help with cracking, but did make the dough a genuine pain to roll out. What did help, however, was rolling out room-temperatur­e dough, then refrigerat­ing the cut cookies in the sheet pan until chilled.

The bake

The goal: Crispy, smooth cookies that will hold icing.

The challenge: Achieving perfectly baked, crisp, dense cookies that won’t shatter.

The tip: With gingerbrea­d, you do not want the edges to begin to get more brown than the centers. Also, plan on turning your pan, which will help give you even results. With older ovens, use an oven thermomete­r and/or baking or pizza stones on the bottom rack. This increases preheating time, but helps your oven heat more evenly. All ovens differ, so knowing the quirks of your oven is the key. Signer adds that for her, the l–inch thickness is key: Thinner, and the cookies tend to warp if they’re moved before cooking (and break once cooked).

The icing

The goal: Beautiful and tasty. The challenge: The perfect icing for cookie decorating is all about consistenc­y. There’s “icing glue” — the thick, paste-like stuff Signer will use to attach cookie walls and structural supports in three-dimensiona­l elements. Then there’s “piping” icing for outlines, stars and textural elements; and “flood” icing which, with the help of a few smoothing tools, creates a solid coat of color across the surface of the cookie. Newcomer’s tip: When you’re thinning icing, Signer says to go slowly — add a drop of water at a time to your cup-or-less of icing. In addition, letting icing sit overnight (or, in the case of black, for days) intensifie­s the color. When all else fails, there’s also Google, and Facebook groups like Cookie Decorating for Beginners.

The bottom line: The important difference in all four types of icing is consistenc­y, and consistenc­y is controlled with the amount of water.

The fun stuff: decorating

The goal: Keep your energy and creativity high, and keep turning out beautiful, appetizing cookies

The challenge: It’s hard! Not everyone is an icing artist.

Newcomer’s tips: Have all the prep done so you can focus on the artistic part. That means having your cookies baked and your icing prepared and colored ahead of time, and all of your tools laid out. The bigger the flat surface to play on, the better, so clear the table. Look online for cookie designs you like, and practice the same design over and over again on parchment paper or a plate. “I always try to do too many things at once,” Signer said, “so I need to sit down and do 12 of the same cookies. That’s how you get good at a design.” She also recommends watching YouTube videos by Julia M. Usher, author of “Ultimate Cookies.”

Expert tips: “Sit with the (icing) bag and practice,” Richmond said. “There’s a lot of ways you can hold the bag. I hold it like a pencil.” Once you’re confident, let yourself go, she added. Put your heart and soul into it. She also doesn’t “flood” — she instead creates an icing-based glaze that’s thinner and dips the whole cookie to coat it. “Everyone is different, but even beginners are creating something that makes someone feel really good,” she said.

And, of course, you could always take a cookie decorating class such as the two coming up on Dec. 15 in Fort Lupton, hosted by Get Baked bakery.

Five bonus tips

Both Signer and Richmond tend to work “tipless,” using plain icing bags with a tiny snip taken out of the end. No need for fancy plastic or metal tools here.

1. Signer says when you go to snip a hole in the end of the pastry bag, put the bag’s seam in the middle, not the end or beginning, of the cut. You’ll get a true round hole that way.

2. Icing left over? There are several things you can do. Push the icing away from the point of the bag (so that it doesn’t clog); fold it over and clip it closed with a small binder clip, then freeze or refrigerat­e. You can also drop the bag into another pastry bag WITH a decorative tip, and make leaves, stars, or rosettes with the remaining icing, allow them to dry, and then freeze or refrigerat­e them for later cookie-making sessions.

3. Signer swears by gel food coloring, available from craft, specialty and baking catalogs, for tinting her icing. Remember that colors will intensify and darken overnight.

4. Signer buys Wilton’s meringue powder for her royal icing, and uses the recipe on the package. You can use real egg whites, she says, but be sure they are pasteurize­d.

5. During decorating sessions, it helps to distinguis­h between bags of flood and piping icing with a special ribbon around the wide end of the pastry bag for one of the two kinds. Try to keep the two types of icing on two separate, different colored plates as well.

Recipes Gingerbrea­d

Flour weights matter in cookie baking. If you don’t have a gram scale, err on the side of too little flour, then add as you go. The conversion­s here are approximat­e. Recipe by Monica Signer

Ingredient­s

500 g (3 L cups) all-purpose flour,

plus more for dusting 3 teaspoons ground cinnamon 3 teaspoons ground ginger

1 K teaspoons ground cloves

1 cup cold unsalted butter, cut into

small dice

40 g (about N cup) sugar 2 medium eggs

120 g (about L cup) molasses

Directions

In a large bowl, mix the flour, baking soda and spices together. Add the butter and cut in with pastry cutter to avoid melting the butter. Cut in until mixture resembles fine breadcrumb­s, then stir in the sugar. In another large bowl, mix the eggs with the molasses. Using a stand mixer or strong hand mixer (or lots of elbow grease), add the flour mixture and mix to combine and form a soft dough. Transfer the dough to a lightly floured work surface and knead until smooth. Wrap in clear plastic wrap and refrigerat­e for 30 minutes or more.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line four baking trays with parchment. Halve the dough, then divide one half of the dough into thirds. Working with one section of dough, roll it out l inches thick on the floured surface. As in the tips above, roll out the dough and cut the shapes on the baking liner or parchment so that you never have to lift cut cookies. When a tray is full, chill for 10 minutes before baking.

Bake each tray of cookies for 9 minutes, turn pan, and bake for 4 to 5 more minutes or until gingerbrea­d is firm to touch in the center of each cookie (don’t wait until the cookies brown; that means they’re burned.) Remove from oven and tidy up any shapes while cookies are hot. Leave cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 to 10 minutes, then transfer to wire racks to cool completely.

Gluten-free flours vary widely in their ingredient­s. After many tests, we found that Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour yielded the tastiest and smoothest cookie; don’t judge it by the taste of the dough itself, which is awful! The two kinds of cocoa give the cookie a deep but not bitter chocolate flavor. Finally, because the cookies aren’t leavened, it doesn’t matter whether the baking cocoa powder is Dutch processed. Recipe by Monica Signer

Ingredient­s

500 g (4 scant cups) Bob’s Red Mill Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour, plus extra for dusting

75 g (about O cup) cocoa powder — half regular baking cocoa and half Black Onyx Cocoa Powder, available at Savory Spice Shop

2 pinches salt

1 cup unsalted butter, at room temperatur­e

320 g (1 K cups plus 1 tablespoon)

sugar

2 K teaspoons vanilla

2 eggs, room temperatur­e

Directions

In a large bowl, sift together the flour, cocoa powder and salt. In another bowl, cream together the butter, sugar, and vanilla until fluffy. Add the eggs and beat until combined. Stir in the dry ingredient­s. Turn out onto a clean surface with a little flour and knead just until the dough comes together and is smooth. Flatten into a disc and wrap in plastic wrap. Refrigerat­e to chill only slightly before rolling, or, if chilling for longer, allow to come back to a working temperatur­e, as this dough will crumble if cold.

Preheat oven to 350. Roll dough out to l inches thick; cut shapes on parchment or baking mats. Chill cut cookies on baking sheets for 20 minutes before baking.

Bake cookies for 9 minutes, turn the pan, and bake for 7 more minutes, depending on the size of the cookie. They should be just beginning to darken at the edges and be firm to the touch in the center when they are done. Cool for 5 to 10 minutes on the baking sheets before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.

Royal icing

Make sure all utensils are free of grease and oils. Recipe adapted from Wilton.com

Ingredient­s

3 tablespoon­s meringue powder 5 tablespoon­s warm water 4 cups confection­er’s sugar

K teaspoon almond extract

Directions

In a small bowl, mix the meringue powder and warm water to reconstitu­te. To a large bowl, add the confection­er’s sugar, and then the meringue powder mix. Mix thoroughly until the pale tan color turns pure white and peaks form. Do not overwhip, as this just adds bubbles that cause problems later on. This recipe makes a very thick icing; you can flavor it at this stage if desired. Working quickly, subdivide the batch into several small bowls to add coloring. Keep inactive bowls covered with plastic wrap; otherwise the icing will crust on the top, which will form dry bits that will clog icing bags.

Gluten-free Dark Chocolate Cut-out Cookies

 ?? Photos by Susan Clotfelter, Special to The Denver Post ?? Decorated cookies can be as varied as your imaginatio­n, and if that runs dry, try turning to cookie-decorating YouTube videos and Facebook pages for inspiratio­n.
Photos by Susan Clotfelter, Special to The Denver Post Decorated cookies can be as varied as your imaginatio­n, and if that runs dry, try turning to cookie-decorating YouTube videos and Facebook pages for inspiratio­n.
 ??  ?? Monica Signer of Berthoud consults her phone to create a tiny Abominable Snowman face in royal icing — with plans to have him peeking out of a window in her gingerbrea­d scene.
Monica Signer of Berthoud consults her phone to create a tiny Abominable Snowman face in royal icing — with plans to have him peeking out of a window in her gingerbrea­d scene.
 ?? Photos by Susan Clotfelter, special to The Denver Post ?? Shannon Ramey creates a pale-blue design on a gingerbrea­d Christmas cookie at the home of Monica Signer of Berthoud.
Photos by Susan Clotfelter, special to The Denver Post Shannon Ramey creates a pale-blue design on a gingerbrea­d Christmas cookie at the home of Monica Signer of Berthoud.
 ??  ?? Decorating cookies with icing can be as simple, as whimsical or as painstakin­gly elegant as you want.
Decorating cookies with icing can be as simple, as whimsical or as painstakin­gly elegant as you want.
 ??  ?? Classic royal icing for cookiedeco­rating is easy to mix. Gel food coloring yields vibrant colors that become more vivid if you refrigerat­e the icing for a day (or more).
Classic royal icing for cookiedeco­rating is easy to mix. Gel food coloring yields vibrant colors that become more vivid if you refrigerat­e the icing for a day (or more).

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