Cut Out + Keep

Birdie Cookies

Poured sugar icing and some birdie cookies.

https://www.cutoutandkeep.net/projects/birdie-cookies • Posted by Meaghan M.

These birdies are the result of my experimenting with poured sugar icing, that is, an icing you pour rather than spread or pipe. Usually, poured sugar is used to coat petits fours, but I used it to coat cookies. the pros of poured sugar icing: quick, easy, tasty, beautiful smooth coat the cons: I felt like I wasted a lot Overall, I'd say poured sugar is a good way to easily coat cookies without the muss and fuss of whipping meringue, preparing frosting bags, piping...

You will need

Project Budget
Cheap

Time

0 h 40

Difficulty

Nice & Simple
Medium birds2a Medium birds4b Medium birds3

Description

These birdies are the result of my experimenting with poured sugar icing, that is, an icing you pour rather than spread or pipe. Usually, poured sugar is used to coat petits fours, but I used it to coat cookies. the pros of poured sugar icing: quick, easy, tasty, beautiful smooth coat the cons: I felt like I wasted a lot Overall, I'd say poured sugar is a good way to easily coat cookies without the muss and fuss of whipping meringue, preparing frosting bags, piping...

Instructions

  1. Small drawingpoured

    how to coat cookies with poured sugar icing: In a bowl, blend with a whisk: 1 cup confectioner's sugar 2 tsp light corn syrup 2 tsp milk a drop of coloring, if desired (I used Sky Blue Americolor soft gel paste) Add more milk, 1/2 tsp at a time until desired consistency. Your icing should be thin enough to pour, but not so thin it drains off your cookie totally. It should have a slight thickness, but not so thick it sits on your cookie. You can add confectioner's sugar or milk to thicken or thin, respectively. Line a baking tray with wax paper and place a wire rack on the tray. Lay cookies on rack and use a small spoon to pour icing over each cookie, making sure the icing falls over the sides, encouraging with the back of the spoon as needed. Like I said, you'll see a lot of waste falling from the cookie. So sad. Let the sugar dry several hours or overnight before decorating.

  2. Small birds2a

    how to make birdie cookies: *Find fondant in the baking aisle of the craft store. Find the cutters there, too. The leaf will likely be the smallest in a set of cutters (you can also make these cookies with the larger cutters). For coloring, I used Americolor soft gel pastes (Sky Blue for the background, Red, Orange, Electric Pink and Electric Green for the birds) and a black Americolor Gourmet Writer.

  3. step one: prepare your cookies Bake cookies as directed by recipe using the circle cutter (or any desired shape). Let cool completely. Add a drop of coloring, if desired, to the poured sugar icing and use to coat cookies (see above).

  4. step two: prepare your fondant Take about an egg size chunk of fondant (or less, depending on how many cookies you have) and tint a piece for each color you need by adding drops of food coloring and kneading very well. Start with one drop and add more as desired. If fondant gets too sticky from overhandling, simply let sit uncovered at room temperature for about 15 minutes until easily pliable.

  5. step three: prepare your birdie pieces Roll out fondant between two pieces of wax paper or on a surface dusted with confectioner's sugar. For each bird, cut out a leaf shape in desired color. With a sharp knife, cut out a small triangle for a beak (I used orange for all the beaks, though I think yellow might look better. I just happened to already have orange fondant.)

  6. Small bird.drawhowto

    step four: assemble your cookies Dab corn syrup on the back of the birdie pieces to adhere to the cookie (you might want to arrange the beak and birdie shape first to see where they will go). With the marker, draw a dot for an eye and two upside down "Y"s for legs.