Delve into the world of cookie magic, where you can make everything from edible jewelry to cookie bacon and eggs! Organized by theme, each chapter is overflowing with luscious photographs and dozens of recipes and ideas. In carefully illustrated details, the author guides you to make perfect little cookie masterpieces.
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Ultimate Cookies
Delve into the world of cookie magic, where you can make everything from edible jewelry to cookie bacon and eggs! Organized by theme, each chapter is overflowing with luscious photographs and dozens of recipes and ideas. In carefully illustrated details, the author guides you to make perfect little cookie masterpieces.
Delve into the world of cookie magic, where you can make everything from edible jewelry to cookie bacon and eggs! Organized by theme, each chapter is overflowing with luscious photographs and dozens of recipes and ideas. In carefully illustrated details, the author guides you to make perfect little cookie masterpieces.
Julia M. Usher is a celebrated pastry chef and food writer who has designed extraordinary desserts for such magazines as Chocolatier, Better Homes and Gardens, Bon Appetit, and Modern Bride, and such books as Vera Wang on Weddings and For the Love of Food. Usher is a former Contributing Editor at Chocolatier magazine, a James Beard Foundation Journalism Awards finalist, and a Director of the Itnernational Association of Culinary Professionals (IACP). She divides her time between St. Louis, Missouri and Stonington, Maine.
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butterflies
Land one of these supersized treats in your tummy, and you’ll be flying high for quite some time. Trace the outline of a large butterfly cookie cutter and then blow it up 150 percent to make the templates for these giant moth and butterfly wing designs.
Makes about 6 moths or butterflies, 4.75 to 5.75 x 5.75-inches each
1/2-inch to 6/8-inch plain round cookie cutter (or pastry tip)
About 4 1/4 cups Royal Icing (p. 225), divided; quantity will vary with number of marbling colors mixed
Black and other soft gel food coloring (p. 248), colors of your choice
Parchment pastry cones (p. 248) or disposable plastic piping bags
Toothpicks or trussing needle
About 6 (1/2-inch) gumballs (1 per moth), for heads
About 6 wire stamens normally used for gumpaste flowers (1 per moth, p. 248; must be removed before eating), for antennae (optional)
Stand-in: If time is of the essence, make flat moths using a standard-size butterfly cookie cutter. You can also substitute store-bought candies for the iced and filled cookies used to make the butterfly bodies, pictured on page 12. Here I used a combination of Skittles (for the heads and the first four segments of the bodies) and mini M&Ms (for the tails).
Marbling and Detailing a Wing. (1) Outline the wing with thick black Royal Icing. (Divide the wing in two parts and work on one part at a time.) Apply relatively heavy patches of icing within the outline. The colors should just touch one another. (2) Pipe thin lines of black icing on top. The cookies pictured have three linesone on the blue icing and two more on the yellow, close to the edge of the wing. (3) Use a toothpick to draw several lines starting at the edge of the wing and ending in the center. (4) Add dots with icing of beadwork consistency. (5) Repeat to complete the other half of the wing.
4. Outline the wings. Tint the remaining 1/2 cup icing black; then thin to outlining consistency following the instructions on page 226. Fill a parchment pastry cone with the icing and cut a small hole (about 1/16-inch) in the tip of the cone. Outline around the perimeter of each wing. Let the outlines dry to the touch before marbling the wings. Note: Though I typically don'ft outline cookies before top-coating, I like to outline when marbling with many colors, since the larger amount of icing on top is more likely to flow off. If the icing flows off, the marbled pattern will distort. For large cookies such as these, divide the top and bottom of the wings with the outline and marble each area separately. The icing is less likely to set up as you work if you marble a smaller area at a time.
5. Marble the wings. Thin the 2 1/2 cups icing reserved for marbling to the proper consistency (p. 226). Divide evenly into about 5 portions and tint each portion. (High-contrast colors work best for marbling.) Fill one parchment pastry cone for each of the marbling colors and cut a small hole (about 1/16-inch) in the tip of each cone. Work on one wing at a time. Start with the upper half of the wing. Apply colors in an alternating pattern so that they completely fill the interior of this portion of the wing. (The surface of the icing should be very smooth, as if it had been simply top-coated.) Immediately run a toothpick or trussing needle through all of the colors to create a marbled pattern of your choice. Marble the bottom half of the wing using the same process.
This time the clever cookie comes in the guise of Julia Usher. [I] love the fact that she has created an instructional book with clear intent, [and] thoughtful and excellent recipes topped with quality decorations. I see a lot of adequate decorating out there, but this work is inspirational. Cupcakes had better not rest on their laurels: I can easily be persuaded to put them aside when enticed by the decorative crumbs of Julia's cookies. Beautiful book, beautiful work . . . [I] recommend to all edible artists.