Peppermint Stripe Cookies

- Total Time
- 1 hour, plus at least 4 hours’ drying
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- 2cups/245 grams unsifted confectioners’ sugar, plus more if needed
- 2egg whites (or 2 tablespoons meringue powder and 4 tablespoons water)
- A few drops of glycerin, if desired to create more of a sheen (optional)
- 1recipe Basic Sugar Cookies, dough flavored with ½ teaspoon peppermint extract (omit the vanilla extract), cut into 3-inch squares and cooled
- Red and pink petal dust and luster dust
For the Royal Icing
For the Cookies and Decorating
Preparation
- Step 1
Prepare the royal icing: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whip attachment, combine the confectioners’ sugar, egg whites and glycerin, if using. Combine on low speed, then raise speed to high and beat until stiff peaks form, about 5 minutes. Remove bowl from mixer, and test some of the royal icing on a cookie: If it doesn’t spread out to a smooth finish within 10 seconds, it’s too thick. Add 1 to 2 tablespoons water as needed to thin the mixture, whipping it by hand using the whip attachment. If the royal icing runs off the edge of the cookie, it’s too thin, so you’ll need to whisk in more sugar to thicken. You should have 1½ cups royal icing.
- Step 2
Transfer to a small airtight container and refrigerate. It can be left out for 1 or 2 days, but you’ll need to refrigerate for longer storage. (The icing will keep, refrigerated, for several weeks.)
- Step 3
Decorate the cookies: Pour the royal icing into a wide bowl. (The icing can be used cold, but it may separate, so it needs to be whisked, and may need to be thinned out with water or thickened with confectioners’ sugar.) Holding a cookie by the edges, with the top-side down, dip into the icing, moving the cookie around a bit to make sure the icing coats the whole surface. Gently shake the cookie from side to side to let the excess icing drip off.
- Step 4
Use a small offset spatula to stop the flow of icing, gently scrape cookie against edge of bowl, and flip the cookie over. Use the spatula to spread the icing to pop any air bubbles, and make sure it goes all the way to the edges. It should quickly smooth out on its own. If not, thin it out a bit until it does. Use your fingers to wipe away any icing on the outside edges. Repeat with all the cookies. Place on a cooling rack set over a parchment- or wax paper-lined baking sheet to dry completely, preferably overnight (or at least 4 hours).
- Step 5
When dry, set up the cookies on a baking sheet or other flat surface in four rows of five cookies (you may have a few extra cookies), so they are abutting one another with no spaces. Mix the petal dust and luster dust with enough peppermint extract to make a very loose “wash” and, using brushes of different widths, make continuous brushstrokes in a few different widths across the entire surface. If you run out of pigment as you’re brushing, dip the brush again, and continue the line, allowing the brush texture to show in places. When dry, rearrange the cookies on a platter so the lines no longer match up. Cookies will keep in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks.
Private Notes
Comments
This might be total heresy but could you mix food coloring with the peppermint extract rather than purchasing the dusts?
You can also dilute a drop of gel food coloring with a teaspoon or so of vodka and paint with that. The vodka dilutes the gel enough to make a nice brush-able color and will evaporate quickly so the colors can dry.
I think I have some Angel Dust lying around, can I use that instead?
Sooooo good! I accidentally did the vanilla extract in the cookie instead of the peppermint. So I added a tiny bit of peppermint extract to the royal icing. Honestly VERY into it! Would do it the same way next time. These are fabulous and soooo pretty.
They were pretty spectacular. Used the peppermint oil/food coloring/confectioner's sugar combo for the paint. They looked a little like ..blood streaks?!.. so I added some yellow stripes and they became modern art.
Fantastic. Exact texture you're looking for. Peppermint in the dough subdues its tendency to overpower. No notes. 9/10
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