This glaze/icing dries hard so you can stack the cookies without damaging the embellishments. You can divide it into several cups and color each differently, then use wet-on-wet decorating techniques for stunning effects.
2 cups (8 oz / 250g) confectioners’ sugar
1 tablespoon (24mL) light corn syrup
2 tablespoons (30mL) water, milk or coffee creamer substitute (see Recipe Notes)
1 teaspoon clear vanilla extract (or almond extract)
Gel food coloring (optional)
2 cups (8 oz / 250g) confectioners’ sugar
1 tablespoon (24mL) light corn syrup
2 tablespoons plus 1 teaspoon (34mL) fresh lemon juice
1 or 2 drops yellow gel food coloring (optional, but it will make the icing look more lemon-y)
For a smoother and more flavorful vanilla glaze, replace the water with an equal amount of milk or powdered coffee creamer dissolved in boiling water.
Here’s how to make the coffee creamer substitute: (This will make more than you’ll need for the glaze, but you can use this substitute in buttercream as well, so don’t throw it out! It will keep for 3-5 days in the refrigerator.)
Stir 2 tablespoons (20g) powdered coffee creamer into ⅓ cup (60mL) boiling water until it’s completely dissolved. Let the coffee creamer substitute cool completely. Replace the water in the glaze with 2 tablespoons (30mL) of the coffee creamer substitute. Store the remaining coffee creamer substitute in the refrigerator for up to 5 days.
I love these snowflake cookie cutters because the cutouts are part of the cookie cutter. You have to use a fairly stiff dough, like shortbread dough, when using them, but the results are stunning:
Available from Amazon:
Snowflake Cookie Cutter 3-piece Set chevron circle right
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