Labels

"Погребок"- заготовки на зиму(canning) (82) Afternoon Tea-recipes and tradtions (41) All about Sushi rolls and more (2) appetizers (61) Baby Shower (2) Barbecue (45) Beauty (29) Bread and pizza (67) Breakfast Sunday Brunch (18) Bridal Shower and Wedding (8) burgers sandviches and toasts (22) Cake decorating and gum paste flowers (144) Cake pops and balls (35) cakes (197) canning (31) cheesecakes (31) Chocolate (38) Christmas (102) Coffee and Latte Art (22) Coffee cakes pies sweet breads (74) cookies (226) Cupcake Muffin Пирожное (62) Decorated cookies tutorials (48) Decorating Easter Eggs (19) Dessert (46) Easter (52) Easter and Spring (29) eggplants (3) eggs (11) Father's Day (4) Fish and seafood (30) French cooking (14) fresh fruits (6) gingerbread (68) Healthy Eating (32) Homemade gifts (3) Hапитки (30) Italian food (39) jams and jellies (33) Jello salads and desserts (17) Kашки (4) Kонфеты и другие сладости (42) Kремы-Buttercream-Frosting (4) Kрымские блюда (14) Main course (36) Main Dish (53) meringues зефир marshmallow pastilage (40) Mexican-Spanish food (34) Mothers Day (7) Mяско (59) Nutella (5) Olive Garden recipes (3) oranges (3) Oriental food (8) Oформление салатов (41) Pasta (16) plums (2) Potluck (6) Poultry (31) pumpkin (19) Pецепты Джейми Оливера (5) Pецепты Сталика Ханкишиева (37) Quinoa (5) Risotto Jambalaya Плов Paella (27) salads (123) Sauces Dips and Spreads (38) Saving money in the kitchen (4) Side Dish- гарнир (15) Slow-Cooker (9) soups (105) Summer recipes (12) Table setting etiquette(Сервировка стола) (67) Tagine-cuisine of Morocco (13) Thanksgiving and Fall (46) Tатарская кухня (6) Tесто (17) Valentines Day (36) Video-рецепты (20) Блины блинчики и оладушки (44) блюда в горшочках (23) Блюда из курицы (60) Блюда из теста (56) булочки (103) Вкусности из детства (63) Вкусные местечки-Sweet places (7) Детский праздник (29) Заготовки-полуфабрикаты (44) заливное и холодец (13) Запеканки и омлеты (11) история блюд и кулинарные истории (24) Котлеты Тефтели Голубцы и Перчики (58) Мороженое-Ice Cream (15) овощные заготовки (18) пирожки чебуреки беляши и т.д. (42) Пляцок (2) рулеты мясные и овощные (36) Сосиски и домашние колбаски (26) Старинные русские рецепты (38) Творожная выпечка (13) Узбекская кухня и Среднеазиатская (66) Хворост Крепли вергуны Пончики (25)

Friday, August 5, 2011

Speckled Egg cookies

These cookies are a tale of lemons to lemonaide. They are simple but gorgeous and oh so easy to make!

Hopefully, if you have been at the cookie decorating game for a little while, you own a few of these.
I personally possess of a SHAMEFUL amount of them.
Anyway, as you grow accustomed to using decorating bottles, one of the first things you will learn {probably in the most awful and infuriating way} is that when they start to run low on icing, it’s imperative to stop immediately and refill.
If you don’t, you will soon be in tears when the air filled bottle BURPS and mists your beautiful, PERFECT cookies with a fine spray of icing =(
The good news is, that my awful mistake once again led to a great idea for me to share with you.
This is the end result…

To make speckled egg cookies you will need:
  • a sheet pan covered with an old kitchen towel
  • flooded cookies that have completely dried
  • Wilton squeeze bottles {Wal-Mart or click on the photo above}
  • thin brown flood icing
  • a spatula
Be prepared when you begin this project. It can and will get messy. Give yourself plenty of room to work and relocate anything you don’t care to splatter with royal icing.
I suggest covering a table with a vinyl table cloth and working there.

To get started add 2-4 tablespoons of thinned icing to a squeeze bottle…I prefer the Wilton kind.
Hold the bottle upside down until the icing runs to the top, then turn it right side up for a second or two.
?

Quickly do a test squeeze onto the kitchen towel, and if it splatters and the spatter is not to thick, begin squeezing the bottle repeatedly to spray the cookies.
When the bottle is fuller, you will get a heavier, more widely spaced pattern.

Then, as the amount of icing in the bottle decreases, the pattern becomes finer and covers a larger surface area.
?

Keep repeating these steps until you achieve the level of coverage you want.


Let them dry overnight, and the next morning you have beautiful, perfect, speckled robin’s egg cookies.
?

For an even simpler project, try this technique on cookies made from colored dough. It’s super easy but produces breathtaking cookies.

Mix them with bunnies or birdies, and you have an elegant Easter display.?
If you don’t feel like making cookies, this would also work for other projects. Try making egg shaped Rice Krispie treats and splattering them with melted candy coating.
The possibilities and combinations are endless, and these are so simple, anyone can do it. Hope to see more of these popping up!  http://sweetsugarbelle.com/2011/04/speckled-egg-cookies/

It's Gingerbread Time!

The cool thing about blogging is that it’s my world, and I can make it what I want it to be! So today in SweetSugarBelle’s world, we are going to pretend like today was yesterday, and we are starting out the week with Gingerbread cookies, like I had planned. I am also going to announce the winner of my first give away, like I planned, but that will come a little later.
Gingerbread is my second favorite cookie, after those soft sugar cookies you get in the mall. Yes, I know…I’m not a very discerning cookie eater, but I sure do like those things.
I love it when Christmas time comes around and I can break open the old recipe binder and make batch after batch of gingerbread. I know my sugar cookie recipe so well, that I don’t need to read it, and I can make royal icing without measuring, but I use this recipe so infrequently, I forget what’s in my gingerbread from year to year.
I have been thinking about starting my holiday baking for a week, especially after my friend Glory made the prettiest gingerbread garland. However I didn’t really get the umph to do it until after the cookie decorating party I went to on Saturday. (More about that later) When I walked in the door, the air was heavy with the telltale scent of gingerbread. And to make matters BETTER, it tasted as good as it smelled! I had to ask Mrs. B, my friend J’s mom, and my third grade teacher =) where she got the recipe. I was thinking mom, grandma, something along those lines…I was pleasantly surprised to learn she got the recipe straight from Glorious Treats, my friend Glory’s blog.
I was so excited to have tasted her recipe, I called G on the way home and we spent some time talking about our recipes. They really are VERY different! One major difference between my recipe and hers is that she uses butter, and I use butter flavored shortening. Because it’s bad reputation for being unhealthy, Glory prefers not to eat shortening, which is perfectly understandable, so for the sake of experimentation, *and the experience that Glory is always right* I baked a batch when I got home, substituting half of the shortening with butter. My heart may hate me for this, but I have to say, I still like the shortening texture wise, but I think butter adds flavor that wasn’t there before, so, my original recipe changed a little =)
Just in case you are interested, all three variations work…shortening, half and half, or all butter. I just thought I would mention that substitution is fine, for anyone else who prefers not to bake with shortening.
I came up with this recipe in the early years of my cookie obsession. Since it was Christmas, and Christmas meant gingerbread, I decided I really needed to make some, even though almost no one in my family cared for it. *that has changed* As an inexperienced baker, I had no idea what recipe to use. So, basically, I printed out about four recipes, took the things I liked, made sure the ratios were okay, and tweaked it until I came up with something I liked.
The thing about gingerbread is that I like the dough, just about as much as I like the actual cookies. I like to tell myself it’s not that bad for me since it tastes so earthy, but, my waistline says different. Regardless, the dough sure is pretty!

So here it is, my personal favorite gingerbread recipe. I feel like I should warn you, I like spicy gingerbread. Whatever quantity of spice you are used to seeing in a cookie, double it, that’s about where I like it. So, if you aren’t one for spice, keep in mind you can definitely adjust it to your personal preference.

*do not, I repeat, DO NOT use those nasty ten year old spices in your cupboard! It makes a difference, and this is coming from the girl who likes mall cookies! Invest in fresh ones =)*

SweetSugarBelle’s Gingerbread
(PS, this is written in the order I prefer to read recipes, just in case anyone was wondering)
*START YOUR OVEN NOW!!! 375°*
½ c butter flavor Crisco
½ c butter
1c granulated sugar
1 ¼c unsulphered molasses
2 eggs
5-5 ½c all-purpose flour (sometimes even six)
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
2 tsp ground ginger
3 tsp ground cinnamon
1 ½ tsp ground cloves
2 tsp ground nutmeg
¼- ½ tsp ground white pepper (optional for some, a must for me)
Cream together shortening butter and granulated sugar. To that, add the molasses and eggs. *crack those eggs into a separate dish and beat them a little before adding them to the mix. No one likes egg shell or scrambled egg in their cookies*Whip that until it’s light and fluffy…then sift all of your dry ingredients into a large bowl. Don’t even bother with those crazy hand sifter things unless you like having hand cramps. Those things are basically scrap metal! Run out to Wal-Mart and pick up one of those giant sieve/strainer things. You will thank me later! When you get that all incorporated, use a measuring cup to add the dry ingredients about a cup at a time. *Trust me on this one too*. My hubby does a lot of baking for me, and I sometimes get annoyed that even when I am in a hurry, he ALWAYS does this. It takes longer, but, that’s why he’s back on the couch watching football right after he mixes, and I am usually in the kitchen covered in flour and cleaning it off the floor.
I guess I should have mentioned to start early, because this dough NEEDS to be chilled. Its sticky and wet, so if it isn’t cold, rolling and cutting is misery. So, go watch a nice holiday movie (my personal favorite is National Lampoon’s Christmas Vacation), and by the time it’s over, you will be ready to roll!
For this step use flour and parchment paper. Working with small pieces of gingerbread, dust the paper with flour and roll out to somewhere between a quarter and half inch. You will have to dust the top of the dough with flour also. Then use whatever cutters strike your fancy to cut out cookies until all the dough is gone. After that, pop the cut out cookies into the freezer for ten minutes or so before baking. *This is also a new step for me, but it was another Glory-ism, so I tried it and liked it. You should too!*
*Did I mention this takes forever? Suddenly I remember why I only do this once a year!*
After that, bake at 375°. The times I have written in my book are: 6-10 minutes for small cookies, 10-15 for large. Whole lot of help that is, LOL! This is very broad because, honestly, I don’t really know. Ovens vary and gingerbread has to be watched. This year, my baby cookies took about 8 minutes and medium-ish ones ten. I really watch them. It’s kind of hard to tell when gingerbread is done because you cannot see browning. However, if you wait until you do, you have gone too far and will have hockey pucks rather than cookies. So, watch those baking times, stay near the oven until you figure out what it’s going to do.
After this is FINALLY done, let them cool completely. I like to let mine rest for a day, but if you still feel like decorating after all that work, it will be fine.
*Now you’re ready to go!*

Cookies can be decorated with royal icing (I’ll post a recipe before the week is out) or glaze, which I will also talk about later this week. I have been decorating mine with orange icing all week. I guess that’s my kick this year. Here are some of the collections I have made to kick off the season…
A whimsical Santa set to put in my cookie jar =) *note, I prefer less icing on gingerbread, so I decorate them simply. I think too much icing takes away from the cookie in this case*
I made a bunch of itty-bitty pretty gingies to give as gifts to my cookie deserving friends…

And I made these to include in a care package headed to my cousin in Afghanistan. I have more for him coming later this week!

As for the book give away (yes, I made you read all of that to find this), the winner is IZZY! I will be contacting you later today or tomorrow to get your information so you can have this book in your hands and get to making Christmas cookies AS SOON AS POSSIBLE! You can also give us reviews. For those of you who didn’t win, I will post my favorite recipe from the book later this week, and I will also be announcing another giveaway this week, don’t you just love Christmas-time?
If you start baking today, *or not*, you’ll be ready for tomorrow’s post about cookie decorating for non-bakers and busy moms. I’ll be sure to post my recipe (I say mine loosely, it’s really Wilton’s with a kick) for royal icing. Happy baking, friends!  http://sweetsugarbelle.com/2010/12/its-gingerbread-time/

Cowboy Snowman

*FIRST OF ALL, the long delayed winner of my last giveaway is…helpergirl, Kelley!!! I will be contacting you soon to arrange shipment! Congratualtions, Kelley!*
Well there may not be snow in San Antonio, but it’s a Texas Christmas to me…
That’s really a song. I promise. George Straight sings it and once back in my LimeWire days, I got the nastiest computer virus trying to illegally download it …What an expensive song that turned out to be!
Anyway, I often wonder if anyone besides Texans have ever heard it.
I keep thinking of my brother off in snowy cold Utah, and I wanted it to be a Texas Christmas for him, so I made him these.
I cannot decide if my favorite is the rope snowflake, or the sand globe. A snow globe doesn’t really make sense here…come to think of it neither do snowmen!
If you like Cowboy Frosty, he’s pretty easy to make!

I came up with two ways of course, the hard way, and the easy way. For the hard way, you will need your ghost cutter (it doesn’t have to be this one, as long as it’s the same general idea) and a round cutter that looks proportionate to the hat. Don’t make it harder than it has to be. You’re not after perfection. The details can be worked out later with icing.

Follow steps 1-4, and you will have a cowboy snowman in no time flat!
The bad thing is, I always think of what I should have done mid-project. If I were going to do this over again, I would probably go this route…
I mangled one of my many gingerbread men to make a rounder snowman face…then I cut him out and used a knife to finish out the details.

It might look a little complicated, but it’s a heck of a lot easier than that apple pie I mentioned earlier!
After I made these, I got a wonderful surprise in the mail! I recently won TWO awesome Ecrandal cutters in giveaway on Glorious Treats.
At first I was more excited about the snow hat, but when I received them, I fell in love with my waving gingerbread man. I had to try him IMMEDIATELY!!! I altered him a little to match the rest of my theme. Isn’t he cute?

The twennty second rule

Yeah, I know…completely different than anything you have heard or seen…
I guess I am a rebel. Or lazy. Maybe a little of both. Whatever the case, this works, and once you get the hang of it, it will save you time and frustration when decorating cookies.
This is a visual example of “Oh, @#*! Icing {view post here}
I most often use this when I have waited until last minute do work on a set of cookies, but it also works for achieving certain textures and effects.
This first video is what I call the 20-second rule.
According to our tests it’s really the 19.7, 19.4, and 19.9 rule, but for ease we’ll go with 20…
When you are watching this, pay attention not only to the rate at which the line dissapears, but also the icing as it drops back into the bowl. It’s thicker than normal flood icing. The recipe I use can be found {HERE}


Now that we’ve covered thickness, I want to show you HOW I get the icing into the bottle. You know those measuring cups and mini-spatulas I’m always pushing on you? This is EXACTLY why I hoard them. They WORK!

Now to the decorating. When you use this type of icing, it’s all in the order that you work. It’s a little hard to explain, so just watch. This is step 1.

After this, wait a while. Twenty minutes, thirty…watch a show. You’ll save so much time not filling bags, you can find all kinds of things to do.
Finally, move on to step two. {Some cookies will require three}.

When the cookies are complete, give them the normal 6-8 hour drying time, and you’re done. You can use them to top cupcakes OR I LOVE putting mini cookies into jars and giving them as gifts! They are SOOOOO cute!
*Icing bottles can be found at Karen’s Cookies, Fancy Flours, Country Kitchen, Global Sugar Art, or even Wal-Mart.
*I use the Wilton recipe for my RI.  http://sweetsugarbelle.com/2011/04/the-twenty-second-rule/

Gingerbread Cookies

I made more gingerbread than I care to think about this season. My favorite was orange gingerbread. I made these for my sweet little niece to take to school. I was worried that this kids would not enjoy them, but, I was told they were a hit.
I am hoping for a reason to make a full candy tray soon…maybe I can get away with it for one more of Belle’s birthdays before she has an opinion!

Christmas Cookies

Whew! I am sick and tired but it was a good day! I had so many posts planned, but as it always does, life happened, and now finally, I am sitting down to rest. It’s by no means quiet. I have a whole crew hollering over a Cowboys game in the back, and kids playing happily with their new toys. I hope everyone is this content and happy on this most special of days.

Luke 2:10-11 (King James Version)
And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for, behold, I bring you good tidings of great joy, which shall be to all people.
For unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord.
I have so many cookies to show, it will probably take until the new year! Here’s my Christmas medley, ENJOY!
Rudolph
Oh, how I love DISCO DUST!

Cookies for my neighbors!
I was REALLY on a snowman kick this year!
Itty Bitty Christmas cookies!
A close-up

These were my favorite. They really are bitty!
I have a special plan for these =)
I got the idea for these from Evan’s school program…there was a song that said, “Santa’s gone and got stuck in the chimney…”

I had visions of purple this year!
Along with snowmen, I was on a disco dust kick also =)
I wish I had made more of these!
And for the naughty ones…

Walking in a winter wonderland

Happy Monday. I am pretty excited about this week. I have a lot planned, but I still feel very relaxed which doesn’t often happen.
Later today I will be announcing the winner of last week’s giveaway, so stay tuned. This collection is called Wonderland. I made this as a gift for my friend’s daughter who just turned one =)

I made this platter of pretty snowflakes for one of my former teachers. She deserves them, I am not quite sure HOW she put up with me =)

Easter cookies

The closer it comes to Easter, the more and more beautiful cookies keep popping up. And when I say beautiful, I MEAN beautiful!
I spent the last two days in Austin working with some AMAZING women on passing a bill that will allow people like myslef to legally bake from home, which is an answered prayer for many.
If you are from Texas, or any other state for that matter and interested in keeping up their progress, you should definitely “LIKE” the Texas Baker’s Bill fanpage on Facebook.
It’s very easy to take for granted that there are people willing to put time, energy, and money into making a change. Most do not realize what it takes to make something like this a reality. These women have worked without sleep, compensation, and have kept going even when things looked hopeless so that in the future, others would not have to face the worry and fear that they have.
In other words, they have selflessly busted their booties and they deserve a big ol’ Texas, “THANK YOU!”
Back to the subject of cookies…as I said, while I was busy chasing down state representatives, my cookie friends were decorating their happy hearts out. I am amazed at their creations, so I need to brag a little. In the spirit of today’s post, I am going to start with the Texas gals…
One of my favorite cookiers, Alison, of Ali-Bee’s Bake Shop made both of these collections. I really don’t even have words, believe it or not…



Okay, maybe I found a few words like, so pretty I could cry…
I feel the same about the next set from my friend Angela, another fellow Texan. They make me tot?ally sad about being a Wilton drop out…
After visiting Austin, I was even more impressed with the fact that despite insanely high humidity, her cookies always look like this!

These bunnies are were made by my friend Laura, owner of A Dozen Eggs Bakeshoppe. She’s kinda famous ya know…been on the Food Network and all that!
Her designs are all original, and she makes THOUSANDS? of them!!!
I have looked at these ten times and they STILL crack me up…

?
Plus, they taste wonderful!
The next two sets were made by my friend Marlyn of Montreal Confections. She is both creative and an amazingly skilled piper…

One of my FAVORITE cookie tricks is using cutters to make cookies other than what they were intended for, so it’s no surprise I LOVE these!
?

These were another take on a popular cookie by benzie design?. Susan made it her own by adding a stained glass border. The amazing thing is, she is a GLAZE user. I am convinced she has the patience of a saint!
Every single cookie she makes is this PERFECT, as you can see on her Flickr photostream.

I also fell in love with ?Glory-bee’s 3-D Easter cookies. There’s a how-to tutorial on her blog and I am hoping to have a chance to make these before Sunday…
And as if I weren’t already impressed enough, she had to go and make these!


I am also very smitten with with Haniela’s medovnicky eggs. All I have to say is that she does all this with a snipped plastic baggy. No 00 PMEs, no speacial tools. Just a BAGGIE. WOW!
My newest love is LilaLoa. She’s the “full package”. Creative, orignal and FUNNY! I love reading her blog.
My cookie idol Maryann and her daughter took Easter cookie to a whole new level. She gave them a teenage flair. Who’s have thought Easter cookies could be “cool”. I LOVE the peace sign eggs!

I found these on Flickr. I dont know this talented lady, but I sure wish I did. I was really taken with the delicate look of these and the beautifl soft colors. You can see more of her work {here}.

I could not help but smile at these cuties by my friend Susan, AKA The Painted Cookie. {I have also noticed recently that there are a lot of talented cookie decorators named Susan}

And finally, these cuties…by Sue of Munchkin Munchies. There’s not a kiddo in the world who would not LOVE these, and they are om my “to-do” list for sure!
I was very tired from my trip, but simply assembling all of my latest awe-inspiring faves gave me the itch to do a few last cookies myself. Stay tuned for Easter cookies from me. I challenged myself to make all of my cookies using the Twenty-Second Rule. I’ll let you know how it went!
I have lots of fun cookies up my sleeve. I cannot wait to share!  http://sweetsugarbelle.com/2011/04/amazing-easter-cookies/