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Painted Cookies

There are two ways to paint cookies—before and after they are baked. We would like to acquaint you with both methods.

We usually think of painting cookies as a kid’s activity—and it is. Kids can spend hours making cookies into shapes and painting them. It addresses two passions—cookies and creativity. Allow kids imagination to run both in the shapes they make and the colors they paint.

Painted cookies are also a fun craft for older kids and adults. We have seen pictures of painted cookies that are truly beautiful. Carefully painted cookies make wonderful decorations for Christmas or holidays. And since they are painted with edible paint, you can eat those creations that you don't keep.

Painting Cookies before They are Baked

Raw cookie dough can be painted because it is fairly dense and the paint stays on the surface rather than soaking in. We have tried both egg yolk based paints and cornstarch based paints. The egg yolk based paints are dense and opaque and create a colored “skin” on the cookie. When the cookie expands in the oven, the colored skin does not expand with the cookie and therefore does not leave complete coverage. Because of the pigment in the yolks, the colors are yellow tinted. Use egg yolk based paints and paint cookies before they are baked when the yellow tint from the yolk is acceptable and when the edges of the cookie do not have to be covered. The antique looking flower on the left (top picture) in the accompanying picture was painted on a peanut butter cookie with egg yolk based paints. You can check out the recipe for the Painted Peanut Butter Cookies.

The same paints were used to paint the lighter-colored cookie on the right (again, top picture). This is a sugar cookie made with our American Classic Sugar Cookie Kit. Notice that the sugar cookie did not expand as much as the peanut butter cookie and therefore has more coverage.

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Ingredients

The flowers in the above picture were created by molding bits of dough as you would clay. Kids will have a great time molding animal shapes and characters. Help them press the shapes to a uniform thickness so that the cookies will bake uniformly. The seams formed by pressing the bits of dough together act as lines to guide your child in his or her painting.

Edible paint can also be made with cornstarch. The red heart (middle picture) was made with a simple cornstarch-based paint. The cornstarch does not cover as well nor create the skin that egg yolks do but the colors are true and the paint seems to expand with the cookies a little better.

Cookie dough can be used as a canvas and kids can paint scenes or designs with egg yolk based paint. The rectangular cookies to the right are chocolate shortbread cookies painted with egg-yolk based paints. We tried a shortbread recipe because shortbread is dense and expands very little. Interestingly, the paint left an embossed effect on the surface of the cookies.

Painting Baked Cookies

Once the cookie is baked, the surface has risen and is much more porous. To paint baked cookies, the porous surface is covered with a hard shelled frosting, usually a frosting with meringue powder added to create a smooth, firm surface. On the frosted surface, bright colors and crisp lines are painted using undiluted food coloring. Just dip the tip of the paint brush right in the food coloring bottle.

To the right, are sugar cookies that are frosted and then painted with food colors. We used an American Classic Sugar Cookie Kit to produce both the cookies and the frosting but you can use your own recipe. The cookies come in both chocolate and vanilla and the royal icing mixes contain meringue powder. We also carry meringue powder for icings if you care to do your own.

Whether painting on unbaked cookies or frosted cookies, simple water color brushes work well. They are inexpensive, you can buy them in different widths, and they clean up with hot water.

Here you will find the recipes that you need to paint your cookies. We hope that you and your kids have a wonderful time.

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Ingredients

Easy Meringue Frosting

Meringue powder is made with powdered egg whites (plus starches and flavors). Reconstituted egg whites dry hard leaving a shell on the frosting. You can purchase meringue powder at baking supply stores, on the internet, or at The Prepared Pantry. (Click here for meringue powder.)

3 tablespoons meringue powder for icing
1/4 cup water
2 1/2 cups powdered sugar, more or less

Stir the meringue powder and water together until smooth. Add enough of the powdered sugar to obtain the desired consistency for spreading. Completely cover any leftovers.

Edible Cookie Paint Recipes
(for Decorating Un-baked Cookies)

Egg Yolk Based Paint

2 large egg yolks
1 teaspoon water
food coloring

Stir the yolks and water together until smooth. Add the food coloring. Clean up with water.

Cornstarch Based Paint

3 tablespoons cornstarch
water
food coloring

Stir enough water into the cornstarch to make a slurry. Add the food coloring.

Printable Version

Free! A Bakers Cookie Guide
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