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Sugar Cookie Pops

Posted by Call Me Amaesing | Posted in , , | Posted on 9:01 PM

Hi everyone! Sorry I've been lagging on my posts but there's been so much going on I can't wait to talk about it all!

But first off here is the main event of tonight: Sugar cookie pops!

I haven't made sugar cookies in such a long time, and with the time you have to make the dough, let it chill, bake, then prepare icing and then ice and wait for them to dry.. phew. I spread the process out in two days so I wouldn't be so overwhelmed. But nonetheless it was certainly fun. It was also my first time making Glacé Icing for decorating cookies - so please forgive me for all the icing run-offs and lack of professionalism. Only with time...


Let's start with all our materials. Measuring spoons and cups, lollipop sticks, eggs, rubber scraper, butter and cookie cutters. Not pictured: flour, baking powder, vanilla extract, sugar, wax paper, mixing bowls, and lots of paper towels. Also not pictured. Extra sticks of butter. And extra sugar. Sorry. It's all part of the ingredients list. I didn't make it up.

I decided last week that I was gonna make some cookie pops for my work. "Cookie pops", is a term for a cookie on a stick. (Cake pops = cake balls on a stick.. get it?) Wilton, the company that makes all things for bakery utensils (and gladly takes half my paycheck), manufactures these 6'' lollipop sticks. They also have 4'' lollipop sticks, and 12''... and cookie sticks, which is a different post in itself. Since our company, Launch, is based on a paper plane, I decided to make airplane cookies. And look what I had in my hobby chest: an airplane cookie cutter. I haven't really reached outside the realm of cupcakes recently, and my level of cookie cutter experience is limited to Christmas trees and failed gingerbread men, why not give this one a shot. This was going to be an interesting task. New cookies and new icing.


I'm not going to post pictures on the dough making process. Although it's not hard to make, let's just say there's a few ingredients, but a lot of it. And since I made two batches of sugar cookies, it was double the sugar, double the butter. Not that there's anything wrong with butter. I mean, Julia Child based her whole career off butter. So does Paula Dean... but hey, back to cookies. I had to separate the dough into four batches, and wrap them individually with wax paper.

Then they go into the fridge for at least a good hour to chill. Working with warm, soft dough is a big no-no with sugar cookies. And since they warm almost instantly the time they get out of the fridge, you must work fast when you roll them out to bake. I chilled my dough for a good two hours while I went to the store for corn syrup that I needed for the frosting. Actually it took me 2 minutes to buy corn syrup. The craft store was next door.... that's what took an hour and a half.

I rolled out one batch of dough at a time, leaving the rest to still chill in the fridge until I was ready for them. Roll the dough out till they're about 1/4'' thick, and use your cutter to punch out shapes. Lay them out on a cookie cutter and bake them at 350F for about 8-10 minutes until the edges of the cookies are a golden brown.

I realized that I didn't want to make all the cookies a "pop" so I left a majority of them as just a cookie. No stick. But they do look pretty neat on a baking sheet. Looks like a Boeing traffic jam.

I also found a flower-shaped cookie cutter and decided to also make some flower pops. Before putting them in the oven, insert the lollipop stick halfway into the cookie. They won't burn in the oven. I also was a little skeptical on how well this will hold upright so I took some extra dough and covered the top of the stick so they would stay secure after baking.

Fresh out of the oven.. Oh and that "extra dough" didn't flatten evenly as I wanted. No worries though, they will be covered up with icing.

Random note: Baking these cookies made the whole house smell like.. well.. sugar cookies. It was so overwhelming that I thought I was back at Magnolia Bakery. Not that it's a bad thing.. at at all. I like the smell of hard work mixed with warm baked buttery sugar goodness. It's just. I think I have 5 more cavities from just inhaling it. It was so hard not to eat them when they were cooling....

don't.. eat...not done yet..



Here are the airplane cookies. Right off the oven on my cooling rack. So warm...

Must resist..


Ok, well maybe I ate all the broken pieces.

Ok fine. Maybe I ate all the broken pieces AND purposely broke some pieces to eat.

But let the rest cool. I put these aside and let them cool in the kitchen for a full 12 hours while I dreamed of sugar plum fairies.

ICING SUGAR COOKIES



Now here comes the fun part. The next day you grab all your supplies for Glacé Icing.

Powered sugar, Wilton disposable bags, Food gel (I prefer the concentrated ones from Wilton), Light corn syrup, whole milk, a coupler, and a small piping tip. I used a #4 and #2.
Mix the ingredients according to the instructions. I tried to mix half of my icing to match the green that we have at work.

Fill the decorating bag with the piping tip and secure with the coupler. Then pour in the icing and twist bag to secure. Pipe outline on cookie, then fill in the cookie with icing. This is called "flooding", it prevents the icing to drip off the edges. Ignore image above. That was a failed attempt to properly hold piping bag in one hand and shoot a picture with the other. Use both hands! Stability is key.

Now look at this picture. It's better. Kinda..

I outlined all the cookies before I flooded them, to make sure the outlines had a little time to dry.

Flooded.

mmmmmmmmm..... cookie.

To flood, use squiggle icing in between the lines. No need to fill in all the negative space, if the consistency is right, they will flood in the space on its own. If not, then use the back of a spoon to help fill it in.


After all the green was put on, I had to let them dry for another few hours to make sure the icing was hard enough to pipe another color on top. A good tanning session and shopping trip definitely helped pass the time.

I made one more batch of icing, only this time I didn't color it and left it white. Also, I used a #2 piping tip instead of #4 for thinner lines. With the white, I put "windows" on one side of the plane and outlined each wing and tail.


Excuse my lack of line making skills. It wasn't helping that my coupler was malfunctioning and icing was coming from all sides of my bag. But not bad!

Oh - here's how the flower cookie pops turned out. I wasn't happy with the icing job, but after I outlined the petals with white I was a lot more content of how it looked.

But now I have to think about how I will carry them to work. And by "carry them" I mean eat them all. And by "to" I mean during.





Happy baking!