Filed under: Tips


The Royal Icing decorating (or Flow Icing) technique is an easy way to make beautiful cookies. Yes, it is EASY! All you need is a little practice and you will be creating cookie masterpieces! Let’s go through some of the basic steps to get you started.
1. Begin with your favorite sugar cookie recipe. Ours is the “NO FAIL SUGAR COOKIE RECIPE” located in the recipes tab. This is a great recipe because the cookies hold their shape really well. Your cookies won’t spread and become giant blobs! Follow instructions for baking and let completely cool.
2. Now for the ROYAL ICING. Royal icing is made of an egg white base. Meringue powder works great, but an even easier way is with Royal Icing Mix. The mix includes meringue powder and confectioners (powdered) sugar; you just add water. Follow directions on Royal Icing Mix package. The mix will ice approx. 24 large (3″-5″) cookies depending on the detail of icing.
3. After initially mixing with water, divide your icing into small measuring cups WITH SPOUTS. You will need one for each color that you want to decorate with. Add desired food coloring. Beat in additional water with spatula a little at a time, until your icing is a consistency somewhere between heavy cream and ketchup.
4. Now you are ready to pour your icing into Squeeze Bottles. Pastry bags work fine too, but the squeeze bottles make life so much easier and they are great for kids to use! You will need a squeeze bottle for every color you are working with. Once icing is in bottle, invert bottle upside down inside of a tall drinking glass. In order to keep the tip from drying out, tear a little piece of paper towel, moisten it with water and place in bottom of glass. This will help with a clean, steady flow of icing out of the bottle.
4. It is time to start decorating!
Step 1: Outline outside edge of cookie (this could be the whole cookie, or perhaps just certain parts depending on the look you are going for).
Step 2: Flood in outlined area. Using your squeeze bottle you can do this by making back and forth brush-like strokes while squeezing out icing. Let dry (30 minutes) or…
Step 3: Apply a separate color of icing onto the wet flood for a wet-on-wet technique. Some fun ideas to try are: polka dots, stripes, and swirls.
Step4: Other easy, yet fun techniques are:
*Wet detail on dry flood. This creates a 3D effect and is perfect for adding faces and other details.
*Toothpicks! Use toothpicks when you are doing a wet-on-wet technique. Draw toothpick through stripes to create a feathered or tie-dye look. Draw through a dot to make a heart or clover. Make a swirl and then draw lines though from the center outward to make a web. Truly, the possibilities are endless!
*Apply decorative sugars, quins, dragees and edible glitter to wet icing at any time for a great WOW factor.
*After your cookies are decorated let them completely dry for at least 24 hours, uncovered. The cookies will not dry out, because the royal icing holds in the moisture. Once completely dry you can stack, store, ship, and if you haven’t done it already, eat!
There are many other fun techniques to try. Don’t be afraid to try something new. If you don’t like it, you can always just eat the evidence! Let the cookie be your canvas and have fun decorating!
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As a beginner,these were the easiest directions to understand that I have found on decoratin g cookies.Thank you for the simple,yet informative way that this is presented!
Comment by nikki tilton February 28, 2008 @ 9:37 pmMy cookies looked (and tasted) wonderful (I added drop of vanilla and orange oil to the royal icing to give it better flavor) but the next day my cookies were soggy. Can you brush with eggwhite before baking to prevent sogginess? Or other ideas?
Comment by Wendy March 26, 2008 @ 11:50 amThis recipe worked fine for me, but the cookies did not dry properly. They look bumpy and sweaty with the icing seeming to crystalize. Very disappointing ! Does anyone know why this happens?
Comment by Mary Lou June 21, 2008 @ 2:41 pmIt may be air bubbles that didn’t pop – this happens naturally when you whip the icing – I usually let my royal icing sit for a few hours before decorating cookies (and the colors deepen while it sits, too) and a toothpick is useful to pop visible bubbles. As for the sweaty or crystalizing look of the cookie, it may be that the icing was too thin.
Comment by Diane June 24, 2009 @ 8:20 pmI decorated some cookies for a wedding shower tomorrow–left them out for 2 days and they are still sticky. Any ideas? I need to get them into celo bags, tied with bows by tonight!
Comment by Terri Montante July 11, 2009 @ 5:27 amHello,
Thank you for commenting on the Fancy Flours Blog. If you used Royal Icing (a mixture of meringue powder, powdered sugar and water, the cookies should dry hard overnight. You should be able to stack them and not worry about them smearing. The recipe for Royal Icing is as follows. This is the only icing recipe I use for sugar cookies and it works great every time. You can buy our Royal Icing mix (pre-mixed – just add water) at http://www.fancyflours.com.
Otherwise the Recipe is:
1 lb. confectioners sugar (powdered sugar)
5 tbs. meringue powder (you can find this at most craft stores)
1/2 cup water
1. Combine all ingredients and blend with electric mixer for 7-10 minutes. Continue adding water, a tablespoon at a time, until the desired consistency is reached. A consistency between heavy cream and ketchup is ideal for icing sugar cookies. Gel food colors work great for dying and I always love to use lemon or almond extract to flavor the icing too.
Comment by fancyflours July 15, 2009 @ 2:57 pmThanks so much for the wonderful tips! I am a beginner, and all of the practical pointers are a HUGE help. Thanks again!
Comment by Sandy Baker August 10, 2009 @ 1:08 pmI just had a go at flooding cookies – here is my first attempt:
Comment by Kat Arney September 2, 2009 @ 8:57 amButterflies and hearts
Kat
hi! when i have used the wet-on-wet technique, I usually notice that the top color has bled into the bottom color after the icing has dried. Have you ever encountered this problem?
Comment by kristen October 5, 2009 @ 1:30 pmHello,
You might try waiting a little bit between the application of the 1st color and the application of the 2nd color. 3-5 minutes. This should help. If you have highly contrasting colors (ie: white and black) you do end up with a little bit of bleeding. You can also try making your icing a little bit thicker, so as not to run as easily.
Happy baking!
Comment by fancyflours October 6, 2009 @ 11:02 amI absolutely love making your sugar cookies with the royal icing mix. I’ve made these for a couple of different holidays now and everyone raves about them. They all want to know what bakery I bought them from and can’t believe I made them myself. Thanks!
Comment by Lauren November 1, 2009 @ 8:06 am