This is a classic design for brides and grooms using heart shaped cookies for wedding favours. It's not original, it's not complicated, it's perfect for the occasion, and it's easy enough to make in large numbers. This is why I've always thought it's one of the cleverest ideas around. Does anyone know where it orginated? Would it even be possible to find out now?
Saturday, 19 July 2014
Groom on a heart cookie tutorial
This is a classic design for brides and grooms using heart shaped cookies for wedding favours. It's not original, it's not complicated, it's perfect for the occasion, and it's easy enough to make in large numbers. This is why I've always thought it's one of the cleverest ideas around. Does anyone know where it orginated? Would it even be possible to find out now?
Thursday, 10 July 2014
A Midsummer Night's Dream Cookie Set
Commissioned to make a set of A Midsummer Night's Dream cookies, as a thank you gift for a teacher, I wanted to do something different, in style, technique and design. I've been wanting to try a freer method of cookie decorating and haven't been able to get this beautiful set of ballerina cookies The Cookie Architect made for her Practice Bakes Perfect Challenge #2 out of my mind.
What inspired the 'jigsaw' shapes was the ever present difficulty I have of creating a set that fits the tins I keep for these sorts of gifts. I usually start by making an estimate of the balance of sizes and complexity needed, then make extra to ensure that the finished tin doesn't end up with a layer of just one cookie. That's not a good look when you lift the last layer and find just one cookie at the bottom.
This method usually works well for my household though, as there are always extras lying around for lunch boxes. But it takes ages to pack a tin, going in and out and rearranging layers so the cookies don't slide about too much, yet each layer having a nice balance of designs.
Anyway, this time I was lying in bed meant to be sleeping but thinking instead about cookies; not just cookies, but fitting odd shaped cookies together into rectangles, because that's normal; and it occurred to me how easy it would be if I could just make big tin-sized rectangles.
So that's what I did. I created three big tin-sized rectangles. But then so that it didn't seem like I was getting away with just making three cookies for an order, I chose a couple of ordinary cutters, cut them out of the rectangles, then used a scalpel to hand cut the rest of the shapes around them. There was a certain amount of guesswork regarding size and allowing for spread of individual pieces, but it all seemed to work out quite well.
The backgrounds I spread with stiff white royal icing and a palette knife, leaving rough(ish) edges and swirls that fit the shapes, but which would enhance rather than interfere with the designs I wanted to create, like the tree and its roots below. I pressed a few sugar pearls into some areas, and when dry I had fun with lustre and petal dusts, and a little edible paint, to create three colours schemes for the three rectangles.
As for the images, first and foremost I had Arthur Rackham's illustrations for A Midsummer Night's Dream in mind, but I collected a number of different illustrations in the same vein in a Pinterest board here.
For most of the cookies, I simply used my tipless bag of soft white RI and 'drew' freehand, in stages, particularly for the couple of images of Titania (see above and below). Lots of flowing hair, a suggestion of wing and crown, and a little lustre dust to highlight is all the Queen of fairies needs really.
For the detailed head of Bottom (below) I made a few marks with edible pen to start with, just to get the overall dimensions, then referred to Rackham's illustration for more detail.
Puck clinging to the tree however was a direct copy of 'Puck' by Charles Vess and I used the Camera Lucida ipad app to scratch the image on the cookie with a scribe. I hadn't intended to paint the faces on these cookies, but keep them in a cameo style, but I couldn't help add a hint of 'puckishness' to this one.
Saturday, 5 July 2014
How to make royal icing eyes for Anna from Frozen and other Disney Princesses
I've been meaning to make some more eyes for ages. I use these for most of my character faces as it makes life a lot easier to have a ready made eye around which you pipe the face. If you have some spare white, black and blue/brown icing it's worth making some to store away for future use.
Wednesday, 2 July 2014
The First Rule About Book Club...
I was asked to make some cookies for a book club meeting, and after mulling over a few ideas such as reproducing famous book covers, or illustrating book related images, it occurred to me that I could illustrate books and then see if the club members could guess which books they were. I decided some should be obvious and some should be more obscure.

I mulled over a few ideas for images but some were tricky to work out as images alone - ladies in high-waisted dresses could apply to quite a few early 19th Century novels!
So I decided to add quotations from the novels, again trying not to choose ones that were too obvious or too obscure. In addition, some could be slightly obscured by the images, whereas others needed to be more readable.
The style of the cookies came about from their needing to be big, to accomodate the quotations and images. I flipped a plaque shaped square cookie on its end and piped 'stretched' paper canvases in a flood layer, after spraying the corners of the biscuit with bronze lustre.
It wasn't too much of a leap to decide to make the background look
'paper' like with dark ivory icing and dark lustre dust to age the
edges.
I dried the flood layer in the dehydrator to get a nice shiny surface to write on. Unfortunately the brown fine tipped pen I'd ordered for the task of writing wasn't quite as fine as others I've bought in the range (the black is much sharper and worked very well for drawing the ink botles and quills on the 'filler' cookie hexagons), and the writing turned out a little more fuzzy than I'd intended. In addition, somehow my writing goes a bit wonky when I know that there's no room for error! My jaw ached from gritting teeth by the time I'd written all of them!
I also made a selection of 'filler' hexagon cookies, hand drawn with quills and ink bottles, using black edible ink.
(Scroll down and mutter about finding the 'lock screeen' button on your ipad/phone for the answers.)

2. qǝʍ s,ǝʇʇolɹɐɥɔ
3. ǝɔıpnɾǝɹd puɐ ǝpıɹd
4. pɹıqƃuıʞɔoɯ ɐ llıʞ oʇ
5. ɯɹɐɟ lɐɯıuɐ
6. oƃɐʌıɥz ɹp
7. uʍop dıɥsɹǝʇɐʍ
8. puɐlɹǝpuoʍ uı ǝɔılɐ
9. ǝqoɹpɹɐʍ ǝɥʇ puɐ ɥɔʇıʍ ǝɥʇ 'uoıl ǝɥʇ
10. ʞɔıp ʎqoɯ
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