No. 3 couldn't resist dipping into the icing for a lickity lick! :) |
No. 3's lesson was this morning. I've decided that instead of having them use cookie cutters to cut out shapes of triangles, squares and circles, to make it 'easy' and time efficient to get them to ice cookies with shapes instead.
Icing requires the Nursery kids (4-year-olds) to activate their fine motor skills - not that easy a task. But no matter... it was the sensory experience of taste this cookery class was about, and in which playing with food a key factor! ;)
To this end, I decided that the smaller the child, the bigger the cookie needs to be. So I made square cookies the size of a slice of bread for each child to use as an edible icing board.
It was not easy at first to look for a rolled cookie recipe that enabled me to cut and bake that size of a rolled dough. The first recipe I used from Allrecipe was too sticky and melted very fast in our hot weather. Furthermore, it was almost impossible to cut and move out a large square cookie shape. In the end, I found a butter cookie recipe that worked well. However, I had issues with transferring the cut-cookie to the baking tray, until I hit upon an idea which I've made a photo-tutorial after the Butter Cookie Recipe:
Butter Cookie Recipe
Ingredients:
(For about 11 bread-slice-size squares... I'd suggest halving this recipe if you're making it for home.)
450g Plain Flour
2 tsp Baking Powder
200g Butter
210g Sugar
2 eggs
2 tsp Vanilla Extract
Methods:
- Sift flour and baking powder. Set aside.
- Cream butter and sugar until butter lightens.
- Add eggs one at a time. Add vanilla extract.
- Add flour and beat on very very low speed for 10 seconds. You only want the flour to gather and form a dough - not create gluten. The lighter the forming, the better the texture of the cookie. At this point, I put the dough in a plastic wrap and put it in the fridge to harden a bit before rolling out.
- Bake 180deg C for 10 minutes, then turn tray to even out the baking for another 4 minutes. Cool on rack.
Cutting the Bread-Slice-Sized Cookie:
Cut the silicon-coated baking sheet to a size slightly larger than the cut-cookie size. Sprinkle icing sugar on it to help prevent it from sticking. |
Put some cookie dough on top of that, and sprinkle more icing sugar on top. |
Place another sheet of the baking paper over that to roll out. |
Using a rolling pin with a height guide (this one is about 0.5cm) helps tremendously! |
I used an air-tight container that's square-shaped to cut the cookies. Dip the edge into the icing sugar to help prevent the dough from sticking to it. |
Make sure that the rolled dough is larger than the square box. |
Remove the excess dough. |
Ta-da! What the dough looks like after removing the box. |
Then put the entire cut-cookie dough on the baking tray. This way, you don't have to handle the cookie by tranferring onto the tray. |
These are done baking. |
A close up. |
The lesson today was really simple and fun. I taught the kids how to make icing. Of course, the icing were pre-made and coloured and put into tiny ziploc bags that I bought from Daiso (70 pieces for S$2!). When the kids need to ice, I just cut a tiny hole at the corner of the bag, and the kids are good to go.
Icing Sugar Recipe
Ingredients:
(This is sufficient to make 4 packets of colour. I used double this recipe to make 8 packets of the same colour because there are 8 groups to prepare for - 4 each for AM and PM class.)
120g confectioners' sugar/icing sugar
20g milk
24g light corn syrup
Food colouring gel
Directions
- Put all the ingredients except the food colouring gel in a small bowl, and stir together until it comes together. If needed, thin the mix with the addition of milk, half a teaspoon at a time. If you're going to use liquid colouring, add this to the ingredients before you start thining the icing with milk. You may also add flavouring extract if you want - almond or rose, or lemon would be good. If you're going to add extract, again, hold off thining with milk until you used the extract first.
- Separate the mix into different bowls to add the gel colouring of choice.
- Spoon the icing into tiny ziploc bags and cut the edge to enable piping. Otherwise you may add a little more milk to the icing to make it a thick paint - use a paintbrush to help paint on a design to your cookie.
The icing in the rectangle packs - Red, Yellow, Green, Blue and Purple. The lesson was making Orange... mixing a dot of red gel and yellow gel. :) |
The kids tracing the shapes with the icing... of course with adult help! Then after they got the shape, it was really up to them how they wanted to decorate their cookie. |
I love how their tiny hands measured up to the cookie. :) I helped this girl play with the idea of the square as a window. :) |
Tune in next week for No. 2's class - cake decoration! :)
1 comment:
Hi Brenda,
Your blog is amazing! I'd love to be in touch with you.
Would it be possible for you to drop me an email at janecjj_92@hotmail.com?
Thanks,
Jan Jee
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