Mama's Golden Recipe: Basic Cut-out Cookies
- 55 grams Unsalted butter
- 100 grams Caster sugar (granulated sugar)
- 1 medium egg Egg
- 225 grams Cake flour
- 1 tsp Baking powder
- First, make the dough.
- Add sugar to room temperature butter, and blend well with a whisk.
- Add the beaten egg gradually and mix well.
- Add the sifted powders, and mix gently with a spatula.
- Flatten the dough and wrap with plastic wrap.
- Refrigerate for 30 minutes or more.
- (The dough can be frozen and stored in this state.)
- Roll the dough to about 5 mm thick.
- If you roll the dough between plastic wrap or parchment paper, you don't need to use flour.
- (If too much flour is used, it will get into the dough and ultimately cause the dough to crumble.)
- Cut the dough with cookie cutters of your choice.
- You can prepare the cookies up to Step 3, and freeze.
- Lay the cut-out dough on a tray lined with plastic wrap, and cover with a piece of plastic wrap.
- Just make sure that the water content does not evaporate.
- The frozen cookies can be baked as is.
- It may take a few minutes longer.
- Put the cookies on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, and bake until golden in an oven preheated to 340 degrees F (170 degrees C).
- (Regular size cookies will take 10 to 14 minutes.)
- If you prefer glossy cookies, brush the dough with egg yolk (not listed) after setting on the baking sheet.
- Dough variations ... For a chocolate dough, switch 5 g of the flour (more for a darker color) with cocoa.
- You can also add chocolate chips.
- For a matcha green tea dough, switch 1-2g of the dough (note that matcha colors very well).
- Increase the variations by adding chopped peel, poppy seeds or nuts, etc., to the plain dough.
- Here are some adaptations of the design.
- I am still working on the finish, but here is a sweets box for chocolate candies (about 13x8x5 cm).
- I used exactly one recipe worth of dough.
- Decide the size and shape of the box, and make a pattern.
- Here, I referred to the shape of the paper box in which I would put the sweets box in.
- The sweets box is about 20% smaller than the paper box.
- The base and top of the box are large, so I poked holes with a fork at places so the cookie would bake easily and the fork holes would not stand out.
- Prepare flowers and leaves for decoration.
- Usually, I use natural ingredients such as matcha and cherries for children...
- This box is for an adult, and I wanted a simple yet "showy" finish, so I directly kneaded red and green paste coloring into the dough.
- I used a plum-shaped cutter for the flowers.
- For the leaves, I used a chrysanthemum cutter and cut out a thick piece of dough.
- Then, I rolled it thinly in one direction to make an oblong shape.
- I used the serrated edge of the tool (shown on lower right) to mark the center of the flower.
- A table knife was used to mark the leaf's veins.
- I placed the cutouts in the freezer once to harden the dough.
- I put the dough onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.
- I wanted a simple finish, so I did not use an egg-yolk glaze.
- There are various cookie sizes, so I baked the larger pieces longer, and the smaller pieces shorter.
- Even still, the edges of the leaves got a little burnt.
- Using icing as a glue, I nicely balanced (!?)
- and arranged the finished cookies!
- I made seasonal (rabbit and chicks for Easter) out of sprinkles and stuck them on four corners.
- This is the finished box.
- The cookies expand when baked, so shave the edges with a knife and finely adjust the box corners.
- I shaved the glued edges to about 45 degrees.
- Set the box into the paper box.
- I laid the sprinkles as the decorations on the bottom of the cookie box, and put chocolates inside (6 chocolate cups fit).
- Set the lid, add a handmade message, and it's ready!
- I was relieved that finished size was just right and the top of the paper box fit.
- These are regular cookies made with a cookie cutter.
- You can even use stamp-type cutters.
- They have a very simple finish.
- These are cookies decorated as Thank you cards.
- They come with a sugar paste and icing badge.
- These cookies were made into a sheet-type birthday cake decoration.
- The cookies will get soggy from the whipped cream, so arrange them just before eating.
- Here's a set for moving a birthday cake for reference.
- I put the decoration cookies ("HAPPY BIRTHDAY" and name) in a separate container from the main cake.
- I even made a Christmas train.
- Here are some Christmas decorations.
- Here's my Christmas in 2009.
- I decorated a plain sponge cake with a boy for the children's day celebration in Japan.
butter, sugar, egg egg, flour, baking powder
Taken from cookpad.com/us/recipes/147715-mamas-golden-recipe-basic-cut-out-cookies (may not work)