Why stop at the candy inside? Make the whole piñata worth fighting for!
These multi-striped, burro piñata sugar cookies come complete with hollow centers that you can fill with a secret stash of your favorite candies. Break open or bite into these festive treats and be greeted with a sugary surprise. Olé!
Ingredients:
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 cup powdered sugar
- 1 cup butter
- 1 cup vegetable oil
- 2 eggs
- 1 teaspoon cream of tartar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon almond extract
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 5 cups flour
- 1 tablespoon vanilla
- Mini M&M candies
- 1/2 cup powdered sugar (frosting)
- 2 teaspoons milk (frosting)
Directions to make piñata sugar cookies:
1. Make the dough
Cream sugars with butter. Beat in eggs. Add oil. Combine dry
ingredients together, and then gradually add them to the mixture. Mix in
vanilla and almond extract.
2. Color the dough
Split dough into five, even-sized balls and one smaller ball (this
will be the black one). Add food coloring to each of the dough balls
until desired color is achieved. Gel food coloring gives you more
intense colors than liquid.
3. Layer the dough
Use a container the same approximate width of your donkey/burro
piñata cookie cutter, and line it with plastic food wrap. Split all of
your colored
dough balls in half (except the black) and begin layering
the dough in the container, starting with the black dough on the bottom.
Alternate the colors so that you end up with two layers of each color
by the time you're done.
4. Wait
Cover the layered dough and freeze for four hours or overnight. This
is the perfect time to conserve your creative juices for what lies
ahead.
5. Bake the cookies
Remove the dough from the container and unwrap from the plastic. Cut
slices, approximately 1/4-inch wide. Place them on a baking sheet lined
with parchment paper. Bake them at 350 degrees F for 12 minutes.
6. Cut the cookies
Immediately after you take them out of the oven, use your burro
piñata cookie cutter to cut the cookie shapes. Working in sets of three,
be sure to cut two burro piñata cookies in one direction and one burro
piñata cookie in the opposite direction. (Just flip your cookie cutter
over.) That way, when you go to assemble them, the finished cookie will
look "pretty" on both sides -- because the baked, bottom sides will be
hidden.
7. Create the hidden pocket
For the middle cookies in each set, cut off the ears and legs, and
cut out the center where the M&Ms will go. I used a small square
cutter, and made three cuts to get a narrow rectangle. Try to work
quickly, because as the cookies cool, they are more likely to crumble or
break. Let them cool on the baking sheet before you move them and
remove the excess, outer cookie.
8. Assembling the piñata cookies
To assemble, take the first piñata cookie and lay it upside down so
that the baked bottom is facing up. Outline the center of the piñata
body with a "frosting glue" mixture of milk and powdered sugar. (I used
1/2 cup of powdered sugar and two teaspoons of milk. If you put it
inside a Ziploc bag and cut off a tiny tip of the bag's corner, you can
pipe it onto the cookie easily.)
Put the middle cookie on top of the frosting glue and add the
M&Ms to the open center. Put another outline of frosting glue on the
middle cookie and place the opposite-cut piñata cookie on top (so that
the pretty side is facing out). Let these sit and harden for at least 30
minutes before you stand them upright.
9. Show off your finished piñata cookie
This recipe will make six to eight piñata cookies.
source :
http://www.sheknows.com/food-and-recipes/articles/958083/cinco-de-mayo-pinata-cookies
0 komentar:
Posting Komentar