The New Cookie Plate for a New Year
Gluten-free Chocolate Christmas Crinkle Cookie
by Jennifer
Peters of Vancouver’s NextJen Gluten Free (nextjen.ca)
This year, make a resolution to create a much more interesting cookie plate.
When you order the cookie plate, restaurants might serve the cookies on ho-hum, doily-dressed plates, maybe with a cup of hot chocolate or a glass of milk for a nostalgic dessert.
But why not make the cookie plate artful, visually appealing as Vancouver baker Jennifer Peters has done?
You'll need a little bit of Plate Paint, your cookies, and a scattering of little bits to add color and texture. Peters used cookie crumbs, tiny pieces of fresh orange, and chopped pistachios. Simply put the Plate Paint in a squeeze bottle and squeeze out a pattern on a white plate. Arrange the cookies around the squiggles, then scatter the crumbs, orange segments, and pistachios.
And while you're at it, look for more great ideas and playfully delicious recipes in Bake Happy, which you can pre-order right now!
And while you're at it, look for more great ideas and playfully delicious recipes in Bake Happy, which you can pre-order right now!
Plate
Paint
Adapted from the upcoming Bake Happy, which will be out in May 2015.
I wanted
a thick, viscous, translucent “paint” made with fruit juice in order to create
dots, squiggles, zigzags, or spirals to plated desserts. So, I went into the
kitchen and played around a little bit.
The happy result is this Plate Paint,
which is edible, colorful, easy, vegan, gluten-free, and very shapeable at room
temperature. Use any type of colorful bottled fruit juice (cherry, cranberry,
kiwi, mango, papaya, or pomegranate). You can also try frozen Goya “fruta"
concentrates (pink passionfruit, deeper pink guava, or blackberry).
Makes
about 2/3 cup (150 ml)
1
tablespoon cornstarch
1 cup
(250 ml) colorful bottled fruit juice or frozen fruit juice concentrate, thawed
Spoon
the cornstarch into a small jar with a lid. Add the fruit juice, secure the
lid, and shake to blend. Pour the juice mixture into a small saucepan over
medium-high heat, and whisk it constantly until the juice begins to boil and
turns from a lighter opaque color to a darker, more transparent one. Keep
whisking until the “paint” begins to thicken slightly. Remove the pan from the
heat and set it aside to cool to room temperature. Use the paint right away or
store it in a jar with a lid in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. Let the
paint come to room temperature before using.
Plate Paint dotted around a meringue with fruit compote. |
Paint Your Plate
Add a
playful or colorful dimension to a slice of pie, a meringue, a brownie, or any other
dessert by embellishing the plate with fun, edible color..
To make
a dot, let about 1/2 teaspoon of Plate Paint drip off a small spoon, held just
above the plate.
To make
a squiggle, spoon 1 tablespoon of Plate Paint at the 12 o’clock point on the
plate. Use the back of a teaspoon to press down into the paint and zigzag down
to the 6 o’clock point on the plate.
To make
a zigzag, pour the paint into a plastic squeeze bottle and secure the top. Make
sure the opening is at least 1/4 inch in diameter. Turn the bottle upside down
and squeeze a zigzag onto each plate.
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