Royal Icing
This simple royal icing recipe is fast, colorful, tastes great and sets perfectly! You can make a simple cookie look super professional with this royal icing recipe.
Think back to when you use to make cookies over the holidays. What was your favorite part? Besides eating them, mine was definitely decorating them! We would normally get the white canned frosting and my mom would die some in a few different bowls to give us color options. Then the messy awesomeness of the decorating would commence. My brother and I would come up with some crazy looking snowmen, that’s for sure. Now I prefer this royal icing as my decorating tool. It is so elegant looking and smooth.
Is it safe to eat royal icing?
When it comes to eating frosting, there are a couple of tips that you should know about. Using raw egg whites in royal frosting is fairly common. When you make royal icing you should use pasteurized eggs. According to research, the salmonella is primarily found in the yolk of the egg, but it is possible that it can be in the whites too. You also have to keep royal icing, that is made with raw egg, in the fridge.
As kids, we would commonly fight over who got to lick the spoon when my mom would make any kind of yummy dessert. In the many years I did that, I never got sick from the raw egg. I am not making light of food poisoning, I have seen some go through it an it looks like hell. So to be safe. This is why I use meringue powder in my royal icing recipe. No chance of salmonella.
What can I use instead of cream of tartar in royal icing?
If you do not have cream of tartar on hand but do have a lemon, you can use equal parts lemon juice or even vinegar. Using these will not affect the taste of your royal icing, as a matter of fact, these can actually enhance the flavor. You can also use corn starch in place of cream of tartar, which I have heard has been done and you can get away with it just fine.
How long does it take for royal icing to dry?
If you're applying the royal icing in a thin layer it can dry fairly quickly. I give myself a 15 minute widow to decorate a half batch. that is if I am doing If I want a layered look. Such as raised dots or lines, I let the cookies set for a few hours, or even over night. It can take 4 to 6 hours for the frosting to dry and set completely. A thick layer can take a few days to dry completely.
How should royal icing be stored?
I take all un-used royal icing and store it in the refrigerator. I make sure to put plastic wrap directly on the surface of the royal icing so it doesn't create a crusted layer on top. Then I cover it tightly with more plastic wrap or a lid. When you're ready to use the royal icing take it out of the refrigerator and return the royal icing to room temperature before mixing. Once mixed, let it set for a little while so any air bubble have a chance to escape.
Can you freeze cookies with royal icing on them?
Iced cookies can be frozen in layers. With royal frosting you want the cookies to set and dry completely before storing in the freezer. You can even put wax or parchment paper in between the layers, just to be safe. You'll want to put them in a container that has as little air as possible to avoid freezer burn. You also don't want to freeze them for long since the cookies can absorb that "freezer taste" and no one likes that.
What is the difference between icing and frosting?
Frosting is normally used to coat the outside of a cake or go on top of brownies. It is more buttery to the taste and softer to the touch, fluffier and thick. It hardens, yes, but not as much as royal icing. It can be harder to stack a set of cookies that are frosted instead of iced.
Cake Batter and Frosting Calculator
Select an option below to calculate how much batter or frosting you need. Adjust the servings slider on the recipe card to change the amounts the recipe makes.
Choose a pan type
Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)
Choose a cake pan size
(based on 2" tall cake pan)
Cupcake Tin Size
Choose number of pans
Cups of Batter Needed
8 cups
Cups of Frosting Needed
5 cups
Note: measurements are estimated based off the vanilla cake recipe using standard US cake pans and sizes. Measurements used are for 2" tall cake pans only. Your results may vary. Do not overfill cake pans above manufacturer's recommended guidelines.
Recipe
Ingredients
Ingredients
- 16 oz Powdered sugar 1 lb is about 4 cups
- 5 tablespoon Water
- 3 tablespoon Meringue powder
- Some extra water In case mix is too stiff
- ⅛ teaspoon cream of tartar
Instructions
Standard Royal Icing
- Make sure all mixing cups, mixing bowl and attachments are grease and fat-free. Any added fats from residue on mixing cups or bowl will ruin the royal icing.
- Add all ingredients into stand mixer with paddle attachment and mix on low. If icing mixture is too stiff, mixer will struggle and bog down to mix ingredients. Add small amount of water until mixer doesn't struggle to mix ingredients.
- Bump up speed to 2 and whip for 7-10 minutes until icing becomes fluffy, increases in volume, is a bright white color with stiff peaks.
Thinned Royal Icing
- After following above instructions, take a portion of icing and put in a separate bowl.
- Slowly add water (about 1 tablespoon at a time) and mix with spoon until fully incorporated. Pull mixing spoon up and drizzle icing over itself in bowl until it takes 10-12 seconds for drizzle to flatten back into icing completely.
- Once you can count 10-12 seconds for drizzled icing to flatten back into icing in bowl, you now have thinned icing, ready to use for flooding sugar cookies with icing.
Linda Peterson says
I've read icing mixing instructions that say to use a whisk attachment and others say use a paddle attachment. Some people say mixing at high speed incorporates too much air into the mixture. I'm confused as to why people give such differing instructions. I have had issues with air bubbles in the past, so I want to reduce them.
I am semi-pro and want to get to a point of consistency. Right now I am planning to try different icing recipes, because I keep having problems with icing twisting as it extruded from narrow tips. The softer recipe I have been using has 2T light corn syrup in the ingredients. I like the taste, but not the trouble I have decorating fine details.
The Sugar Geek Show says
If your icing is not coming out of the tip straight it could be the quality of your tip. A lot of people really like ATECO piping tips. Icing is very personal. This is the recipe that I like but I'm no cookie professional. You can use the paddle if you prefer.
Hollie says
Can I add flavoring to this icing?
The Sugar Geek Show says
Yes you can
Robin says
I’m going to make watermelon cookies. Is it better to add the flavor to the cookie dough or the royal icing?
The Sugar Geek Show says
I would add it to the icing, it will retain more of it's flavor
Shanique says
In step 3 it says to whip. Is it safe to assume I will be switching from the paddle attachment to the whisk attachment and then whip for 7-10 minutes? Or is the entire mixture made using the paddle attachment?
Elizabeth Marek says
Yes you switch to the whip