The She & Him Christmas album (both of them) has been playing on repeat and my table has often been covered in flour and flecks of royal icing in all the colours possible — I could not be happier. It’s officially the holidays! I still have work, I still have some content to edit, but it is officially the holidays! I marked the occasion of this fall-to-holiday transition by having my first polar bear sugar cookie of the season. For the last few weeks, I have been keeping baking all the holiday treats. I have also been trying to keep up with all the cute festive treats that blogger friends and bakeries have been sharing on their blogs and Instagram. I have all the cookie and cake inspo organized oh so neatly in my ‘collections’ tab on Instagram that sometimes I think my Instagram collection section is actually the most organized part of my life. One image I saved quicker than you can say ‘icing’ is the gingerbread house cookie jar from Bobbette and Belle. I have seen gingerbread house cookies decorated elaborately with icing in the past, but I have never seen it all set up inside a glass cookie jar, showcasing the little houses like a snowy village. I live quite a few provinces away from Toronto, where the bakery is located, so the only way I could have a little snowy cookie village of my own was to make it myself. I used a classic sugar cookie dough for my houses and different colours of royal icing to decorate the houses. Each house is unique, with different “paint” and festive decor displayed on the front of the house. I love the way these cookie jars turned out and thought they would make an amazing holiday gift for your friends and family, especially for those who you have trouble finding a gift for or those who appreciate handmade gifts. Instead of a traditional recipe post, I thought I would share some tips and tricks to constructing your perfect snowy village cookie jar.
Snowy Village Sugar Cookie Jars (DIY Gift Idea)
Ingredients
- 1 large glass cookie jar, (preferably one that has an airtight lid so you can make your cookie jar ahead of time and keep your cookies fresh). I purchased mine from a dollar store for around six dollars.
- Your favourite gingerbread, shortbread, or sugar cookie recipe., You want to use a cookie dough which you know will not expand or change shape upon baking. Crisp, straight lines are the way to go! An extra step to ensure your cookies do no change shape while baking is to chill the cookie cut-outs thoroughly before you bake it. I popped my cut outs in the freezer for about 15 minutes before baking.
- 3 – 5 Cookies for each jar. , You can use more or less depending on how you want it to look.
Instructions
- Wait until your cookies have completely cooled before decorating. We do not want the icing to become a soupy mess!
- Use a good royal icing recipe for decorating. My go-to recipe is the one from Wilton that uses meringue powder. I generally use a little more water (~ one extra tablespoon) than they suggest on the website.
- Have patience! Have patience when decorating your cookie (it takes a deceivingly long time to decorate a cookie) but you want to give yourself sometime between switching colours of icing if you want a more 3D pop-up effect with your second colour. For example, I let my blue icing of my house’s base colour dry before using white icing to add the snowman and green icing to create a tree. I let it that layer dry a bit before adding the eyes and nose for the snowman.
- I used granulated sugar as the snowy base of my cookie jar and gently tucked the cookie houses into the “snow.” If your houses have trouble staying up, use royal icing to attach half a popsicle stick on the back of the houses with and 1 – 2 inches of the popsicle stick poking out at the bottom. The popsicle stick will help anchor the the house deeper in the snow.
- Also have patience when you let your cookies dry. Do not try to tuck any wet/semi-dried houses into the sugar snow. It will ruin all your hard work!
- Other cute decorations you can add to your village cookie jar: fake mini Christmas trees, reindeer figurines, and mini gingerbread men as villagers!
- Tie a ribbon and a gift tag at the base of the lid for an extra touch.
That’s it! Those are the steps I took to construct my snowy village cookie jar — I hope you found them helpful. Now that I have posted my first holiday recipe/DIY gift guide, all the festive recipes are just going to keep flowing on my blog. Stay tuned!
Happy baking + holidays!
Unknown says
These are the cutest damn things I've ever seen.
Unknown says
THANKS ERIN <3