Marilyn, my neighbor kids decorating your huge cookies!

They were all adorable:)

The egg was decorated, if i understood correctly, in the colors of a Pokemon character - LOL:)

The edible markers worked great!

 
Question: I'm considering baking cookies for a friend's daughter's wedding. (it will

depend on the # of guests.) They'll have to be mailed out of state, so do you have any suggestions on time line and how to wrap? I was thinking of putting each heart-shaped cookie in a bag, then vacuum seal 5 or so cookies in a bag.

Was going to use Penny's sugar cookie and Royal icing since there would have movement during shipping. I'm envisioning using a calligraphy pen and super-thin icing to write their initials on each cookie.

Sadly, things that work out in my head rarely work out in life.

 
oh, oh, oh...you just gave me a great idea. Well, I'm STEALING your idea. What if I send

a bunch of cookies simply iced and several packages of pens and LET THEM! (friends, family, etc) write their own message to the bride and groom??

What 'cha think?

 
Thoughts and ideas

How nice of you!!

First let's tackle shipping. The way my baker (for my party favor store) ships her cookies and they almost NEVER break is: once she has put them in the cello she then puts each one in a small paper bag 'sleeve' (think of a glassine cookie bag) and basically stands them up/leans them against each other in a box. Then that box is put in another shipping box that has lots of peanuts/bubble wrap in it (this last step is done by a lot of professional bakers - the box inside a box).

That being said, the way I've done it (only twice but with good luck) is to use one shipping box only and use shredded paper as the filler. So first a layer of shredded paper, then the first layer of cookies (laying flat and not touching), then a layer of shredded paper, etc. I used this before when I was sending about 75 of fragile small items I made (as party favors) to a box that I shipped; never had breakage.

Yes - agree with the recipe and royal frosting. I think I would use the royal icing also to do the initials if you decide to do them yourself versus the markers only because the 'raised' initial might look more elegant.

I use a impulse heat sealer to seal my cookies in cello:
http://www.papermart.com/standard-sealers/id=18855?SearchItemNumber=2930100T

it was a great investment (about $65 - I use the small one). Once sealed this way that stay fresh for weeks (at least 3 but even more). To fancy them up I put a label on the back (I use lightweight cardstock to make them/print them, use a 3" card punch to cut out each one, and use a tape runner to adhere to the back). I've also, to fancy them up, left about an inch of the cello bag, above where it is heat sealed, before I cut the rest off. Then I used a two hole punch (found at craft stores - same as the card punch) that is made especially for tying bows to punch holes and then tie a pretty satin ribbon to it. Cut the bag to size before sealing (meaning if you are going to tie with ribbon account for that extra inch before cutting the bags; then seal the cookie.

Timeline: I tend to bake, ice and bag the same day (most cookie decorators don't) because I think you end up with a much fresher product. I often bake/decorate/seal the cookies and then put in the freezer until needed - I've never had a problem with this. I put on the label once thawed.

Hope this helps!

 
Excellent info, deb. Thank you! One more question: for my brother's party, I baked the

oatmeal cookies, stacked 8 per cello bag and popped those in the freezer. The cookies were fine...but the seal at the bottom of the bag open. I almost dropped the contents of two packages when I pulled them out of the freezer to pack for the trip to PA.

These were the clear cello. about 10" long, 4" wide. I figured freezing the bag degraded it. For the other 400 cookies, I packed the unbaked cookie dough in a suitcase and baked them in Pittsburgh.

 
They were either *100 per package* from the cake decorating store or

*25 per package* from Wilton. I have a drawer with all the stuff, so I don't know which one it was.

And the other cookies were all drop or filled, so no fancy decorating like you do.

 
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