Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (2024)

Gorgeous Valentine’s Day themed cut-out cookies are decorated with royal icing in the easiest way! Put these pink and red heart cookies out for the holiday and you’ll look like a cookie pro.

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (1)

If you’ve been intimidated to try decorating cut-out cookies with royal icing, I’m here to show you that it’s not hard at all to get great results with royal icing, especially if you have some basic tools and skills in your arsenal. When you’re finished with this tutorial, you’ll be able to use royal icing to decorate cookies for any occasion.

Valentine’s Day Cookies with royal icing are going to be the easiest cookies you’ve decorated yet! As a bonus, royal icing is gluten free and dairy free, so feel free to use it on your favorite sugar cookie recipe.

Today I’m going to bake cookies using a store bought cookie dough for convenience, but I am working on perfecting my cut out cookie recipe to share with you very soon!

Prefer buttercream frosting on your cut-out cookies? See this recipe for Valentine’s Cat Cookies! They are piped with a sweet and creamy frosting and are super cute.

These Ombre Valentine’s Spritz Cookies and Valentine Whoopie Pies are also very impressive on a dessert tray.

Join our Facebook Cookie Group! It’s a community of people who LOVE baking cookies! Join us to find new recipes, share recipes, or to ask cookie questions! 💕

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (2)

Table of Contents

Why Should You Decorate Cookies With Royal Icing?

  1. Super Simple Recipe – Royal icing is a really easy recipe to make and only requires 3 ingredients. One of those is water, so you only really need to find two things.
  2. Hardening Royal Icing – royal icing dries hard as a rock (almost) so it’s perfect for making cookies that you plan to give as gifts and makes it easy to stack your cookies up for storage too.
  3. No Raw Eggs Needed – While the traditional recipe for royal icing is made with raw egg whites, the safer and easier way is to make royal icing with meringue powder, which you can buy in your local craft store or baking shop. It’s available in large supermarkets, or you can also order some online.
  4. Failproof Cookie Decorating – the royal icing technique I’m showing you today is a “wet on wet” method. We will line and flood the cookies, then add details while the background is still wet. The details will melt into the background color, giving us smooth decorations and no need to fuss with piping lines or raised details. I’ll even show you how to draw on details with a marker – this is my favorite because it’s just like coloring!
  5. You don’t even need cutter cutters – these tall rectangle cookies were made using a simple ruler and a sharp knife. I love this shape because you can turn it into so many different fun things!

Key Royal Icing Ingredients

Complete list of ingredients with quantities and instructions islocated in the recipe cardbelow

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (3)

Don’t blink – you might miss it! There are only a few ingredients needed to make royal icing for cookies.

  • Powdered Sugar: Sometimes called icing sugar or confectioners’ sugar, depending on where you live, this superfine sugar is used in all sorts of frosting and icing recipes. It blends and melts into the other ingredients easily to create super smooth royal icing.
  • Meringue Powder: Meringue powder is essentially dehydrated egg whites. The benefit of using this product instead of actual egg whites is that the risk of foodborne illness from consuming raw eggs is eliminated since the eggs have been cooked and processed to create the powder.
  • Water: Water moistens the sugar and blends all of the ingredients together. With royal icing, adding more or less water is how we can control the consistency.
  • Gel Food Coloring: I always use gel food coloring in icings, because liquid food coloring can throw off the moisture content in my recipes. This is easy to find in large grocery stores and craft stores or pick up a pack of 12 colors online. A little goes a long way with these food colors; a set will last forever.

How to Make Royal Icing for Cookies

You’ll need about 5 minutes and a stand mixer to make this royal icing recipe. A hand mixer can be used instead, but if you have a stand mixer, now is one of those times that you should definitely use it. You can get your arm workout in another way! Once you have your icing made, I’ll show you how to decorate Valentine’s Day cookies with it.

  1. In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine powdered sugar and meringue powder.
  2. Add in 8 tablespoons of water, and beat for 1 minute on low speed.
  3. Continue to add water, one tablespoon at a time until the icing slowly drizzles from the paddle when lifted.

Royal Icing Consistency for Cookies

The consistency that we are going for here is called a medium consistency. We don’t want the icing to hold details when we pipe it onto the cookies. Instead, we want it to spread out on the cookie while having enough sticking power to not completely spill over the edges,

Medium Royal Icing for Cookies: If you take your whisk or a spoon and drizzle a line of icing into the bowl, it should take 13-15 seconds to settle into the icing and disappear. This is the perfect consistency for outlining and filling small to medium sugar cookies.

Stiff/Thick Royal Icing: For piping raised details that hold their shape, you want icing that takes 20-25 seconds to disappear back into the bowl of icing. I’m not using thick royal icing on these valentine cookies, but you may want to. If you make large cookies (over 4 inches) it’s usually best to outline with thick icing and then fill in with medium or thinner icing.

Supplies Needed for Royal Icing Cookie Decorating.

Squeeze Bottles: Bakers who decorate a lot of sugar cookies all have their preferences when it comes to the tools and supplies they use. I like to keep things simple, so for these valentines day cookies, I’m going to use squeeze bottles for my icing.

I like this set that comes with piping tips (tips are not necessary, but nice to have). I also like this cookie decorating kit from Wilton that includes a squeeze bottle, meringue powder, a set of gel food colors, and some plastic tools for painting and pushing icing around. It’s a pretty good deal actually! Otherwise, any set of plastic squeeze bottles will work. For these decorations we need three colors, white, red, and pink.

Squeeze bottles give me just enough control or my royal icing, without making things more difficult or confusing than they need to be. There’s no need to use piping bags or piping tips with this wet on wet royal icing decorating tutorial, but you can use them if you have them. I suggest using #2 or #3 round tip, or just snipping off the end of the bag to get a small hole.

Sprinkles: Valentine’s Sprinkles are a must! I used a variety of sprinkles that I had on hand, and you can do the same. I like this set from Wilton.

Edible Marker: These are so fun to use! You can draw or write anything you like on hardened royal icing with one of these. You can also use them to write on other things like marshmallows or fondant.

You’ll also need a toothpick. Super easy!

How to Decorate Sugar Cookies with Royal Icing – For Valentines Day

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (4)
  1. Start with baked cookies. You can use your favorite recipe, or make things easy and buy pre-made dough. The recipe card below includes instructions for making these cookies using Pillsbury sugar cookie dough. You can even buy the cookies already baked at the store! Cookies need to be completely one-hundred percent cool before adding icing to them.
  2. Tint your icing. For this set of colors, separate your royal icing into 3 small bowls. Leave one of them white. Add a few drops of red food coloring to one to create a nice pink. Add more red food coloring to the third bowl to get red. Fill your bottles with the icing.
  1. Fill and decorate: Working on just a few cookies at a time, use the icing to outline the shape of the cookie, then quickly fill in the entire background. If needed, use a toothpick to pop any air bubbles or coax the icing to fill in corners. Decorate using one of these simple methods, while the icing is still wet.
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  • Sprinkles – Place your favorite Valentine’s Day sprinkles on top of the icing while it’s still wet.
  • Polka Dots or Stripes – Use a contrasting color to add small dots or lines to the wet icing. The details will slowly fall into the background creating a smooth surface.
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  • Hearts – Before the flooded area dries, add dots of a different colored icing. Drag a toothpick through the dots to create hearts.
  • Ziz-Zag or Marbling – Similar to the hearts, draw lines of icing on top of wet icing. Use a toothpick to drag through, creating patterns.
  • Edible Markers – After the background has dried completely for at least four hours, go back and draw on fine details with an edible ink marker. The LOVE cookies were done in this way. First I added sprinkles to the top of the cookies and let them harden. I came back a few hours later to add the letters.
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Recommended Cookie Making Tools

These tools are all in my kitchen, and help me bake cookies with ease. Pick up any that you don’t already have, and you’ll be ready for baking any time.

  • Pyrex Mixing Bowls: There’s something about these clear glass mixing bowls that brings me back to baking with my mother. They are a must for me, even though I’ve tried other bowls, I still come back to these every time.
  • Hand Mixer: No need to use a fancy stand mixer for a batch of cookies when a hand mixer does the job just fine. I use this one from Kitchenaid.
  • Measuring Cups and Spoons: This set from OXO is just so well designed! There are magnets in the handles so they stack and stick to each other perfectly.
  • Kitchen Scales: for measuring ingredients or portions by weight, this glass kitchen scale is my favorite.
  • Cookie Scoop: This scoop is a small size, and makes one tablespoon sized scoops, perfect for most drop cookie recipes. I suggest keeping a medium cookie scoop on hand as well.
  • Cookie Sheet: I love my Nordic Ware half sheet pans. They are very high quality and last forever.
  • Silpat: To line the cookie sheets, a Silpat silicone mat in half size is perfect for making everything non-stick, and you’ll never need to buy parchment paper again.

More Fun Cookies to Make

  • Soft Orange Cookies
  • Butterscotch Oatmeal Cookies
  • Baby Yoda Blue Macarons
  • Banana Pudding Cookies

FAQs

Is Royal Icing Vegan?

People following a vegan diet generally do not want to eat royal icing. Meringue powder is made from eggs. I have seen vegan royal icing recipes that utilize aquafaba (chickpea can liquid) replicate the holding power of egg whites, but I have not tried it personally yet.

Can cookies with royal icing be bagged?

Yes, royal icing decorated cookies stand up really well to being bagged up, much better than any other type. You can wrap your cookies in cello bags and tie them up with pretty ribbons to give as gifts.

How do I store cookies decorated with royal icing?

Store the finished cookies at room temperature in an airtight container. You can also freeze royal icing decorated cookies in an airtight container for up to 3 months.

Have fun making these easy royal icing cookies for Valentine’s Day! Be sure to come back for new fun cookie recipes every week!

Recipe

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (8)

Recipe

5 from 2 votes

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Valentine’s Day Cookies with Royal Icing

Created by: Fun Cookie Recipes

Prep Time 5 minutes mins

Total Time 20 minutes mins

5 servings

This recipe for royal icing for cookies with meringue powder is so simple to make, and decorating these Valentine's Day Cookies is fun and easy too.

Equipment

  • Icing Squeeze Bottles

  • Toothpick

  • Edible Marker

Ingredients

Easy Sugar Cookies:

  • 1 package Pillsbury Refrigerated Sugar Cookie Dough
  • ¼ cup all-purpose flour

Royal Icing:

  • 4 cups powdered sugar
  • 3 tablespoons meringue powder
  • 8-12 tablespoons water
  • red gel food coloring
  • Sprinkles optional

Instructions

To bake the cookies

  • Combine the refrigerated dough with the flour using a wooden spoon and your hands to knead it until smooth.

  • Use a rolling pin to roll the dough out to ¼-inch thickness. Use cookie cutters to cut out heart shapes, and use a ruler to cut ½” x 3” rectangles.

  • Bake at 350°F/ 177°C for 8 minutes or until the edges start to brown. Allow cookies to cool completely before decorating.

To Make Icing and Decorate

  • In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, combine powdered sugar and meringue powder.

  • Add in 8 tablespoons of water, and beat for 1 minute on low speed.

  • Continue to add water, one tablespoon at a time until the icing slowly drizzles from the paddle when lifted.

  • Separate icing into smaller bowls and color as desired using gel food coloring. Add royal icing to squeeze bottles.

  • Working on a few cookies at a time, use the bottle to outline each with icing, then quickly fill in the outline to create the background of your design.

  • While still wet, decorate using sprinkles, or a contrasting color of icing.

  • Allow cookies with royal icing to harden for at least 4 hours before adding any writing with an edible marker, or additional royal icing details.

Notes

  • For these wet on wet decorated cookies, your icing should be at a medium consistency. If you take your whisk or a spoon and drizzle a line of icing into the bowl, it should take 13-15 seconds to settle into the icing and disappear.
  • Decorate quickly so that the icing doesn’t harden before you’re finished. This will allow your cookies to be smooth and seamless.
  • Use a toothpick to pop any air bubbles and to get icing into corners and bare spots.
  • If your icing is too thick, add drops of water until it is the right consistency.
  • If the icing is too thin, you can mix in additional powdered sugar.
  • Store decorated cookies at room temperature in an airtight container for up to 5 days, or in the freezer for up to three months.
  • Feel free to use your favorite sugar cookie cut-out recipe in place of the easy shortcut recipe here.

Nutrition

Calories: 677kcal | Carbohydrates: 139g | Protein: 5g | Fat: 12g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 7g | Cholesterol: 7mg | Sodium: 215mg | Potassium: 127mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 117g | Vitamin A: 23IU | Calcium: 9mg | Iron: 2mg

This website provides approximate nutrition information for convenience and as a courtesy only. Nutrition data is gathered primarily from the USDA Food Composition Database, whenever available, or otherwise other online calculators.

did you make this recipe?

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You may also like...

  • Ombre Heart Spritz Cookies

  • Valentine's Day Cat Sugar Cookies

  • Soft and Chewy Sugar Cookies

Valentine's Day Cookies Decorated with Royal Icing - Fun Cookie Recipes (2024)

FAQs

What is the most difficult part of decorating cookies with royal icing? ›

Cratering refers to the formation of small depressions or pits on the surface of royal icing cookies during the drying process, making it particularly frustrating because your cookies look fine as you work on them, and as it dries, these little craters start to form, and it becomes difficult to fill them in later.

How long do decorated sugar cookies last with royal icing? ›

On the counter in an airtight container, I'd say up to 3-4 weeks. Personally, I prefer to eat them within 1 week or freeze them. Frozen properly, they can easily lats 3-6 months (or more!). You can even freeze dough before it's baked (just makes sure it is VERY securely airtight!).

Can I use royal icing on cookies? ›

This thicker royal icing is perfect for the final decorations that sit on top of a cookie and make it so much fun. Remember that each flooded cookie should be completely dry before you start to decorate with piping icing. If it's not dry, your piped decorations will bleed into the thinner icing.

What is the 10 second rule for royal icing? ›

If the icing surface becomes smooth in anywhere between 5-10 seconds, then your icing is ready to use. If it takes longer than approximately 10 seconds, the icing is too thick. Slowly add more water. If your icing surface smoothes over in less than 5-10 seconds, it is too runny.

How long should cookies cool before decorating with royal icing? ›

Follow this tip: Don't rush the cooling process. The first step to making beautifully decorated cookies is making sure the cookies are completely cooled when you begin adding the icing. Play it safe by making it a two-day process: Bake the cookies one day, then decorate the next day.

Can I leave royal icing cookies out overnight? ›

Yes. Allow royal icing cookies to dry and harden overnight at room temperature. Can I store royal icing in piping bags? Yes, you can store royal icing in piping bags.

Can I leave decorated sugar cookies out overnight? ›

Decorated Sugar Cookies

If you leave them on the counter, at room temperature, they should be good to go for about two weeks. If you decide to leave them in the fridge, they will last about a week, but keep in mind that it's best to eat them within the first three days.

Is royal icing or buttercream better for cookies? ›

Since buttercream frosting remains pretty soft even after a couple of days, it is not recommended for stacked or mailed cookies. Another very popular frosting for decorating cookies, royal icing holds up very well if cookies need to be stacked or mailed (unlike buttercream).

What are the three types of royal icing? ›

There are three main types of royal icing: stiff consistency, piping consistency, and flood consistency. They are used for different decorating techniques, although sometimes you can use different consistencies to achieve the same result.

Can you put sprinkles on royal icing? ›

A variant of flocking is to sprinkle non-pareils, sprinkles, or jimmies over the piped icing and then shake the sprinkles off. You can create fun and whimsical looks with rainbow sprinkles!

How do you dress up sugar cookies? ›

5 Ways to Get Fancy with Your Sugar Cookies
  1. Make a fancy thumbprint cookie. ...
  2. Turn them into sandwich cookies. ...
  3. Decorate with melted chocolate. ...
  4. Try different flavorings in the sugar cookie dough. ...
  5. Roll cookie dough logs in sparkly sugar.
May 1, 2019

How do you decorate sugar cookies like a pro? ›

Start by outlining the cookie with piping-consistency icing in any color you choose. Then, use flooding-consistency icing to fill the outlined area, starting by flooding around the edges and working your way towards the center. If the flooding is inconsistent in thickness, redistribute the wet icing with a toothpick.

How do you display decorated sugar cookies? ›

My trick is to save the really pretty iced cookies and place them on the very top of your cookie board. That way, everyone will see those first and it makes for a killer display. You can also display these cookies at varying heights, placing some on a tray and some elevated up on some cake stands too!

Is royal icing hard to work with? ›

Royal Icing can be used on everything from sugar cookies to cakes and is a staple in the world of baking. Once dry, the look is flawless and will leave your friends and families amazed. Most think it's overly difficult, but in all reality it's quite simple, it just requires a little time.

Why is royal icing so hard? ›

A big part of royal icing is how much water you add to the mix. Water makes royal icing either stiff (for detailing) or thin (for flooding). If your icing is stiff and doesn't seem to want to spread and mix back together, you may need to add a bit more water to it.

Does royal icing set up hard? ›

Does this icing get hard? As royal icing dries, it hardens to the consistency of a candy-like coating with a smooth, shiny finish, so it doesn't smear if you run your hands over it. It will take 6 to 8 hours to dry at room temperature.

Is royal icing always hard? ›

As it dries, it hardens to the consistency of candy, similar to like button candy or a smarty. Hard enough to not smear, but not so hard you can't bite it easily. It's perfect for piping on cookies. Pipe out your image, flower, or whatever, then set it out to dry for a few hours or overnight.

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