Olympic Medal Cookies

Olympic Medal Cookies

February: Winter Olympic Games

Be a winner when hosting an Olympic Games watch party by providing sugar cookie medals to guests. These gold, bronze and silver treats make impressive favors and desserts.

We actually gave out these Olympic medal cookies to winners of a bible trivia contest at a prayer social hosted by Islander’s brother’s student ministry group. Teams had to “compete for a cookie medal” and were very motivated to win these sweet treats. Students showed great sportsmanship, made new friends with their teammates and challenged themselves with bible knowledge (the use of smart phones disqualifies them!). Everyone had a lot of fun and looked forward to earning a custom cookie.

Create your own Olympic-style contest for a unique and enjoyable event and award the winners with sugar cookie medals.

Recipe

 (Adapted from Southern Living: Incredible Cookies)

 For the sugar cookies

  • 1 cup butter, softened
  • 1 cup sugar, granulated white
  • 1 egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract/flavoring
  • 3 cups flour
  • ¼ teaspoon salt

Directions

In a large mixing bowl, cream the butter with the sugar until smooth. Beat in the egg. Add the vanilla. Gradually add the flour and salt. Blend well until a dough is formed.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Roll the dough into a ball and refrigerate for an hour. Cut the dough in half and roll each out into 1/4-inch thick on a lightly floured surface. Cut with 2 ½ or 3-inch rounds using a cookie cutter or rim of a glass/cup. Punch out holes using Wilton tip 2A.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Place the cookies onto a parchment paper-lined baking sheet about an inch apart. Refrigerate for 10-15 minutes before baking in a preheated oven at 350 degrees F for 10 minutes. Bake until the edges of the cookies are lightly browned. Remove from the oven and let cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

Olympic Medal Cookies

For the fondant design

  • white fondant (we used Wilton brand)
  • water or clear piping gel (we used Wilton brand)
  • gold, silver and bronze edible dusting powders (we used CK Products brand)
  • tequila or vodka

Directions

Roll out fondant according to package directions. Using the same size round cutter and tip, cut out shapes and set aside.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Brush the surface of a cookie with water or piping gel. Adhere the fondant over the cookie, aligning with the hole punch. Smooth out edges with fingers. Imprint Olympic circles using the back end of another decorating tip.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Make a paste with the bronze/silver/gold dusting powder by mixing with a drop or two of tequila/vodka. Quickly paint over the surface of the fondant.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Let the cookies dry completely. Tie ribbons to the cookies (1 yard/3 feet long). Keep in a container until ready to present the medals.

Olympic Medal Cookies

Notes

  • Knead hardened fondant with a little vegetable shortening to soften and make more pliable. Dust a clean surface with powdered sugar to avoid the fondant from sticking.
  • Take care to choose edible and non-toxic dusting powders for painting the cookies. Some powders are made for sugar showpieces only and should not be eaten. They may be painted onto the fondant “dry” (without alcohol). However, the alcohol gives the powder a shinier metallic finish.
  • We used a 5/8-inch wide red-white-and-blue ribbon. Other ribbon substitutions could be made, such as blue for 1st place (gold), red for 2nd place (silver) and white for 3rd place (bronze).
  • The ribbons may be tied directly on the cookies. We used clear “twist ties” to attach the ribbons through the cookie holes.
  • Thanks to Lisa L. for gifting us with the cookie cookbook from where we got the recipe for the sugar cookie base.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

February: Washington’s Birthday/Lincoln’s Birthday/Presidents’ Day (third Monday in February)

The first president of the United States of America is often associated with cherries. George Washington chopping down a cherry tree as a child and admitting the truth that he did it is actually a myth. His name is also linked to the state that is the largest supplier of the fruit in the country. The close dates of the birthdays of Washington (February 22, 1732) and another great and reputably honest president, Abraham Lincoln (February 12, 1809), are observed together annually as Presidents’ Day on the third Monday of February.

Pretty please, with a cherry on top, celebrate this national holiday with chocolate cherry cola cupcakes. We chose to make this dessert for this blog post because it is both National Cherry Month and National Chocolate Month as well. Two fabulous flavors, two presidential birthdays, one delightful dessert! Indulge!

Recipe

(Adapted from Betty Crocker)

For the chocolate cherry cola cupcakes

  • 2 jars of maraschino cherries (with or without stems)
  • 1 box devil’s food cake mix
  • 1 cup cherry cola carbonated beverage
  • ½ cup vegetable or canola oil
  • 3 eggs

Directions

Drain the cherries, reserving some of the juice for the frosting recipe and also saving around 30 cherries for the topping. Chop the remaining cherries into little pieces and set aside. In a large mixing bowl, combine the cake mix and moisten with cherry cola.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

Add the oil, eggs and ¼ cup cherry juice. Mix well. Fold in the chopped cherries.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

Scoop batter no more than 2/3 full into cupcake papers lining a muffin pan. Bake in a preheated oven at 350 degrees F for 25-35 minutes, testing with a toothpick for doneness. Remove from the oven and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. Yield: Approximately 30 cupcakes.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

For the cherry buttercream frosting

  • 1 stick (½ cup) butter, softened
  • 3-4 cups powdered sugar, sifted
  • 1 teaspoon cherry flavor/extract
  • 4+ tablespoons maraschino cherry juice (reserved from above)
  • red food coloring (optional)

Directions

Cream the butter with the sugar until smooth. Add the cherry extract and mix well.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

Tint to the desired shade of pink with a few drops of red food coloring (optional). Thin the frosting to spreadable/piping consistency with the cherry juice. Frost the cupcakes (or use tip 1M and a pastry bag to pipe swirls).

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

For the cherry topping and chocolate ganache drizzles

  • maraschino cherries, dried
  • 4 ounces chocolate (we used one bar of Baker’s brand chocolate)
  • ¼ cup heavy whipping cream

Directions

Wash and dry the remaining 30 maraschino cherries, gently squeezing out the excess juice. Dry on paper towels. Melt the chocolate. Stir in the cream until smooth and well blended.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes

Allow the ganache to cool and thicken (this may take several minutes, depending on the room temperature; may speed up the process by refrigerating but watch carefully for the consistency). Pour a spoonful of the ganache over the chocolate and allow to drip down the sides. Top with a maraschino cherry.

Chocolate Cherry Cola Cupcakes 

Notes

  • Many boxed cake mixes used to by 18.25 ounces. Nowadays they are 15.25-16.5 ounces. Add six tablespoons of flour to the cake mix to compensate for the difference.
  • Double the recipe for the frosting and ganache if decorating the cupcakes in a full and fancy style.
  • The reserved maraschino cherry juice could be substituted for the cherry cola, kirsch or water.

 

Football Coffee Cookies

Football Cookies

February: Super Bowl

We sometimes host a small and simple Super Bowl Sunday social with our neighbors and watch the big football game at our home. Highlander grills the burgers, our neighbors bring fried chicken wings and beer and Islander prepares the snacks, sides and desserts.

Football-shaped cookies are a thematic dessert that can be easily made ahead of time so we can concentrate on getting the main foods ready and then focus on our friends and the game. Although a chocolate cookie recipe is often used to make the football cookies, we baked a fragrant and flavorful coffee cookie instead.

Support your favorite school or professional team and make football coffee cookies as tailgating treats or game day desserts during football season, especially for Super Bowl Sunday.

Recipe

(Adapted from Southern Living: Incredible Cookies)

Ingredients

  • ¾ cup butter, softened
  • ¾ cup sugar
  • 2 cups flour
  • ¼ teaspoon baking powder
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 3 tablespoons coffee liqueur (Kahlua)
  • 2 tablespoons instant coffee granules
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • ½ cup white chocolate, melted

Directions

In a mixing bowl, cream the butter with the sugar. Set aside. In another bowl, combine the flour, baking powder and salt. Gradually add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and blend well. In a cup, mix the coffee liqueur, instant coffee granules and vanilla extract.

Football Cookies

Blend coffee flavoring into the dough. Mix well and shape into a smooth ball. Refrigerate the dough for 10 minutes. Place flattened dough between two sheets of waxed paper. Roll no thicker than ¼ inches. Cut with football-shaped cookie cutter, re-rolling dough scraps as necessary.

Football Cookies

Place onto lightly greased cookie sheets about an inch apart.  Refrigerate for 10 minutes. Bake in a preheated oven at 375 degrees F for 15-20 minutes or until brown on the edges. Remove from the oven and let stand on the baking sheet for five more minutes. Transfer to a wire rack to cool completely and harden.

Football Cookies

Melt the white chocolate and place in a piping bag with a round tip. Draw the football stitching on the cooled cookies. Allow to dry completely. Yield: Approximately 14-16 football cookies.

Football Cookies

Notes

  • For an alternative to melted white chocolate, use tube icing, such as Wilton or Betty Crocker brands. Some of the ready-made frostings do not dry completely so avoid stacking the football cookies or the stitching design will stick to each other.
  • For crisper wafers, roll the dough into 1/8-inch thickness and bake for 7-10 minutes.
  • For a chocolate football cookie, use this recipe here.