Question On Pearl Dust On Frozen Fondant Cookies

Baking By Phyllis52 Updated 27 Sep 2010 , 5:16pm by Phyllis52

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 9 Aug 2010 , 3:23pm
post #1 of 20

Should I put pearl dust on the fondant on my cookies before freezing or after defrosting? Not sure how it will look. I'm wondering if the shine will go away if I freeze with it on.

Thank you.

19 replies
linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 9 Aug 2010 , 7:19pm
post #2 of 20

I dust them before freezing. In fact, I do mostly dry dusting and you need to do it before the fondant dries. The drier the fondant, the harder it is to get the dust to stick, JMHO. The shine will not go away. I have frozen many dusted cookies. HTH

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 9 Aug 2010 , 7:51pm
post #3 of 20

Thanks linedancer.

I didn't realize I could dry dust - I was going to mix it with vodka, you just saved me a step! Glad to hear the shine will still be there.

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 9 Aug 2010 , 8:25pm
post #4 of 20

You are welcome. I use a nice soft natural bristle minimop brush to dust with. Find it goes on more evenly.

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 21 Aug 2010 , 10:00pm
post #5 of 20

Hi Linedancer -

Just wanted to let you know I used your tip about dusting as soon as I cut out my fondant - they look wonderful and it was so easy. Now to the freezer (by the way I had to do this to 600 cookies!).

Thanks.
Phyllis

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 21 Aug 2010 , 10:06pm
post #6 of 20

Glad it worked for you, that's a lot of cookies icon_eek.gif

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 22 Aug 2010 , 12:28pm
post #7 of 20

Hi linedancer -

Whoops - I don't have enough room in the freezer - I'm guessing I should put the rest of my fondant cutouts (no cookie attached) in an airtight container, right?

I hope I'm doing this right: I'm cutting out, dusting fondant and then will bake in 2 weeks and adding fondant while cookies are hot. The fondant should still be fine? I have never put fondant on cookies when they got this hard before. I feel like I've never baked before!

I think I'm starting to panic - wedding in 4 weeks!! Yikes.

Thanks.

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 22 Aug 2010 , 12:53pm
post #8 of 20

Don't want to upset your apple cart, but I do not know how the pearlized fondant will look, if you put it on hot cookies. You might want to do a test, to see if that works. No harm, if it doesn't, just a little more time to apply the fondant with some thinned karo to the cooled cookies.

Do you have any refrigerator space? I would layer the fondant between sheets of plastic wrap, put in a container, and then in the fridge, if you have room.

If you could beg, borrow, or steal some freezer space, you can bake the cookies, apply the fondant, and even bag them, if you are going to, then freeze. That way you could do a couple of batches a week, and not have to bake them all at the last minute.

If you freeze the completed cookie, they are as good as the day you put them in there. I have a 300 cc wedding, a 100 cookie party and a 100 cookie demo the first two weeks in October. I am going to start baking right after labor day and into the freezer everything will go...

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 22 Aug 2010 , 2:39pm
post #9 of 20

Thank you linedancer!! thumbs_up.gif

You have answered ALL my questions and more. I will follow your lead.

After the wedding I will post pictures (if I know how). They will be 200+ cookie cake favors (3 cookies stacked with gumpaste flowers on top).

I'm pooped already!

Again, thank you, thank you.

Phyllis icon_biggrin.gif

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 23 Aug 2010 , 1:07am
post #10 of 20

You are welcome, will be looking for your pics.

stephilde Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
stephilde Posted 27 Aug 2010 , 1:37am
post #11 of 20

linedancer- how do you package the cookies that you freeze. I asked this question once before and people recommended not freezing decorated cookies? what is they best way to keep them fresh and not freezer burned? Do you freeze RI ones too or just fondant?thanks!

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 27 Aug 2010 , 11:08am
post #12 of 20

I do only fondant cookies, so I can't tell you about ri. I do know you can use ri decorations on fondant and that is ok to freeze.

If I am going to bag the cookies, I do that, using an impulse sealer. Then I layer them in a plastic container. I use the sheet cake carriers you can get at Walmart for about $6. If I am not going to bag the cookies, I layer them between wax paper, then into the plastic container.

If you can't get them into the freezer with the lid on, I cover them with aluminum foil. I take them out the night before I need them, leave them on the counter in the container. The exception to that is if they have eis on them, then I lay them out individually, so they don't smear. I have kept them up to 4 weeks this way with no problems. HTH

stephilde Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
stephilde Posted 27 Aug 2010 , 12:28pm
post #13 of 20

thank you so much! i cant wait to try it. I asked before and got such a bad impression i was scared.

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 28 Aug 2010 , 1:07am
post #14 of 20

You are welcome, happy baking icon_smile.gif

Tracya Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Tracya Posted 22 Sep 2010 , 11:16pm
post #15 of 20

ok I am confused. Sorry ladies. I am making cookies for a wedding as well. So I can bake the cookie, attach the fondant, and freeze them in advance? Wow, nice. Won't the fondant get freezer marks from stacking? Also, how do you attach the fondant to the cookie?

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 23 Sep 2010 , 2:17am
post #16 of 20

Tracya Yes, you can bake the cookies, decorate, and freeze them. This is with rolled fondant for icing. You can also use ri accents on the fondant. I use thinned karo syrup to attach the fondant. Others put the fondant on while the cookie is hot from the oven, still others use butter cream or jam/preserves to adhere the fondant.

The cookies look as good when you take them out as when you put them in. Earlier in the thread I explained how I packaged them for the freezer.

HTH

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 26 Sep 2010 , 11:26pm
post #17 of 20

Hi linedancer,
If you look in my gallery you'll see the finished product. Click on the one picture and you'll see them in their boxes.

Thanks so much for your help.
Phyllis

linedancer Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
linedancer Posted 26 Sep 2010 , 11:36pm
post #18 of 20

Wow, what a great job, they are beautiful thumbs_up.gif You are welcome.

Karen421 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Karen421 Posted 27 Sep 2010 , 12:07am
post #19 of 20

Phyllis52 your cookies are beautiful! How was the wedding?

Phyllis52 Cake Central Cake Decorator Profile
Phyllis52 Posted 27 Sep 2010 , 5:16pm
post #20 of 20

It was just wonderful - everything went great. The guests loved the cookie favors and they were eaten even before dinner!

Thanks for asking.

Quote by @%username% on %date%

%body%