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Description

A flowery flourish to make your favorite New York City bakery staple even more enticing! Icing recipe adapted from Preppy Kitchen; base cookies via Sally’s Baking Addiction.


Ingredients

Units Scale

For the cookies:

For the icing:

  • 2 cups confectioners’ sugar, sifted to remove lumps (sift after measuring)
  • 2 teaspoons lemon juice
  • 2 tablespoons water, plus more as needed
  • 1 tablespoon light corn syrup
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3 tablespoons cocoa powder

For the garnish:

  • Edible flowers, pressed or fresh (if using fresh, see below for pressing instructions)

Instructions

  1. Press your flowers (if not working with store-bought blooms!): Ideally, you’ll do this at least two weeks before assembling the cookies in order to ensure that they’re really dry and flat! But I’ve had luck pressing them for just a week, and you can absolutely get by with less-than-totally-dry flowers. Use a flower press or lay the fresh blooms flat on one sheet of printer paper with a tiny bit of space between each (so that they don’t get stuck together once dry). Top with a second sheet of paper, then place several heavy books or flat objects on top (you really want some serious weight here!). Return in two weeks—your flowers should be beautifully dry and paper-thin.
  2. Bake the cookies according to the recipe linked above. (Don’t make the icing that accompanies the base cookie recipe.)
  3. While the cookies cool, prepare the icing by mixing together the confectioners’ sugar, lemon juice, water, corn syrup, and vanilla until smooth (I prefer to use a hand mixer for this because the icing can get very, very thick). Regardless, though the finished icing *should* be thick, you will likely need to gradually add more water, a 1/4 teaspoon at a time, to get it to a spreadable consistency.
  4. Transfer about half of the icing to another small bowl, then stir in the cocoa powder and a few teaspoons of water until you reach a consistency similar to that of the white icing.
  5. Once the cookies have cooled completely, place them flat sides up, then use an icing spatula to spread white icing over half of each. Unless you want to place flowers on the white side (in which case, you’ve got to get moving!), let the icing firm up a bit, 10-15 minutes, before continuing the frosting process, spreading chocolate icing over the other half of the cookie. Use craft tweezers to place individual flowers artfully across the chocolate half of the cookie (the idea is to place them where the icing has yet to “set”). Less is more! If your icing begins to set too quickly, you can always dab a drop of water onto the space where you’d like to place a flower; it’ll loosen up that icing and act as “glue.” 
  6. Let the icing and florals continue to firm up for another 15 minutes before enjoying.