SweetSugarBelle’s Royal Icing
Summary: My favorite royal icing recipe
Ingredients
- 4lbs {two bags} confectioner’s sugar
- 3/4 c. meringue powder
- 1 1/3-1 1/2 c. warm water
- 2-4 tbsp. oil-free extract or flavoring
Instructions
- Add the dry ingredients first. Use your mixer’s whisk attachment to incorporate the sugar and meringue powder. Add the extract to the water and slowly add it to the dry ingredients while mixing. At first the icing will be very liquid-like. Continue to mix it at medium-high speed until it is fluffy and stiff peaks form, about 7-10 minutes. Mixing times are approximate, keep your eye it icing and stop mixing as soon as it becomes stiff. Over mixing and oil-containing extracts can keep the icing from setting up, so keep this in mind as you work. This recipe makes enough icing to decorate at least 9-10 dozen cookies. Royal icing will keep at least a month. I prefer refrigerating it, but it can also be left at room temperature.
Preparation time:
My rating
Copyright © 2010-2011 Sweet Sugarbelle.
Have you ever heard the saying, “All roads lead to Rome”? It basically means that there are many different ways of doing things, but in the end, they all have the same result.
When I first began making cookies, I didn’t really do a lot of research. I’d read a magazine article that said I needed meringue powder, SOOOOO, I headed on out to Wal-mart and bought a can of the Wilton stuff.
The first thing you’ll find when you open it up, folded in a tiny square, are the instructions. That was pretty much my beginning. No Googling or classes, just me reading those little instructions, interpreting in my head what they meant, and taking a leap.
I have gone back and fourth about posting this for a long time, just because I know, if there is any book, or proper way to make royal icing, I’d probably get a big fat “F”, so, as a little disclaimer before I start, PLEASE don’t turn me into the Royal Icing Police if the way I do things strikes you as a little ODD. This method works well for me, so I’m sharing it with you.
When I started, I used with the Wilton recipe. However, as I got better and better at making royal icing, I got to the point that I didn’t measure anymore. At this point, I CAN’T, I just look at it and adjust. To double check “my” recipe, I broke it down .
I pretty much always make a large batch of RI. It almost fills my 5 quart mixer, which is way too much for most people, so I’ll post two versions, a large and a small. If for SOME reason, you hate this recipe, revert back to the Wilton version or another popular favorite, Antonia74′s Royal Icing.
2 lbs {1bag} confectioner’s sugar
1/3 c. plus one tablespoon meringue powder
about 3/4c. water
To begin, I add all of my sugar and meringue powder to the mixer bowl. I am what you would call a non-sifter. In my defense, I ALWAYS sift my flour, but I just don’t waste the time with powdered sugar.
Instead of scraping the sides, ever since I read Gail’s life-altering post on ”shpritz bottles” I keep my trusty spray bottle handy. If a little icing happens to stick, I just spritz the sides until it’s incorporated. {As a matter or fact, I now use my bottle for all sorts of little jobs in the kitchen}
At this point, the icing may look too thin, but believe me, it’s not. It should be about the consistency of honey {in a warm room} or shampoo.
A little FYI, a useful piece of info I have learned along the way is this: If for some reason you forget the meringue powder, DO NOT add it into the icing after it has reached this point…if you do, it will be ruined. If you need to add meringue after the fact, dissolve it into as much water as it needs to become liquefied and then add it.
The Christmas before last, exhausted from making tons of cookies, after a few minutes of unsuccessful beating I realized I’d forgotten the meringue. Without a thought, I dumped it right in. The resulting icing was so clumpy, that after a FRUSTRATING hour of unclogging and changing tips, I finally tossed it out and started over.
On the other hand, if I happen to over-thin my initial mixture, adding more powdered sugar to the mix doesn’t seem to effect it at all. Go figure…
Moving right along…I begin by mixing my icing for 5-6 minutes at medium speed. Then, as it thickens up, {think pudding} I hike it up to high.
I let it go on that way for about 3-4 more minutes until it is stiff and fluffy like meringue. At this point, I can tell by the clanking of my mixer that it’s ready…thank goodness for Kitchen Aid’s wonderful warranty!
-
Royal icing and oil are NOT friends. make sure all of your utensils are oil free, including your bowls. wash them well in hot water, and give them a rub with lemon juice or vinegar before using them.
-
Royal icing keeps for a long time. I have been told by MANY that they leave it covered on the counter for up to a month with no problem. I refrigerate mine, but that’s just me.
-
If you need to refresh it, you can fluff it up again with the mixer, and it will be like new.
-
If I am expecting humidity, I add a little less meringue powder, and a little cream of tartar. I didn’t just make that up. I read somewhere that CofT is a stabilizer and helps when it’s humid. It seems to work, although humidity has not been a concern of mine for almost a year *GRUMBLING*
-
It’s also alright to add a little bit of corn syrup to your icing. Every once in a while I do this if I want it to be a little shinier, but I really can’t tell if it helps or if I just think it does =)
-
I don’t really use Wilton Meringue powder anymore, but if you don’t have access to other brands, it works just fine…
























Hello, I want to know how your get that smooth shiny coat on your icing? Also how do you keep it from cracking?
Try an oscillating fan. That is one of my favorite tips!
BEAUTIFUL WORK!!
What is 3/4 c. meringue powder???
And
2-4 tbsp. oil-free extract or flavoring??
I have another question I was looking at your hibiscus and leaf cookies (BEAUTIFUL)
Where did you get the leaf?? I cant find one like yours!
Thanks!
It’s a really old leaf cutter, like the antique type it’s not open and has the little handle, you can find them on ebay and etsy OFTEN!!!
Hi there, I’m from South Africa, Cape Town. I have never heard of meringue powder, possibly we have it by another name. If I don’t manage to find it here can this be made?
Wondering when you mention making the Icing Thick or Thin….what are you doing to change the consistency? Adding or withholding water?
Just want to say that this recipe is 5 STARS!!! I love working with it and it comes out perfect everytime… thank you so much for the tips I have learned so much from you
Callye,
Just wanted to let you know that I have tried 3 different cookie recipes and 3 different RI recipes and yours are the best! Your cookie recipe is fabulous – not only the taste but the fact you don’t have to refrigerate before cutting is so helpful when you don’t have a lot of time. I did decrease the amount of baking powder by half because I did not want them to spread as much. The RI recipe turned out so good and was so easy. I was worried at first because it didn’t seem to be thickening up – but it did and it is so fluffy and smooth – a joy to work with. Now I just have to perfect the 20 second icing and flood icing – what a challenge it is to get it consistently right. But I’m getting better at it – now it only takes me 2 hours to thin, color, bottle and bag 5 different icing colors instead of 4 hours!!! LOL! I’m not saying that they are all consistent, but I’m getting there! Thank you so much for all your explicit instructions – I keep coming back to them over and over. And thanks again for the seahorse tutorial! They are beautiful!
Susie
Thank you!!!!!!!!!!!!
Hello! This is the first time I visit your blog, and I just loved it! A friend recommended it, and I can’t thank her enough!!!
I do have a question, though… My RI works just fine for me, but when I flood the cookies, as they are drying out, in some parts they start growing a “hole” of some kind, the RI starts sinking into the cookie, and some parts of the decoratin turn out with a hole in them, especially small spaces like noses, little flower petals, etc. It happens to the fluid version of my RI… Does anyone know what’s happening? and of course, do you know how to prevent it? THANKS A LOT
—- Marian
Hi!
Can you just tell me Royal Icing Recipe in European units of measurement?,
Thank you!
What a talented and generous lady you are!!! I discovered you a couple of weeks ago and it was -literally- like finding a treasure! I’m amazed by your work and the quality of your posts, full of details and helpful tips -especially for novices like me!! I followed them to decorate my last batch of cookies and worked marvels! Your cookies are breath taking and soooo shiny. I’m writing you from Tenerife, Spain, where I have many difficulties to find all the materials you use and I worry that one of the reasons why mine don’t gleam as much may be that I have to use pasteurized egg whites instead of meringue powder. Would you happen to know a good recipe to make a royal icing as consistent as yours using liquid egg whites instead of powdered?
Thank you for sharing all spectacular work and teach me so much -your videos are GREAT.
Love from a little island,
Eva