Royal Icing 101 and My Favorite Recipe
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.
Notes
Royal icing will keep at least a month. I prefer refrigerating it, but it can also be left at room temperature.
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!
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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.
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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.
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If you need to refresh it, you can fluff it up again with the mixer, and it will be like new.
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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*
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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 =)
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I don’t really use Wilton Meringue powder anymore, but if you don’t have access to other brands, it works just fine…
what if you don’t add the meringue powder?
Then unfortunately the frosting won’t be as stiff and won’t hold those nice peaks
Just curious, if we do decide we really need to add some CofT because we know its humid (HAHA SoFla), exactly how much? like a teaspoon?
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callye- thanks so much for the recipe and for all the other great tips and tutorials. I feel like I’ve learned so much from you! my question about royal icing: can you explain to me why it is important to start with a thicker RI and work backwards to thin it out? you mention about stability, what exactly does that mean? what is unstable RI likely to do? I am about to try your recipe right now, although I like my RI a little runnier, (like 10-15 seconds), so that I don’t have to mess around with 2 consistencies for outlining & flooding, ala sweetopia. I’m just wondering why I shouldn’t just make it to the consistency I prefer right from the beginning, rather than making it stiffer and then thinning it out.
Working backwards is easier because going from thick to thin is literally a few tbsps of water/milk, whatever you use. However if you make your icing too thin, it will take considerable amounts of powdered sugar to get back to your desired consistency.
Any thoughts on the recipes that include cream of tarter? Seems so strange to me to make icing with this ingredient, so I just wanted to see what others thought! Thanks so much!
Too funny I had the same though when it said to “beat icing into peaks” I never heard of using the paddle attachment I have always used the whisk attachment.
hey great recipe! i was wondering how many egg whites is this?
Hi i love your blog and have spent the last 4 hours reading everything youve done. I have a question about the RI recipe. I dont have a stand mixer, just a hand mixer. Can that be used on the RI recipe or should i really invest in a stand mixer?
<3
Your site is one of the . . . no make that IS the BEST website I have ever found. Your cookies are flat AMAZING. I can tell that you DREAM cookies! – Like you, I spent a long time trying to figure out the best method from the wilton directions using the egg white powder. I have been making family cookies for years and wanted to pass on the technique to my niece and god daughter. For her daughter’s communion she wanted to do the royal icing on the sugar cookies and begged me for help. Unable to attend the communion (due to distance issues), she and I spent TWO HOURS on Skype so that she could see how the consistency looked at each stage. Your helpful tutorial with pix is just perfect. I sent her a link to your site too. Thank you. Thank you. Thank you. Keep on dreaming and creating – as a graphic artist I must say your cookies are truly an ART FORM!
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I’m sorry but i0m new to decorating and i’m not a native english speaker and live in uruguay, but what is meringue powder?? I’ve never heard of it!! I wasn’t able to do almost any type of icing because i needed raw eggs and i’ve been searching for an eggless recipe..
So I’ve made some cookies a few times now, using your cookie and your Royal Icing recipe. Everything was great, but as soon as I started adding color to the icing by the time it dried, it was all marbled and wonky. If I leave the icing white, we’re in business, no problem, but adding even the smallest amount is messing me up. I’m not using any coloring that contains oil as far as I know(Wilton Icing Colors), I just don’t understand it. Any suggestions?
Just made royal icing – for the first time, ever! Baked the cookies yesterday and then, tomorrow, finally: decorating! I am very excited -and nervous- about it.
Your blog has been a huge inspiration for me, I love everything you make. You have such a recognizable style.
One question; I really liked the clingfilm wrap thingy by Karenscookies.net; but this icing seems to liquid (after thinning for decorating). Can you still use the clingfilm or should I try to find those bottles?
Thanks!
Hello. I started decorating cookies about a year ago. Before that, I simply baked different cookies and arranged them bouquet style (chocolate chip, oatmeal, sugar) and felt the overall appearance with the entire arrangement was not only affordable, but served as a nice presentation. Then, I finally gave the decorating a try and I’m HOOKED! I do sell my cookies, although all of my profits are donated to non-profit (hands on) organizations. The only way that I can do this is with awesome confection decorators as yourself and your mentors. I want to thank you from my heart for your awesome post (and laughs along the way). I too blog, but not on designing, more on why I do what I do. Would love you to visit my blog at http://confectionsbyelizabeth.blogspot.com/ and PLEASE feel free to address any boo boo’s I am making with my blogs..I need all the help I can get. Blessings, Elizabeth
Hi! I just wanted to say thank you for all of your tutorials and your wonderful inspiration. I have been teaching myself to bake and decorate cakes/cupcakes for a while but had completely ignored cookie decorating after one royal icing mishap with lots of egg yolk and no peaks (I didn’t quite know what that meant but I tried to get peaks to form)! Someone posted your blog on my facebook page because they knew I did some decorating. Since then, I have made royal icing twice and I have conquered my fear! Your tutorial helped me so much and I am able to try my hand at some adorable cookies!
Okay, I have made this twice now and I am hooked. As a ten year vetran of cake decorating, I’ve always hated messing with RI. The first time I made it, I used the combo vanilla and almond extract. The second time I did the same, but really wasn’t fond of the taste. I have a bunch of Lorann Oils around the house for candy making. The name is a misnomer because many of hte flavors have no oil in them. This time I added about half a dram of cheesecake flavor and it made the RI go from good to PHENOMINAL! It doesn’t truly taste like cheesecake (neither does the champagne btw) but it gives such a wonderful essence to the icing. I used it on some vanilla bean sugar cookies and the hubs has already been asking for more. 🙂 Thanks once again!
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Hello!! Do u have the standard US measurements for this awesome recipe??
This is standard as far as I know…
Do you know if the flavoring by CK products are oil free?
I have no idea, bt they have very very helpful customer service by telephone. They’ll tell you anything you need to know.
Hi, I’m writing from Australia. I have always made royal icing with cream of tartar (a teaspoon) instead of the meringue powder. Does the meringue powder replace the cream of tartar? My recipe is egg white, pure icing sugar, cream of tartar and lemon juice as the liquid part (I think I have read somewhere that the lemon juice is supposed to give a hint of glossiness to the icing?)
cheers, Fiona.
Did you say that you use both almond and vanilla extracts in your RI recipe? Or just one extract per batch?
Both =) I mix them
HI! i just made ur icing and used vanilla extract for flavoring and my icing was of a light brown color. How is ur icing so white if u also use vanilla extract?? 🙂
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Hi! I just stumbled upon your blog and I must say, IT’S AWESOME!
Quick question about your icing (this may seem a silly question because I am a novice when it comes to cookie decorating, but here goes): how much extract should be added to the water? How much of the almond and vanilla do you normally add? (:
Hello, I just tried your recipe for the first time today and while it sounds super simple and it seems like other people have had great results, mine is gritty. I did everything exactly how you said and it feels like it has granulated sugar in it 🙁 I’m thinking maybe the meringue powder needs to be dissolved in the water before adding it to the sugar? I don’t know but I’m not sure what to do with this now. Very sad.
Thank you for the wonderful tutorials and helpful comments. I have been using royal icing or a recipe that uses equal parts caro syrup and milk. Either way, the cookies start out looking beautiful, but they only last about two days. After that, they become pale or get a crystallized look. Is there a trick to making the cookies last longer visually? I can’t believe the cookies I see on line or in the bakery are less than 2 days old. There must be a secret that I haven’t figured out. I’m hoping there are some suggestions from those of you with more experience than I have. Thank you, Anne
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i lov ur toturials among all d site hav entered urs is best please i will appriciate if u also teach me diferent type of icing 2. wht is meringue is d first tim am hearin dis name explain please tanks and God bless
so…is ur recipe for royal icing the same thing as 20 sec icing..? cuz i clicked on ur link n it brought me here for 20sec icing but i cant seem to find anything on this page about 20 sec icing…btw, what stores would i find the decorating bottles sold at?
can i subsitute the meringue powder with cream of tartar?
Your RI and 20 second rule articles are the most informative I have ever found. I’ve been making RI for many years but was always afraid to keep it past 3 days, then I would dread having to make more. My kids love decorating too, so now II will always be able to have some on hand. Thank you so much!
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I don’t need this much icing.. and I’m not much of a baker or icer for that matter.. but I want to try to make this icing how can I make half of this recipe? Can I just cut all the ingredient in 1/2??
Hi!
Can you help me?
I cant’t making the conversion of measurement for your recipe.
There are more different conversion In italy .
Can you tell me this recipe in grams?
Thank you!
And sorry for my language!
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hello, I live in thailand and cannot find meringue powder any suggestions on what I can do ? can I use normal egg white stiffly beaten ?
and also what is confectioner’s sugar ? I have only icing sugar
very best regards
Thank you for the great tutorial, I am making gingerbread leaf cookies for place settings this year at Thanksgiving and we needed a great royal icing recipe. I have one question: Can you use the meringue right away or does it need to set for a few hrs? Thanks
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Hi sugarbelle!! Today I’m trying this RI recipe. I’m just starting in this fantastic world of decorated cookies, and your website have been useful, a lot.
Saludos desde México! >.<
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Hi I have a question I made RI but I have trouble after dry they look like hole please help me
can i use a regular hand mixer if i don’t have a professional one like yours?
what brand of meringue powder do you use?
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Curious, in this recipe/post you use the whisk attachment for the royal icing but in the post that brought me here, Country Christmas Color palette, you use the paddle. Which works best for you?
What is oil free extract?
Hi Callye
When you want ot add corn syrup , at which stage you do that & how much with respect to your large batch RI ?thx
I have been making my RI with natural egg whites but worried about the selmanila that can be in fresh eggs so I made your recipe for RI with meringue pd. I was so pleased on how will it worked but after frosting on the cookies cured the RI was like powdery when biting into it, even would flake off cookie were sprinkles were applied. Is this normal or did somehting go wrong. If this is normal I’ll be going to pasturized whites instesd of meringue pd. The finished product is superior in taste and texture. So confussing cause it seems that most of you that are on line use the meringue pd but I want my cookies to taste awesome besides looking fantastic.
I noticed in the smaller batch recipe there isn’t a measurement for flavor. How much flavor do you use when making a smaller batch?
May i know how many Grams of 3/4 c. meringue powder, thank you.
Hi,
I have used the meringue icing before! However now that it is close to Christmas I am wanting to do Christmas cookies but had no idea about flood icing. I see you work backwards after doing the royal icing to make it to the consistency you would like. Can you tell me how to get it to flood icing or is that a totally different recipe? Thanks
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This icing tastes awful! I don’t know why. I followed the recipe exactly. I used Wilton meringue powder. Blech!
so informative and detailed…THANK YOU!!! I have my cookie itch and will try this today!
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So generous of you to share your recipe. You are doing a great job. Sure got me motivated.
God Bless
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I am in love with your website/blog! You are so talented!! My daughter wanted to make cookies this Christmas and I found our site researching what we should do! Thank you for all the recipes and tips!! I’m excited and she is too!
Can this recipe be scaled down, say to 1/2? That would require less measuring and the ease of using a 2lb bag of confectioner’s sugar. Anyone have any insight?
Hi!
I love your article on RI! I can’t wait to try it out!
One question, I don’t have a big mixer like that, i just have a regular old electric hand mixer. Does this matter?
Thanks for the help!
I cant find on the site the recipe for stiff piping icing which you mention. Obviously it starts w/ the basic royal recipe, but then what? IT’s been three days 5 batches and I still dont have it right. It’s either too soft and the roses puddle before they harden, are it takes a professional wrestler to squeeze the bag hard enough to get the icing out of the tip. I’m really baffled. Your household products display of consistency is great! Can you suggest household products that have the consistency needed for stiff piping icing?
The reason that adding meringue powder after the icing is together causes clumps but adding more powdered sugar just thickens the icing without causing clumps is this: meringue powder is made primarily of egg white protein. Structurally speaking, protein makes things hold together and clump–it’s it’s job. Meringue powder is soluble in water, but it isn’t as easily soluble as powdered sugar, which dissolves easily. Again, it’s the protein that makes it difficult to dissolve, as opposed to sugar which dissolves into solution very easily.
Just thought you might want to know -why- the meringue powder must be added from the beginning, but powdered sugar can be added with impunity at any point in icing making.
Hi. Do we need to bake after decorating? Since we use meringue powder in royal icing which contains white eggs. Just concern about the food safety.
Hi. Do we need to bake after decorating? Since we use meringue powder in royal icing which contains egg whites. Just concern about the food safety
HI! i just made ur icing and used vanilla extract for flavoring and my icing was of a light brown color. How is ur icing so white if u also use vanilla extract??
Firstly i wouyld like to say that i love your blog, and your cookies are completely AWESOME!!I i do cake decorating myself but want to get into cookies, yours are very inspiring. your talent completely blows me away! 🙂
Natalia: I dont know where you are from, but here in Australia you can purchase clear vanilla extract from cake decorating/craft supply stores. You could try googling ‘clear vanilla extract’ to find where you can get it near you or online. Cheers
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I love all your recipes and idea”s
Thanks
Hello great recipe but do u have a substitute for the meruange powder I can not find any at the grocery store..
Do u have a substitute for the meruange powder??
You can always use a recipe that calls for fresh egg whites.
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Great blog, wonderful article. I love the way you explain it, and your passion shines. you make me want to go value cookies NOW. my mom used egg whites and vinegar in her icing…for gingerbread houses..She gets pretty extreme…but i have never thought to use it for cookies..
i seriously can’t wait to try this..with flavoring!!
spellchecker changed Bake to Value…sorry!! anyway, mom used conf sugar, whites and vinegar, but I’m totally trying the powdered meringue.
This is the best website! I am so grateful for you time, energy, and willingness to share your knowledge!
Thank you!
using egg whites an vinegar is as good as meringue powder? Do colors stay bright?
The egg whites and vinegar is probably better. I never use this recipe, but I have a cake decorator friend that says it’s far superior. Inexpensive, tastier, and holds up better…
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Can you frost cakes to be covered in marshmallow fondant with royal icing? is it good between cake layers…or does it get way too hard for that….?
I just dont think it could work. The fat would break it down, I think, but I am not one to ask about cakes. I have never in my life made a pretty cake.
Thank you for this fabulous info!
I just made a batch of your Royal Icing, but my vanilla is quite brown. The finished icing looks off white. Do you have a source for a clear vanilla extract?
Thanks!
is there anything can be substituded for the mergine powder?
Just have to say one word…….brillant 🙂
Just one word……..BRILLANT 🙂
Good morning,
I have learned so much from your website and tutorials, thank you very much! I wondered on your smaller batch of royal icing, the one with 2 lbs of confect. sugar, how much flavoring do you use? I cannot seem to get a good tasting icing and don’t see where you included an amount of flavoring to add so wanted to double-check with you. I made a batch last night and obviously didn’t use enough but didn’t want to go overboard with it next time I give it a try.
Thank you again,
Terri
Great recipe but have a quick question.
How long should one wait after outlining to flood the rest? I outlined mine with the recipe above and my son woke up and took around 30 minutes to give a bottle ect ect. When I returned my outlines were a little hard and only worsened as time went on. I added a couple teaspoons of water to flood it and that part turned out fine. It just never meshed with the outline and when all said and done the outline part was brittle whereas the middle was perfect. I assumed I goofed somewhere and ideas? Thanks for the recipe again!
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I love having all of this great info at my fingertips on your blog! You do a great job not only at your art, but in sharing it with us all as well.
I have a question about the Royal Icing recipe. I’ve made it twice, using the lesser amounts, and still end up with way more than I need. I can do math and won’t ask you for an even smaller recipe, but wondered if you had experience in making amounts less than the small recipe above and inquire whether it still works as well cutting it down even further. Thanks.
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