Simple Chinese Lantern Cookies
One of the drawbacks of living in a tiny west Texas town is that my exposure to other cultures is sometimes limited to what I read on the Internet. I’ve always wanted to experience a traditional Chinese New Year celebration, but until that becomes a possibility I have to settle for cookies. With a little help from my amazing friend Ken, author of Hungry Rabbit, I came up with a pretty good assortment. My favorite are these simple Chinese lantern cookies.
There are many cutters that would work well for this project, but I decided on a couple of Christmas ornaments and a snowman. If you don’t own fancy ornament cutters, I really like this four-ornament set from Fancy Flours or this six-ornament set available via Amazon.com
To make these cookies you will need:
- Red piping and 20-second icing
- Gold piping and 20-second icing
- Jade piping icing {optional}
To reduce mixing, you could always cut out the red and jade piping icing and use yellow for all of the detail work.
Begin by using red 20-second icing to create a large circle/oval on the largest portion of the cookie. Don’t worry if it’s not perfect…I read somewhere that Chinese lanterns are traditionally oval shaped. I don’t know if that’s necessarily true but since it cut a little stress on my end I stuck with that.
Let the base dry, pipe on lantern details, and fill in the gold areas with 20-second icing.
Finish up by using piping icing to add the final details. I used a #1.5 tip.
These cookies look perfect mixed with other fun designs. I used Montreal Confection’s wet-on-wet design for the fan cookie. You can view her how-to video here.
If you like this set, be sure to check out these links:
- Cookievonster’s Chinese New Year collection.
- Also, if you find red icing to be bitter, try using tulip red, Americolor’s version of no-taste red icing color.
- For instructions on how to make simple China doll cookies, click here.
Have you ever celebrated Chinese New Year? Tell me about it.
Ohmygosh stop it!!! These are too cute!!!!
Ooooh. Mah. Gooood. So pretty. Your piping is always flawless and your designs are so clever and fun! I want to be you when I grow up!!
A-W-E-S-O-M-E!!!
So cute! Your designs are amazing!
I know you had me in mind when you made these! 😉
Yup, Chinese New Year celebration with the family every year! LOTS of good food!
Oh Trinnie! I am so excited! I can just crash your party some year!!!!!!!!
You are always invited! 🙂
I love the lantern cookies you are so clever at spotting these shapes in the most unusual places. Thanks so much for linking to my video.
Hi Sugarbelle!
You are truly very talented!! Look at those perfectly piped Chinese characters on the gold coins. I can write in Chinese but it is nowhere near as neat as yours, let alone using icing. 🙂
Julie
Hi Julie!
I was kind of worried about those coins, because since I cannot read Chinese, I just picked symbols and duplicated them…what did I write anyway, LOL?!
It loosely translates into “welcoming fortune, entering treasures.” It basically means good luck, /good fortune for Chinese New Year. Your “handwriting” makes it look like you have been practicing Chinese calligraphy for a long time! Seriously!!
I agree! The writing is perfect!
These are just adorable….and the people…oh my gosh….cutest ever!!!!
These are SO cute!!! You make everything look so easy!
These are wonderful!
I’m Vietnamese and we celebrate the same holiday but we call it Tet or the Lunar New Year. It’s always fun bc all of the food. But I haven’t gone to a Tet festival in forever!! These cookies are soooo cute!!!
OOOOH! What are the traditional foods?! Will you be writing about any?
Omg!!!! These are beautiful! I love the lanterns!! You know, now I am just gonna have to recreate these and make a mess in the kitchen during the process.
I don’t know about “simple”, but you do make it look seamless, Callye! Beautiful set! Do the Chinese characters actually mean something? 🙂 I have never celebrated the Chinese New Year, but I’d like to do so in San Francisco!
Oh my!! Sue, if you are able to celebrate CNY, San Francisco Chinatown would be the perfect place to be!! I am a Chinese from Singapore, now living in SoCal. With the present gas prices, making that 9 hours drive would be a real challenge!! Oh the characters represent us, that’s the way we dressed in the olden days. But these days, we are encouraged to dress like that on the 1st day of CNY at least and lots of red color!! We bring 2 oranges to visit the relatives and exchange for well wishes and get a pair of oranges back in return. If you are married, you have to give kids and unmarried adults a little “ang pow” red packet containing money in even numbers. I want to be a kid again!! 😀
Helen, I am a few hours closer than you to S.F. and now you have me REALLY wanting to go! 🙂
LOL, I think they mean year of the Rabbit, lol. They mean SOMETHING, but I had no idea what. I just winged it. Next time I’ll have Ken help me write something meaningful on the coins 😉
Thanks Callye! I was just curious:)
Oh, I’d mistaken Sue’s question about the Chinese characters…I read as the little people!! The 4 characters on the coin are read as “Zhao Cai Jin Bao”. To make it easier to understand, I shall use the North, South, West and East format to explain. North character is Zhao, south is Cai, west is Jin and east is Bao. When combined together into a Chinese New Year phrase, “Zhao Cai Jin Bao” means Wishing you bring in the good wealth and treasure for the new year!! 😀
Btw, is that americolor a gold?
I mixed ivory, egg yolk yellow, and warm brown. But Americolor gold is WONDERFUL!
Wow.
You are amazing. So inspiring!
I still have trouble with my dough, so doing a design like this is a far off goal. But your cookies are so beautiful to look at – its wonderful to think about the world in cookies!
I love the coins!
I just love your tutorials! I like your simplicity & how gorgeous your cookies turn out. The photos of your cookies are bright and colorful. Great job!
Hi, I am a Chinese Indonesian living in New York and I do celebrate Chinese New Year, every year. It is always a great moment with families, lots of food and cake. In Indonesia, we have this cake called “Lapis Legit” or a thousand layer cake. This cake represents that you wish the receiver, all the good luck (thousand layers luck) in the new year. This cake is actually baked layer by layer, it takes forever, very challenging, but super delicious. Here are the pics: https://www.google.com/search?q=lapis+legit&hl=en&tbo=u&tbm=isch&source=univ&sa=X&ei=Iy0TUZy4FqPK0wHcrYBA&ved=0CEIQsAQ&biw=1366&bih=600
Btw, your cookies look awesome and I never made a cookie with royal icing before. I would love to try though. Thanks for all your amazing tutorials. May I know where do you get the Chinese girl and boy cookie cutter as pictured above from?
Agnes,
That cake is amazing!!!!!!!!!!!! I will spend some time looking through all of these photos. As for the boys and girls, they’re a standing bear that I trimmed a little =)
Very cool. I have never seen one in real life but these look just like the photos I have seen. I love the coins too. Actually I love the whole plate! They are all gorgeous as usual.
Hi Callye. I love these so much – the boy and the girl are spectacular. I wanted to know what cutter you used for the fan and the temple? I love them all!!!!
Hi Lorraine!
The fan is a skirt that I trimmed and the temple was a Christmas tree.
Thank you so much
Awesome set of cookies!. We are very fortunate to celebrate Chinese New Year with our dearest friends who are Singaporean Chinese but live in Australia. It is very big here. It is all about family and food. We even have a lion dance to celebrate CNY at church. The food is wonderful!!! Everything put on the plate has a meaning to bring good luck, lots of wealth and happiness. The higher you toss the noodles the more luck you bring for the new year. All your debts should be paid before CNY starts and your house should be clean too. All our children are given red packets, with even amounts of money, but the best part is pineapple cookies! They are only in the chinese shops at new year and they are wonderful, and yes i am eating one now 🙂
Wow! Yet another AMAZING set from you!
So cute the little chinese people!!!!! Lots of love from Spain. I’m learning a lot throught your blog
WOW!!! Those cookies are AWESOME!!! I’ve just shared the significance of the colour red and photos of the ubiquitous red lanterns that are an integral part of the Chinese New Year – http://ofmiceandramen.blogspot.com/2013/02/the-colour-red.html
I’m a Malaysian Chinese and the Chinese New Year is widely celebrated here.
BTW – I’ve pinned these delightful cookies and shared some of your other fabulous cookies on my blog.
Incredible! The gold piping on the people’s clothes is such an awesome, “Sugarbelle” touch!
So – I’ve been stalking yr blog since around Halloween when I stumbled across yr witchy legs. I’ve been so inspired, I’m reading through the archives and am excited to cookie more and more with every trick you share.
I don’t typically comment on blogs, but – I LOVE Chinese New Year. My dad and I would frequent Chinatown NYC and I have a very good friend who is first-gen American who’s family is from China. I learned all about the Lunar New Year when I was younger – probably don’t remember much these days! – and it became a celebration for my dad and I. One year, without telling each other, we had prepared Chinese New Year gifts for each other, and I finally picked up a new Kitchen God to put up in my kitchen this year. These cookies brought back a flood (har har, icing pun) of memories and reminded me to get my God ready for hanging!
Gung Hay Fat Choy!
Grammer: *whose
So so cute , love the blog , you are my go to resource , today I used your cookie recipe and loved it .Thanks so much for sharing your wealth of knowledge . Love from Australia
Oh my goodness!! These are incredible and I LOVE the PHOTO!! You ROCK!!!
so cute! we try to go to the mandarine restaurant this time of year, it is so fun to try all the foods and see the decorations. I love seeing different cultures.
What a beautiful set of cookies to wake up to, love, love, love the colours! You continue to amaze me!
You totally inspire me to try cookie decorating–I love how you break everything down and make it look so easy. These are so cool!
LOVE these cookies!!!
Callye, these are true works of art. Your talent blows me away!!
The lanterns are great but I’m really loving the pagoda, the little Chinese people and the fans!
You never cease to amaze – what an adorable way to introduce other cultures to the kiddos. 🙂 Keep doing what you do!!!
Which came first, the problem or the sonoitul? Luckily it doesn’t matter.
OMG, I love these it makes me want to try so BAD, but I am a little nervous. I love your work ! Wonderful job done as always !
Wonderful collection! The soft green is a beautiful accent color on your designs.
These are absolutely gorgeous ! I don’t know what it is… the colour, the theme but these are just happy cookies! Beautiful work as always… you have bucketfuls of inspiration seeds, lady!
They look great, the bronze/gold turns out perfectly. Great job. We celebrate this holiday since I’m Chinese. Fun times. I’m making my cookies tomorrow for Sunday, wish me luck:-)
They are so pretty! Love the assortment…
Super cute! And thanks so much for the shout out my CNY set xxx
By the way, your chinese writing on your coin is even better than mine…and I’m Chinese… who obviously can’t read or write Chinese to my mother’s disappointment HAHHAHAHAHA
Big hugs :0)
You are so crazy talented!!!
I totally love these!
Lovely designs! =)
SO DARN CUTE!!!
Holy moly… these are adorable. Your talent amazes me.
omg LOVE THESE
I’m pretty sure I could stare at your cookies all day. Delicious and gorgeous!
My husband keeps asking me why I’m staring at this picture so much. haha! I told him I’m trying to memorize them so I can try to duplicate! Just trying to figure out which of my cutters I can hybrid together. 🙂
Oh these are absolutely cute! I have to try something like this sometime!
I celebrated Chinese New Year with my Chinese Language class. In preparation for it, we made Chinese couplets and Chinese character hangings, it was really fun. Then we had a huge party where everyone brought all types of food. Since I love Asian culture and Asian food, I decided to have fun with this. I brought rice, chopsticks, spring rolls, and almond cookies with royal icing on top that had the Chinese character ‘Nian” (which means ‘Year’) on it. I love Chinese New Year and hopefully I can celebrate it even better next year!
I love your cute Chinese boy and girl cookies! Please share how you made them? Thanks!
I will soon =)
I can write Chinese, but your handwriting on those characters is way better than mine.
WHAT is that about? >_>
This whole set is amazing though, can’t find a single one I don’t think is gorgeous. My favourite must be the technique on those little cherry blossoms though. Lovely!
Please, please share images of how you created the little boy and girl!! I’m practicing so that these cookies will be added at the next Lunar New Year celebration, along with the traditional dishes my mom and grandma spend days preparing for!!!
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I try to bring alot of culture to our dinner plates. i have lived all over the US being an Army brat. Many yummy foods out there
Hi hi ,
I want to make the Chinese boy & girl cookies
Do you have any cookies I can you .
Best regards
E
Very beautifully decorated cookies. it gives me alot of inspiration. tks
Hello!
I just wanted to let you know that a user on Instagram (with the name quenniekitchen) used your chinese lantern photos and claimed them to be herself. I recognized your work as soon as I saw it and I reported the photo!!!
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Your cookies are gorgeous! I found your blog through Pinterest, and I’ll definitely be following your work from now on. You’ve got some great posts!
What consistency icing is done with the star tip on the lantern – piping or stiff consistency?
You are amazing. So inspiring! http://www.pipefittings-flanges.in/duplex-stainless-steel-pipe/
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