SC - eggs?
KriSiena@aol.com
KriSiena at aol.com
Mon Jul 12 13:52:05 PDT 1999
- --- Linda Peterson <mirhaxa at swcp.com> wrote:
> On Sat, 10 Jul 1999, Elise Fleming wrote:
> > Briefly, royal icing is runny. Gum/sugar paste is not; neither is
> > fondant. Both can be used to cover modern cakes but the results
> are
> > somewhat different.
> >
> > If you dip a knife into royal icing, you can let the icing drip
> off.
>
> The royal icing I'm familiar with has the texture of frosting to
> start and
> dries rock hard. The drippy stuff used for frosting petit fours I
> don't
> recall the name of. Am I lost in the ozone, or is this a cultural
> variation?
>
> Mirhaxa
> mirhaxa at morktorn.com
>
The Royal Icing I use does contain egg white, and starts out tacky
enough to assemble gingerbread houses, and dries hard enough to hold
them together. Although, the first time I tried it, I didn't know it
would firm up so much on drying, so I kept adding a bit more sugar
until it was REALLY thick -- and dried so hard we needed a chisel to
get the house apart! A friend cut (well, tore) her finger on it! Took
3 years before I attempted another house.
- -- Harriet
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