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Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting

Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting is the recipe you need for great holiday cookies and gingerbread houses

Smooth white Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting covers a beater from a stand mixer - The Goldilocks Kitchen

Royal Icing Gingerbread frosting is meant to dry solid quickly, and you shouldn’t need to worry about using a raw egg white. This Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting recipe is specifically formulated for your gingerbread cookie & gingerbread house decorating and binding. It’s very simple and doesn’t require pasteurized egg whites or meringue powder. Sugar acts like a preservative, and because there’s so little moisture in this recipe, any bacteria will starve and die. I have never heard of anyone getting sick from traditional royal frosting. It’s been around for over 100 years!

How to make Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting

There are only 4 ingredients needed- an egg white, vanilla extract powdered sugar and a little milk or half and half. Start by beating the egg white and vanilla until frothy, either with a stand mixer or a hand held mixer.

An egg white and a teaspoon of vanilla extract sit in the bottom of a silver stand mixer bowl to make Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting - The Goldilocks Kitchen

Add just a half a cup of powdered sugar and beat it in, scraping down the edges if needed.

Powdered sugar is beaten into egg white and vanilla extract in a silver stand mixer bowl to make Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting - The Goldilocks Kitchen

Continue to slowly add the rest of your powdered sugar. If the mixture gets too try, add a tablespoon or two of milk or half and half (I prefer the half and half, I think it makes it taste better) until it mixes up smooth and stiff. It should form a ‘soft peak’ on the end of your beater, as shown in these pictures.

white and smooth, Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting sits in a silver mixing bowl ready to be placed into a piping bag - The Goldilocks Kitchen

Now you are ready to load your Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting into a piping bag. I LOVE my box of Wilton disposable piping bags. I can just throw them away when I’m done making cleanup a breeze!

A close up picture of flowing white Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting on the end of a stand mixer beater - The Goldilocks Kitchen

I would recommend a very small round piping tip for cookies, and something a little larger if you’re putting together a gingerbread house. Good luck with your creations, and above all have fun! Please rate and review this recipe to help other readers. Thanks!

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Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting


  • Author: Emily
  • Total Time: 5 minutes
  • Yield: 1 and 1/2 cups 1x

Description

This Royal Icing Gingerbread Frosting is specially formulated to dry quick and strongly affix your gingerbread house pieces together. Also will dry solid on gingerbread cookie cut-outs.


Ingredients

Scale
  • One large egg-white
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla
  • 3 cups powdered sugar
  • 12 tablespoons milk as needed

Instructions

  1. Beat together the egg white, vanilla and 1 cup of powdered sugar. Slowly beat in the remaining powdered sugar, adding a little milk if the frosting gets to dry and begins to clump. Frosting should be smooth and thick.  
  2. Load frosting into piping bag with a small round tip. If you don’t intend to use immediately, cover the tip with plastic wrap and place in the fridge for up to 24 hours, letting it sit on the counter for an hour to come to room temperature before using. 
  • Prep Time: 5 minutes
  • Category: dessert
  • Cuisine: American

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