Tie Dye Sugar Cookies

When our sons 6th birthday rolled around, I wanted to be the cool mom who brought in super-holy-cow-awesome treats for his class, sadly, the school’s policy did not feel that should be easy. All treats had to be low fat and healthy. I thought I was going to be clever and make Nutella covered strawberries, but let me just save you a tub of Nutella, the net lies. The oil from the hazelnuts causes the melted chocolate to slide off as it cools rather than harden like plain chocolate does. In a last minute what-the-heck-am-I-going-to-make situation, I ended up making tie dye sugar cookies instead, and they were a huge hit with the kindergartners, though I got shifty eyes from the teacher for breaking the low-sugar rule. Oops.tie dye sugar cookies recipe

Anyway, let’s get down to why you likely landed on this tie dye sugar cookie recipe page in the first place, to find out how to make tie dye sugar cookies.

The base sugar cookie recipe for this is just off the back of my sugar bag. I didn’t come up with it, and I don’t take credit for it. It is however, a great just plain sugar cookie recipe if done correctly.

Ingredients for tie dye sugar cookies:tie dye sugar cookies recipe

-2 ¾ cup flour

-1 tsp baking soda

-1/2 tsp baking powder

-1 large egg

-1 tsp Vanilla (I recommend getting the real deal rather than imitation)

-1 ½ cups sugar

-1 cup softened butter

-Food coloring of your choice

A note on butter: You must soften your butter on the counter over time. Do not use cold butter and do not use microwaved butter. Either will result in tie dye sugar cookies with poor texture.

You’ll also need:

-Plastic gloves

Directions for making tie dye sugar cookies:

Pre-heat your oven to 375.

Cream butter and sugar together in a large bowl. Add egg and vanilla and mix. Add baking powder, baking soda and flour use a large spoon to mix until combined, then use your hands (washed) to smash into a proper dough. (You can do it all with a spoon, but I promise this is easier.)

tie dye sugar cookies recipeSeparate the dough into equal sized portions for the number of colors you desire in your tie dye sugar cookies. I use 5 in the photos: green, blue, red, yellow, purple. You can easily alter these to meet themes, such as red, blue and then plain dough for white to make 4th of July tie dye sugar cookies or red and green cut into tree shapes for Christmas tie dye sugar cookies.

Make each portion into a bowl shape in its own bowl, and then drop food coloring into the indention. The more food coloring you use, the darker the color will be. Put on gloves. You can do this without gloves, but you’ll have tie dye hands for the next week. Squish each dough until the desired color is reached. You may need to add more coloring. tie dye sugar cookies recipe

Once completed, take a pinch of each color and roll it into a ball. Note that I said roll and not squish. If you over mix the dough colors, they’ll come out brown—kind of like an unsupervised kid’s finger painting project. Roll each cookie ball in sugar and then place on a cookie sheet. I recommend using the big commercial ones if you bake a lot. They allow tie dye sugar cookies recipefor two dozen per pan rather than one.

Alternately, you can take each dough ball and create a tie dye log by rolling each ball into a snake shape, winding the shapes together and and slicing the log for cut-out cookies. I prefer the shape of ball tie dye sugar cookies, plus they are easier to roll in sugar.

Bake for 8 to 10 minutes or until edges are set. Pull and allow to cool for 2 to 3 minutes before removing from the pan.

Peanut Free Candy for Halloween: A List for Parents

I’ve always loved Halloween and everything about it, especially the candy, but as I found myself on the mom-side of the Halloween candy bag with a child allergic to peanuts I was frightened. A brief stroll down the candy aisle reveals a good 90 percent of all Halloween candy contains peanuts or was manufactured on equipment with peanuts.

What’s that mean for parents with children allergic to peanuts? Not just checking their kids Halloween candy bag for the razors and opened packages of the common parents’ fears, but for peanuts of any kind. It also means taking away a great deal of your child’s candy to avoid him or her having a possibly deadly allergic reaction. To me, it seems the fairest way to deal with this peanut situation on Halloween would be to replace the candies with peanuts with peanut free candy. Go ahead, let the kid trick-or-treat, raid their candy bag for peanut containing candies and replace them with allergy-safe peanut free candy alternatives.peanut free candy

So, for the parents of children with peanut allergies this Halloween I offer up this convenient list of peanut free candy for both checking and re-filling your child’s Halloween candy bag:

Anything made by Haribo including Gummi Candies

Skittles of all flavors and varieties

Mike and Ikes of all flavors

Trader Joe’s milk chocolate and semisweet chocolate chips

Altoids Mints, of all varieties minus chocolate

Hershey (plain milk chocolate) chocolate bars and Krackle bars, personal size only

Hershey (plain milk chocolate) chocolate Kisses of regular size only

Hershey Milk Duds, Kissables, Rolos (not mini) and classic Caramels

Wonka’s Nerds, Nerds Rope, Bottle Caps, Runts, Gob stoppers, Shock tarts, Pixy Stix, Tart n Tiny, Fun Dip, and Flavor Flippers (not all Wonka is peanut free candy but a lot is!)

Laffy Taffy of pretty much all brands

Cell’s milk or dark chocolate covered cherries

Super Bubble bubble gum by Farley’s and Sathers

Dubble Bubble Gum

Anything made by Tootsie including Tooties Pops & Tootsie Rolls

Junior Mints

Andes Mints

Lifesaver Gummies

Smarties

Sour Patch Kids of all varieties

Whoppers (excluding the new peanut butter flavor)

Sweet Tarts

Dum Dum lollipops

SunMaid chocolate-covered raisins

Ring Pops candy rings by The Topps Co.

Push Pops by The Topps Co.

Bottle Caps

Pop Rocks

Now and Laters

Caramel Apple pops

Zours

Hot Tamales

Red Vines

Trolli gummi worms sour and regular, and racecars

Jolly Rancher hard candy, lollipops and gummi candy

York Peppermint Patties

Twizzlers

Starburst fruit chew, lollipops and jelly beans

All variety of Dots

Sugar Daddy pops and Babies

Sixlets

Starburst fruit chews and lollipops of all varieties

Blow pops

Charleston Chews

Betty Crocker fruit roll-ups, fruit chews, fruit by the foot and gushers

Marsh Mellows of any brand (unless they are peanut flavored of course.)

Rice Crispy original

Candy Corns

The majority of non-peanut flavored hard candies

This is not an all inclusive list of peanut free candy, I just tried to list what is readily available at most grocery stores in most areas, when in doubt flip it over and check those ingredients. Many mini-candies or “fun sized” candies we see at Halloween don’t have ingredients listed because the size of the packages. You can always do a Google search and the candy company’s website will usually have an ingredient list, or if nothing else check next time you are the grocery store.

Remember that even peanut free candy that is manufactured on equipment with peanuts shouldn’t be given to a child with peanut allergies such as plain m&m’s.

I hope this has helped you and your child with a peanut allergy to have a happy and emergency room trip free Halloween.