These Beehive Cookies with Royal Icing feature a gold beehive with a bee and bee path showing the bee leaving the hive on a light blue background. They are fitting for a Winnie the Pooh or bee themed birthday party or baby shower.
piping bag holders or tall drinking glasses optional
small round piping tips, like #2 optional
plastic tip couplers optional
toothpicks or scribe tool
Ingredients
Cut Out Sugar Cookies or Shortbread Cookiescut with a large round cutter, see note
Easy Royal Icingsee note
blue, yellow, gold and black food coloring gel or black royal icing powder
black food coloring markers or penssuch as FooDoodlers
Instructions
Cover the Cookies in Light Blue Icing
Thin the royal icing stock with small amounts of warm water until a slightly thicker flood consistency is achieved. Tint with a tiny amount of blue food coloring gel to make a very light blue color.
Transfer the icing to a disposable piping bag with the tip cut off and pipe a border around the circular cookie, then fill the center with icing. Use a toothpick or scribe tool to guide the icing to the edges and swirl the icing to pop any bubbles.
Repeat this with all of the cookies. Allow the icing to dry completely, about 24 hours at room temperature on a drying rack or in an airtight container in a single layer.
Pipe the Beehive
Tint some slightly thick flood consistency icing with gold food coloring gel. Transfer the icing to a disposable piping bag with the tip cut off.
The beehive is made of 4 sections, #1 being the top and #4 being the bottom. Layer #1 is a rounded top of the hive, layers #2 and #3 are rounded rectangle shapes, and layer #4 is a larger rounded rectangle with a half circle opening at the bottom. Pipe layers #2 and #4 on each cookie. Allow the icing to dry for about 1 hour, then pipe layers #1 and #3 on all of the cookies.
Allow the beehive icing to set for about an hour before adding the bees.
Add the Bee and Bee Path
Prepare outline consistency black royal icing by using either black royal icing powder or by tinting royal icing stock with black food coloring gel. Make outline consistency white royal icing and yellow royal icing. Transfer each icing color to a disposable piping bag with the tip snipped off or fitted with a small round tip such as a #2.
You can do two kinds of bees: bees that you see from the side with just one set of wings and one antenna and bees that you see from above with two sets of wings and two antennae. Use a black food coloring marker to make either one antenna (for a side view bee) or two antennae (for an above view bee) where you want the bee's head to be.
Pipe a black circle bee head attached to the antenna(e).
Pipe a yellow oval next to the head to make the body of the bee.
Pipe on two white wings on top of the yellow body for the side view bees and two white wings on each side of the body for the top view bees.
Allow the bees to dry for about 18 to 24 hours at room temperature on a drying rack or in an airtight container in a single layer.
Use a black food coloring marker to make a dashed line bee path from the hive to the back of the bee. You can make this path curved or with loops.
Pipe on two thin, vertical black stripes of outline consistency black icing on the yellow bee body.
Allow the icing to dry completely, about 18-24 hours at room temperature, by keeping the cookies on a drying rack or in a single layer in an airtight container.
Storage
Store the cookies by placing in a single layer in an airtight container. I highly recommend not stacking royal icing cookies, as the grease from the top cookie can bleed onto the royal icing design of the bottom cookie.
If you need to stack them, I recommend using aluminum foil between the layers to prevent the grease from transferring. Even waxed paper will allow grease transfer.