Cute and Easy Spritz Cookies for Hina Matsuri (Doll Festival). Great recipe for Cute and Easy Spritz Cookies for Hina Matsuri (Doll Festival). I used to make easy spritz cookies but decided to arrange the cookies as a gift for hina matsuri. As usual it's hassle free but I wanted to make something that looks a bit elegant and sophisticated. As usual it's hassle free but I wanted to make something that looks a bit elegant and sophisticated.. I wanted to make a cute purple cookies decorated with heart-shaped.
As usual it's hassle free but I wanted to make something that looks a bit elegant and sophisticated..
I thought of this recipe after finding some cute marshmallow hearts.
The "hina dolls" (雛人形, hina ningyo) are only displayed when a family has a daughter.
You can have Cute and Easy Spritz Cookies for Hina Matsuri (Doll Festival) using 7 ingredients and 18 steps. Here is how you achieve that.
Ingredients of Cute and Easy Spritz Cookies for Hina Matsuri (Doll Festival)
- Prepare 90 grams of Cake flour.
- You need of If cake flour 60 g + katakuriko 40 g = 100 g is substituted for the 90 g of cake flour, the result will be a lighter texture..
- It's 40 grams of Margarine or butter.
- You need 40 grams of Milk.
- It's 30 grams of Sugar (white sugar).
- It's 1 dash of Matcha.
- You need 1 small of quantity on the tip of a toothpick Red food coloring.
Usually a set is handed down from generation to generation or the grandparents or parents will buy one for a girl's first Hina Matsuri (初節句, hatsuzekku)! A complete set with traditional dolls can be extremely expensive! In Japan, families with a daughter(s) display a set of beautiful hina dolls on a tier of five or seven shelves to celebrate and pray for their healthy growth and happiness. Platforms with a red hi-mōsen are used to display a set of ornamental dolls (雛人形 hina-ningyō) representing the Emperor, Empress, attendants, and musicians in traditional court dress of the Heian period.
Cute and Easy Spritz Cookies for Hina Matsuri (Doll Festival) step by step
- For a variation on this recipe, see.
- Melt the margarine and milk in the microwave for 5-10 seconds. I recommend using margarine to play up the flavors of matcha and anko..
- Add in the sugar and mix well..
- Add the flour and mix. There's no need to sift..
- Divide the dough roughly into 4 parts. Mix in about the same amount of anko (not listed in ingredients) as the dough..
- The anko dough will be a larger quantity due to the addition of anko so take care to set aside a smaller portion..
- Make the red food coloring cookie dough and matcha dough. Adjust the food coloring/matcha powder according to your own taste..
- Stack each dough on a piece of plastic wrap..
- Roll the wrap as though you are using a sushi rolling mat. Take care not to roll the plastic wrap into the dough..
- Put the plastic-wrapped roll into a pastry bag. A bigger pastry bag will be easier to use. Here, I used a star-shaped tip..
- Pipe the dough in a circular fashion. The individual colored dough will come out beautifully together..
- Piping a wavy pattern is beautiful too..
- If you pipe the dough into smaller cookies, they'll be similar to hina arare (Doll Festival cookies) and look cuter..
- If decorating with dragées they should be sprinkled on the cookie dough before baking. If decorating with chocolate wait until the cookies are baked..
- Preheat oven to 170°C (338 Fahrenheit). Bake for 12-15 minutes at 170°C (338 Fahrenheit). Adjust time according to the brownness of the cookies..
- Even a little bit of decoration makes these cookies cute! The kids loved them..
- Decorated with sugar craft. It's ideal for times when you want to make just a little. https://cookpad.com/us/recipes/146717-sugar-crafted-flowers.
- Here they are in a simpler arrangement with a greater Japanese influence..
Hina are the special dolls for the occasion and matsuri is the Japanese word for a festival or holiday. Families and communities wish health and happiness for all girls on this special day. Hina dolls are displayed in each house where there are young girls and special dishes are eaten on this day. Read on to find out more about the unique customs related to Hina Matsuri. Cookies help us deliver our site.