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Hi everyone - question from a newbie here:

 

I have so many problems with craters and pin holes and it seems no matter what I do, I can't avoid them. Not quite sure what it is I am doing wrong. 

 

With that being said, I've read a lot about people using dehydrators and a few have said they use a fan to help speed the drying process. I've also read that both will help with those issues. 

 

Can you tell me your experiences with this? I have a table top fan and if it helps I am going to start using it today! :-)

 

Where do I place the fan though and on what speed? I have visions of me blowing the wet icing right off the cookies if it's on too high or the fan is too close to the cookies. Also, should the fan be pointing directly down on to the cookies? Not sure if my fan will angle down like that but if that's what it takes, I'll make it work. 

 

I don't want to try it until I see what others "in the know" say about using it.

 

Thanks!

Colleen

Colleen

 

Blogging about the ups and downs of learning to decorate cookies keeps it real. The day I stop having fun decorating I will hang up my apron but I don't see that happening for a very long time. I'm on a never ending journey to learn from others more skilled than I am.

Last edited by Julia M. Usher
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I use a fan--and I love it! After flooding a small section of a cookie, I immediately put it on a rack in front of a fan on low. The rack is about 1-1/12 ft. away from the fan and I don't have any trouble blowing the icing off the cookies (but that did cross my mind, too!)

Since I started using the fan, I have all but eliminated those annoying craters and holes! 

Hope this helps!

I used the fan (ceiling fan) when the weather has high humidity.  Or when you want to dry your cookies faster.  I have used butane(natural gas) heater too.   I put infront of the heater the sheet and turn on the ceiling fan.  To near of the heater can burn your cookies.  Use a Little crémor tartar in wet weather it helps. If the humidity is very high you can lost your cookies.  They will melt. Bubbles can be because your royalicing is very liquid.  If royalicing dryes with a rugous look and breakes it could be because the meringe powder or egg White powder is to old, or you have used to many flavoring (put flavoring in the wáter to prepare the royalicing helps a Little.  If royalicing over your cookies looks foamy it will never dry nor with heater or fan (I experienced it once).  I usually bake my cookies and wait for a better weather.  I hope this can help you. Be careful, the royalicing could be seen as dry but it can be wet in the middle , that can make Little cracks or melt your cookie.  I usually make more cookies to taste (with your finger, so if you made a damage is only in one cookie.)

 

Last edited by Mily

Thanks so much for that information. Yes, humidity is an issue for me. I live in South Florida. And I think for sure that my icing has been too thin on many occasions. It's something I am constantly working on - consistency! 

I just had to post an update here. I tried using a fan today for the first time. I decorated about 2 dozen cookies and as I completed each step I put them on my baking sheet, about 1-1/2 feet from my table fan, on low. 

 

Not a single cookie has a crater! I'm just beside myself. This is a first for me and such a victory. I cannot thank you enough for the tips. I will never decorate again without using a fan! 

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