 The autumn leaves are at full peak in my small New England coastal town. Tourists, or Leaf Peepers as we call them, come by the busload to see natures full regalia.
The autumn leaves are at full peak in my small New England coastal town. Tourists, or Leaf Peepers as we call them, come by the busload to see natures full regalia.  When a few of us on my crew wanted to show our appreciation to the concierges and airport agents in Paris, we wanted to bring them a sampling of our America. Last year I made Eiffel Tower, Merci and Au Revoir cookies. This year we brought bagels and cream cheese, chocolate chip cookies, carrot cake, peanut butter chocolate kiss cookies and brownies. As I looked at the brilliant colors around town, I decided to also make maple leaf shaped sugar cookies. I had four colors of petal dust I had gotten at Christmas time, that just happened to be colors of fall leaves. You cannot go wrong by brushing on these colors in any combination. I started at the edges, with a food dedicated paint brush, and worked inward using the colors singularly and mixing them. The metallic gold and copper blended into the green and mango orange.
When a few of us on my crew wanted to show our appreciation to the concierges and airport agents in Paris, we wanted to bring them a sampling of our America. Last year I made Eiffel Tower, Merci and Au Revoir cookies. This year we brought bagels and cream cheese, chocolate chip cookies, carrot cake, peanut butter chocolate kiss cookies and brownies. As I looked at the brilliant colors around town, I decided to also make maple leaf shaped sugar cookies. I had four colors of petal dust I had gotten at Christmas time, that just happened to be colors of fall leaves. You cannot go wrong by brushing on these colors in any combination. I started at the edges, with a food dedicated paint brush, and worked inward using the colors singularly and mixing them. The metallic gold and copper blended into the green and mango orange.Each one was as varied and different as the leaves on the trees. 
I layered the brownies and chocolate chip cookies first in the bottom of the gold box that was lined with decorative tissue paper. 
 Next were the fall colored leaf cookies.
Next were the fall colored leaf cookies. The box came with a gold grosgrain ribbon that I tucked a leaf bouquet into, which helped bring a little bit more of New England to our friends in Paris. 
 I think they really loved tasting a bit of our culture as much as we loved showing our appreciation. Merci!!
I think they really loved tasting a bit of our culture as much as we loved showing our appreciation. Merci!!
Maple Leaf Sugar Cookies
For the cookies:
2 1/4  cups flour
1/4  teaspoon salt
3/4  cup sugar
12 tablespoons  unsalted butter (room temperature)
1  large egg
1 teaspoon almond  extract
For the color:
3-4 fall colors of petal dust
a #6 round watercolor brush
In large bowl or food processor, cream sugar and  butter  together until fluffy. Add egg, and almond extract  until well blended.  Add the flour and salt and mix until it begins to  form a ball, scraping  down the sides of the bowl if needed. If the dough  is too dry, add a  few drops of water. Scrape dough onto a sheet of  plastic wrap and press  together to form a thick flat disc. Wrap well and  refrigerate for 2  hours.
Preheat oven to 350 degrees and butter a  baking sheet.
On  a lightly floured surface, roll out the dough  to about 1/8 inch thick,  or desired  thickness. The dough  needs to be just the right  temperature to roll and cut properly. If it  is too cold, it is hard to  roll, and if it is too soft it becomes  difficult to cut and pick up.  Roll any scraps back into a ball and  chill again. Use as little flour as  possible to roll out, so they don't  get tough. After cutting, place on a  baking sheet and bake for 8-12  minutes or until just lightly browned.  Remove from oven and let cool on  wire rack. I use an insulated baking  sheet to prevent the edges from  getting too brown.*
Makes 4 dozen,  3 inch (1/8 inch thick)  cookies.
*My tips: Keep dough chilled just  enough so it is easy to  roll and cut, but not so cold that it is hard  and cracks. I like to roll  between 2 layers of plastic wrap. This keeps  the dough from sticking  without extra flour that makes the dough  tough. I even roll it to  desired thickness, between 2 layers of plastic  wrap before chilling.  Then when it comes out of the refrigerator, you  won't have to roll and  you'll be ready to cut. If the dough warms up  too much while working  with it, you can slide the whole layer onto a  cookie sheet and chill,  without disturbing what you've already done.  Also, bake sugar cookies on  insulated pans for even browning.
Coloring the cookies: To color the cookies, use 3-4 fall color petal dust colors. I used Super Gold, Copper, Moss Green, and Mango,  Color about 6 cookies at a time by placing them on parchment or a silicone baking mat. Lightly dip the paintbrush into the petal dust and tap off any excess. Starting on the edges, lightly dust the cookies using any combination of colors you choose or blending several colors together. Vary the colors on each cookie for a more interest.  
For the petal dust:
KitchenKrafts.com  
Gold Box by Hallmark
 
 
 
 
 
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