Esta es una exhibición prevé de cómo se va ver la receta de 'Salt (Bread) Dough Ornaments' imprimido.

Receta Salt (Bread) Dough Ornaments
by Lois B

When we were stationed in Spain, the squadron used to deploy to Turkey for a month at a time, and since there were three squadrons, it happened every third month. You can imagine the toll this could take on families and morale. It was the squadron commander's wife's job to keep all of the pilots' wives left behind occupied and entertained. The schedule of potluck meals, trips, and activities planned was referred to as our "Turkey Calendar."

During a December Turkey Calendar thirty-one years ago, the commander's wife invited us to her home to make Christmas ornaments - bread dough ornaments to be exact. Those ornaments still hang on our tree every year. It was a fun day and something that I've done again over the years, with our daughters, and today with the ladies from my Bible study group.

Since this is a food blog, I should say that this dough is not edible; for decorative use only!

Ingredients

for dough:

paperclips and wire cutters

watercolor paints and brushes

Sharpie pens (optional - for very fine detail)

Clear spray sealant

Directions

to make the dough:

Combine flour and salt

Add just enough water to form a dough

Kneed the dough to work in a little more flour - just to the point where the dough is no longer sticky. The dough should be soft, not stiff.

Keep the dough wrapped in plastic to keep it from drying out.

to make the ornaments:

Use a small (6 inch square) piece of aluminum foil as your assembly/baking tray for your ornaments

To create your personalized ornaments, analyze your design, breaking it down into individual elements, as illustrated in the angel assembly photos below

Begin making each part of your design by rolling a little ball of the dough between the palms of your hands. This serves two purposes: it give you a smooth finish on the outside of your dough and will work out any air bubbles in your dough. You don't want a hollow spot that would weaken the structure.

Keep the scale of your finished piece in mind as you create the "parts." For example, it you're making a head that will be on a body, the head should be about the size of a nickel. If you were making just Santa's face, the head could be as big as two inches in diameter. The "parts" should be no more than a 1/4 of an inch thick if you'll have more than one piece on top of another. Unless it's required by the nature of your piece, such as a teddy bear's belly.

Open a paper clip so that you have sort of an S shape. Using the wire cutters, cut off the top and bottom of the S, to give you two very long thin U shaped pieces of wire.

Add a loop to the top of your ornament (to give you a place to attach a hook) by inserting the open end of the U shaped cut paper clip into the dough and pushing it in until only about 1/4 of an inch remains above the dough.

Fill a cookie sheet with your ornaments on foil and bake at 200 F or 100 C for about an hour; it may take much longer. The dough will become lighter as it dries out. You want it to be dry, but not burnt.

the ball of dough is made into a cone shape and then flattened for the bodya smaller ball is flattened and attached to the top of the bodycone shapes bent at the end for wings, candle added, sleeves and handsa little hair, made by running dough through the garlic press and inserted the wire loop into the top of the headtexture added to hem, sleeves, and collar with a toothpick pointThe finished product to finish the ornaments:

After the ornaments have cooled, paint with water colors. I use the kind that comes in a tube (especially for the very necessary white) or a tray of kid's watercolors. If borrowing the kid's watercolors, you'll want them to be very thick, so let a few drops of water sit on each disk of paint for a few minutes before starting.

After the paint has dried, lightly spray with a clear sealant. For best results and a long life for your ornaments, repeat the spray coating at least three times.

Other examples--

Caroline's stocking and wreath

Coralanne Y.'s Christmas bell and candy caneKlaudia's "brooch" and teddy bearSanta in a F-16 for Janet's son the fighter pilotFor my friends at the Sweet Surrender coffee shopEd's shooting starI opened up a wire hanger, putting ridges along the bottom to make a drying rack. It allows you to spray both sides at once.

I had an air bubble that broke off part of Santa's F-16My first ornament - Snoopy flying an F-4 wearing the squadron's blue & white gingham scarf

When the girls were very young, they made some with cookie cutters