Tag Archives: the decorated cookie
the girl with the parrot on her head + doodle cookies from the decorated cookie
The Girl with the Parrot on her Head by Daisy Hirst (2015).
This picture book is zany and perceptive, a very good combination. Mostly, I loved Isabel, the girl with the parrot on her head—her emotions and her imagination.
It starts with a friendship: Isabel and Simon, “who was very good with newts.” They played together in the most imaginative ways, something we know only from illustrations of their treasure maps and pirate hats and funny props. But one day, Simon moves away.
(click image(s) to enlarge)
“For a while, Isabel hated everything.”
Isn’t that how it is after loss? Even the parrot leaves her head “to sit on top of the wardrobe.” Once she’s quieted herself, Isabel develops a system. And this is where things get really interesting. She puts all the items in her room into different boxes: castles, hats, cars, the wolves, the dark, a monster. We hear that the parrot is worried about the stuff in those boxes, especially the biggest wolf and we know the parrot is a proxy for Isabel’s own fears. Fears brought on by her best friend moving, by change, by being alone.
So Isabel must find a box big enough for that big wolf. But when she does, she finds another friend in that box too. Chester. Chester helps, the way friends do when you’ve got a big problem (or wolf) you can’t figure out how to solve on our own.
And so the box is no longer necessary. It can become something a lot more imaginative, a lot more fun, a lot more…zany.
Big thanks to Candlewick for images!
THE GIRL WITH THE PARROT ON HER HEAD. Copyright © 2015 by Daisy Hirst. Reproduced by permission of the publisher, Candlewick Press, Somerville, MA on behalf of Walker Books, London.
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Cookie expert and children’s book lover, Meaghan from The Decorated Cookie, is here to share her doodle cookie recipe and craft inspired by The Girl with the Parrot on her Head. So lucky to be hosting her again!
She’s made doodle cookies(!), which are perfect for this book in so many ways. They mirror the illustration style and the endpapers, which have little white circles with doodles in them (one with a cookie). They encourage creativity and imagination, right in line with Isobel. And they offer a place to draw the stuff a kid might like and even the stuff she might be afraid of (e.g. wolves).
What you need:*
Cut-out cookie dough AND royal icing
Circle cookie cutter
White food coloring
Disposable decorating bags
Size “3” decorating tip
Rubber bands
Food coloring pens
*Here are some helpful hints for cookie decorating supplies.
Prepare cookie dough according to the recipe, chill it, roll it out, cut out circles, bake and let cool. Prepare royal icing according to the recipe. Tint some icing white. Prepare a decorating bag with the tip and fill it with some of the white icing. Tie closed with a rubber band.
Pipe a white outline on the circle cookies and let set. Thin the remaining white icing with drops of water until it’s of flooding consistency (that is, when overturned with a spoon, the icing slowly folds back into itself and the lines disappear). Fill an empty decorating bag with the icing, tie closed with a rubber band and snip the tip. Pipe to fill the circles of cookies with white icing. Let dry OVERNIGHT.
The next day, use food coloring pens to draw designs and doodles.
Gift idea! Package some cookies topped with dried icing in a cellophane bag, add a couple black food pens, and a copy of The Girl with the Parrot on her Head.
So lucky to host Meaghan from The Decorated Cookie again! See Meaghan’s post here.
You may be interested in my last collaboration with Meaghan on One Word from Sophia too! Giraffe marshmallows!
one word from sophia + marshmallow giraffes from the decorated cookie
One Word from Sophia by Jim Averbeck and Yasmeen Ismail (2015).
This book has a wonderful, sophisticated group of family members. It has loose, lively illustrations (aren’t they lovely?). And it has Sophia, who wants a giraffe for a pet.
Sophia’s one true desire is a pet giraffe. Her four problems are “Mother, who was a judge, Father who was a businessman, Uncle Conrad, who was a politician, and Granda-mamá who was very strict.”
Each family member’s occupation comes into play with how Sophia tries to convince them about the giraffe. Each gives her rhetorical advice that boils down to: use fewer words.
It’s so much fun to see Sophia make charts and graphs and poll her stuffed animals. Sophia is determined. Sophia is smart. Sophia is creative. We as readers have a feeling Sophia will come out all right in the end.
I rarely give away the exact ending of a book, but I just have to here. So, spoiler alert, Sophia gets a giraffe. I love that! In a book so rooted in exactness and elocution and making realistic arguments, Sophia ends up with a yellow, brown-spotted, very tall pet of her own. Of course she does. She said that one word from the title.
This is the perfect book if you want challenging vocabulary. If you want to craft compelling arguments. If you want [insert true desire here].
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Meaghan over at The Decorated Cookie is a whiz at making delightful food crafts. So when she agreed to make a real life marshmallow giraffe just like Sophia’s, I was thrilled!
So cute, right?!
You can see the whole tutorial over at The Decorated Cookie. And while you’re there, check out some of her recent creations like mini donut candy pops, birthday cake on a stick, and marshmallow cat faces! And she’s got a book too: Sugarlicious!
Big thanks to Meaghan for collaborating with me over our shared love of picture books and adorable, kid-friendly crafts! Also, marshmallows!