Okay, here’s my take on a blog post about cookie decorating piping bags, based on your instructions. Let’s do this!
My Cookie Decorating Piping Bag Adventure!
Alright, so, I decided to get fancy and try some real cookie decorating. I’ve seen all those perfect cookies online and thought, “Hey, I can totally do that!” Famous last words, right? But you gotta start somewhere! It’s always the same with baking. I see it, then I want to try it.

First things first, I grabbed my supplies. I had the cookies baked and cooled – sugar cookies, nothing too crazy. Then came the royal icing. I followed a recipe online, and it seemed okay, you know, not too runny, not too stiff. I split it into bowls and added gel food coloring. I wanted a pastel vibe, so I went with pink, blue, and yellow.
Next up: the piping bags. This is where the fun really began.
I bought a pack of disposable piping bags – figured those would be easiest for cleanup. I also got a set of piping tips. I was feeling ambitious, so I got a bunch of different sizes and shapes.
I started by cutting the tip off one of the bags. I probably cut it too high because the tip kept popping out. Major fail. I had to wrestle with it to get it back in, and icing went everywhere. Lesson learned: cut small!
I finally got the tip secured (more or less) and started filling the bag with pink icing. Another rookie mistake: I overfilled it. Icing oozed out the top as soon as I tried to squeeze it. Ugh.
So, I scooped some icing back out (messily, I might add) and tried again. This time, I managed to hold the bag closed at the top and started practicing on a piece of parchment paper. My lines were shaky, and my dots looked like blobs. I tried different pressures, different speeds, but nothing seemed to work perfectly.
I switched to a different tip – a smaller one for outlining. This was slightly better, but still not great. I outlined a cookie, and the icing was all wobbly. I tried to smooth it out with a toothpick, which just made it worse. It was a hot mess.

I kept practicing, though. I told myself I wasn’t going to quit. I outlined a few more cookies, then flooded them with the blue icing. The flooding part was actually kind of satisfying. I used the toothpick to pop any air bubbles and spread the icing evenly.
After that, I tried adding some details – little dots, swirls, and lines. Some of them looked okay, others looked like a toddler had decorated them. But you know what? I was having fun.
It wasn’t perfect, not even close. But I learned a lot. I learned how to cut the piping bag, how much icing to fill it with, and how to hold the bag properly. I also learned that decorating cookies takes a lot of patience!
Cleanup was a breeze with the disposable bags, thank goodness.
Will I be entering any cookie decorating contests anytime soon? Definitely not. But I’ll keep practicing. Maybe next time, they’ll look a little less… homemade. And hey, even if they don’t, they’ll still taste good! That’s what really matters, right? Now, to eat my failures… I mean, creations!