Vanilla icing is the grand finale, the crowning glory, the pièce de résistance on thousands of different recipes including scones, cinnamon rolls, crumb cake, muffins, and so many more. It’s so simple, yet often overlooked. Don’t underestimate the power of a really good icing! I have so many recipes that use this topping, so I decided it’s time to create a separate post. Vanilla icing, in all its dazzling drippy glory, deserves the spotlight today.
Vanilla Icing Vs Vanilla Buttercream
Let’s get one thing straight. What’s the difference between icing and buttercream? Like vanilla buttercream, vanilla icing is made with confectioners’ sugar, milk or cream, and vanilla extract. The differences are the ratio of ingredients and absence of butter. The terms icing and buttercream are often used interchangeably, but icing is typically light and liquid. Vanilla buttercream, on the other hand, is heavy and solid. Does this vanilla icing set? Vanilla icing eventually sets as it dries. It doesn’t harden like royal icing, but if applied lightly, you can stack your iced baked goods on top of each other. Another way to guarantee this icing sets: whisking constantly, warm the vanilla icing ingredients together in a small saucepan over medium heat for 2 minutes. Warming the icing before drizzling over baked goods promises it will set faster.
Vanilla Icing Ingredients
You only need 3 ingredients. Could this BE any easier?! Whisk these ingredients together. A fork or mini whisk is helpful since the mixture is so small. Give it a taste, then add a pinch of salt if desired. (I usually add a small pinch.)
Control the Consistency
Stick with 2-3 Tablespoons of milk/cream and 1/2 teaspoon of vanilla extract per 1 cup of confectioners’ sugar. This ratio of ingredients produces a wonderfully flavored and drizzle-able icing. But you have total control over the thickness! For thinner vanilla icing: Use milk instead of heavy cream. Add more cream/milk or less confectioners’ sugar. For thicker vanilla icing: Use heavy cream instead of milk. Add more confectioners’ sugar or less cream/milk. I prefer thicker icing for iced oatmeal cookies and sprinkle scones.
Uses for Vanilla Icing
There are literally hundreds of uses for this topping!
Cinnamon Roll Cookies (pictured above) Raspberry Danish Bread (pictured above) Scones (like Apple Cinnamon Scones or Blueberry Scones) Coffee Cake or Sour Cream Crumb Cake Raspberry Streusel Bars Cinnamon Swirl Banana Bread or Glazed Strawberry Bread No Yeast Cinnamon Rolls Raspberry Swirl Pound Cake Apple Crumb Cake Cinnamon Rolls, Giant Cinnamon Roll Cake, and Cinnamon Roll Wreath Raspberry Sweet Rolls or Birthday Cake Cinnamon Rolls Apple Cinnamon Muffins (pictured below)
Drizzle on blueberry muffins, birthday cake pancakes, or star bread, pour over pound cake, or use as a topping for baked donuts, French toast, eclairs, croissants, sweet potato fries, and so much more.