*Save Burton – Vashon Island Cookie Cutters
$16.00
I have only ever seen one cookie cutter that was shaped like Vashon Island.
For those of you who don’t know, Vashon Island is a mystical place in the Pacific Northwest, inhabited by fairies and filled with love and acceptance), and the one cookie cutter I saw excluded a major piece of the topography (probably to make their lives easier, as that particular piece of topography was a huge stressor).
But now you can purchase your very own, Burton Peninsula inclusive, Vashon Island Cookie Cutter. Isn’t that exciting? SAVE BURTON!
Several things to note:
- The cutter will come in a random color.
- Cutters are printed when you order them.
- Then they are coated in polyurethane to make them somewhat food safe. You will need to coat them periodically, as PLA by nature is food safe, but objects that are 3D printed have ridges where food could be difficult to remove, making the situation questionable. This is a “use your own common sense” kind of situation.
- Apparently you are supposed to chill cookie dough both before AND after using a cookie cutter (?!?)
- Apparently you can’t just use any old recipe either. It has to be a recipe FOR cookie cutter cookies (?!?!?)
- https://joyfoodsunshine.com/best-cut-out-sugar-cookie-recipe/ is the recipe recommended to me by a friend who is a baker.
- I am not a baker.
- The cutters themselves are just under 5″ long and 3″ wide. The inside of the cutters (and therefore the cut dough) measures approximately 4.75″ x 2.5″
Update Notice: This page redirects to another page owned by us – HomemadeHandcrafts.net.
This change was made so that we can keep similar products in their appropriate groupings.
We just wanted you to know so that you can update your bookmarks.
We appreciate your patience!
— Thanks!
Vashon Island Cookie Cutter. This is my own design (of a cookie cutter, since Vashon Island actually exists) and I took minor liberties with the topography in order to make a cookie cutter that included our peninsula.
Ingredients
Ingredients: PLA (Polylactic Acid) (from Wikipedia): a thermoplastic polyester with backbone formula (C3H4O2)n or[ C(CH3)HC(=O)O–]n, formally obtained by condensation of lactic acid C(CH
3)(OH)HCOOH with loss of water (hence its name). It can also be prepared by ring-opening polymerization of lactide [–C(CH3)HC(=O)O–]2, the cyclic dimer of the basic repeating unit.
PLA has become a popular material due to it being economically produced from renewable resources. In 2010, PLA had the second highest consumption volume of any bioplastic of the world,[3] although it is still not a commodity polymer. Its widespread application has been hindered by numerous physical and processing shortcomings.[4] PLA is the most widely used plastic filament material in 3D printing.
Although the name “polylactic acid” is widely used, it does not comply with IUPAC standard nomenclature, which is “poly(lactic acid)”.[5] The name “polylactic acid” is potentially ambiguous or confusing, because PLA is not a polyacid (polyelectrolyte), but rather a polyester.[6]