
7 minute read
ICING ON TOP
Sugar Rush
MEET THE COTTAGE BAKERS WHO MAKE OUR NEIGHBORHOOD SWEET
Becoming a professional baker doesn’t have to start with a 40-quart industrial mixer. Some of the tastiest cookie makers in the neighborhood grew businesses straight from their Lake Highlands homes. These local creatives will satisfy cravings with cookies delivered right to your door.
Story by JAIME DUNAWAY-SEALE | Photography by JESSICA TURNER
sweets
Carrie DeCicco never baked much before starting Salt Sweets in 2018. But she wanted to help when neighbor Erin Willis asked her to make cookies for the opening celebration of her restaurant, RM 12:20. The cookies were a hit, and a few weeks later, Willis asked her to make cinnamon rolls.
Her next gig was at Resident Taqueria, then at Vector Brewing and Shady’s Burgers & Brewhaha. Although the restaurants paused partnerships with her during the pandemic, her business never slowed down. She was overwhelmed with delivery orders.
“People were eating their feelings. I try not to eat my stuff, but I do,” DeCicco says. “I was at Shady’s, and I had a threepack of rolls that had been there for a while. I wondered how they tasted, and they tasted great. That was dinner. You’d think I’d get sick of them, but I don’t because they’re so good.”
The cinnamon rolls are her best-seller, but her cookies come in a variety of flavors for every palate. There’s the classic chocolate chip cookie, which can be elevated with toffee, caramel, bacon and peppermint. Everything is baked with a sprinkle of salt to accentuate the sweetness of the cookies.
She also sells oatmeal cream pies and dough to go.
Most of her business is local, and DeCicco credits her success to the Lake Highlands community, especially the women on the LH Mamas Facebook page.
DeCicco bakes out of her home, but she also rents space at a commercial kitchen. She has two employees to help keep up with orders. She has no plans to open a storefront, but she’s not counting it out in the future.
Salt Sweets, 469-274-6164, saltsweets.com

colormycookie
Nancy and Sam Major started Color My Cookie last spring to earn revenue when their storefront, Tart Bakery, was forced to close at the onset of the pandemic. They envisioned the cookie decorating kit becoming a product of Tart, but operating the storefront soon became impractical.
The couple started delivering cookie decorating boxes from the back of their cars. People bought them, then bought them again. By the end of last year, Color My Cookie had shipped to all 50 states and Puerto Rico.
Original-size kits include six cookies to decorate, icing, sprinkles, edible water colors, paint brushes and extra decor. Each box comes with a link to an online tutorial where a pastry chef provides decorating tips and tricks.
Color My Cookie has themed kits for every occasion, including birthdays, graduations, holidays and new homes. It also caters to specific interests, such as dinosaurs, tractors and mermaids.
The cookies are shortbread, so they’re a little more crumbly and a little less sweet than sugar cookies. They are pre-iced to preserve freshness and provide a blank canvas for customers’ creativity.
cookie

Color My Cookie spread locally, then garnered national attention with features on the Food Network, Today and Delish. As the business continues to grow, Major dreams of having a mixed-use facility with office and production space that visitors can tour and receive a free cookie. “This is a craft, a treat, an activity and a class,” Major says. ”It meets a lot of needs.”

Color My Cookie, 214-258-5294, colormycookie.com
June MLS home sale statistics*, plus annual totals area home valuesREAL ESTATE REPORT
SUB SOLD SOLD Year-To-Date Year-To-Date Avg Days on Avg. Sales Avg. Sales AREA JUNE ‘20 JUNE ‘21 Sales ‘21 Sales ‘20 Market YTD Price YTD ‘21 Price YTD ‘20 1 11 12
2 3 8 7 5 3
4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12
10 30 5 9 1 0 4 3 3 0 6 8 6 6 3 4 2 5 13 11 10 14 4 0
15
8 8 TOTAL 87 105 AVG 5.80 6.46
45 40 19 103 36 12 28 15 38 38 10 21 54 9 40 508 34.00
38 33 24 57 28 11 23 8 29 33 9 5 43 24 42 407 27.13
56 $456,808.00 $316,089.00 23 $303,716.00 $263,420.00 22 $287,849.00 $274,315.00 42 $203,225.00 $182,790.00 33 $369,793.00 $317,706.00 16 $534,357.00 $502,273.00 52 $584,268.00 $524,410.00 43 $495,160.00 $436,375.00 21 $440,145.00 $411,985.00 49 $216,081.00 $244,882.00 46 $724,328.00 $464,882.00 62 $601,667.00 $506,780.00 32 $515,303.00 $483,236.00 7 $456,500.00 $414,553.00 34 $450,474.00 $445,007.00 538 $6,639,674.00 $5,788,703.00 36.00 $442,644.93 $385,913.53
Sponsored by:
GEORGE HAYNES GHAYNES@EBBY.COM 469-774-7405
*Statistics are compiled by Ebby Halliday Realtors, and are derived from Dallas Multiple Listing Service (MLS). Numbers are believed to be reliable, but are not guaranteed. The Advocate and Ebby Halliday Realtors are not responsible for the accuracy of the information.
75 - Central Expr essway Walnut
B r a n c h
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Mama Shep
Sandra Shepherd thought the iced cookies at the shower she was attending were beautiful, but when she took a bite, they didn’t taste very good. The Lake Highlands resident recalled the cutout cookies she used to make for birthdays and holidays when her kids were young.
“They tasted good, so I thought, ‘Maybe I should make them pretty,’” she says.
Shepherd had never made royal icing, but she perfected her recipe and decorating techniques by watching videos on YouTube. When she mastered that, she enrolled in a cookie decorating class in Austin to elevate her skills.
Shepherd’s sugary shortbread cookies come in almost any shape imaginable. She’s made everything from prams for baby showers to crawfish for seafood boils.
Much of her inspiration comes from party invitations. She also searches themes and hashtags on Instagram to see what other cookie artists have created. Instead of replicating their work, she adds her own twist to the design.
Since she started selling cookies about five years ago, Shepherd says her hobby has turned into a full-fledged business. But she doesn’t want it to become a full-time job. Sometimes, that means turning away orders so she can spend more time with her grandkids.
Shepherd doesn’t ship and says most of her business is from the Lake Highlands community.
Mama Shep Cookies, mamashepcookies.com