How to make a cornet and never go without decorated cookies
All you need is a piece of parchment paper.

The best long-term relationships are the ones that grow and evolve over time. Just when you thought you knew everything about a person, they come along with some surprising new personality quirk that makes you love them even more.
I thought I had a great relationship with parchment paper. We were steady, if a little stale — always protecting my half sheet pans for minimal cleanup and lining my cake pans to ensure an easy release. I knew what this trusty workhorse gave me, and I loved it for that.
After decades of camaraderie, however, parchment paper and I are now spicing things up in the kitchen.
That’s because, thanks to the talented bakers at the King Arthur bakery, I’ve learned how easy it is to make a cornet out of parchment, and now I can decorate just about any baked good with ease.
A cornet is a small cone made from parchment paper that’s used to pipe fine lines of glaze, icing, or melted chocolate to decorate baked goods.
According to Jackie Tissiere, one of King Arthur's pastry bakers, “The advantage to the cornet is efficiency. We often don’t have small piping bags, just big ones. The cornet is nice because you can make fine lines and write little things with it, as opposed to having a giant pastry bag to try and wield. We always keep some filled with chocolate just hanging around the bakery, ready to use anytime.” Kristen Fenn, another King Arthur baker, likes them for their “fine detail, whether writing on a cake or making delicate decorations on cookies.”
Another benefit: You can make detailed designs without having to keep a tiny piping tip lying around (something I don’t typically keep in my kitchen, and other home bakers may not either).
To master the cornet, I asked Jackie to walk me through the process. Here's a guide on how to do it:
Start with a rectangle or a square of parchment paper. Cut it from one corner across to the opposite corner to make a triangle.
To make a cone shape, take the two corners at the bottom of the triangle and roll them into the center to form a cone shape. The “tip” will be at the center of the long end (hypotenuse) of the triangle. You’re going to have one corner on the inside and one on the outside, but that straight line where you cut should roughly meet up in the back.
Shift the folded edges of the parchment around a little bit until you get a nice taut point at the bottom of the cone you’ve made — there should be no holes or gaps.
Once the cone feels sturdy and stable, take the corners sticking out above the open end of the cone and fold them into the cornet. That keeps everything from coming apart as you’re piping.
The cone is pretty much sealed at the bottom until you cut off the tip, allowing you to fill the cone neatly before cutting it.
A cornet is easy to overfill because it's so small. Only fill it about halfway with glaze or chocolate; because you’ll be folding down the open end of the cone to close it, you want ample room there.
Flatten the top of the cornet. Then fold both corners into the center, almost as if you were wrapping a present.
Next, fold the top down in a rolling motion, until you’re up against the filling. The folded end should be nice and secure so that the filling won’t come out the top.
When snipping the opening to pipe, always start small. You can cut a little more off, but once you’ve cut too big a hole, you’re stuck. Make a small snip, then try it out by piping a little on a spare piece of parchment. If you like the size, great! If the filling isn’t coming out the way you want, cut a little more.
If you’re finding your chocolate or icing isn’t coming out smoothly, or you need to put a lot of pressure on the bag to pipe, try cutting your hole a little bigger. It’ll help you get a more fluid, even line.
Because it’s smaller than a regular piping bag, a cornet can be a bit odd to handle. Hold it almost like you would a pencil if you were going to write with it. The entire bag is held in one hand, with the folds snuggled up under the thumb, and the thumb controlling the flow.
To pipe, put pressure at the top, right where the filling is, so that you can draw a line.
Chocolate is nice because it flows easily — you don’t need to put much pressure on the cornet itself. For icing or something a little stiffer, you’ll need to squeeze harder on the cornet to get it out.
The only downside to the cornet is that you can’t really refill it. It gets messy, so these are typically a single-use item. If you go through all of your chocolate or glaze, just make another one rather than try to refill.
This simple piping tool can be used to add detailed decorations to any number of baked goods: celebratory writing on a birthday cake, marbled chocolate lines on the top of a Napoleon, or even an artful drizzle of glaze on scones.
One particularly great application is cookies. You can use a cornet filled with Royal Icing to pipe and flood a cookie — in other words, pipe an outline of icing around the edge of the cookie, let it set, then completely fill with icing for a smooth decorating surface.
Next, use a cornet to add artful touches like lines or dots. (Check out our blog post on cookie decorating techniques for tips.)
You can make more detailed designs if you’d like. That said, one of the great things about decorating with the fine tip of a cornet is that even the simplest additions, like polka dots, can create professional-looking cookies.
If you’re ready to make some stunning cookies this season, get started with our Holiday Butter Cookies, Royal Icing, and of course, parchment paper.
Cover photo by Jenn Bakos.
June 14, 2024 at 4:19pm
It's beyond belief that i clicked an endless amount of cornet/parchment-bag instructions and maybe 1/2 of one percent actually gives the DIMENSIONS that the INITIAL-RECTANGLE is supposed to be!!! Why was i thrust into a world of chaos?
June 15, 2024 at 9:49am
In reply to It's beyond belief that i… by Judy (not verified)
Hi Judy, we apologize for the chaos! The size of the initial rectangle can vary, of course, but for the example pictured here I would say she started with one of parchment half-sheets (16 1/2" X 12 1/4") and then folded over one corner to make a triangle that is approximately 12 1/4" X 12 1/4" X 16 3/4" (at the base of the triangle). You've actually folded over a square here, so you'll need to cut that in half to get your triangle.
December 24, 2023 at 2:43pm
Love this post! I've been trying for years to find the right method to pipe icing on my yearly christmas gingerbread cookies. Big, bulky piping bags have never been my friends and squeeze bottles are just so hard to clean. I'm so glad I've finally found a good techniques.
December 30, 2023 at 2:46pm
In reply to Love this post! I've been… by Lily (not verified)
Hi Lily! These really do come in handy when it's time to decorate! Happy Baking
April 25, 2023 at 12:53pm
Thank you for such a helpful tip! I have a baking shop and constantly I'm drizzling muffins, brownies, etc. With glazes. This has made my workload so much faster and easier. Love, love King Arthur's website!
June 3, 2022 at 5:15pm
This looks fabulous and easy! I'm a granny who likes to have fun cookies on hand for the grands. I'm going to try this in a few weeks when they come to visit. I've made cookies for baby showers and our church group and community dinners. This easy step would have been very helpful then but now I'm looking forward to teaching the next generation how to make cookies. I love that parchment is always on hand and small batches of icing are easy to make. Love this idea so thank you!
June 4, 2022 at 2:35pm
In reply to This looks fabulous and easy… by Pamela Marks (not verified)
Thanks for reading and baking with us, Pamela. We hope you and your grandchildren have a wonderful time baking together!
December 6, 2021 at 7:23am
What a wonderful & very useful post! Thank you so much Rossi. I'm definitely giving this a try. Happy baking everyone!
December 5, 2021 at 7:03pm
I took a cake decorating class years ago and we used parchment paper cones for all the piping. No plastic piping bags for anything large or small. Definitely more environmentally friendly. In fact the shop sold parchment paper triangles pre-cut.
December 5, 2021 at 2:19pm
This is wonderful. I hate the idea of using a plastic bag to pipe, and have often simply not done it because of this. This is so simple and so obvious!! I should have thought of this myself---but I didn't. Thanks for sharing this easy and eco-responsible way to decorate.
Pagination