Oreo Turkeys and Cookie Pilgrim Hats

Today I’m going to show you how to make a fun Thanksgiving craft perfect for both kids and adults!  These darling turkeys are made from candy and completely edible!  They are a fun activity for holiday parties, family nights, or just for fun. I’m also going to show you how to make a great little pilgrim hat at the end as well. 

 

Ingredients/Supplies needed for candy turkeys:

Double Stuff Oreo Cookies
Candy Corn
Whoppers
Mini peanut butter cups
Chocolate frosting*
Yellow Frosting*
Optional: Red frosting*
Optional: black sprinkles for eyes

*For these kinds of things I love to use the little pre-filled tubes of colored frosting you can buy in the baking aisle.  The chocolate is easy to make, and homemade actually works a little better because you can make it stiff.  However, for the colored details like yellow and red, these little tubes are great.  It doesn’t really matter what they taste like and they last forever (which is both cool and disturbing at the same time.) I’m using store-bought tubes for everything here purely for convenience- works great!

Step 1:

Grab a cookie.  You don’t have to put frosting in there, but I like to because it holds in the candy corn a little better. Just give it a little squeeze of chocolate.

Then stuff in your candycorn.  If you’re in some sort of candy corn shortage, you can cut off the white tips to use later for your beaks.  I think the candy corn sticks in better with the tip so I leave it on.  Go ahead and do all of the cookies through this step.

Step 2:

Next, put a dab of frosting on the opposite end of the cookie and secure it to the “base” cookie.  It helps to place them next to a wall as they dry so they stay put.

While those are drying, unwrap your peanut butter cups.  Take a sharp knife and cut a sliver off one end.  (I don’t need to tell you what to do with the sliver, do I?)  It helps to gently cut in a sawing motion so you don’t break the PB cup.  (Although I wouldn’t have to tell you what to do with a broken one either, would I?)  Cut it from the bottom like I show here:

Once those are ready, flip your cookies over, but you may find it’s easy to keep them next to the wall.  My frosting was a bit soft, so they needed the extra support.

Place a dab of frosting on the peanut butter cup, and place it on the cookie like so:

Step 3:

Now those little guys will need heads, so glue a whopper on there with frosting as well. I put frosting on the side of the whopper that hits both the cookie and the PB cup.  We wouldn’t want a turkey running around with its head cut off, would we??

While they’re still lying there, use a dab of frosting (I use yellow) and glue on the white tip of a candy corn for a beak.  Put two yellow dots on for eyes, and for the black spots in the eyes you can use a dab of chocolate frosting, or a mini chocolate chip, or a little sprinkle like I’ve used.  A sprinkle is really the perfect size if you have them.

Step 4:

Once the beak is secure, you can flip them over and draw on some little yellow feet.  If you have red frosting too (usually comes in a set with the tube of yellow) you can add a little gobble gobble. Or whatever that thing is called.  What is it called?  I’m too lazy to google.  Extra giveaway entry for the first person who can tell me.  Okay not really but I’ll think you’re awesome.

And there you go, cute as can be!

These make really cute place card holders too, for either a kid, or adult table!  How cute is my little turkey family?

Stick one on each plate and everyone will say “Awwwwwwe….” If you have kids old enough to handle making them, it’s a fun project for them to be in charge of.

They’re also darling combined with pilgrim hats.

Those are just marshmallows dipped in chocolate and placed on a fudge strip cookie.  Use yellow frosting to make the buckle.  (Pretty much the Thanksgiving version of the Halloween witch hats seen in this post!)

Hope you enjoy these fun little things! Happy Friday!

Sara Wells
Meet The Author

Sara Wells

Sara Wells co-founded Our Best Bites in 2008. She is the author of three Bestselling Cook Books, Best Bites: 150 Family Favorite RecipesSavoring the Seasons with Our Best Bites, and 400 Calories or Less from Our Best Bites. Sara’s work has been featured in many local and national news outlets and publications such as Parenting MagazineBetter Homes & GardensFine CookingThe Rachel Ray Show and the New York Times.

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Questions & Reviews

  1. I made 40 of the little turkeys on Wednesday to give to my guests on Thanksgiving. They were a BIG hit! Several people posted them on Facebook. They are a bit time consuming, but worth it! The trickiest part was keeping the Oreo’s from cracking when I put in the candy corn.

  2. Funny story! My mom did not know what I needed the oreo’s for and bought the Christmas ones with the red filling!!! The turkeys looked like they were bleeding when they were eaten! haha! The kids and adults loves them anyways!

  3. Made one for everyone that came to Thanksgiving Dinner and everyone was wowed and loved them! I lety them know where to find your idea. Thanks so much for the awesome ideas and how perfectly and neatly everything is made.

  4. hey i tried these for thanksgiving this year and they were a hit 🙂 since i could not find any candy corns when i made them i tried mike and ikes instead 🙂 they worked and made them more colorful 🙂 to make the mike and ikes fit in the oreo you just need to cut the ends off them 🙂 you can use the other piece of the orange mike and ike for the beak as well 🙂 thank you for puting the happy into my thanksgiving by thinking of these wonderful treats 🙂

  5. I wish I had remembered to look at this again sooner. I wanted to make these so bad for tomorrow, but there’s no candy corn in stores anymore 🙁
    I tried to look at the store for something I could use for a substitute of candy corn, and I found nothing. Bummer.

    1. My husband and kids went out last night to purchase all of the pieces. Finally found the last two bags of candy corn at the dollar store!!! Making them for today and a celebration on Saturday with the other side of the family.

  6. I’ve got the pilgrim hats done and now working on the turkeys! Can’t wait for my grandsons to see them tomorrow on Thanksgiving ’12!!! THANKS

  7. These were a super cute idea for me and my daughter to make. However, somehow all of ours came out really goofy looking…the eyes and the beaks were melting down the wopper, so our birds looked possessed…lol how do you keep you icing in one spot???

  8. Its so hard to make the oreos stick together!! what is the tip of them sticking together??

  9. I cannot find candy corn anywhere and want to make these for thanksgiving tomorrow. Does anyone have any suggestions of things to use instead of candy corn? Thanks!

    1. I ended up using Mike & Ike’s and they turned out perfectly. I found that squishing the ends of the candy together worked better than cutting the end so n a bias for the feathers. Thanks for the great idea!