5/13/2013

10 Homemade Play-dough Recipes

Have you ever tried a new play-dough recipe? Was it everything you hoped it would be or was it an experience you never want to repeat?

I have tried lots and lots of different play-dough recipes and been disappointed many times, I have also tried a few that were AWESOME. The problem is I can never remember which recipes worked and which turned out to be a horrible mess. I also never know how much play-dough a recipe is going to make or how long it is going to last...it is all a HUGE guessing game. 

We LOVE play-dough at our house...it's my 4 year old's favorite activity and I enjoy it too so we have played this guessing game a lot. About a year ago I thought I'd found the perfect play-dough recipe online but when I made it I was very disappointed...it made a ton of play-dough and it was a crumbly mess. I decided I wasn't going to play this guessing game anymore. I decided to devote an entire day to making and playing with play-dough and recording info about each recipe.  


What We Did- Our play-dough day
(Pretty much we had a HUGE play-dough day!)
1- We made all 10 of my play-dough recipes the same day  (I followed directions exactly)
2- We played with each play-dough and wrote down what we thought about it
3- Measured how much play-dough the recipe made (We measured using store bought play-dough containers)
4- Took pictures of each recipe
5- Stored each recipe in plastic Ziploc bags
6- Played with each play-dough at 3 weeks, 2 months, 6 months and 9 months after making it and took notes.

What We Wanted to Know
1- If we liked the recipe or not (Trash it or Keep it?)
2- How much play-dough the recipe made
3- How long it lasted/stayed good

Recipes & Results
**Over the years we have tried some fun edible play-dough's.  They are fun but typically a one day play-dough. They don't last long and usually end up getting eaten so we didn't experiment with any edible play-dough's. 

Recipe #1 (Best Play-dough)
Ingredients
1 C Flour
1 C Water
1/4 C Salt
1 T Vegetable Oil
2 t Cream of Tarter
Food Coloring (4 drops)
Sauce Pan and Wooden Spoon

Directions (Cook all ingredients over stove)
1- Pour all ingredients (order does not matter) into sauce pan.
2- Stir until everything is mixed well.
3- Once the mixture is mostly clump free heat over medium heat.
4- Stir and keep stirring, after a few minutes it will start to clump up.
5- Stir until one big clump is formed and remove from heat.
6- Knead by hand.

Keep or Trash?: Keep! This was by far my favorite recipe, it's just like store bought play-dough! It isn't too sticky/oily and doesn't leave a residue on hands or surface.
How Long it Lasted: 9+ months (We still have it) At 6 months this play-dough was just like it was when we made it, at 9 months it was starting to crystallize a tiny bit but still great to play with.
How Much it Made: 2 1/4 containers

Recipe #2 (Great Play-dough)
Ingredients
3 C Flour
1 C Salt
6 t Cream of Tarter
3 t Oil
3 C Water
Food Coloring

Directions (Cook all ingredients over stove)
1- Pour all ingredients (order does not matter) into sauce pan.
2- Stir until everything is mixed well.
3- Once the mixture is mostly clump free heat over medium heat.
4- Stir and keep stirring, after a few minutes it will start to clump up.
5- Stir until one big clump is formed and remove from heat.
6- Knead by hand.

Keep or Trash: Keep! This is a good play-dough and makes a ton. It does leave a very slight white residue on hands and surface.
How Long it Lasted: 9+ months. At 6 months it crystallized slightly, by 9 months it was a little dry but still good to play with.
How Much it Made: 6 containers


Recipe #3 (Good Play-dough)

Ingredients
2 C Flour
1 C Salt
4 t Cream of Tarter or Alum
2 C Water
2 T Oil
Food Coloring

Directions (Heat water over stove then mix in large bowl)
1- Mix dry ingredients
2- Boil water and oil
3- Mix all together in large bowl
4- Knead

Keep or Trash: Keep! This was a great recipe but did become sticky overtime.
How Long it Lasted: 9+ months.  This recipe became sticky at 6 months but it was still okay to play with...just a little messy.
How Much it Made: 4 Containers


Recipe #4 (Kool-aid Play-dough)
Ingredients
1 C Flour
1/2 C Salt
3 t Oil
1 Small Package of Kool-aid (any flavor)
1 C boiling water

Directions (Heat water over stove then mix in large bowl)
1- Mix dry ingredients
2- Add oil and boiling water
3- Stir
4- Knead on waxed paper

Keep or Trash: Keep! This smells really good for the first week but then the smell wears off. It also stores well without having to be refrigerated.
How Long it Lasted: 9 + months. After about 3 months it is a little sticky and leaves a slight white residue but is still great to play with.
How Much it Made: 2 1/4 Container


Recipe #5 (Jello Play-dough)
Ingredients
1 C Flour
1 C Warm Water
2 t Salt
2 t Cream of Tarter
2 t Oil
1 Packet (3 oz) Jello (any flavor)

Directions (Cook all ingredients over stove)
1- Pour all ingredients (order does not matter) into sauce pan.
2- Stir until everything is mixed well.
3- Once the mixture is mostly clump free heat over medium heat.
4- Stir and keep stirring, after a few minutes it will start to clump up.
5- Stir until one big clump is formed and remove from heat.
6- Knead by hand.

Keep or Trash: Keep. This was a good one time play-dough although it doesn't last long.
How Long it Lasted: At 2 weeks it had become really sticky.
How Much it Made: 2 1/2 Containers


Recipe #6
Ingredients
1/4 C Salt
1 C Flour
1/4 C Water

Directions (No cook, just mix in bowl)
Mix with hands in bowl, knead.

Keep or Trash: Trash, it worked but was not a very good play-dough.
How Long it Lasted: At 3 weeks it was a little watery, at 2 months the oil had surfaced and it was very sticky.
How Much it Made: 1 1/2 Containers


Recipe #7 (Baking Soda Play-dough)
Ingredients
1 C Baking Soda
1/2 C Corn Startch
3/4 C Water

Directions (Cook all ingredients over stove)
1- Pour all ingredients (order does not matter) into sauce pan.
2- Stir until everything is mixed well.
3- Once the mixture is mostly clump free heat over medium heat.
4- Stir and keep stirring, after a few minutes it will start to clump up.
5- Stir until one big clump is formed and remove from heat.
6- Knead by hand.

Keep or Trash: Trash. This could be a good alternative to flour recipes, but it's not a great play-dough.
 How Long it Lasted: 3 Weeks. At 2 Months it had separated and was not good to play with.
How Much it Made: 1 1/2 Containers

Recipe #8 
Ingredients
2 C boiling water
2 T oil
1/4 C Salt
2 C Flour
2 T Cream of Tarter or Alum

Directions (Heat water over oven then mix in large bowl)
1- Boil Water and Oil
2- Mix all ingredients in large bowl
3- Knead

Keep or Trash: Trash. This would be an alright one timer but I won't be making it again.
How Long it Lasted: Molded in 3 weeks.
How Much it Made: 3 1/2 Container


Recipe #9 (Crumbly No-Cook Play-dough)
Ingredients
3 C Flour
1 C Cold Water
1 C Salt
2 t Oil
Food Coloring

Directions (No Cook, mix ingredients in large bowl)
Mix with hands in bowl, knead.

Keep or Trash: Trash, way to crumbly.
How Long it Lasted: This was really crumbly in the beginning but we held on to it for 2 months to see if it got better. At 2 months the oil came to the surface and it was sticky but still crumbled like crazy.
How Much it Made: 4 Containers


Recipe # 10 
Ingredients
2 C Flour
2 C Water
4 t Cream of Tarter
2 T Oil
1 t salt
Food Coloring

Directions (Cook all ingredients over stove)
1- Pour all ingredients (order does not matter) into sauce pan.
2- Stir until everything is mixed well.
3- Once the mixture is mostly clump free heat over medium heat.
4- Stir and keep stirring, after a few minutes it will start to clump up.
5- Stir until one big clump is formed and remove from heat.
6- Knead by hand.

Keep or Trash: Trash, Molded in 4 days.
How Long it Lasted: 4 days. This play-dough was fine (sticky) for a one-time use but did not store well at all.
How Much it Made: 3 Containers


Secrets to Making Great Play-dough
I learned a few things from this experiment::
~Cream of Tarter really helps the dough stay together.
~Don't add a lot of salt...it dries the dough out.
~Their are all sorts of ways to make play-dough: Cooking it over the stove: adding hot water to the dry ingredients and no-cook recipes. If you are looking for a store bought like play-dough that stays together well and doesn't have visible grains of salt you are most likely going to use a recipe that requires cooking it over the stove. Others are easier to make but don't turn out as well.
~Play-dough is best stored in plastic Ziploc bags that seal well. We experimented with storing it in containers and plastic bags and the play-dough in the bags stayed better longer...it didn't dry out as fast.

Wondering what to do with your play-dough now that you have a great recipe? Click the link below for some fun play-dough activities.

Fun Play-dough Activities

We would love for you to Subscribe or follow us/our blog:
Google + (In our Sidebar)
 Photobucket 

7 comments:

  1. Thanks for doing all the research for us! I thought I had a great recipe from teaching preschool but I am excited to try your favorite!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I appreciate this sooo much!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Wow! Thanks! I am also tired of searching for a great play doh recipe. You described everything so well! Excellent job!

    ReplyDelete
  4. Thanks for the recipes. Can't wait to try them out! Can i confirm that 1 T = Tablespoon?; 1 t = teaspoon?

    ReplyDelete
  5. Did you use table salt or kosher salt?

    ReplyDelete
  6. I found this via Pinterest, i tried the first recepie, and it's AWESOME! Only i used lemon juice instead of cream of tartar (we do not have that in my country).
    Thank you so much for the research!

    ReplyDelete
  7. I found this via Pinterest, i tried the first recepie, and it's AWESOME! Only i used lemon juice instead of cream of tartar (we do not have that in my country).
    Thank you so much for the research!

    ReplyDelete

LinkWithin

Related Posts Plugin for WordPress, Blogger...