Why My Grandkids Stopped Reaching for the Tablet 🍪
The slower Sunday afternoon my own grandmother gave me, handed down to three grandkids in one hour.
My nine-year-old came over and was on the tablet the full two hours I had him. Same room as me, somewhere else entirely. I worried they'd grow up remembering my house as the place with the wifi password. I figured this was just how it was now. Then a friend in my book club mentioned a simple thing she does at the counter with her grandkids…
Written by Slow
Grandma of three
If you're tired of being next to your grandkids, not with them
The tablet comes out of the backpack before their coats are off. Ten minutes in my own kitchen and they're somewhere else. I grew up at a floured counter with a kitchen radio on low and a grandmother who had time. The world they're growing up in is loud, and I was afraid that slower Sunday feeling would die with me unless I handed it over on purpose. Out of the four afternoons I tried last month, only one held their attention.
- The screen wins by default
- An hour I can't get back
- The memory I want to pass down fades
- The quiet ache
How I finally got the kids off their tablets

The afternoon I still remember from my grandmother's kitchen was never about the cookies. It was the slower hour she gave me. That hour is the thing you can pass on, and a patterned pin is the easy reason to start. My book club friend told me about a wooden pin from a workshop in Warsaw. What caught me was the carving. You can drop a fingernail right into the deep cuts. That depth presses the pattern into chilled dough in one even pass, so a snowflake still reads after the bake instead of blurring out. The pin felt solid in my hand, not too heavy, with handles that spin while you roll. My six-year-old grandson rolled it himself. Honest note: the dough has to chill first, so you can't decide to bake on a whim. You plan an hour ahead, the way Sundays used to feel.
The cookies that actually kept their pattern
The cuts are deep enough to bite into cold dough in one pass, so the design holds up through the oven. For me that meant pulling out a tray and seeing the snowflake still crisp once the cookies cooled. The cheap pin I'd tried before carved too shallow and the pattern baked right out flat. This one didn't. What got me was my eleven-year-old, the one who acts like she couldn't care less, leaning in to watch the pin peel off the dough. Picture a Sunday at the counter: the six-year-old up on the step stool, the nine-year-old dusting flour around, and all three of them hovering over the cooling rack later with not a screen in sight. Three grandkids at the same rack, staring at patterns that actually stayed sharp. My daughter wanted to know where I got it before she'd even tasted one.

My Honest Assessment
I had my doubts. It's not a cheap pin, and I'd already bought a bargain one off Amazon that baked out into blurry thumbprints. The thing nagging at me was simple: would the pattern really show up after baking, or would the kids end up let down? So I tested it. Four trays over three Sundays. Shortbread, sugar cookies, a snowflake batch, a floral one. Every single cooled cookie still had its design. My Results: I used to be the grandma whose plain cookies got one bite before the tablet came right back out. Now I'm the one whose grandson said "that's MY snowflake" before he ate it. The tablet stayed put for two hours. With holiday baking picking up, the workshop ships in small batches, so I ordered a week ahead. One honest thing: it does one job. It won't roll out pie crust or bread dough, just cookie and shortbread dough. If that's mostly what you bake, you won't miss a thing. When I lined everything up side by side, here's what I found:

How It Compares
| Pastrymade Pin | Amazon Mass-Market Pin | Nordic Ware Seasonal Pin | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pattern after the bake | Still sharp on the cooled edge | Blurs out flat | Faint, shallow imprint |
| First-bake guidance | Printed recipe guide in the box | None | None included |
| A ritual you pass down | Chill, roll, bake, lean over the rack together | One-time novelty | Seasonal shelf piece |
| Price | Around $40 | $9-$22 | $25-$35 |
The bottom line
After three Sundays, here's what I'd tell a friend: the cookies were never the point, the slower hour was, and this pin is the easy reason to start one. The afternoon my grandmother gave me, I finally handed to my grandkids. Around $40 for the pin and the recipe guide that gets your first tray right.
What's in the box
The questions I had before I clicked Buy 👇
Alright, I sat on this for a few days before ordering. Here's what I kept wondering…
Will the pattern actually show after baking? 😅
Yes. The cuts are deep enough to feel with a fingernail, so the design presses in and holds. I baked four trays over three Sundays and every cooled cookie kept its snowflake.
Is it too heavy for a young grandchild to roll? 🤔
My six-year-old rolled it on the step stool by herself. The handles spin while you roll, so her knuckles never dragged across the pattern. It's solid but not heavy in the hand.
Is it worth it over the cheap ones? 💸
Around $40 bought me a pin that worked on batch one. My $12 Amazon pin bought me a tray of blurred thumbprints and one disappointed afternoon. I'd rather pay once for a tool that holds.
Should I get a second pin? 🍪
Actually, yes. I kept a snowflake for December and a floral one for spring, so the drawer earns its space all year. Plus the grandkids each wanted a turn picking the next pattern.
What about the chill-and-flour steps? 😬
The recipe guide in the box walks you through both. Skip the flour dusting and the dough sticks, so I dust the counter every time. After three Sundays it's second nature.
Pastrymade Embossed Rolling Pin, for the slower hour you pass down
The deep cuts press the pattern in once, and it survives the rise in the oven.
