Dessert & Baked Goods Stained Glass Cookies

Stained Glass Cookies

A great cookie dough recipe, creative cookie cutters and colorful candy create a stained glass effect. Enhance the design with Holiday Cookie Decorating Techniques. Susan Reid of King Arthur Flour demonstrates holiday cookies you'll be proud to share.

Watch this video! Get Adobe Flash Player

Tags:

  • desserts
  • dessert
  • cookies
  • cookie
  • holiday cookies
  • baking cookies
  • candy cookies
  • christmas cookies
  • baked goods
  • susan reid
  • king arthur flour
  • all-purpose flour
  • about susan reid
  • baking
  • chef susan reid
  • chef reid
  • king arthur
  • king arthur flour recipe
  • king arthur recipe
  • stained glass cookies
  • king arthur cookies
  • king arthur stained glass cookies
  • king arthur cookie recipe
  • susan reid's cookies
  • susan reid's cookie recipe
  • decorated cookies
  • how to make stained glass cookies
  • how to bake stained glass cookies
  • cookies with candy
About Susan Reid

Watch this video! Get Adobe Flash Player

Tags:

  • pie crust
  • pumpkin pie
  • how to
  • susan
  • cookie
  • brownies
  • about
  • flour
  • holiday cookies
  • grilled asiago rounds
  • king arthur flour
  • zucchini caponata
  • about susan reid
  • baker
  • coffeecake
  • baking
  • scones
  • baking tips
  • new england culinary institute
  • sue
  • reid
  • the baking sheet
  • reed
  • norwich
  • vermont
  • writer
  • the baking education center

About Stained Glass Cookies

A great cookie dough recipe, creative cookie cutters and colorful candy create a stained glass effect. Enhance the design with Holiday Cookie Decorating Techniques. Susan Reid of King Arthur Flour demonstrates holiday cookies you'll be proud to share.

About Susan Reid

Susan Reid has been at King Arthur Flour since 2001, combining her dual passions for words and food. After careers in advertising, in high-end restaurants, and as a Chef-Instructor at the New England Culinary Institute, she spends her time at King Arthur writing and editing the baking newsletter, The Baking Sheet, and teaching both on the road and at The Baking Education Center. She’s a contributor to the award-winning King Arthur Flour Baker’s Companion and The King Arthur Flour Cookie Companion, and co-author of King Arthur Flour Whole Grain Baking.

Recipe

Ingredients

Cookies - Yield: 4 dozen cookies

  • ½ cup (3¼ oz) vegetable shortening
  • ½ cup (1 stick, 4 oz) unsalted butter
  • 1½ cups (10½ oz) granulated sugar
  • 4 oz (half an 8-oz pkg) cream cheese, softened
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 1 large egg
  • 4 cups (17 oz) unbleached all-purpose flour
  • ½ tsp ground ginger
  • 1 tsp ground nutmeg
  • ½ tsp baking soda
  • ½ tsp salt

Candy Centers

  • candy of choice, placed in freezer bag (do not close the bag) & smashed with a rolling pin (Suggestions: Jolly Ranchers, Life Savers)

Special Equipment

How-to

Make the Dough

  1. In a large bowl, cream the shortening, butter and the 1½ cups sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in the softened cream cheese, vanilla and egg and beat well
  2. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, ginger, nutmeg, baking soda and salt. Gradually add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture, beating until well-combined. Cover the dough and refrigerate it overnight, as it will be soft
  3. The next day, remove the dough from the refrigerator and divide it into quarters. Keeping the remaining pieces refrigerated until they're needed, roll out each piece of dough on a lightly floured work surface to a thickness of ⅛"
  4. Use a 3½ to 4" round cookie cutter to cut the dough and immediately transfer the rounds to greased or parchment-lined baking sheets, leaving a bit of space between them. Now use a smaller (1" or so) cutter in the shape of a heart, star, diamond or what-have-you to cut out the centers. If the dough isn't cold enough, refrigerate the sheets and cut out the centers when the dough is a bit easier to work with
  5. Refrigerate the scraps and re-roll them with the remaining portion of dough, cutting out cookies until all the dough is gone
  6. Preheat the oven to 375°F and bake the cookies for 6-7 minutes, or until they're just firm but still somewhat pale and just lightly browned around the outer edges. Let them cool on the baking sheets

Make the Candy Centers

  1. Place candy of choice in a freezer bag and smash with a rolling pin
  2. Fill the cookie cutouts with the pieces, cleaning overflow with a dry paintbrush
  3. Bake just until candy/sugar melts - about 3 minutes. Keep an eye on them so that the sugar does not bubble. Remove and let cool
  4. If these cookies are for consumption, store them in a cool, dry place in a single layer in an airtight container. (Be sure not to store them near a heat source!)

Tips from Chef Susan Reid

  • This dough rolls out beautifully, can be rerolled without being tough, and tastes delicious

  • Have your Life Savers or Jolly Ranchers sorted by color and ready to go before you bake. Life Savers can be put in the cutouts before the cookies go into the oven; Jolly Ranchers should be put in halfway through the baking time. (They're cooked to a lower temperature, and melt more quickly than Life Savers do; if they're put in too soon, they'll boil and make bubbles in the windowpanes.) You can also bake the cookies until they're set (about 8 minutes), let them cool, and then fill with crushed candy. A baby food or demitasse spoon is the best tool to use for this. Having a clean craft paintbrush on hand is also a good idea, to brush any stray candy bits back into place

 

Nutrition information per serving (1 cookie with unflavored center, 43g): 157 cal, 5.1g fat, 1g protein, 7g complex carbohydrates, 20g sugar, 14mg cholesterol, 53mg sodium, 16mg potassium, 30RE vitamin A, 18mg calcium, 13mg phosphorus

Share this video

Send to a Friend

Want to share this how2heroes video with a friend? Enter your email address and their email address below and hit share. They’ll receive an email from you with the details.


Get code

If you’d like to publish this how2heroes video on your own Web page or blog, copy the code below and paste it into the HTML on your site. Please note that some blogs may require additional steps to publish HTML.

Comments (0)

Log in to comment & post a picture

No comments have been posted yet.