Stained Glass Cookies
Stained glass cookies are an easy holiday cookie to make, plus they are showstoppers! Jaws will drop when you reveal that you made them!
When I saw that the Tuesdays with Dorie group was making Stained Glass Sugar Cookies, I knew these picture-perfect cookies would be ideal for our annual neighborhood cookie exchange!
Why Youโll Love this Glass Pane Recipe
- Theyโre really no more difficult than making regular cut-out sugar cookies!
- They will be the talk of any party! Everyone (especially non-bakers!) will ask how you made them. Or where you bought them!
- They are super festive and perfect as Hanukkah cookies, too. Cut out round cookies, then use a small dreidel cookie cutter in the center.
It was time for our annual neighborhood cookie exchange and I needed a new recipe to try! I love perusing through Christmas Cooking Roundups like 50 of the Best Holiday Cookies, The Top Ten Holiday Cookies, or 25 of The Best Christmas Cookies Recipes for inspiration. Knowing that Dorie Greenspan had a recipe for stained glass sugar cookies that my โDoristaโ pals were trying helped seal the deal.
Frequently Asked Questions about this Stained Glass Cookies Recipe
Are These Cookies Hard to Eat?
Knowing how hard a Jolly Rancher is, you might wonder if these cookies are difficult to eat. Fortunately, the candy windowpane is thin enough that you can easily bite through the candy centers.
Can You Use Different Shapes?
Yes, feel free to use any shaped cookie cutters. The smaller cookie cutter can be the same shape as the larger cutter like with these cookies or you can mix and match.
Can You Use Different Candies?
Jolly Ranchers definitely work better than Lifesavers, as the latter doesnโt always bake up clear. Suckers, such as Dum Dums, are another good option.
Can You Freeze Stained Glass Cookies?
Knowing that the โglass portionโ can get sticky when baked on a humid day, I donโt recommend freezing them. I havenโt tested this, but the middles could potentially get sticky when they defrost.
Tips for Making the Best Stained Glass Sugar Cookies
- Smashing the Jolly Ranchers to smithereens definitely brought familiar scents to the forefront. They were a childhood treat while we hiked in Colorado! To make sure the candies melt properly, they need to be pulverized to nearly a powder. A few slightly bigger pieces seemed to be fine.
- Jolly Ranchers are the candy to use. Lifesavers donโt work as well.
- Be prepared for a mess. I placed the candies inside of two ziplock bags and pounded them with my metal meat mallet. The shards of candy broke through both thick layers of plastic so beware. I havenโt tested grinding some smashed candies in a food processor, but that should work.
- A non-spreading roll-out sugar cookie recipe is imperative. And chilling the dough before rolling helps, too.
- PRO-Tip: Donโt roll your dough too thin as youโll want a deep enough โwellโ in the middle to add the crushed candy. 1/4-inch thickness works well, but if you like thinner cookies 1/8-inch should be fine.
- You can cut any shape of cookie youโd like, then find a smaller cookie cutter that works well with your shape to cut out a window or two.
- You can bake the mini cookies cut from the centers, too.
- PRO-Tip: Carefully fill the centers with the candy dust. Any that lands on and is not removed from the dough will mar the cookie.
- A small silicone brush is the perfect tool to remove any candy crumbs that spill over onto the cookie dough.
- A pointed grapefruit spoon helps place the powdered candy into the window openings.
- If youโd like to make ornaments or use as a gift tag on a present, make a hole in the cookie with a skewer before baking. You may need to widen it as soon as the cookies come out of the oven if your opening isnโt big enough.
- PRO tip: Also, make sure to bake on parchment paper or a Silpat so that the melted candy doesnโt adhere to your baking sheet.
- Cool completely before moving the cookies from the baking sheet to a cooling rack. The candy middle needs to solidify.
I went to Alton Brown for his sugar cookie recipe and the dough worked beautifully! I also read through Dorie Greenspanโs recipe in Baking Chez Moi and used some of her tips and her baking times. My friends were quite impressed with these Stained Glass Cookies. Theyโre so VERY festive!!!
More Holiday Cookies Youโll Love:
These are all wonderful contenders for your next cookie exchange or holiday gathering!
- Best Sugar Cookie Recipe Ever from In Katrinaโs Kitchen
- Rolo Double Chocolate Chip Christmas Cookies from Living Locurto
- Christmas Peanut Butter Cookies from Bless This Mess
- Santaโs Favorite Cookies from Crazy for Crust
- 30+ Christmas Cookies
- Holiday Pinwheel Cookies
- White Chocolate Candy Cane Cookies
- Linzer Cookie Recipe
- Italian Christmas Cookies
- Chewy Gingersnaps plus 40+ Holiday Cookie Recipes
- Plus How to Host a Cookie Exchange
- More Holiday Recipes
Helpful Tools (affiliate links):
- French Rolling Pin (affiliate links)
- Wilton Snowflake Cookie Cutter
- Set of 4 Snowflake Pastry/Cookie Stampers
Stained Glass Cookies
Perfectly festive cookies for the holidays! Sugar cookie recipe adapted from Alton Brown.
Ingredients
- 3 cups flour
- 3/4 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 1 cup butter, softened
- 1 cup sugar
- 1 egg
- 1 tablespoon milk
- Powdered sugar, for rolling out dough
- Jolly Ranchers candies, separated into colors and smashed into a powder (about 15-20 total)
Instructions
- Whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
- In a stand mixer, beat together butter and sugar until light in color.
- Add egg and milk and beat to combine.
- With the mixer on low speed, slowly add flour, and beat until mixture pulls away from the side of the bowl.
- Wrap the dough in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 2 hours.
- Preheat oven to 350º.
- Sprinkle surface where you will roll out dough with powdered sugar. Roll out dough to ¼-โ -inch thick.
- Cut into desired shapes.
- Next, find a smaller cookie cutter in the same shape, then cut out a center section of the larger version with a smaller cookie cutter to make a "window".
- Place the cookies with the cut out about 1-inch apart on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Carefully spoon some of the crushed Jolly Ranchers into the middle of each cookie. Brush any that lands on the dough towards the middle with a dry pastry brush (or clean paintbrush).
- Bake for 7 to 8 minutes or until cookies are just beginning to turn brown around the edges
- Cool for a few minutes on the baking sheet to let the candy solidify, then move to a cooling rack to finish cooling.
Notes
You will need coordinating cookie cutters, one smaller of a similar shape to cut out the opening for the "window."
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Nutrition Information:
Yield:
24Serving Size:
2 cookiesAmount Per Serving: Calories: 224Total Fat: 10gSaturated Fat: 6gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 4gCholesterol: 28mgSodium: 141mgCarbohydrates: 31gFiber: 1gSugar: 14gProtein: 2g
I pulled out the cherry, sour apple and blue raspberry candies from the bag of Jolly Ranchers to use for the windows of these stained glass cookies. The fruity aromas reminded me of hiking the trails near Aspen with my family.
My dad would always have a stash of lemon drops and Jolly Ranchers in the exterior pocket of his backpack. I was partial to grape and needed a continual supply of as we huffed and puffed our way over switchbacks, through meadows and forests to our destination.
59 Comments on “Stained Glass Cookies”
What beautiful cookies and so festive as well. Hope you and your family had a wonderful Christmas ๐
I LOVE Stained Glass Cookies, Liz. Thanks for the tip about the Jolly Ranchers. I wonder why that is though:)
Thanks for sharing Liz…Wishing You and Yours a Very Merry Christmas and a Happy & Healthy New Year!!!
Pretty! I like the blue snowflakes the best. Merry Christmas!
So so SO impressive, Liz!! Your treats always blow my mind and get me so excited to start baking again (which is saying something, since I always swear that I’m going to avoid the kitchen for weeks after my baking splurges). I’m saving this one for the books. LOVE!
Beautiful cookies, Liz! I love Jolly Ranchers too. I ate them all the time as a kid.
What a gorgeous plate of cookies, Liz! Happy holidays.
Amalia
xo
Yeah awesome, please delete that previous error lol. Gorgeous cookies I am so impressed and so cool the flavors bring up great memories. Happy Holidays!
c
These are lovely, look so neat Liz. Merry Christmas to you and your family and happy holidays.
So pretty! And so perfect for the season. Speaking of which, Happy Holidays!
When I saw these on Facebook I was wondering about the color. They are beautiful!
Simply beautiful. You’re right, the Skinny Chick can bake.
Wow Liz!!! These stained glass cookies are perfect and look like delicious works of art!!! Love these! Merry Christmas to you and your family!
If anyone could make utterly beautiful cookies, I knew it would be you! These are stunning. ๐ Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Wonderful New Year 2016 my friend! Have a delicious holiday with your family. ๐
wow gorgeous colour! A perfectly festive cookie recipe, Liz.
Merry Christmas!
Angie
Wow, flying candy shards! Sounds dangerous. ๐ But it’s worth it for such a beautiful cookie!
BTW, was looking at a couple of your other posts. Are you in Indianapolis? Because that’s my hometown and I haven’t been back in a very long time. I miss it!
YES!!! I’m in Indy! If you’re ever back to visit, let me know—I’d love to meet you in person.
These are so perfect for Christmas
Wishing you Merry Christmas
Very pretty! I love the snowflake cookies, they’d be great for all winter:@)
Liz these are PERFECT! You obviously did not make them with 11 year old boys ๐ (though I love our imperfect offerings!) Merry Christmas, I hope 2016 is a sweet year for you xox
Your stained glass cookies are purty – I especially like the blue ones.