Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (2024)

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (1)

Cookies6 commentsBy Matt Taylor

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If you are looking for an impressive cookie to make for the holidays, make these homemade stained glass cookies. I just love these!

When it comes to the Holidays, one thing I love is the assortment of cookies. No cookie plate would be completely without these amazing stained glass cookies. And if you want you can even turn them into Christmas tree ornaments.

These are perfect for Christmas time or stick to the hearts and make them for Valentine’s day. Stained glass cookies are incredibly easy to make, if I can I do it, you can do it. Let’s get baking!

Step 1: Gather the ingredients

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (2)

In order to make these cool stained glass cookies you need just a handful of easy to find ingredients:

  • Flour – All purpose/plain flour, do not use self-rising flour.
  • Salt – Half it if you used salted butter.
  • Butter – Softened/room temperature, unsalted or salted.
  • Sugar
  • Eggs
  • Vanilla extract
  • Jolly Ranchers – Or use any other hard candy.
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Tools

  • Bowls
  • Hand mixer or stand mixer
  • Spoon
  • Spatula
  • Bags
  • Rolling pin
  • Meat tenderizer, optional, for mashing the candy
  • Sheet pan or cookie sheet
  • Parchment paper or asilicone baking mat
  • Cookie cutters

Step 2: How to make stained glass cookies at home

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Begin by making the cookie. It is pretty much a basic sugar cookie without the baking powder and an additional egg.

In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour and the salt.

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (5)

In a large bowl, add the softened room temperature butter and the white granulated sugar and mix until just combined. Mix in the eggs one at a time and then the vanilla extract. Scrape the sides of the bowl as needed with a spatula to ensure everything is well combined.

TIP: IF you forget to take the butter out of the fridge to soften, put it in the microwave on the defrost setting for about 45 seconds.

TIP:A stand mixer with a paddle attachment works great as well as a hand mixer. If you don’t have a mixer, use a sturdy whisk or wooden spoon.

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Gradually add in the flour mixture, about a third of it at a time, until it is all mixed in. Again, scrape the sides of the bowl as needed. Put the mixer away and clean the beaters. And just like that the cookie dough part of the stained glass cookies is done. Super easy right?

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Place the dough onto a counter or table and shape it into disc or rectangle and wrap it with plastic wrap. You may need a little bit of flour on the counter, to keep it from sticking.

Set the wrapped dough in the fridge and chill for about an hour.

Step 3: Break the candy

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While the dough is chilling you can break up that candy. Place the Jolly Ranchers or other kind of hard candy into sandwich bags according to their color. You will only need 7 to 8 of each color.

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Now smash those candies with a meat tenderizer or rolling pin. Don’t break them completely into a powder, just so they are small pieces.

Step 4: Cut out those stained glass cookies

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (10)

After the dough has chilled, remove it from the fridge and take out of the plastic wrap. Flour the work surface and cut the dough in half and wrap up one of the halves and place it back in the fridge to use later. The dough can also be frozen if you like and be used several days later.

Roll out the dough with a rolling pin until it is between 1/4th and 1/8th of an inch. It doesn’t have to be exact. Make sure to add flour to the rolling pin as well, especially if the dough is sticking.

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Now time to make the cookie shapes. There are so many different shapes you can do, with one large shape and one small shape in the middle.

Cut the cookie shapes with the cookie-cutter, and pull away the scraps, and ball those up to be re-rolled. Use a spatula to lift up the cookies as needed and place it on a cookie sheet lined with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper.

Then cut the middle out with a smaller cookie cutter. Which is where the candy glass will wind up going. You can bake the inside piece of dough as is to make a small cookie or just form them all together and re-roll to make more of the bigger ones.

Place the pan of cookies back in the fridge and allow them to chill for 15 to 20 minutes.

Step 5: Bake the homemade stained glass cookies

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (12)

Preheat the oven to 350 F/176 C. Set the main rack in the middle position.

Remove the pan/s of cookies out of the fridge. Then use a small spoon and add a small amount of crushed candy into the center of each cookie. Don’t overfill them, if so they will bleed on the top, which you will see an example of that. They only need to be about two thirds full.

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (13)

Bake them on the middle rack in the oven for 12 to 14 minutes. Closer to 12 if you like softer cookies, closer to 14 minutes if you like browner crunchier cookies.

Once they are done baking the candy will have melted in the middle. Allow the cookies to cool completely before removing them and serving. Enjoy!

NOTE: Sometimes the candy part of the cookie sticks to parchment paper. Usually it is because the cookie wasn’t completely cool when it was removed. But if you are having issues, I recommend just using a silicone baking mat.

TIP: This same technique can be used to make stained glass windows for gingerbread houses, only use gingerbread instead. Or you can use this dough as well along with the gingerbread.

How do I make Christmas Ornament stained glass cookies?

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (14)

If you would like to make ornaments out of the stained glass cookies, before you bake them, poke a hole in the cookie with a straw. Then after it bakes and cools you will have a nice hole that you can tie a narrow ribbon or string too.

Why did my cookies bleed candy on the top?

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (15)

If you have candy that bled on top, it just means that you overfilled the hole a bit, and while the candy melted it flowed on top of the cookie instead of only in the middle.

How long do stained glass cookies last?

If stored in an airtight container or ziplock bag these cookies will last about a week at room temperature. If it is warm and humid, the candy will get a bit sticky.

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Here are some other holiday desserts you may like:

Oreo Balls

Red Velvet Cake Mix Cookies

Candied Orange Peel

Gingerbread Cookies

Pumpkin Roll

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (17)

Print Recipe Pin Recipe

5 from 3 votes

Stained Glass Cookies

Stained glass cookies are awesome for the holidays. And they can even be made into Christmas tree ornaments if you like. Pretty awesome! I love how super easy they are to make with just 7 ingredients. If I can do it, you can do it. Let's get holiday baking!

Prep Time25 minutes mins

Cook Time13 minutes mins

Chilling Time1 hour hr 30 minutes mins

Total Time2 hours hrs 8 minutes mins

Course: Cookies

Cuisine: American

Keyword: Christmas, easy, Holidays, kids, soft, sweet

Servings: 28 cookies

Calories: 147kcal

Author: Matt Taylor

Equipment

  • Bowls

  • Hand Mixer or Stand Mixer

  • spoon

  • Spatula

  • bags

  • rolling pin

  • Meat tenderizer, optional, for mashing the candy

  • Sheet pan or cookie sheet

  • Parchment paper or a silicone baking mat

  • Cookie Cutters

Ingredients

  • 3 cups of all-purpose flour 360g
  • 1/2 tsp. of salt 2g
  • 1 cup of softened room temp butter unsalted. If you use salted reduce the salt in half (226g)
  • 1 cup of white granulated sugar 200g
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 tsp. of vanilla extract 7ml
  • 20 to 30 jolly ranchers/hard candy smashed

Instructions

  • Add the flour and salt to a medium bowl and whisk them together.

  • In a large bowl, add the softened room temperature butter and the white granulated sugar and mix until just combined. Mix in the eggs one at a time and then the vanilla extract. Scrape the sides of the bowl as needed with a spatula.

  • Add in the flour mixture a third of it at a time until it is all mixed in. And just like that, the easy cookie dough is finished.

  • Place the dough on a table or counter, you may need a little bit of flour on the surface. Then shape the dough into a disc or rectangle and wrap with plastic wrap. Store the dough in the fridge for about an hour.

  • Sort the individual colors and unwrap them, and place them in a sandwich bag. Then mash away with a meat tenderizer or rolling pin. You don't need to make a powder from it, just until the pieces are fairly small around a sixth of the size of a full one or something.

  • Flour the work surface and cut the dough in half and wrap back up one of the halves and place it back in the fridge.Roll out the dough until it is between 1/4th and 1/8th of an inch.

  • Use the larger cookie cutters and cut out the shapes, peel away the excess dough, and put together and re-roll. Place the cookies onto a sheet pan or cookie sheet lined with parchment paper or a silicone mat. Use a smaller cookie cutter and cut out the middle of the cookies. Place the pan back in the fridge for 15 to 20 minutes.

  • Preheat the oven to 350 F/176 C. Then use a small spoon and fill in the middles of the cookies with the candy pieces. Don't fill them up too much otherwise, they will bleed on the top. About 2 thirds full is great.

  • Bake them in the oven on the middle rack for 12 to 14 minutes, until the cookies are slightly golden brown and the candy melts. If you want the cookies softer, 12 minutes is about right, if you want them a bit crunchier and more brown, 14 minutes.

    Allow them to cool completely on the pan. Before serving, enjoy!

  • To make ornaments, there needs to be a hole in the cookies. Use a straw and poke out a hole, before baking. Then you can put a string or narrow ribbon on it so it can hang on the tree.

Video

How to Make Stained Glass Cookies | Easy Homemade Stained Glass Cookies Recipe

Notes

TIP:A stand mixer with a paddle attachment works great as well as a hand mixer. If you don’t have a mixer, use a sturdy whisk or wooden spoon.

Note: This recipe makes 25 to 32 cookies depending on the size you make them.

Troubleshooting: If you bake them too long they will start to get really brown on the tips and edges of the cookie. These aren’t too bad. If you fill the middle up too much with candy, it will bleed on the top. The taste will be the same, but it won’t present as nicely as the others. 🙂

Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (18)

Tried this recipe?Mention @WPRecipeMaker or tag #wprecipemaker!

Nutrition

Calories: 147kcal

Do you like this recipe? Share and Pin it! Please give it a rating and comment down below, I really appreciate it.If you make it tag me on Instagram @inthekitchenwithmatt. Also, sign up for the newsletter so you won’t miss out on any of my new posts and recipes.

Tags

candy Christmas holidays soft

Matt Taylor

YouTuber and food blogger with a passion for cooking, eating, being outdoors and watching movies. Did you know I wrote an ebook cookbook called "All Things Chocolate: 30 of my favorite chocolate recipes."? Help support the food blog and YouTube channel by buying a copy in my shop. :)

6 Comments

  1. Melissa

    December 2, 2020 at 1:18 pm·Reply

    Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (19)
    Delicious cookie recipe! We had a great time making these, thank you!

    • Matt Taylor

      December 3, 2020 at 9:10 am·Reply

      So glad you like them. You are so very welcome. 🙂

  2. Toni Dash

    December 2, 2020 at 12:58 pm·Reply

    Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (20)
    This was a sure hit with my kids! They enjoyed making and eating it!

    • Matt Taylor

      December 3, 2020 at 9:10 am·Reply

      So glad they liked it!

  3. Betsy

    December 2, 2020 at 11:47 am·Reply

    Stained Glass Cookies Recipe | In The Kitchen With Matt (21)
    These are gorgeous and fun! My kids LOVE these! They also love helping by smashing all those Jolly Ranchers!! 😀 Tasty and fun. 🙂

    • Matt Taylor

      December 2, 2020 at 11:48 am·Reply

      Thank you, Betsy! I know right? that part is so fun haha

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FAQs

What were cookies originally used as in the kitchen? ›

The Origin of the Cookie

The first cookies are thought to be test cakes bakers used to test the oven temperature. They date back as early as 7th Century A.D. Persia which is now Iran.

How do you shape cookies with a glass? ›

And sure, this does seem like a fun little hack to make your cookies look more uniform, or at least uniformly round. All you have to do is take the baked cookies from the oven, place a mug (or a glass) over the still warm dough, do a little swirl and voilà, perfectly round cookies.

Can I bake cookies in a pyrex dish? ›

Bake the Cookies: Carefully place the glass pan in the preheated oven and bake the cookies for 8 to 10 minutes, or until the edges are golden brown.

What causes cookies to be too pale in color even when cooked completely and had the same cook time as darker ones? ›

Brown sugar adds a beautiful color as well as a more complex flavor. They'll also make cookies chewier, softer, and thicker than white sugar. Adding too much can result in dark brown cookies. Adding too little results in paler cookies.

What cookie was invented in 1938 by accident? ›

Chocolate chip cookies are claimed to have originated in the United States in 1938, when Ruth Graves Wakefield chopped up a Nestlé semi-sweet chocolate bar and added the chopped chocolate to a cookie recipe; however, historical recipes for grated or chopped chocolate cookies exist prior to 1938 by various other authors ...

What is the oldest known cookie? ›

Pizzelles are the oldest known cookie and originated in the mid-section of Italy. They were made many years ago for the “Festival of the Snakes” also known as the “Feast Day of San Domenico”.

How long to bake cookies on glass? ›

Finally, fold in the chocolate chips. Drop rounded tablespoons of the cookie dough onto an ungreased glass tray, leaving enough space between each cookie for spreading. Bake for 8 to 10 minutes in the preheated oven, or until the edges are lightly golden.

Should I bake cookies on glass or metal? ›

– but metal does an overall better job than glass of baking almost everything except for acidic desserts. It bakes evenly because it heats up so quickly. It also browns beautifully and crisps to perfection.

How do you make cookies thick and not flat? ›

Briefly Freeze Your Cookie Dough Balls

Take your sheet of cookie dough balls and pop it in the freezer while your oven preheats, for about 20 minutes. This will help prevent excess cookie spreading, so you get nice fat thick cookies.

Can I use a glass dish instead of a cookie sheet? ›

Unless you know the recipe author used a glass pan to test the recipe, generally you'll need to drop the baking temperature and increase the baking time. For most recipes: Drop the temperature by 25°F.

Is vintage Pyrex safe to bake in? ›

Ultimately, vintage Pyrex, made from borosilicate glass, is generally considered safe to use in the oven. Its robust composition makes it highly resistant to temperature changes and less prone to shattering, even when subjected to the high temperatures of an oven.

Can you bake cookies in an air fryer? ›

A basic chocolate chip cookie will bake at 350°F for five minutes and comes out just right. However, you can make most cookies in the air fryer. When air frying, reduce the heat on the machine by about 25°F (so if a cookie recipe calls for 350°F in a conventional oven, set it to about 325°). It's super easy to adjust.

What was the original use of cookies? ›

The idea behind cookies was to help store items in a virtual shopping cart by storing the data in the user's local computer. The name “cookie” was coined by Lou Montulli himself and is derived from the term “magic cookie”, which is the package of data received and sent by a program.

What did they use to bake in the 1800s? ›

Stoves were gaining popularity in the 1800s, but they were not electric or gas like ours are now. Instead, they had either a wood fire or a coal fire inside. The stove allowed the heat to more uniformly cook and bake food than an open flame.

What is the original cookie? ›

According to culinary historians, the first historic record of cookies was their use as test cakes. A small amount of cake batter was baked to test the oven temperature. What is this? 7th Century A.D.

What cookies were invented by a black man? ›

The History of Famous Amos

Big was in, but Wally Amos dared to go small and perfected the ultimate bite-size chocolate chip cookie. He used only the best ingredients from an original family recipe to create the cookie you know and love. From there, the Famous Amos story became a Hollywood success story.

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