I was flattered to be invited to join a group of bloggers in a challenge to bake – and write about – 12 different holiday cookies in 12 days. These first 12 days of December, to be precise. The theme this year is the 2008 Bon Appétit Holiday Cookie-a-Day collection. Out of the 31 cookies in the collection, we were free to choose any 12 recipes to bake and blog about, in any order we choose. At the bottom of this post is the list of my fellow asylum inmates participants, who have taken up the gauntlet and are baking so you don’t have to. Well, okay, if you want to actually eat the cookies, you have to bake them yourself. But it’ll be fun! Right? I said, Right?
What will really be fun, is to see who’s chosen which recipes and compare notes, tastes, and, well… let’s leave artistic merit out of it, shall we? I’ve already warned you that I am not a food stylist!
On a more serious note, December is also AIDS Awareness Month, and today, December 1st, is World AIDS Day. Many of us, if not most of us, have been touched by this world scourge in some form or another, whether it be the illness or loss of a family member or friend. I’m no exception. There were friends of mine from high school and college days – terribly talented people – who were cut down in the prime of their lives, and whose loss most of the world will regrettably never know.
Angela of Spinach Tiger has asked that we Cook Red to Remember today to increase AIDS awareness and to honor the lives and memories of those we loved and lost. You don’t have to be gay to contract AIDS, nor do you have to be young. You might be shocked to learn that one of the fastest growing populations susceptible to contracting STD’s and AIDS, is the heterosexual elderly. It’s no joke. So, while I have no compelling story to share, I can offer my compassion and support. In their honor, I’ve combined my first cookie offering for the 12 Days of Cookies with a tribute in red in support of World AIDS Day.
Stained-Glass Lemon Cookies
Ingredients:
- 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 3/4 cup sugar
- 1 large egg yolk
- 2 teaspoons grated lemon peel
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 1/4 cups all purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 6 ounces (about) red and/or green hard candies
- Additional sugar
Preparation:
Using electric mixer, beat butter and 3/4 cup sugar in large bowl until well blended. Beat in egg yolk, lemon peel and vanilla extract. Add all purpose flour and salt and beat until mixture begins to clump together. Divide dough into 3 equal pieces. Flatten each piece into disk; wrap each in plastic and refrigerate 2 hours. (Can be prepared 2 days ahead. Soften dough slightly at room temperature before rolling out.)
Finely grind red and/or green hard candies separately in processor. Transfer each color of candy to separate small bowl; cover candies and set aside.
Position 1 rack in center and 1 rack in top third of oven and preheat oven to 375°F. Line 2 large baking sheets with parchment paper. Roll out 1 dough disk on lightly floured surface to 1/4-inch thickness. Using 2 1/2- to 2 3/4-inch-diameter cookie cutter or biscuit cutter, cut out cookies. Using small (about 1 inch in diameter) cookie cutter, make cutouts in center of each cookie.
Transfer cookies to prepared baking sheets. Spoon ground hard candies into cookie cutouts, filling cutouts completely to same thickness as cookies. Sprinkle cookies lightly with additional sugar. Repeat with remaining dough disks, ground hard candies and additional sugar. Reroll dough scraps and cut out additional cookies. Place on baking sheets; fill with hard candies and sprinkle with additional sugar.
Bake cookies until firm and light golden and ground candies look translucent, about 8 minutes. Cool cookies completely on baking sheets. (Can be prepared ahead. Store in airtight container at room temperature up to 1 week or freeze up to 1 month.)
I really like these cookies and will make them again – with and without filled centers. They’re fun to make and eat and I found the subtle lemon flavor helped to keep them light and not overly sweet.
I’ll take this opportunity to repeat one of my favorite tips: Whenever you have a recipe that calls for lemon juice, but not the zest, put the whole juiced rind into a plastic freezer bag and toss it in the freezer. When you have a recipe that calls for zest, but no juice, you can zest one of your frozen lemon rinds with a microplane grater, right out of the freezer! With the price of lemons these days, who can afford to waste them? My husband recently made a batch of hummus and tabouleh, and that’s how I have a supply of lemon rinds to zest for all of these recipes!
While some readers who left comments on the original recipe apparently found it difficult to remove the cookies from the parchment, I used my silicone baking sheet liners (Silpat or Matfer) and had no problem whatsoever. Personally, I think the real “trick” is to really let these cookies cool completely on the cookie sheet. That won’t take more than about 15 minutes, tops.
I whizzed cherry Lifesavers in the mini-food processor attachment of my stick blender to make the centers, and used a demitasse spoon (eensy-weensy espresso spoon) to fill them. If a few sprinkles of crushed candy miss the hole, it’s really no big deal to lightly brush at them with your finger, back to the filled centers. After a couple of hits-and-misses, I also found that it was easier to take the rounds to the baking sheet and then cut the centers out in place. Fewer stretched out and misshapen middles that way.
As you might guess, I’ve already made several of these recipes, and I will share with you now a couple of vital bits of intelligence for working with these cut-out cookie recipes:
First, these recipes don’t yield huge quantities of cookies, so there is really no value to creating several separate rounds of dough to wrap and refrigerate. These doughs are super-sticky right out of the mixer, and you’ll drive yourself mad. Just pull out a nice big piece of plastic wrap, dump the dough out of the mixing bowl into the center, and use the plastic wrap to shape it into a round (or a square, or a rectangle – really, who cares? You’re not making pie, here.), and flatten the whole thing to about a 1/2 inch thickness. When you get to the rolling out part, just cut off the amount you want to work with, and add the scraps to the next hunk.
Second, the dough may be rock-hard when you take it out of the fridge, but it will soften up in mere seconds, so don’t go wandering off to watch “Desperate Housewives” while you wait for it to become more pliable.
Third – and most importantly – whenever you see the words “on lightly floured surface”, that’s code for “keep the bench flour close and use it liberally and often.” You’ll need it.
So, there you have it for Day One, folks! Please visit my cohorts below to see what they came up with today. And drop by again tomorrow for the next installment in The 12 Days of Cookies! Sounds like a freaking soap opera, doesn’t it? Oh, wait.
Andrea of Andrea’s Recipes (honorary member and our founder but not participating this year)
Claire of The Barefoot Kitchen
Courtney of Coco Cooks
Di of Di’s Kitchen Notebook
Judy of No Fear Entertaining
Kelly of Sass & Veracity
Michelle of Big Black Dog
RJ of Flamingo Musings (hey! that’s me!)
Sandy of At the Baker’s Bench
Tiffany of The Nesting Project
In honor of World AIDS Day, even Sly is wearing a red ribbon. We remember.
diva says
awww look at Sly!! gorgeous red ribbon 🙂 i was wondering wht to do today for World Aids Day but dont think I have time to cook something up before uni today. Will wear my red ribbon though 🙂 gorgeous stained glass cookies. can i have one with a glass of milk pretty pls? xx
Judy@nofearentertaining says
SO glad you are joining us this year! Your cookies look wonderful and what an awesome tip for the lemon!!! Can't wait to see what comes up in the next 11 days!
angela@spinachtiger says
Thank you for these beautiful cookies and your support. We never know how a simple cookie can make a difference in a person's life. BTW, I'm ready to bake, so I'll be back. I'm looking for a recipe for SOFT sugar cookies that I can decorate. I'll feature your post on Dec 8.
Andrea Meyers says
I'm so glad you could bake with us this year! I've always thought stained glass window cookies look so pretty for the holidays, and yours are beautiful!
Rosy says
Great post and beautiful cookies. I love how you incorporated them with such a worthy cause.
Barbara Bakes says
Such a pretty cookie and I love lemon. I'm bookmarking this recipe! I'll have to try your lemon zest tip!
kellypea says
Welcome to our baking group this year! Your choice of these cookies and the lovely product has caused me to rethink my list ; ) Thanks for the tip on freezing the rinds of citrus. I usually do it the other way around: zest whole fruit, then either bag them so they won't dry out and we can eat them, or juice them and freeze that for later use. You are SO right on the soft aspect of many of these doughs. I have to dredge up my patience. Seriously!
glamah16 says
Love that tip about juiced lemons. Suppose it could work for oranges, limes as well. Thanks for baking with us and I llok forward to seeing more of your delctable cookies.
Elle says
So pretty! I've always wanted to make these cookies, but rolling out any dough really tries my patience. Nice work!
The Duo Dishes says
We couldn't participate in the 12 days of cookies, but we also cooked red. You chose a great recipe to do both!
Heather says
Poke a hole in the top of these and steal Sly's ribbon for a loop and you have a pretty cool cookie ornament! So pretty!
Megan says
Great advice for the lemon peel. The prices are ridiculous, aren't they? The cookies look tasty. Love that you went red! 🙂
Alice Audrey says
You are a braver soul than me. No way I dare have that many cookies around.
Di says
Those look great! And what a great way to combine the 12 Days of Cookies with World AIDS Day. Looking forward to seeing what other cookies you post!
Michelle says
LOVE>>>LOVE>>>LOVE the lifesaver idea..what a hoot! Still love ButterRum Lifesavers!Beautiful Linzer Cookies and thanks for the feedback on the wonderful lemon taste!
Dina says
your cookies are so pretty!
Dina says
your cookies are so pretty!
angela@spinachtiger says
I had to come back again to look at the cookies. You have given great instructions and I love your tip on the lemon zest. I didn't realize these stained glass were hard candies. So do they get softer when baking?