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Christmas cookies hanging on a christmas tree branch

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How to make Christmas cookies

November 8, 2016 • In Baking, Christmas, Family favourites

Give your Christmas cookies a bit of extra sparkle by creating a magical stained glass effect using boiled sweets.

To kick off, we have some Christmas cookies with extra sparkle thanks to a magical stained-glass effect using boiled sweets. These beautiful biccies make lovely edible gifts for Secret Santa, plus they look stunning hanging on the Christmas tree.

STAINED GLASS BISCUITS

You’ll need:

1 clementine

100g unsalted butter (cold)

180g plain flour

50g caster sugar

½ teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 tablespoon milk

12 coloured fruity boiled sweets

Preheat the oven to 180ºC/350ºF/gas 4, and line two baking sheets with baking paper.

Biscuit_ONE.jpg

Finely grate the clementine zest. Cube up the butter then place in a mixing bowl with the flour, sugar, clementine zest and cinnamon.

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Using your fingers, rub the butter into the mix until it resembles fine breadcrumbs.

Add the milk and bring together to make a soft dough. Wrap the dough in clingfilm and place it in the fridge to firm up for about 30 minutes.

Separate the sweets into colours and place in separate sandwich bags. Press the air out and seal the bags, then carefully crush into small pieces with a rolling pin.

Place the dough on a lightly floured work surface, and roll out to 1cm thick.

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Use a selection of large cutters to cut out your shapes and place on the lined baking sheets, then use the smaller cutters to cut a ‘window’ in the centre of each biscuit.

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Sprinkle enough crushed sweets to fill the centre hole (don’t overfill, or the sweets will melt over the biscuit) then use a cocktail stick to make a hole in the top of each biscuit, so you can thread a ribbon through them later. (You can re-roll any dough trimmings to make more biscuits, but you’ll need more sweets. You could also bake the cut-out centres and eat as a treat when decorating the tree!)

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Bake for 12 minutes, or until the biscuits are golden and the sweets have melted.

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Leave them to firm up, then transfer to a wire rack. Thread with ribbon and hang them on your tree.

Biscuits_TEN.jpg

STORING, FREEZING & DEFROSTING

If you want to get ahead before the Christmas rush, you can work up to step four, then freeze the biscuit dough. Either freeze in a ball and allow to defrost in the fridge before rolling out, or cut out your shapes and freeze (without the sweets) on a baking tray. Then simply allow to defrost and add the sweets before baking.

The finished biscuits will keep well for about five days in an airtight container. Alternatively, they’ll last for a day on the tree. Why not hang them on your tree last thing on Christmas Eve and eat them as you unwrap presents the next morning?

MORE FESTIVE BISCUIT IDEAS

When it comes to the smell of the season, it doesn’t get much more Christmassy than gingerbread – and these gingerbread people are just delicious. Either for hanging on the tree, or simply devouring, they’ll put a smile on anyone’s face.

And if gingerbread isn’t your thing, then try these chocolate candy cane cookies. Minty chocolate cookies sprinkled with crushed sweets, they are the perfect Christmas gift

Discover Jamie’s ultimate recipes for all the festive classics in Jamie Oliver’s Christmas Cookbook, on sale now. And take a look at our Christmas hub for ideas for everything from cocktails and edible gifts, to special-diet recipes and tasty leftovers.