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In a large bowl, cream together
the shortening, butter, and sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in the
cream cheese, vanilla, and egg and beat well.
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In a medium-sized bowl, sift
together the flour, ginger, nutmeg, baking soda, and salt. Gradually add
the dry ingredients to the butter mixture, beating until well combined.
The dough will be soft; cover and refrigerate it overnight.
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The next day, remove the dough
from the refrigerator and divide it into quarters. Refrigerate three of
the pieces until needed. Preheat the oven to 375°F. Lightly grease (or
line with parchment) two or three baking sheets.
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Roll each piece of dough to a 1/8-inch thickness on a lightly floured work surface.
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Use a 3 1/2- to 4-inch round
cookie cutter to cut the dough, and immediately transfer the rounds to
the prepared baking sheets, leaving a bit of space between them. Use
another shape cutter if you like; just make sure it leaves enough space
in the middle to cut out the space for the candy filling. Use a smaller
(1 inch or so) cutter in the shape of a circle, heart, star, diamond, or
what-have-you to cut out the centers. A bagel or doughnut cutter works
well here-it cuts out the cookie and its center hole at the same time.
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. Repeat with the
remaining pieces of dough.
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Bake the cookies for 8 minutes, or
until they're barely firm and still somewhat pale; they'll be just
lightly browned around the outer edges. Let them cool on the baking
sheets.
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Place two or three 1-cup ovenproof
glass measuring cups in a 375°F oven to warm. In a medium-sized pan,
combine the sugar, corn syrup, and water, and stir over medium heat
until the sugar is dissolved. Next, without stirring, cook the syrup
until it reaches 300°F to 310°F (hard-crack stage) on a candy
thermometer. Remove the syrup from the heat and take one measuring cup
from the oven. Pour one half (or one third) of the syrup into the
measuring cup, depending on how many colors of filling you want to make,
and stir in the food coloring and flavor of your choice. Leave the
remaining syrup in the pan, set over low heat.
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When the syrup in the cup stops
bubbling, hold the cup with a very thick potholder and pour the syrup in
a then, gentle stream to fill the cookie centers. Stop pouring just as
the syrup comes to the top level of the cookie. Be careful; this is an
extremely hot process and you may need to take a break halfway through
to give your hand a rest. Alternatively, you can use a small (teaspoon)
cookie scoop to dip syrup out of the cup and deposit it in the cookie
centers; fill the scoop about halfway. This prevents the mild discomfort
of holding onto a hot glass for a long time.
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Use the second and/or third cup
and the rest of the syrup, colored and flavored differently, to fill the
centers of the remaining cookies. (If you have any leftover syrup, pour
it into small rounds on a piece of parchment or aluminum foil to make
hard candies.)
Source:
http://www.seriouseats.com/recipes/2009/12/stained-glass-cookies-recipe.html?ref=holidays
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