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The Secret To Beautiful Cut-Out Christmas Cookies

Salted Brown Butter Cookies

Photo: Lara Ferroni

With a blizzard sweeping across much of the country today and tomorrow, and only four days before Christmas Eve, this weekend is shaping up to be prime cookie-making time. There are few things more tantalizing than the aroma of buttery sweet cookies baking in the oven, but as much as I love the ritual of holiday cookies, I do remember being frustrated as a kid when the shapes I’d cut out didn’t bake up the way I expected. Details disappeared as the dough puffed and spread in the oven. Snowflakes morphed into unrecognizable blobs. Stars bulged and lost their points.

I didn’t know then that the secret to clean-edged butter cookies is to chill the dough repeatedly after it’s rolled out. You want the dough firm and cold when you cut out the cookies, and when you transfer them to the baking sheet, and chilly again when you pop a sheet full into the oven. The freezer makes quick work of this process. Five minutes is often all you need to firm up the dough. The refrigerator can do it, but it takes a lot longer.

Always chill your rolled-out dough on a baking sheet or flat tray. It needs a firm foundation. Being able to fit a baking sheet of cookie dough into the freezer is the reason why I’m a fan of refrigerators with freezers that are either on top or on the bottom. Side-by-side door designs often don’t allow the space for a large baking sheet on the freezer side. If you’re a baker, keep that in mind if and when you renovate your kitchen.

So keep the mantra of chill, baby, chill in your head this weekend when you’re baking, but forget about it when you’re shoveling the snow! And if you’re looking for a terrific recipe for Christmas cookie cut-outs, we are crazy about the salted brown butter cookies pictured above.

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The Holiday Cookie Baker’s Best Friend

Rolling Pin Spacer Bands

Photo: Courtesy of Casabella

With  holiday cookie swaps in full gear, my vote for the greatest—and simplest—bakeware innovation goes to rolling pin spacer bands. They solve an ongoing baking problem—one that vexs holiday cookie bakers particularly—with a design solution so ridiculously simple that you wonder why you didn’t come up with the brilliant concept yourself.

The problem? Rolling out dough—whether cookie or pie—to an even and specific thickness. Eyeballing it is fraught with error, and a ruler, if you can find one—not easy in my cluttered kitchen—is a pain in the neck when you’re talking about 1/4-inch or less. Recipe writers have gotten in the habit of also giving the diameter of the rolled out dough, but that tidbit is only helpful on the first roll of something like a cut-out butter cookie dough. It doesn’t apply to the scraps.

The simple solution? Drum roll, please: Sturdy but stretchable silicone rings in varying thicknesses that slide onto the ends of your rolling pin and raise it above your work surface to the exact thickness you want your dough to end up being. All the guesswork and estimation is gone. Just roll your pin back and forth until it no longer encounters any hills or ridges of dough. This way you know for sure that your dough is even, which means the cookies will bake and color more evenly. No more burnt Christmas cookie tree trunks.

Several companies make the rings, and there’s even a rolling pin that comes fitted with metric-sized discs, but I particularly love the wide, brightly-colored bands made by Casabella that come in four sizes, ranging from 1/2 inch down to 1/16th inch. Because of their heft and intensely saturated hues, no way will I  be losing track of these bands in my gadget drawer!

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