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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Melting hard candies in the oven or on the stovetop saves time versus making hard candy from scratch. This shortcut works well when you want to make stained glass sugar ornaments, windows for gingerbread houses, a windshield for a car cake, or to achieve the look of water. The oven method is best for retaining color detail in candy or to achieve a marbleized effect with multiple colors.

Stovetop

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Divide the hard candy by color into separate zipper seal bags so you can melt each color separately.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Set each bag on a hard work surface and lay a towel over it. Pound the candy with a mallet or roll over it with a rolling pin to crush it into smaller pieces. Crush the candy first so it melts faster and more evenly.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Add the candy to a saucepan with a thick bottom; the thick bottom helps prevent burning. In the absence of a thick-bottomed pan, add the crushed candy to a double boiler with water in the bottom part of the boiler.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Turn the burner to "low" and monitor the pan carefully. Boil the water on medium-low to medium heat if you use a double boiler.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Stir the candy frequently at the first sign of melting -- the candy will begin to shift in the pan slightly as it melts. Remove the pan from the heat immediately after all bits of candy are melted, within about 5 minutes. Use immediately because the candy will cool and harden quickly. Hard candy melted in this way can be poured into molds to make lollipops, into metal cookie cutters to make candy shapes, or poured in a baking sheet lined with wax paper to make a sheet of candy.

Oven Method

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Preheat the oven to 300 to 350 degrees Fahrenheit depending on the presence of cookie dough in your process. A temperature of 300 F is actually best for melting the candies by themselves without scorching, but when you melt candy inside a cookie cutout, the recipe might require a 350 F setting.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Line a baking sheet with wax paper or aluminum foil. Cut the paper or foil large enough to extend up the sides of the pan to keep the melted candy mess contained.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Crush the candy on a hard work surface. Fill in the cutout of a cookie on the baking sheet, making a slight mound above the top of the cookie dough. For example, roll out sugar cookie dough and cut out a large star shape. Cut out a smaller star shape from the large star, filling in the small star with crushed candy for a glass-like effect. Another option is to place metal cookie cutters on the baking sheet, filling in the space with crushed candy to make glass-like candy shapes. Or instead of crushed candy, use whole candies in different colors to make a marbleized design. Alternatively, line up the candy in even rows and columns so it melts in a rectangular, tray-like form.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Bake the candy for 5 to 7 minutes or until the candy is melted and completely flat. Monitor the candy constantly after about 5 minutes and remove it just before the hot candy begins bubbling so it doesn't scorch.

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Laura Beth Drilling/Demand Media

Remove the pan from the oven and set it on a level surface to cool. Transfer the pan carefully, holding it perfectly flat, so the melted candy doesn't slide to one side of the pan. This is especially important when making a tray from hard mint candy when you want to retain the green or red stripe detail. Allow the candy to cool for 20 to 30 minutes or until completely cool and hard.

Tip

Drag a toothpick through the candy to create swirls for a marbleized effect after the setting it on the work surface to cool. You might try this option when you melt different colored candies together in a cookie cutter. Arrange hard candies in rows and columns on a tray with the colors placed randomly. Drag a toothpick in zigzags or swirls to mix the colors. Cut the colored sheet in squares with a pizza cutter after 30 seconds of cooling to make stained glass windows for a gingerbread house or cake.

Some cookies require more baking time than is necessary to melt the candy in the center. If your cookies require a total baking time of 15 minutes, for example, cut the shape out of the center and bake them for about 8 minutes. Remove from the oven and add the candy to the center opening. Return the pan to the oven and continue baking until the candy is melted and the cookies are done.

Boil a pan of water on another burner while you melt the candy in a saucepan. Pour the boiling water into the candy pan immediately after pouring out the melted candy to prevent the residual candy from sticking to the bottom of the pan.