Warning! While this approach was probably more or less OK for the original poster, it isn't really a good idea in general. In particular, note (as per the comment thread) that artificially manipulated tokens have been reported to cause problems in more complicated applications, so if you are using them, be sure to stick to the basic Win32 API. There are of course also potential security implications.
In most scenarios similar to those of the OP, it would probably be preferable to replace the shortcut that launches the elevated application with a launcher application. The launcher can then remain running for as long as the elevated application is running, and provide a natural limited token for the elevated application to use to launch non-elevated processes.
There's code for launching a low integrity process, which is analogous to your case, in the Designing Applications to Run at a Low Integrity Level article in MSDN.
First, you duplicate the process token, since you can't (or at least shouldn't) mess about with a token that is already being used. Then you use SetTokenInformation with the TokenIntegrityLevel class to set the integrity level. There appears to be a bug in the example code, since the correct SID for low integrity level is S-1-16-4096 rather than S-1-16-1024, but you'll want medium integrity level anyway, which is S-1-16-8192. These can be found here.
Once you have this working (that is, once you are able to launch medium integrity processes from your high integrity process) you should try using CreateRestrictedToken to create the new token instead of DuplicateToken, and remove the Administrators token and all privileges (except SeChangeNotifyPrivilege). Otherwise, the new processes will have medium integrity but still have administrator privilege, which could make it easier for any malicious code that might be running in the same session to elevate its privileges.
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