When I was growing up, I always enjoyed making sugar cookies at Christmas time. Even at a very young age I would spend half an hour carefully decorating a cookie, adding one sprinkle at a time. My sisters would have a whole plate of cookies decorated in the time I would decorate one or two, but mine were little works of art. My mom never quite understood my need to seek perfection (especially on a cookie!), but she knew it was simply a part of who I was. Well, some things never change… I’m quite a few years older now, and a mother myself, but I still find such enjoyment in spending the late hours of the day hunched over a tray of cookies, adding sprinkles with the greatest of care.
One of the nice things about making sugar cookies is that they can be as simple or as detailed as you care to make them. Making sugar cookies with children can be a fun and special activity. Or taking the time to decorate sugar cookies with extra care can produce some really beautiful results, perfect for special gifts. Whatever the end goal, starting with a reliable recipe, and handling the dough with a bit of care will ensure delicious results every time.
Here is the recipe I use, and have made hundreds of times. Most recipes for sugar cookies are extremely similar to this. Some recipes call for almond extract or lemon zest in place of the vanilla extract. I’m sure those variations would produce delicious results as well.
Note (November 2017) – I’ve written an updated post as well as a printable version of this recipe in my post titled –> Perfect Sugar Cookie Recipe.
Rolled Sugar Cookies
3 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 cup sugar
1 large egg
1 teaspoon good quality vanilla extract
Parchment paper
Directions:
-In a medium bowl, stir together the flour and baking powder and set aside.
-In the bowl of an electric mixer, using the paddle attachment, cream together the butter and sugar until light and fluffy. This should take about 3 minutes.
-Add the egg and vanilla and beat another minute or so.
-Add the flour mixture slowly. (Be careful not to add too much at a time or you will have a snowstorm of flour.)
-Blend until all of the flour is incorporated and the dough begins to pull away from the sides of the bowl.
-Take the dough out of the bowl and place it on a piece of parchment paper.
-Using your hands, knead the dough a few times.
-Place the dough in a large plastic (ziplock type) bag and refrigerate for about 2 hours. If you want to speed up the chilling process, place the bag of dough in the freezer for about 20-30 minutes. Just don’t forget it in the freezer, or it will become too firm to work with (and then you’ll have to wait for it to thaw).
-When it’s almost time to remove the dough from the refrigerator (or freezer), preheat oven to 350 degrees (F).
-When the dough has chilled and is firm, take out about half of the dough, leaving the rest in the refrigerator (until your ready to work with it).
Place the dough on a lightly floured work surface. You’ll notice the sticks I have on either side of the dough. These are paint stir sticks (available for free from the paint department of any hardware store). There is a product on the market called Perfection sticks, which are sticks that usually come in a set of a couple different thicknesses. They are designed to help you roll out the dough in a nice even thickness. Since I don’t own Perfection sticks, I just glued two paint stir sticks together, which makes about the perfect thickness for sugar cookies. (So you need 4 sticks total, since you need a double thick stick for each side of your dough.) If I want the dough a bit thinner, I just roll out the dough to the thickness of the sticks, then remove the sticks and roll just a bit thinner.
Place a piece of parchment paper on top of the dough. This helps you roll out the dough without adding additional flour (adding too much flour can make the dough a bit tough, and can create little pockets of flour in the dough that cause bumps to form on your cookies during baking, making it more difficult to decorate later).
Roll out the dough to about 1/3 of an inch thick.
Cut the dough with your choice of cookie cutters. Try to make the best use of the dough you’ve rolled out. Every time you re-roll the dough you add a bit more flour, and can create the flour pockets I mentioned that can cause bumps to form in the cookies while baking.
Place cookie shapes on a prepared baking sheet. I bake my cookies on heavy weight metal baking sheets, topped with Silpat brand silicone liners. Silpat liners are a bit of an investment, since you’ll probably want to have two (I have four) but they are such a great quality product and last a lifetime.
Make sure to only put cookies of similar size on each bake sheet. If you try to bake smaller cookies with larger ones the small ones will be over done before the large ones are baked.
Place entire baking sheet (with cookies on it) in the freezer or refrigerator for about 3-5 minutes. Chilling the cookies this way will help ensure they keep their shape while baking.
Bake cookies for 8-10 minutes depending on the size of the cookie. Bake until they are just barely beginning to take on a golden tone. They will continue to bake as long as then are on the pan, so don’t let then get too brown. Cool for just a minute or so on the pan, then carefully remove cookies from the baking sheet and place on a cooling rack.
This recipe yields about 30, 2 1/2 inch cookies or 16, 3 1/2 inch cookies.
Once cooled, the cookies can be decorated with frosting, royal icing or rolled fondant.
To get you started on the decorating, here are a couple posts,
Basic cookie decorating tutorial (the cookies in this post are mini cookies used as cupcake toppers, but the information can be used for any cookies).
How to make pretty Luau cookies (the same techniques could be used for cookies for any occasion).
I also highly recommend the book Cookie Craft. This is the best and most complete book I’ve found on decorating cookies. This book has gorgeous photos for inspiration, but also has every bit of information you need, including directions and recipes. Despite the thousands of cookies I’ve made over the years, I still come back to this book for ideas or to refresh my memory on a particular technique.
And once your cookies are decorated, take a look at my post HERE on pretty packaging for your cookies
Emi says
Hi Glory,
You are absolutely wonderful for sharing all of these with us. You are talented and awesome! I am addicted t your blog. I am planning the 2nd birthday of my boy, i am going to start practicing as I want to make Elmo cookies, but I am going to start practicing making the cookies, then decoration, etc….
Please i have a question I just have a hand electrical mixer with no paddle attachement just the regular mixers. I dont want to invest yet in a professional mixer with paddle, you think I will be ok?
Glory/ Glorious Treats says
@Unknow- Royal icing and color flow are almost identical, when you are comparing "flood" consistency royal icing to color flow. When I cover my cookies with royal icing, the icing drys firm enough to stack the cookies, but it is not rock hard. The butter in the cookies keeps the icing that is in direct contact with the cookie still a bit soft. My cookies are quite easy to eat, and have just a thin crisp shell, but are still quite soft.
Unknown says
I am just wondering…Why do you use Royal Icing. It is soooo hard. I use the Wilton cookie flow icing that hardens enough to stack (I stand the cookies in a box) and it is soft enough to easily eat. It is easy to work with and people really like it.
Glory/ Glorious Treats says
Miss Q- I'm so glad you gave this recipe a try! It is a very nice dough to work with. You are welcome to add a dash of salt if you like, and it is also essential that you are using a high quality vanilla extract. You may also add more vanilla, or any other extracts or flavoring you like. Have fun experimenting!
Mrs. Q. says
I made these today and I was worried: I usually HATE making rolled cookies. This is such a wonderful dough– nice to roll and use. However, I found them to be a bit… bland? Maybe it's the unsalted butter? I'm not sure, but maybe I'll add more flavoring next time.
And thank you for the wonderful decorating tips!!
Caitlin says
I am wondering if you do one day shipping on your cookies? Or do you just do regular shipping? I'm starting to send cookies to people and I have no Idea how long they are ok for in the mail (icing melting, cookies getting thrown around etc..)
cheryl says
This is probably a question that you've never gotten before. When I bake the cookies, some of them shrink so that I have 3 different sizes of the same cookie. Any suggestions would be great!
Glory/ Glorious Treats says
Tyler, Caitlin, and Leo-
The cookies will be perfectly fine left out overnight while the royal icing dries. The icing preserves the freshness. Once the icing it fully dry, wrap the cookies (in bags or in tupperware) to keep them fresh (up to 7-10 days)
Tyler, Caitlin and Leo says
Thank you so much for the recipe again! I am wondering how you store the cookies for the royal icing to dry? If you leave the cookie out for eight hours and then another 3 for the other parts to dry will they go bad? Should I cover them? I'm making them tomorrow for my friend on bed-rest and I even bought meringue powder!! I'm excited/nervous.. can't wait to see how it will go!!
Anonymous says
Hi Glory,
I just made 1, 5 batch of cookies. While I was doing it I realize I have enough flour only for 1 batch. So I added 1, 5 cup of self rising flour (and I use 1 tsp of baking powder too). My dough is cooling now. But what is going to happen when I bake it? Please help.
Thank you,
Tatyana