Classic Sugar Cookies

Updated Aug. 29, 2023

Classic Sugar Cookies
Karsten Moran for The New York Times
Total Time
1½ hours, plus 2 hours' chilling
Rating
4(3,011)
Comments
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Everyone needs a good sugar cookie recipe. If you can master the very simple technique behind this one dough, you have several variations at your disposal, most likely without a trip to the grocery store.

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Ingredients

Yield:4½ dozen cookies
  • cups/510 grams all-purpose flour
  • 1teaspoon baking powder
  • 1teaspoon kosher salt
  • cups/340 grams unsalted butter (3 sticks), at room temperature
  • cups/250 grams granulated sugar
  • 2large eggs
  • 1teaspoon vanilla extract
  • Frosting, glaze or royal icing
  • Edible glitter or food-grade luster dust
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Cooking Newsletter illustration

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    In a large bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder and salt.

  2. Step 2

    In another bowl, using an electric mixer, beat together butter and sugar on medium-high until the mixture is light, fluffy and pale, 2 to 3 minutes. Scrape down sides of the bowl, and add eggs, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add vanilla, and beat until everything is well combined, stopping to scrape down the bowl as needed.

  3. Step 3

    Add dry ingredients all at once, and mix on low speed just until incorporated.

  4. Step 4

    Scrape dough out of bowl and divide it in half. Wrap each piece in plastic wrap, patting into a 1-inch-thick disk. Chill at least 2 hours and up to 5 days.

  5. Step 5

    Heat oven to 325 degrees. Roll out dough, one disk at a time, on lightly floured parchment paper or work surface until it's about ⅛ inch thick. Create shapes, using a lightly floured cookie cutter. (Alternatively, using a knife, cut the dough into squares, rectangles or diamonds.) If at any point the dough becomes too soft to cut and cleanly remove from parchment paper, slide it onto a cookie sheet and chill for a few minutes in the freezer or refrigerator. Gather any dough scraps and combine them into a disk. Roll and repeat the cookie-cutting process, chilling as necessary.

  6. Step 6

    Place shapes onto parchment-lined baking sheets 1 inch apart and bake until cookie edges are lightly browned with sandy, pale centers, 12 to 15 minutes, rotating the sheets halfway through. Cool the cookies on a rack, if you have one. Otherwise, let them cool on the pan. Decorate with a glaze, royal icing, frosting, glitter, food-grade luster dust or whatever you'd like. Don’t forget the sprinkles.

Tip
  • Cookie dough can be made 5 days ahead and refrigerated. Cookies can be baked 2 days ahead, wrapped tightly and stored at room temperature.

Ratings

4 out of 5
3,011 user ratings
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Comments

This is very close to the recipe my mom used in her bakery. We made these without the baking powder. Since we are cutting out shapes we find no leavening results in cookies that keep their shape when baked. And they taste delicious. You can brush lightly with water and sprinkle with colored sugar crystals before baking.

This recipe makes a fabulous drop sugar cookie. I made half of the recipe, with the exception of leaving the vanilla at 1 tsp, made 29 cookies. Chill dough for 20-30 minutes, form balls slightly smaller than a golf ball, roll in Sparkling Sugar, place on ungreased cookie sheet (no parchment needed), slightly flatten with 2 fingers.

Bake at 350 degrees for 14 - 16 minutes, rotate multiple sheets half way through time. Soft cookie with crunchy edge.

It is a Grandchild favorite for both cutting out with cookie cutters and especially decorating. It is very similar to an old Tupperware cookie cutter recipe. To have control of rolling out dough, I would suggest dividing dough in quarters versus halving. Also, a tiny bit of water can be added to the last bits of dough scraps to add moisture for rolling. Fun to make and delicious.

I followed this recipe even after watching the video and wondering why the recipe called for 3 sticks of butter but Alison only used 2 AND reading that they were very hard to roll out b/c they were so soft (even after chilling AND freezing the dough). Although the taste was good, the dough was WAY too difficult to deal with. I divided in 4ths and STILL had to stop and rechill the dough in between cutting 5 or 6 cookies. I will be deleting this from my recipe box.

Perfect Christmas sugar cookie recipe. Made the dough a day in advance. Decorated 1/2 the cookies with just sprinkles no icing - added before baking. Icing & sprinkles for the rest. Icing was confectioners sugar, a little milk, and food coloring.

Recipe was followed exactly. T The amount of sugar was just right, but they were too buttery.

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