Frosted Sugar Cookies
Updated Feb. 13, 2025

- Total Time
- 55 minutes
- Rating
- Comments
- Read comments
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Ingredients
- ½cup/115 grams unsalted butter (1 stick), at room temperature
- 3ounces/85 grams cream cheese, at room temperature
- 1cup/200 grams granulated sugar
- ½teaspoon kosher salt
- 2large eggs, at room temperature
- 1tablespoon vanilla extract
- 2¼cups/285 grams cake flour
- 2teaspoons baking powder
- Sprinkles, for garnish
- 1cup/30 grams freeze-dried raspberries, finely ground in a food processor or spice grinder
- 1cup/225 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks), at room temperature
- 2cups/245 grams confectioners’ sugar
- 1teaspoon vanilla extract
- Pinch of kosher salt
For the Cookies
For the Frosting
Preparation
- Step 1
Make the cookies: In a large bowl, using a spoon, cream the butter, cream cheese, sugar and salt until smooth and fluffy. Add the eggs and vanilla extract, and whisk to incorporate some air and to dissolve the sugar crystals, about 1 minute. Stir in the flour and baking powder until just incorporated.
- Step 2
Heat oven to 350 degrees and line two rimmed sheet pans with parchment paper. Using two spoons or a cookie scooper, plop out 2-tablespoon/50-gram rounds spaced a couple of inches apart. (You should get about 7 to 8 cookies per sheet pan.) Place the sheet pans in the freezer for 15 to 20 minutes until the dough is no longer sticky and easier to handle.
- Step 3
While the dough chills, make the frosting: In a fine-mesh sieve set over a medium bowl, sift the ground raspberries, using a spoon to help pass them through, until most of the ruby-red powder is in the bowl and most of the seeds are left behind in the sieve. (Discard the seeds.)
- Step 4
To the bowl, add the 1 cup butter, confectioners’ sugar, vanilla extract and salt and, with an electric hand mixer, mix on low speed until the butter absorbs the sugar. Then, turn the speed up to high and beat until the frosting doubles in size, about 2 minutes, scraping down the sides of the bowl with a rubber spatula to ensure all the ingredients are incorporated. Transfer the frosting to a small container, cover tightly, and set aside. (You should have about 2 cups of frosting.)
- Step 5
Remove the sheet pans from the freezer. Roll the chilled dough into even balls and flatten them slightly with your fingers so they’re about 2 inches wide and 1 inch high. Bake the cookies for 13 to 15 minutes, rotating the pans and switching racks halfway through, or until they no longer look wet on top, are still light in color and spring back to the touch. They will puff up and crack slightly. Let cool completely on the sheet pan. (They will continue to cook as they sit.)
- Step 6
Using a butter knife or offset spatula, frost each cooled cookie with the raspberry frosting and adorn with the sprinkles.
Private Notes
Comments
Freezer trick that seems to work for small spaces: make the dough and put in a thick line of plastic wrap. Roll into a tube and freeze. Cut the dough into even cylinders and bake. Much easier than making the cookies and freezing on cookie sheets in our small NYC apartment freezer.
Dying to make these today and can't find freeze dried raspberries. Any substitution thoughts?
Trader Joe's sells freeze dried raspberries.
@E Wondering the best way to store the cookies if I make them two days in advance. How did the frosted cookies at room temp fare?
@rasberry sub? Trader Joe's has them if you have access to their store.
Loved the cookie part! So easy and they melt in your mouth. Someone posted a suggestion to freeze the dough in a tube then slice & bake which made things very easy. I didn’t like the raspberry flavor of the icing which surprised me bc I love raspberries — I think I just wanted the classic lofthouse flavor, I.e. sugar :) will leave out next time. I ground the raspberries by running a rolling pin over the bag they came in a couple of times. I have no food processor but this worked perfectly and spares cleaning another thing
In an icing, I really like the favor imparted by freeze-dried strawberries, rather than freeze-dried raspberries, which when fresh, I'm crazy about. Go figure!
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