Drop Sugar cookies are soft, chewy, melt-in-your-mouth sugar cookie perfection! Without even the slightest hesitation, I can declare this to be our family’s all-time favorite Christmas sugar cookie recipe.
If you polled them, it wouldn’t be just a wide majority. I believe you would get a 100% affirmative from each of them! These sugar cookies are that good!
Frosted Drop Sugar Cookies are the first cookies to disappear out of all that I make each year. (Even the ones I hide. lol)
My Drop Sugar Cookie recipe is the one everybody wants more of. That everyone wants the recipe for. That are most often requested for parties.
They also happen to be about the easiest cookie I make. What’s better than that?
Wanna know a secret? I make these all year round, not just for Christmas. Yeah…they’re that kind of easy and delicious!
Enjoy, my friend!
The Ingredients
For the Cookies:
- Butter I use salted butter, but use your own preference. It doesn’t seem to affect the outcome of this drop sugar cookie recipe.
- Granulated Sugar
- Eggs
- Vanilla Extract
- All Purpose Flour
- Baking Soda
- Salt
For the Frosting:
- Butter
- Vanilla Extract
- Milk
- Powdered Sugar (confectioner’s sugar)
FAQ’s
I don’t recommend rolling and cutting drop cookie dough. Technically, you could chill it and then put it between two sheets of parchment and roll it out. Then you could cut the cookies out. After that you would need to chill the cut cookies before baking and even then, this particular dough will spread more than you typically want for cut-out cookies. Your cookies will lose any definition and design during baking. This dough was made for delicious drop sugar cookies. In a few weeks, I’ll share a good cut-out cookie recipe.
Baking powder creates a bigger rise and a lighter, “cake-like” crumb. We want these cookies to be soft and chewy, not cake-like, so I don’t use any baking powder. Baking soda is the only leavening necessary.
No Need for Rolling and Cutting
It was so important to me to stress that you can still have fun and nicely decorate these delicious, soft and chewy sugar cookies.
If you don’t have the tools or patience for rolled and cut-out sugar cookies, you can still create wonderful decorated cookie designs.
Last year, before our family Christmas Eve get-together, my daughters, daughter-in-law and granddaughters all got together at my house for a sugar cookie baking and decorating party.
You guys! It was so much fun and hopefully the beginning of a new holiday tradition.
With just a basic buttercream recipe, these soft and chewy sugar cookies can be frosted and decorated to fit any occasion. We used butter knives or icing spatulas to simply spread the frosting over the tops of the cookies.
Then with some piping bags and half a dozen of the most common decorator tips, some mini M&Ms and various Christmas cookie and cake sprinkles, we set to decorating our sugar cookies.
I think everybody had great ideas and I love how varied the designs were. From the youngest to the oldest, everybody just created what made them happy. I think they turned out great!
And what a fun family time we had doing it! You guys have to plan a drop sugar cookie decorating party, this year! It’ll be a blast!
How to Make Frosted Drop Sugar Cookies
There’s no big secret to these delicious cookies. It’s the basic cookie formula, again.
- Cream the butter and sugar.
- Beat in the eggs and vanilla.
- Add the dry ingredients and mix until everything is fully incorporated.
- Drop them by the cookie-scoopful onto greased or lined cookie sheets.
- Bake 8 to 10 minutes. The trickiest part of the whole recipe will be figuring out the time for your specific oven. (When I’m figuring that out, I’ll bake one sugar cookie, just to get a feel for how the dough acts in my oven.)
How to Know When the Cookies are Done
These cookies will puff up in the oven, the tops will have lost their dampness.
When you touch one, lightly, with your finger, the top of the cookie will feel dry, but you will be able to tell it’s still super soft in the middle. That’s when you pull them out of the oven. Trust me.
Set the cookie sheet right on your cooling rack for several minutes. The cookies will finish “baking” and setting up.
As they cool, they will lose there puffiness and be flatter. The tops may even look a little “wrinkled”.
You’ve done everything perfectly. That’s exactly how they should be. After 3 or 4 minutes transfer the cookies to a cooling rack to finish cooling.
Decorating Sugar Cookies
When they are completely cool, these scrumptious sugar cookies are soft and chewy.
You can get as elaborate or as simple as you want with your decorating.
Simply spread the frosting over the sugar cookie tops and call it good. That’s what we do when it isn’t Christmastime.
Or break out the piping bags, candy and sprinkles to create your own beautiful sugar cookie masterpieces.
However you decide to decorate them, you my friend, are going to get the title of Christmas Cookie Royal Baker when you put these out for friends and family.
Yes. Be prepared for Christmas Cookie infamy. It belongs to you, now!
Much love and Merry Christmas!
As always, thanks so much for being great supporters and my favorite blog readers!
If you do make drop sugar cookies using this recipe, i hope you’ll consider dropping by, again and leaving a comment on this post with a 5 star rating.
Those 5 star ratings help other readers find our recipes when they do searches on Google.
Thanks so much and happy baking!
The Recipe
PrintFrosted Drop Sugar Cookies
- Total Time: 18 minutes
- Yield: 36–40 cookies 1x
Description
Drop Sugar cookies are soft, chewy, melt-in-your-mouth sugar cookie perfection! Without even the slightest hesitation, I can declare this to be our family’s all-time favorite Christmas sugar cookie recipe.
Ingredients
For the Cookies:
- 1 cup butter
- 2 cups sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 Tablespoon vanilla
- 3 to 3 1/2 cups flour
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp salt
For the Frosting:
- 1 cup butter
- 2 Tablespoon vanilla
- 2 Tablespoons milk
- 2 lbs. powdered sugar
Instructions
- Cream together butter and sugar.
- Add the eggs and vanilla and beat to combine.
- Add the flour, baking soda and salt and mix until all ingredients are combined.
- Drop by cookie scoop onto a greased or lined baking sheet.
- Bake at 350° for 8 minutes. (Cookies will be puffed up and super soft. They will be barely dried on top. I promise, if you want soft, chewy cookies, you need to pull them out, now. Place the cookie sheet on a cooling rack and allow the cookies to set for 3-5 minutes before taking them off the pan. They will lose their puffiness as they settle.)
- To make frosting, beat all ingredients together with a hand mixer or in a stand mixer, until a thick creamy frosting has formed.
- Frost completely cooled cookies. You can add sprinkles or decorations if you choose.
- Store in airtight container once frosting has set up.
Notes
These freeze extremely well. Put wax paper between the layers if stacking. If freezing, you can frost them, but I would avoid sprinkle decorations as those will bleed as the cookie thaws.
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 8 min
- Category: Desserts, Cookies
- Cuisine: American
More Deliciously Easy Christmas Cookies and Desserts
- Spritz Cookies with Jam, from Wendy over at Wendy Polisi blog
- Easy Yule Log Recipe, from Laura, at Little House Big Alaska
- Christmas Sandwich Cookies, from Arlene, at Flour on My Face
- Raspberry Jam Shortbread Cookies, from Lois, at Walking on Sunshine Recipes
- Fat Gingerbread Man Cookies, from Lenny, at Fat Dad Foodie
- Chocolate Crinkle Cookies.