Christmas Sugar Cookies (Beginner Tips + Icing Recipe Included) (2024)

Christmas sugar cookies are a wonderful holiday tradition to make with family. Bake the cookies in advance and have a decorating party. You can use homemade icing or a store-bought version for convenience. Either way, you’ll love this easy sugar cookie recipe!

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Christmas Sugar Cookies

Christmas sugar cookies are a sweet, flakey and a feast for the eyes! I make these every year with my daughter. She gets half of the dough to roll out and make cookies with. Then I give her blank baked cookies on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper to decorate. It’s a lot of fun while we have Christmas music playing in the background.

If you’re looking for a fun Christmas tradition to do with your own family, then I highly recommend this one! If you’ve never made sugar cookies before and think they look intimidating, I want to encourage you to at least try them once. You might surprise yourself! It can be easier than you might think. I’ll walk you through all the troubleshooting, tips and tricks below.

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Christmas Sugar Cookie Ingredients

First, lets cover the ingredients you’ll need:

  • Flour – These cookies are made with 2 cups of all purpose flour.
  • Butter – The butter should be softened at room temperature before making the recipe. Melted butter or cold butter will not produce the same results. Also, margarine will not work.
  • Sugar – You’ll need to use white sugar for best results in these cookies.
  • Other – You’ll also need an egg, vanilla extract, baking powder and salt.

Sugar Cookie Icing

For these cookies I wanted to test my skills at making them completely from scratch. So I made two batches of this sugar cookie icing and divided them in half to create four colors: white, green, red, and yellow.

Here are the icing ingredients:

  • Powdered Sugar – To make one batch of icing, you’ll need 1 cup of sifted powdered sugar. You don’t want any clumps as these will show through in the icing.
  • Light Corn Syrup – Used as a sweetener and “glue” to stick the sprinkle candies on top. Be sure to use light corn syrup in order to get the brightest icing colors.
  • Vanilla Extract – You’ll need ½tsp of vanilla extract.
  • Food Coloring – You can use food coloring gel or liquid. I tried both and found the results to be similiar.

Time-Saving Tip: You can also use store bought cookie icing for this recipe! Making your own sugar cookie icing can be time consuming, but it’s always fun to try new things. If you’d prefer to save time, grab a couple bags of cookie icing from the baking section of your grocery store.

Sugar Cookie Decorations

  • Jimmies – These are the long skinny sprinkles. I used green and red jimmies.
  • Mini Round Candies – I found multi-colored hard mini candies that I used on the snowmen and as Christmas tree decorations.
  • Snowflake Candies – These came in a pack of blue and white snowflake sprinkles together. I used white snowflakes on the mini star cookies.

Cookie Cutters

The snowman and tree cookie cutters that I used were found at a local thrift store. The small star shaped cookie cutters are part of a Wilton mini-cookie cutter pack.

There are so many Christmas themed cookie cutter shapes you could try! Reindeer, stockings, ornaments, santa, and anything else you want!

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Christmas Sugar Cookie Tips

Make the cookie dough the night before. Sugar cookies are a lengthy process. They take a few steps which is why I like to spread those steps out. I like to make the cookie dough to chill overnight in the fridge. The next day I’ll roll out the dough, make cookie shapes and bake them.

Flour Your Surface: Your counter should be clean and sprinkled with flour before rolling out the cookie dough. Sprinkle flour on the rolling pin too. Keep sprinkling the counter and rolling surface with a bit of flour when needed.

Rolling Tips: When rolling the dough, it should be an even thickness, about ⅛” thick. Don’t push too hard with the rolling pin. Instead of grabbing the handles, hold them with the tips of your fingers. This will give you a lighter hand. Less pressure gives you smoother results.

Don’t Overbake: These cookies only need about 6-8 minutes to bake. Let the baked cookies sit on the baking sheet after for 10 minutes, then transfer to a rack to cool completely.

Cookie Icing Tip: After baking, reuse the parchment paper on baking sheet as a backdrop for decorating cookies. This makes it easy to clean up any runaway sprinkles and icing.

The cookies need to be completely cooled before icing, which takes about 1 hour. Icing is the most time consuming part. But it’s also the most fun!

Consider Colors: If you want your cookies to “match” consider the colors you’ll use for icing. I used three colors: green, red and yellow, plus white icing. Primary colors (red, yellow and blue) always look great together. Or try using complimentary colors (ex. pink and green).

If you’re not too concerned and just want to have fun, then you can make any colors you and your family want! It honestly doesn’t matter as they’re going to taste delicious and be fun to decorate no matter what.

Add Decorations While Icing Is Wet: Add sprinkles and candies on top of wet icing. This will allow them to stick.

Let Icing Dry: One color of icing needs to dry before you add another one on top. For example, I let the white icing on the snowmen dry completely before adding the red hat and yellow scarf. The mini candies were added while the white icing was still wet to help them stick.

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More Christmas Baking Recipes

If you’re feeling festive, try these other holiday treats!

  • Snowball Cookies– They look just like snowballs with hidden M&Ms inside.
  • Whipped Shortbread Cookies – Light, buttery, melt in your mouth cookies.
  • White Chocolate Cranberry Oatmeal Cookies– Soft and chewy with the perfect sweetness.
  • Red and Green Coconut Jello Balls– Made with only three ingredients, these are fast and delicious!
  • Applesauce Spice Cookies– Soft cookies sprinkled with cinnamon sugar.
  • Gingerbread House Cake– Made using a nordic ware gingerbread house pan.
  • Christmas Cracker Candy– One of the easiest treats to make and highly addictive!

Did you love this sugar cookie recipe? Be sure to leave a rating below!

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Christmas Sugar Cookies

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Prep Time: 20 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 8 minutes minutes

Decorating Time: 1 hour hour

Total Time: 1 hour hour 28 minutes minutes

Servings: 24 cookies

Ingredients

Sugar Cookies:

Sugar Cookie Icing:

Instructions

Make Sugar Cookie Dough:

  • In a medium bowl, mix together the all purpose flour, baking powder and salt. Set the bowl aside.

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  • In a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar with a hand mixer. Butter should be soft and room temperature before doing this step.

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  • Add in the vanilla and milk. Mix again.

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  • Add in the egg and mix again.

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  • Add ⅓ of the dry flour mixture to the wet bowl ingredients. Beat together on lowest speed.

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  • Repeat with another ⅓ of flour mixture.

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  • Repeat with the last ⅓ of flour mixture.

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  • The dough will start to clump together. You can use your hands at this stage to mix and place into a large ball.

    Note: Don't over mix the cookie dough. Just do enough for it to all come together.

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  • Now divide the dough into two sections and pat into balls. Cover each one with wrap or parchment paper and chill in the fridge for several hours or overnight (I chilled mine overnight).

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Bake Sugar Cookies:

  • When you're ready to make the cookies, preheat the oven to 350°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.

    Tip: Use cooking spray on the baking sheet to help the parchment paper stick and stay in place.

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  • Sprinkle flour over a clean counter space. Take one ball and pat between your hands, use your palms to help flatten it a little. Then use a rolling pin sprinkled with flour to roll the dough into a thin, even layer. Dough should be about ⅛" thick.

    Note: If dough is too hard and cold from chilling in the fridge, let it sit on counter for a few minutes and try rolling again.

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  • Use your cookie cutters to create shapes. Press each one down evenly with the palm of your hand.

    Place the scrap dough in a ball, re-roll it out and make more cookies.

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  • Place the cookies on the baking sheet. Use fingers to fix any edges that might need it.

    Bake for 6-8 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool for 10 minutes on baking sheet.

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  • Gently place each cookie on to a cooling rack to cool completely before icing.

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Sugar Cookie Icing:

  • Note: Skip these next steps if you plan to use store-bought cookie decorating icing.

    In a medium bowl, add sifted powder sugar. Add in the light corn syrup and vanilla extract – mix together.

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  • Add 2 tsp of milk and mix.

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  • Add food coloring until you reach desired color.

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  • Note: If needed, add 1 more tsp of milk at a time to reach desired thickness. The icing should still be thick and not too runny. Otherwise it will pour right off the cookie.

  • Optional: Pour into squeeze bottle using a funnel. Icing will be thick and take a few minutes to pour through funnel.

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Decorate Sugar Cookies:

  • Gently use a knife to spread base layers onto cookie. Use squeeze bottles or store-bought candy icing pens for detailed decorating.

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  • Add sprinkles and small candies to tops of cookies while the icing is still wet. This will help them stick.

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  • For cookies with multiple icing colors, Spread one color over the whole cookie first. Add any candies to this layer if needed (I added the eyes, nose and buttons of snowman at this stage).

    Once icing is dry, you can add other colors on top. This is when I added the red hat and yellow scarf.

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  • Let all icing dry completely before storing cookies.

    Place in an airtight container on counter or in fridge for up to 1 week. These cookies can also be frozen in an airtight container for 3 months.

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Recipe Notes:

Quick Tip Before You Start: Making the icing is time-consuming! It can be hard to get the right consistency too. If you want the challenge then definitely make it!

If you don’t, then use store-bought cookie decorator icing. Honestly, it’s too time-consuming for me and I plan on using the store-bought versions next year.

I loved making these with my daughter though! I plan on doing this every year with her. It’s so fun!

Nutrition

Calories: 103kcal | Carbohydrates: 12g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 5g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 20mg | Sodium: 63mg | Potassium: 16mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 4g | Vitamin A: 168IU | Calcium: 24mg | Iron: 1mg

The nutritional information provided is an estimate and is per serving.

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Christmas Sugar Cookies (Beginner Tips + Icing Recipe Included) (2024)

FAQs

How to ice sugar cookies for beginners? ›

Place the powdered sugar, vanilla, and 2 tablespoons of milk or water for the border icing in a medium bowl and stir together with a spoon or a fork until smooth. It should be quite thick, and if you drizzle a little from your spoon, the ribbon should hold for a few seconds before melting back into the icing.

What tip is best for icing cookies? ›

Use a #1 or #2 tip for this, or a pastry bag with just the very tip snipped off. Go ahead and outline a few cookies at a time, to allow the icing to set a bit.

What is the frosting on sugar cookies made of? ›

Sugar cookies are often decorated with royal icing (a hard icing made from egg whites, powdered sugar, and citrus juice) or fondant (a sugary confection that can be used as a filling, decoration, or icing).

What type of frosting is best for cookie decorating? ›

Royal icing creates clean lines and takes on color to create a vibrant look. It also works for detailed piping and decorating, when you want to make a gingerbread house or small designs.

What is the easiest way to decorate sugar cookies? ›

Here are a few ideas:
  1. Use colored sugars, sprinkles, and edible decorations.
  2. Use melted chocolate and colored icing to create patterns.
  3. Use cookie cutters to create shapes and use icing and decorations to embellish.
  4. Use a toothpick or small brush to create designs with icing.
Jan 23, 2018

How to perfectly ice sugar cookies? ›

Decorate your sugar cookies by first outlining the border, then filling in the middle with flood icing which should settle into itself. Use a toothpick or scribe tool to fill in any gaps by spreading the icing around, then tap the cookie on the counter a few times to help the icing settle into a smooth, even layer.

What different icing tips make? ›

Types of Piping Tips
Piping Tip TypeMost Common Uses
Petal Piping TipsDesigning flower petals, curved decorations, and borders
Grass Piping TipsAdding grass to cakes
Ruffle Piping TipsCreating ribbons, ruffles, swags, bows, scallops, and edges
Basketweave Piping TipsAdding basketweave and lattice lines
12 more rows

What is the difference between royal icing and sugar cookie icing? ›

Cookie icing can be used in the same way that royal icing can; however, it doesn't dry as hard as royal icing does. It's great for flooding cookies or piping designs into wet icing. To thin the consistency of cookie icing, just pop it in the microwave for about 20 seconds.

What's the difference between frosting and icing on cookies? ›

Frosting is the thickest of these confections and is ideal for spreading or piping on cakes, cupcakes and cookies. Icing is a little thinner than frosting and is often poured or piped over coffee cakes, pound cakes, doughnuts and cookies—and it usually hardens when it dries.

Is royal icing or buttercream better for sugar cookies? ›

In my opinion, buttercream sugar cookies are the way to go. If I am going to spend my time decorating cookies (noted it takes less time to decorate buttercream than it takes to decorate royal icing) I want my cookies to taste as good as they look.

How do you decorate sugar cookies like a pro? ›

Start by outlining the cookie with piping-consistency icing in any color you choose. Then, use flooding-consistency icing to fill the outlined area, starting by flooding around the edges and working your way towards the center. If the flooding is inconsistent in thickness, redistribute the wet icing with a toothpick.

What is the difference between royal icing sugar and icing sugar? ›

Icing sugar is also called “10x”, “powdered” or “confectioner's” sugar. It's a very finely ground sugar mixed with about 3% corn starch by weight. Royal icing is made by mixing icing sugar with egg white. Generally a 3:4 ratio of egg whites to cups of icing sugar (3 egg whites to 4 cups icing sugar).

How early can you ice sugar cookies? ›

Follow this tip: Don't rush the cooling process. The first step to making beautifully decorated cookies is making sure the cookies are completely cooled when you begin adding the icing. Play it safe by making it a two-day process: Bake the cookies one day, then decorate the next day.

How long to wait before icing sugar cookies? ›

Many bakers like to let bake their cookies at least a day before decorating to prevent oil spots. Sometimes when using two different icing colors the colors will bleed, especially with black.

How long to wait to ice sugar cookies? ›

Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before decorating. I like to decorate cookies directly on baking sheets so I can stick the entire baking sheet in the refrigerator to help set the icing.

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