Christmas Soft Frosted Sugar Cookies are decorated with a sweet buttercream frosting and festive sprinkles. The only soft sugar cookie recipe you'll need.
Sugar cookies are a classic, crowd-pleasing cookie. These cookies are soft, slightly sweet, and decorated with a sweet buttercream frosting and sprinkles.
The perfect addition to your next holiday cookie tray, and easy to customize for any holiday or event.
These cookies are soft, chewy, and lightly flavored with vanilla extract. The cookies themselves are not too sweet, and perfectly pair with a sweet buttercream frosting.
Ingredients and substitutions
As with most baking recipes, there are not many substitutions I would suggest. Since baking is an exact science, all of the ingredients included are necessary and should not be substituted.
Vanilla extract can be substituted with another extract flavor, like lemon, maple, or peppermint.
If making these cookies without buttercream frosting, I suggest rolling your cookie dough with granulated sugar before baking. Otherwise, the cookies are not heavily sweetened and may seem plain on their own.
Room temperature ingredients
Room temperature ingredients are important when baking cookies because your ingredients will incorporate together into a smooth and even dough.
This will help to make perfect cookies, every time.
Place your eggs and butter on the counter top an hour before starting to bring them to room temperature.
Properly measured flour
Properly measuring your flour is extremely important in baking. The best way to measure ingredients is by using a kitchen scale. If you don't have a scale, I recommend the spoon and level method.
Using a spoon, fill your measuring cup with flour, then level off the top with a knife.
By scooping your flour with the measuring cup, you compact the flour into the cup and add up to 25% extra flour to the recipe. This results in cakey, thick cookies that don't spread well when baked.
Frosting your cookies
I chose to frost my cookies with a buttercream rosette. Check out this quick video on how to make a simple rosette with frosting.
It's surprisingly easy, and makes your cookies look professionally decorated. Plus, you can frost a whole batch in minutes! It's really that easy.
If you'd like more detailed instructions on how to make my buttercream frosting recipe, check out the full post here: American Buttercream Frosting
Christmas Soft Frosted Sugar Cookies
Ingredients
Sugar Cookies
- 1 cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 2 large eggs room temperature
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 3 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon salt
Buttercream Frosting
- ¾ cup unsalted butter room temperature
- 3 cups confectioner's sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 2-3 teaspoons heavy cream
Instructions
Sugar Cookies
- In a large bowl, cream together butter and sugar. Add eggs and vanilla extract and beat until fluffy, about a minute.
- In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Gradually stir dry ingredients into butter mixture until just combined.
- Cover bowl or wrap dough in wax paper. Chill for at 1 hour (up to 24 hours) in the refrigerator. Refrigerating will help the flavors meld and also create a firmer dough to roll into balls.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
- Remove dough from refrigerator and allow to sit at room temperature for 10 minutes. Scoop dough using a 1.5 tablespoon scoop or shape by hand into 1.5 inch balls.
- Place cookie dough balls 2 inches apart onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Flatten the balls slightly using your hands or the bottom of a glass dusted with flour (to prevent sticking). This will ensure your cookies spread and leave you with a nice flat top to frost. Optionally, not flattening dough will give you a thicker, rounded top cookie.
- Bake for 10-12 minutes, or until edges begin to barely brown. Allow to cool for 5 minutes before removing to a wire rack to cool completely.
Buttercream Frosting
- In a medium bowl, combine butter, confectioner's sugar, and vanilla extract. Add heavy cream one tablespoon at a time, or until desired consistency is achieved. Whip until frosting is smooth and spreadable.
- Decorate cookies as desired - spread with a knife or use a piping bag with decorating tip. Cookies shown are piped with a rosette using a Wilton 2D tip.
Equipment Recommendations
Notes
- Use the spoon and level method when measuring flour to prevent thick, cakey cookies. Spoon flour into your measuring cup, then level off with a knife. Scooping flour with your measuring cup will add up to 25% extra flour to your recipe, resulting in dry cookies that won't spread.
- Cookie dough will keep in refrigerator for 2-3 days, or up to 3 months in the freezer.
- Cookies will keep for up to 5 days in a tightly sealed container at room temperature. Add a slice of bread to cookie container to help keep cookies moist. Replace as needed (bread will dry out).
- If not frosting sugar cookies, I suggest rolling in granulated sugar before baking. Without frosting, cookies are not very sweet on their own.
Looks amazing.Can't wait to try.
Thank you!
Will this frosting harden? I need to be able to place the cookies in a ziploc baggie as treats for my daughter's daycare teacher and don't want the icing to get ruined....
Hi Archana! This frosting will form a crust on the outside, like frosting on a cupcake, if left out to dry for several hours. However, the frosting stays soft in the middle so with a bit of force (several cookies stacked on top of each other, or pressing down with your finger) the frosting will get misshapen.
Thank you!