Easy Sugar Cookie Recipe (With Frosting!) – Sugar Spun Run

These are my favorite sugar cookies! This recipe makes a simple, versatile vanilla sugar cookie; the dough is easy to roll and to work with and doesn’t spread when baking, so your cookies will always have sharp, defined edges!  You can decorate these cookies with sanding sugar, or you can use my recipe below for a simple (and tasty!) pipeable vanilla sugar cookie frosting.

This is just a friendly reminder that Christmas is officially less than one month away, so if you aren’t freaking out yet about not having all of your Christmas shopping done, or even started, now is the time to start freaking out.

Wait.  Breathe.  Have a (sugar) cookie.

I’m trying not to freak out, but I have 1 husband and 7 family members (plus two birthdays before Christmas) that I need to buy for just on my side.  They’re also aggressively hounding me to know what I want for Christmas, and my wish list currently has exactly two items: This gorgeously colored KitchenAid that I definitely don’t need because I already have one in an equally gorgeous color (affiliate), and like 6 of those robot vacuum cleaners (affiliate) (because three dogs!)… Affordable options for my 12 year old sister, right?  If you have any baking must-haves that I need on my list, send them my way!

While my gift buying situation is not at all under control, I at least have the Christmas cookie situation locked down with this easy sugar cookie recipe.  I started working on this recipe a long, long time ago, but made myself wait until after Thanksgiving to finally share it.

These are easy cut-out vanilla sugar cookies and are destined to be your future cookie platter staple.  Sugar cookie dough always shocks me with its simplicity, it only calls for a few ingredients and no fancy techniques.

When you first make your dough, it will be a bit sticky and tough to manage so you are going to need to chill it before you can roll it out.  I divide my dough into about two equal parts, wrap each in cling wrap and form it into a disk, then chill for 2-3 hours (though you can certainly chill it overnight, or even make it several days in advance).

I know, I know, chilling is a pain.  I played with some no-chilling-required recipes, though, and this recipe that required chilling beat out all of my no-chill sugar cookie recipe versions, so trust me when I tell you that the wait is worth it!  It also makes your dough very easy to manage when it comes time to roll it out, simple and frustration-free.

For the frosting for these cookies, I did not use a royal icing, which I know is popular. Truthfully, I don’t really love the taste of royal frosting, and I know many of you don’t keep meringue powder in your cabinets or feel comfortable making egg white frosting.

Instead, I used the same frosting that I used for my Galaxy Cookies, it’s easy to make, easy to pipe, and dries hard for stackable cookies.  This recipe uses light corn syrup (which is not the same as high fructose corn syrup!) for a nice shiny frosting.

I frosted my cookies and then topped a few of them off with colored sugars, but if you want to skip the frosting you can sprinkle your cut-outs with sanding sugar just before baking.  This is the way my mom always makes her sugar cookies, they still taste delicious!

Tips for making perfect sugar cookies:

Alright, that’s how you make perfect, easy Sugar Cookies from scratch.  Hopefully you guys love cookies as much as I do because I have so many more coming up this month that will be great for your holiday cookie platters (especially excited to share my gingerbread cookie recipe — coming soon!).

Enjoy!!

If you like my sugar cookies, make sure to try out my chocolate chip cookies!

Easy Sugar Cookies & Sugar Cookie Frosting

This is a great and easy recipe for Sugar Cookies and a sugar cookie frosting.
4.81 from 183 votes

Sugar Cookies

Sugar Cookie Frosting

Combine butter and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer (or in a large bowl and use an electric hand mixer) and beat until creamy and well-combined.
Add egg and vanilla extract and beat until completely combined.
In a separate, medium-sized bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, and salt.
Gradually add dry ingredients into wet until completely combined.
Lay out a large piece of plastic wrap and transfer approximately half of the dough onto the wrap (dough will be quite sticky at this point, that’s OK!).
Cover with clear wrap and mold into a disk.  Repeat with remaining cookie dough in another piece of cling wrap.  Transfer dough to refrigerator and chill for at least 2-3 hours3
Once dough has finished chilling, preheat oven to 350F (175C) and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.  Set aside.
Generously dust a clean surface with flour and deposit one chilled cookie dough disk onto the surface.  Lightly flour the dough and roll out to 1/8″ (for thinner, crispier cookies) or 1/4″ (for thicker, softer cookies).  Continue to add flour as needed both on top of and beneath the dough so that it doesn’t stick.
Use cookie cutters to cut out shapes and use a spatula to transfer shapes to prepared baking sheet.4 
Bake on 350F (175C) for 9-10 minutes5, or until edges just begin to turn lightly golden brown.
Allow cookies to cool completely on cookie sheet before moving and frosting.

Sugar Cookie Frosting

Combine sugar, 2 Tablespoons of milk, corn syrup, and vanilla extract in a medium-sized bowl and stir until combined. If frosting is too thick, add more milk, about a teaspoon at a time, until the frosting is thick but pipeable. If you accidentally add too much milk, add powdered sugar until desired texture is reached.  
If coloring the frosting, divide into bowls and color as desired at this point.
Transfer frosting to a piping bag with a piping tip (I used Wilton 5), or place in a Ziploc bag and snip a small piece of the corner off (not as neat, but this will still work, just take care that the frosting isn’t so thick that it breaks open the seam of the bag when you are squeezing).  
Pipe frosting on cookies and decorate with decorative candies, if desired.
Allow frosting to harden before enjoying (this took several hours for me and may vary for you depending on the consistency of your frosting)
Keep uneaten cookies sealed in an airtight container at room temperature.  
*Yield varies greatly depending both on how thick you roll the dough and the size of the cookie cutters that you use.  This recipe can be doubled.

**You may also cut the vanilla extract down to 3/4 teaspoon and add 1/4-1/2 teaspoons of either almond or lemon extract (or just about any other extract you’d like!)

(3) You may chill this dough longer, overnight or even up to several days.  If the dough is too firm to roll out and starts to crack, let it rest at room temperature for about 10-15 minutes before continuing to roll.

(4) If you don’t intend to frost your cookies, then you can just sprinkle them with sanding sugar for decoration at this point.

(5) My cookie cutters were about 3″ in length, if you’re using smaller cookie cutters you will need to bake for less time, keep an eye on the edges of your cookies to know when they are done.

I like to use Americolor gel food colorings. This kit (affiliate) includes the “Red Red” and “Leaf Green” colors that I used

**You may also cut the vanilla extract down to 3/4 teaspoon and add 1/4-1/2 teaspoons of either almond or lemon extract (or just about any other extract you’d like!)

I like to use Americolor gel food colorings.

Serving: 1cookie (approximate, this will vary depending on size of your cookie cutters) | Calories: 75kcal
Tried this recipe?Mention @SugarSpun_Sam or tag #sugarspunrun!

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I filmed myself making these cookies LIVE on my Facebook page 11/30.  Here is the re-play! 

This content was originally published here.