12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (2024)

Home Recipes Cooking Style Baking

ByAmy Glander and Lisa Kaminski

Taste of Home's Editorial Process

Updated: Feb. 05, 2024

    Whipping up bakery-perfect sugar cookies only requires two basic ingredients: a little love and a little baking know-how.

    1/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (1)

    Taste of Home

    There’s nothing more indulgent than taking that first bite into a soft, tender cookie. The classic sugar cutout cookie is twice as nice because these sweet treats offer the opportunity for creativity and fun. You can shape, frost and decorate to your heart’s content, and they can be stylized to reflect your favorite holidays and occasions, like Christmas and Halloween.

    Before you whip up a batch of cute creations, brush up on these helpful tips to ensure good and consistent baking results.

    Check out our Christmas Cookies Baking Guide!

    2/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (2)

    Taste of Home

    Choose the Right Fat (Preferably Butter)

    Julia Child famously quipped, “Life is too short for fake butter or fake people.” Amen! Butter is the ideal fat for cookies because it adds the best flavor. However, stick margarine (with at least 80% fat content) and shortening will also yield good results. All three fats tenderize, add moisture, carry flavors and provide richness to cookies, so it all comes down to your recipe or personal preference.

    Avoid whipped, tub, soft, liquid or reduced-fat products as they contain air and water and will produce flat, tough cookies.

    3/13

    Soften Your Butter

    When creaming butter or margarine with sugar, it should be softened first. (You should be able to make an indentation in a stick of butter with your finger and a table knife will be able to glide through it.)

    If you forgot to take the butter out of the refrigerator prior to baking, resist the urge to zap it in the microwave to soften. The butter may end up too soft or possibly even melted. This will result in cookies that will spread too much and turn out greasy. Follow these easy tips for softening butter when you’re pressed for time.

    4/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (4)

    Taste of Home

    Don’t Overmix

    Here’s the key when mixing the batter: Be gentle! Overmixing or handling the batter too much results in the gluten in the flour forming elastic gluten strands. You’ll end up with dense, tough cookies. And this goes for all cookies—not just cutouts!

    5/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (5)

    Chill the Dough

    For easier handling, chill the cookie dough for 1 to 2 hours before rolling out. This is especially true if the dough was made with butter rather than shortening. Once chilled, lightly dust your work surface and rolling pin with flour to prevent sticking.

    6/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (6)

    Show That Dough Who’s Boss

    Roll out the dough as evenly as possible to the recipe’s recommended thickness (here’s how to roll out cookie dough like a pro!). Most recipes suggest rolling the dough to ¼-inch thick because it’s easy to work with (less breakage) and achieves a soft, tender cookie. Roll out a portion of dough at a time and keep the remaining dough in the refrigerator. Roll out from the center to the edge, keeping a uniform thickness and checking the thickness with a ruler.

    If the thickness of the dough is uneven, the cookies will bake unevenly. Thinner cookies will be crispy and may burn, while thicker cookies will be chewy.

    7/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (7)

    Keep Cutouts Intact

    Cutting the perfect shapes with cookie cutters and successfully transferring them to the cookie sheet intact can be tricky (we’ve all had a dud or two). But with a little practice, you can master cutouts like a pro.

    First, dip the cookie cutter in flour, then press the cutter into the dough. Lift each cookie with a small metal spatula or pancake turner to support the cookie as it is moved to the baking sheet.

    As a general rule, keep the cookies about the same size and thickness per batch for even baking. If you’re using a variety of sizes of cookie cutters, that’s not a problem. Just bake the smaller cookies in one batch and the larger ones can go in the oven next.

    8/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (8)

    Taste of Home

    Don’t Reroll the Dough Too Many Times

    Rerolling and shaping the dough, much like overmixing, can make your cookie dough tough. Try to limit how many times you reroll your scraps (the same way you would with biscuits). Once is enough and then bake up any irregular scraps for a snack.

    9/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (9)

    Be Mindful of Your Cookie Cutter Placement

    To prevent rerolling the dough more than necessary, try to place your cookie cutters strategically. Place the shapes close together so you minimize scraps.

    10/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (10)

    Taste of Home

    Use the Right Baking Sheets

    Use heavy-gauge dull aluminum baking sheets with low sides. In general, lining the cookie sheets with parchment paper is also a good idea.

    When a recipe calls for greased baking sheets, use shortening or cooking spray. Dark finishes may cause the cookies to over brown. Insulated baking sheets cause cookies to be pale in color.

    11/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (11)

    Evenly Distribute Cookies on the Baking Sheet

    Unless the recipe states otherwise, place each cookie 2 to 3 inches apart on a cool baking sheet. Leave at least 2 inches around the baking sheet and the oven walls for good heat circulation. For best results, bake only one sheet of cookies at a time. If you prefer to bake two sheets at once, switch the position of the baking sheets halfway through the baking time.

    12/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (12)

    Shutterstock/plantic

    Check Your Oven Temperature

    Use an oven thermometer to check the accuracy of your oven temperature. A few degrees too hot or too cool may cause the cookies to be under- or over-baked. Use a kitchen timer and check cookies when the minimum baking time has been reached, baking longer if needed. Follow doneness tests given in individual recipes.

    13/13

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (13)

    Allow Sufficient Cooling Time

    Unless otherwise directed, let cookies cool for 1 to 2 minutes on the baking sheet before removing them to a wire rack to cool completely. Once they’re entirely cool, you can feel free to decorate.

    Additionally, allow the baking sheets to cool completely before placing the next batch of cookie dough on them. The heat from warm baking sheets will soften the dough and cause it to spread.

    Originally Published: November 20, 2020

    Author

    Amy Glander

    Amy is a former book editor at Taste of Home where she poured her passion for food and storytelling into a range of trade and series cookbooks. When she's not writing or editing, you'll find Amy cooking and baking from vintage cookbooks and exploring Milwaukee's urban beauty with her DSLR camera in hand.

    Read More

    Author

    Lisa Kaminski

    Lisa is a former editor of Taste of Home and a fantastic baker. During her tenure, she poured her love of all things sweet (and sometimes savory) into Taste of Home’s Bakeable community. She also tested ingredients and kitchen gear. Today, Lisa continues to share her passion for baking and embroidery on her blog Cabin in the City.

    Read More

    12 Secrets to Baking the Best Cutout Cookies (2024)

    FAQs

    What is the trick to cut-out cookies? ›

    In general, metal cookie cutters are sharper than plastic and will give you better results. Whichever type of cookie cutter you choose, flour it and then set it on the rolled-out dough and press straight down. Try not to jiggle or twist the cookie cutter as you use it.

    What does baking powder do in cutout cookies? ›

    Baking powder simply adds carbon dioxide to the equation, providing a more forceful pressure that encourages a dough to spread up and out. Without the well-developed elasticity of a bread dough, the strands of gluten in cookies would sooner snap than stretch, cracking along the surface.

    What is the secret to making the best cookies? ›

    The key is to always use top-quality ingredients as they'll result in a better cookie; it really is that simple.
    1. Always use butter.
    2. Choose the right sugar.
    3. Choose the right flour.
    4. Check your flour is in date.
    5. Choose the right kind of chocolate.
    6. Cream the butter and sugar.
    7. Beat in the eggs.
    8. Fold in the flour.

    Is butter or shortening better for cut-out cookies? ›

    Which One Should I Use in Cookies? Basically, cookies made with butter spread more and are flatter and crisper if baked long enough. However, they are more flavorful than cookies made with shortening. Cookies made with shortening bake up taller and are more tender, but aren't as flavorful.

    How to stop cut-out cookies from spreading? ›

    Always pop the cut cookies back into the freezer for a few minutes until solid again. From there you can put them straight into the oven. Even better is that once frozen you can re wrap your pre-cut cookies in cling film and place in an air tight container and keep them this way already pre-cut and ready to go!

    What makes cookies fluffy baking soda or powder? ›

    Baking soda is generally about three times stronger than baking powder, so adjust your recipe accordingly. Baking soda and baking powder can produce cookies with different textures. Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies.

    Why do my cut-out cookies lose their shape? ›

    Too much baking powder can cause the cookies to spread too much. The other usual reason is that the cookie dough is very warm when it goes into the oven, which means that the butter melts too quickly as the cookies bake and causes spreading.

    What happens if you use too much baking powder in cookies? ›

    Too much baking powder can cause the batter to be bitter tasting. It can also cause the batter to rise rapidly and then collapse. (i.e. The air bubbles in the batter grow too large and break causing the batter to fall.) Cakes will have a coarse, fragile crumb with a fallen center.

    What not to do when making cookies? ›

    Common Cookie Baking Mistakes:
    1. Cookies not baking evenly.
    2. Overcrowding the pan.
    3. Not chilling the dough.
    4. Using wrong flour.
    5. Too much butter softening.
    6. Using stale baking powder or baking soda.
    7. Overworked the dough.
    8. Measuring ingredients incorrectly.
    Jan 31, 2023

    What is cookie secret? ›

    Cookie Secret is the secret used to encrypt and sign session cookies. If you don't provide a cookie secret, Pomerium will generate one for you.

    What makes cookies chewy and not hard? ›

    The science is simple: According to the flour authorities over at Bob's Red Mill, cornstarch can help “soften the rigid proteins of the flour, resulting in a light and chewy dessert.” “The cornstarch complements the flour in absorbing the liquids, but won't develop gluten structure like the flour will,” stresses ...

    Why is my cutout cookie dough too crumbly? ›

    To avoid this, try using as little flour as possible while preparing to roll your dough. Dry – “Dry” or “Crumbly” dough is a product of over-mixing or using too much of any ingredient during the mixing process. This can be reversed by adding one to two tablespoons of liquid (water, milk or softened butter) to your mix.

    How do you keep cutout cookies in shape? ›

    Sandwich your dough between two sheets of parchment, roll, then freeze; it makes cut-out cookies a breeze! If you plan to store it for only a few hours or days, there's no need to overwrap the baking sheet; for longer storage, wrap the entire baking sheet tightly with plastic wrap before freezing.

    How long do you chill cookie dough before rolling? ›

    As a general rule of thumb, you should refrigerate cookie dough for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. More than that, and you won't see a noticeable difference in the final product. Once the dough has chilled, let it warm up at room temperature until it's just pliable (about 5 to 10 minutes).

    What is the cookie cutter method? ›

    If you describe something as having a cookie-cutter approach or style, you mean that the same approach or style is always used and not enough attention is paid to individual differences. Too many cookie-cutter condos were built with no attention to consumer needs.

    What is the best way to cut bar cookies? ›

    To make precise and accurate cuts, insert three toothpicks, evenly spaced, along all four sides of the cooled bars. Cut diagonally across the bars beginning in one corner—the lower left corner is an easy place to make your first cut—and cutting from one toothpick to the next closest on the perpendicular side.

    References

    Top Articles
    Latest Posts
    Article information

    Author: Carlyn Walter

    Last Updated:

    Views: 5714

    Rating: 5 / 5 (50 voted)

    Reviews: 89% of readers found this page helpful

    Author information

    Name: Carlyn Walter

    Birthday: 1996-01-03

    Address: Suite 452 40815 Denyse Extensions, Sengermouth, OR 42374

    Phone: +8501809515404

    Job: Manufacturing Technician

    Hobby: Table tennis, Archery, Vacation, Metal detecting, Yo-yoing, Crocheting, Creative writing

    Introduction: My name is Carlyn Walter, I am a lively, glamorous, healthy, clean, powerful, calm, combative person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.