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- What Makes a “Repeat-Every-Year” Christmas Cookie?
- Our Favorite Christmas Cookies (The Annual Lineup)
- 1) Classic Cut-Out Sugar Cookies (The Ornament-Level Icons)
- 2) Gingerbread Cutouts (Spiced, Sturdy, and Slightly Dramatic)
- 3) Spritz Cookies (Tiny Butter Sculptures That Disappear Fast)
- 4) Peanut Butter Blossoms (The Cookie That Wins the Popularity Contest)
- 5) Snowball Cookies (A.K.A. Russian Tea Cakes / Mexican Wedding Cookies)
- 6) Thumbprint Cookies (Jam-Filled, Party-Friendly, and Secretly Fancy)
- 7) Linzer Cookies (The “Wow” Cookie Without the “Why Did I Do This?” Regret)
- 8) Chocolate Crinkle or Gingerbread Crinkle Cookies (A Winter Wardrobe in Cookie Form)
- 9) Shortbread (The Quiet Legend of Holiday Baking)
- 10) Peppermint Bark Cookies (Because Holiday Chocolate Has a Fan Club)
- Holiday Cookie Strategy: A Simple Make-Ahead Plan
- Pro Tips for Christmas Cookie Success (So Your Tray Looks Like a Win)
- Conclusion: Bake, Share, Repeat
There are two types of holiday people: the ones who “just need a few cookies,” and the ones who suddenly own six kinds of sprinkles and start talking about butter temperatures like they’re running a tiny dairy-based science lab. If you’re here, congratsyou’re probably our kind of person.
Every December, we fall into a joyful routine: pick a lineup of Christmas cookies that never lets us down, bake them in a semi-organized frenzy, and then act surprised when the cookie tin “mysteriously” empties before we’ve gifted a single one. Over the years, our favorites have proven themselves in three critical arenas: taste (obviously), holiday vibe (must), and real-life practicality (because nobody has time for a cookie that crumbles if you look at it wrong).
Below is the annual rosterclassic Christmas cookies, a few modern crowd-pleasers, and the tips we’ve learned the hard way (so you don’t have to). Whether you’re building a cookie tray, hosting a cookie exchange, or bribing relatives to assemble furniture, these are the holiday cookie recipes we come back to every year.
What Makes a “Repeat-Every-Year” Christmas Cookie?
A truly great Christmas cookie isn’t just delicious; it’s dependable. It shows up when you need it, performs under pressure, and doesn’t require a three-day meditation retreat to “find itself” before it’s ready to bake. Here’s what earns a cookie a permanent spot on our holiday baking list:
- It tastes like the holidays. Warm spices, butter-forward doughs, peppermint, molasses, toasted nutsflavors that feel like a sweater.
- It scales well. If doubling the batch causes chaos, it’s not invited to the cookie swap.
- It holds up. Sturdy enough for gift tins, cookie boxes, and the inevitable “just one more” drive-by snack.
- It can be made ahead. Freezer-friendly dough and cookies that stay great for days are the unsung heroes of December.
- It’s fun. Decorating should feel festive, not like an unpaid internship.
Bonus points if it brings people into the kitchen. Kids love pressing spritz cookies. Adults love pretending they’re “just cleaning up” while quietly eating half the “test batch.”
Our Favorite Christmas Cookies (The Annual Lineup)
Think of this as a greatest-hits album, except instead of ballads you get butter, sugar, and emotional support from cinnamon. Mix and match for a balanced cookie tray: one decorated showstopper, one spicy classic, one chocolate-heavy option, one nutty melt-in-your-mouth bite, and one “I swear I’m only having one” cookie (spoiler: you’re not).
1) Classic Cut-Out Sugar Cookies (The Ornament-Level Icons)
If Christmas had an official cookie, cut-outs would be running for office. These are the cookies that look like your holiday spirit got a glow-up: trees, stars, candy canes, a suspiciously lopsided snowmanno judgment.
What makes them worth making every year is the combination of flavor + structure. A good cut-out sugar cookie is buttery and vanilla-forward, but also sturdy enough to hold crisp edges. We like dough that chills well and bakes flat so icing actually stays on top instead of sliding into a sugary avalanche.
Make them better:
- Chill the dough. Even 30–60 minutes helps prevent spreading and makes rolling easier.
- Roll between parchment. Less flour, less toughness, fewer “why is my dough sticking?” speeches.
- Use a simple glaze if you hate royal icing. Glaze sets, looks shiny, and won’t demand you learn new piping techniques at midnight.
Easy variations: Add almond extract, citrus zest, or a pinch of nutmeg. Want bakery vibes? Dip half the cookie in melted chocolate once cooled.
2) Gingerbread Cutouts (Spiced, Sturdy, and Slightly Dramatic)
Gingerbread cookies are the extroverts of the holiday cookie world: bold, fragrant, and impossible to ignore. The best gingerbread tastes layeredginger, cinnamon, cloves, and friendswith molasses bringing depth and that unmistakable “it’s December” aroma.
We love gingerbread because it’s both decorative and practical. It holds shapes well, ships like a champion, and is one of the few cookies that somehow tastes even more “holiday” on day two.
Make them better:
- Bloom the spices. Mixing spices thoroughly into the dry ingredients helps distribute flavor evenly.
- Chill before cutting and again before baking. This is the cookie equivalent of taking a deep breath.
- Decorate with intention. White icing on deep brown gingerbread is basically cookie calligraphy.
Easy variations: Add orange zest for brightness, or swap in dark brown sugar for extra caramel notes.
3) Spritz Cookies (Tiny Butter Sculptures That Disappear Fast)
Spritz cookies are what happens when butter decides to be festive. They’re crisp-tender, not too sweet, and wildly satisfying to make with a cookie press. Plus, they come with a built-in party trick: you press out perfect little wreaths, trees, and swirls like you’re running a cookie print shop.
They’re also ideal for cookie platters because they add shape, color, and that classic “grandma definitely made these” nostalgiaeven if your grandma was actually more of a “store-bought pie” legend.
Make them better:
- Use a cool, ungreased baking sheet. Grease can make the dough slip instead of sticking and releasing cleanly.
- Keep the dough soft but not melty. If it’s glossy and droopy, chill briefly.
- Go light on extracts. Almond extract is amazinguntil it tastes like you licked a marzipan candle.
Easy variations: Tint the dough, sprinkle with sanding sugar, or dip one end in chocolate with crushed peppermint.
4) Peanut Butter Blossoms (The Cookie That Wins the Popularity Contest)
Peanut butter blossoms are the extroverted cousin of the classic peanut butter cookie: rolled in sugar, baked until just set, then topped with a chocolate kiss. They’re sweet, salty, and somehow always the first cookie gone at a cookie exchange.
They’re also a practical holiday cookie: easy to batch, easy to freeze, and universally understood by guests of all ages. It’s the cookie version of a warm handshake.
Make them better:
- Unwrap the chocolates before baking. You’ll feel like a genius later when you’re not wrestling foil with oven mitts on.
- Don’t overbake. Pull them when the edges look set; they finish as they cool.
- Press the kiss in gently. Too aggressive and you’ll crack the cookie like it owes you money.
Easy variations: Use dark chocolate or mini peanut butter cups. Roll the dough in red/green sanding sugar for instant holiday sparkle.
5) Snowball Cookies (A.K.A. Russian Tea Cakes / Mexican Wedding Cookies)
Snowballs are proof that the simplest Christmas cookies can feel the most magical. These are buttery, nutty, melt-in-your-mouth cookies rolled in powdered sugar so they look like they’ve been frolicking in fresh snow.
We make them every year because they’re low drama and high reward. They don’t need frosting skills. They don’t need fancy equipment. They just need butter, nuts, and a willingness to accept that your kitchen will look like it hosted a powdered sugar blizzard.
Make them better:
- Toast the nuts. Even a quick toast deepens flavor in a big way.
- Roll twice in powdered sugar. Once warm, once cool. Double coat = double snow.
- Keep them small. Bite-size is part of the charm (and helps portion control… theoretically).
Easy variations: Swap pecans for walnuts or almonds. Add orange zest or a hint of cinnamon.
6) Thumbprint Cookies (Jam-Filled, Party-Friendly, and Secretly Fancy)
Thumbprints look like you planned ahead. In reality, you made a simple buttery dough, rolled it into balls, poked a little crater, and filled it with jam. That’s it. That’s the magic.
We love them because they offer color on the cookie tray without requiring an icing arsenal. A jewel-toned center of raspberry, apricot, or cherry instantly reads “holiday dessert table.” They’re also fantastic for mixing flavorsone dough, multiple jams.
Make them better:
- Chill the dough balls before baking. Helps keep the shape and prevents excessive spreading.
- Use thick jam. Runny jam = sticky cookie lava.
- Try a nutty dough. A little ground almond or hazelnut in the dough turns “cute” into “cookie boutique.”
Easy variations: Fill with lemon curd or chocolate ganache. Roll the dough in chopped nuts before baking for texture.
7) Linzer Cookies (The “Wow” Cookie Without the “Why Did I Do This?” Regret)
Linzer cookies are sandwich cookies with a jammy center and a powdered sugar snowfall on top. They feel bakery-level fancy but are actually approachable if you treat the dough gently and chill it well.
The classic vibe is almond (or hazelnut) cookie + raspberry jam, but we’ve seen versions with apricot, cherry, and even cranberry-orange. They’re festive, they’re pretty, and they’re a nice break from all-butter-everything (even though, yes, there is still butter).
Make them better:
- Plan for chilling. Linzer dough is easier to roll when it’s cold and relaxed.
- Keep the jam layer thin. Too much jam makes sliding sandwich cookiesand nobody needs a cookie landslide.
- Dust tops only. Powdered sugar looks best when it doesn’t melt into jam.
Easy variations: Add citrus zest, swap jams, or use a tiny cookie cutter to make the “window” extra crisp and clean.
8) Chocolate Crinkle or Gingerbread Crinkle Cookies (A Winter Wardrobe in Cookie Form)
Crinkle cookies are the cozy sweater of the Christmas cookie tray: soft centers, crackly tops, powdered sugar drama. Classic chocolate crinkles are rich and fudgy, while gingerbread crinkles give you molasses and spice with that same snowy finish.
These are excellent for beginners because the visual payoff is huge and the technique is simple. Roll, sugar-coat, bake. The crackle happens in the oven like a holiday magic trick.
Make them better:
- Chill the dough. Sticky dough is normal; chilled dough is manageable.
- Use two coatings. Roll in granulated sugar first, then powdered sugar for a bold white crackle.
- Pull them while the centers are still soft. They set as they cool and stay chewy longer.
Easy variations: Espresso in chocolate crinkles for mocha vibes; orange zest in gingerbread crinkles for brightness.
9) Shortbread (The Quiet Legend of Holiday Baking)
Shortbread is understated, and that’s exactly why it’s essential. In a season of maximalist desserts, shortbread shows up with buttery confidence and says, “You’re welcome.” It’s crisp yet tender, not overly sweet, and pairs perfectly with coffee, tea, hot chocolate, and the sound of gift wrap being destroyed.
We love versions with brown sugar for a deeper caramel note, or a pinch of salt to keep things interesting. And because shortbread is sturdy, it’s one of the best cookies for gifting and mailing.
Make it better:
- Don’t overwork the dough. Mix until combined, then stopshortbread likes a gentle approach.
- Dock or score. Fork holes or scored wedges help bake evenly and look classic.
- Finish with sugar. A light sprinkle of coarse sugar adds sparkle and crunch.
Easy variations: Add rosemary and orange zest for a grown-up twist, or dip in dark chocolate for instant sophistication.
10) Peppermint Bark Cookies (Because Holiday Chocolate Has a Fan Club)
Peppermint bark is a seasonal power move, and turning it into a cookie feels like a public service. Think chocolate cookie base, creamy white chocolate pockets, and crunchy peppermint bits. You get the nostalgic candy-cane flavor without having to chew on an actual candy cane like a determined reindeer.
These are the cookies we bake when the tray needs a bold chocolate option. They’re also a hit with people who claim they “don’t like spiced cookies” (we’re watching them closely, but we still feed them).
Make them better:
- Underbake slightly. Soft centers + set edges = best texture.
- Use real peppermint candy. Crushed candy canes or peppermint pieces give a cleaner flavor than mystery “mint chips.”
- Let them cool fully. Chocolate sets as they coolpatience pays off.
Easy variations: Swap white chocolate for dark. Add a pinch of espresso powder to deepen the chocolate flavor.
Holiday Cookie Strategy: A Simple Make-Ahead Plan
If you’ve ever baked cookies on December 24th at 10:47 p.m. while whispering, “This is fine,” here’s your gentle nudge: most Christmas cookies are extremely make-ahead friendly. Use that to your advantage.
Two Weeks Before
- Make and freeze doughs that hold well: sugar cookie dough, gingerbread dough, shortbread dough, crinkle dough.
- Toast nuts, crush peppermint, stock up on butter and flour (and maybe a backup bag of powdered sugar, just in case).
One Week Before
- Bake sturdy cookies for gifting: gingerbread, shortbread, snowballs, spritz.
- Make jams/ganache fillings or buy the good jam you’ll pretend you “found at a market.”
Two Days Before
- Bake cut-outs and decorate once fully cooled.
- Assemble sandwich cookies (Linzer) close to gifting time so they stay crisp.
If you do nothing else: chill dough when the recipe says to. It’s one of the easiest ways to improve texture, flavor, and shape.
Pro Tips for Christmas Cookie Success (So Your Tray Looks Like a Win)
Chilling Dough Isn’t a SuggestionIt’s a Shortcut to Better Cookies
Chilled dough is easier to handle and helps cookies hold their shape in the oven. It also gives flavors time to settle and deepen. If your kitchen is warm or your butter got a little too enthusiastic, chilling can save the day.
Prevent Cookie Spread Like You Mean It
If your cut-outs turn into abstract holiday blobs, it’s usually one of a few culprits: butter too soft, oven temperature off, overcrowded baking sheets, or dough that needed more chill time. An oven thermometer is cheap insurance, and spacing cookies out helps them bake evenly.
Choose the Right Cookie for the Job
- Cookie exchanges: pick bold flavors and clear identitygingerbread, blossoms, peppermint bark cookies, crinkles.
- Gifting/mailing: choose sturdy cookiesshortbread, gingerbread, spritz, snowballs.
- Kid-friendly baking: spritz pressing, cut-outs, thumbprints (little thumbs are basically built for this).
Build a Balanced Cookie Tray
A great holiday cookie platter is like a good playlist: variety matters. Aim for a mix of textures (chewy, crisp, tender), flavors (spice, chocolate, fruit), and shapes (flat, sandwich, bite-size). This also makes your tray look abundant even if you only baked 3–5 types.
Conclusion: Bake, Share, Repeat
The best Christmas cookies aren’t just recipesthey’re rituals. The smell of gingerbread and vanilla in the oven, powdered sugar on the countertop, someone “testing” a cookie for quality control (for the sixth time): this is the good stuff. Choose a lineup you actually enjoy making, build in a little make-ahead breathing room, and remember that imperfect cookies still taste like the holidays.
If you’re building your annual tradition from scratch, start with five: cut-out sugar cookies, gingerbread, spritz, peanut butter blossoms, and snowballs. Add a chocolate crinkle or peppermint bark cookie for drama, and a Linzer cookie when you’re feeling fancy. You’ll have a cookie tray that covers every craving and a December routine you’ll look forward to all year.
Our 500-Word Cookie Diary (Real-Life Experience, No Filter)
The first year we tried to “go big” on Christmas cookies, we made the classic mistake: too many new recipes, not enough chill time, and exactly zero respect for how quickly butter warms up in a busy kitchen. The cut-out sugar cookies spread into shapes that looked less like stars and more like sea creatures. Our spritz dough was too soft, so it refused to stick to the baking sheetevery press turned into a tiny existential crisis. We learned a humbling truth that day: holiday baking is still baking. The Christmas music does not magically replace accurate oven temperature.
The next year, we got smarter. We picked a “core five” lineup and treated it like a tradition instead of a stunt. We made dough in advance and froze it in flat disks so it thawed quickly. We set up a decorating station that didn’t involve balancing five bowls on one cutting board like a kitchen circus act. Most importantly, we stopped trying to finish everything in one day. Cookie baking is supposed to feel cozy, not like an extreme sport.
Over time, the best moments weren’t even the “perfect” cookiesthey were the rituals around them. Someone always sneaks warm snowballs before the second powdered sugar roll, leaving a trail of evidence like a sweet crime scene. Someone always insists their thumbprints are “all the same size,” while the tray reveals a charming mix of dainty jam dots and jam-filled craters. And someone (usually the person who claims they “don’t like sweets”) always hovers near the cooling rack waiting for the first peanut butter blossom to be kiss-topped and cool enough to eat.
Cookie exchanges taught us another lesson: bring something recognizable, but make it excellent. A well-made classic disappears faster than a complicated novelty cookie. People remember a gingerbread with deep spice or a shortbread that snaps cleanly and tastes like butter in the best way. And if you’re gifting cookies, sturdiness is kindness. Shortbread, spritz, gingerbread, and snowballs travel like champs. Jam sandwiches are gorgeous, but they need a little more care (and maybe a “do not stack” label if your relatives are optimistic packers).
Now our annual approach is equal parts planning and joy. We keep the favorites, rotate in one “new contender” each year, and give ourselves permission to call it a success even if the icing lines wobble. Because at the end of the day, Christmas cookies are a shared experienceone you can taste. And if a cookie comes out a little wonky? Add more sprinkles. That’s not a hack; it’s holiday wisdom.