The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe Ever (2024)

It's my first ever Mouth-Watering Wednesday, and I hope you are ready to try something delicious.

First off, I have a disclaimer. I'm not a professional baker by any means. I often cut corners or use shortcuts to save money or time, and I tweak recipes to make it work for me. I probably don't do things "the correct way", but I make a lot of cookies and goodies, and they usually turn out pretty delicious anyway. It's kind of like math to me- who cares how you get the answer, as long as it's right? (Don't cringe, math teachers. I was never very good at math anyway!)

So, today, I'm sharing with you my favorite Snickerdoodle recipe. I have tried many over the years, and this one produces deliciously yummy, soft cookies covered with just the right amount of cinnamon and sugar. I originally found in in Essential Mormon Celebrations, and have tweaked it just a little.

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Gather your ingredients. Here's what you'll need:
1 3/4 C. Sugar (divided)
1 C. margarine or butter, softened
2 eggs
2 3/4-3 1/4 C. flour
2 tsp. cream of tartar
1 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
2 tsp. cinnamon

Preheat your oven to 350 degrees and prepare your cookie sheets. The recipe says 400, so you can do that if you want, but here's my secret to perfect cookies every time---

Bake cookies at 350 degrees for 10 minutes, no matter what the recipe says. When I do this, my cookies turn out exactly how I like them, 99 percent of the time. They are nice and firm on the outside, moist and chewy (but not doughy) on the inside. I use a typical electric oven, so you may have to adjust for your own, but be brave and give it a try on a test batch. (What's the worst that could happen? If they're not quite baked, just bake them a few more minutes. Or eat the dough. Yum.)

Continuing on....
1. Soften your butter or margarine. I hardly ever bake with butter, mostly for money reasons. My favorite substitute to bake with is Imperial margarine, but I'm sure others are good too. You can leave it out until it softens or put it in the microwave for about 15 seconds. Just don't melt it.

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2. In a large bowl, cream together 1 1/2 cups sugar, your butter/margarine, and your eggs.

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You'll know it's ready when it looks like this:

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3. In another bowl, sift together flour, cream of tartar, baking soda, and salt. (** I hardly ever do this, because I'm lazy. I usually just dump it all together in one bowl. You should probably follow the directions, but my cookies turn out great anyway.)

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Combine dry ingredients with creamed mixture. Don't overmix. (** I use my Kitchenaid, but you can do this by hand. Some people swear by hand mixing, but again, I'm lazy.)

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4. In a small bowl mix together 1/4 cup sugar and your cinnamon. Set aside.

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Shape dough into 1 inch balls.. I find my dough to be pretty sticky. You don't want to add too much flour, so you can do two things. Either put it in the fridge to chill for an hour or so, or you can do what I do-- break out the cookie dough scoop.

Mine is a 1 inch scoop, so I fill it and scrape it on the side of the bowl to flatten it.

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Then I release the dough into the cinnamon/sugar mixture, and lightly roll it around with my fingers.

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Place it on your cookie sheet.(** I use a silicon mat from Wilton on my cookie sheets. It saves me from having to clean cookie sheets, and it keeps the bottoms of the cookies from getting too well-done. Love it.)

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Bake the cookies, as discussed above, for 10 minutes. When they come out of the oven they will be all puffy,
like this:

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But if you let them sit for a few minutes, they will flatten out and crackle across the top, just like a perfect Snickerdoodle will.

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These are best served warm or on the same day you make them, though they also freeze well. Store any leftover in an airtight container.

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I bet your kids would love you if you made these for them! Here's a printable recipe:

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Linking up to some of my favorite parties- come check them out with me!

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The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe Ever (2024)

FAQs

Why are my snickerdoodles always flat? ›

If your cookies repeatedly turn out flat, no matter the recipe, chances are your oven is too hot. Here's what's happening. The butter melts super quickly in a too-hot oven before the other ingredients have firmed up into a cookie structure. Therefore, as the butter spreads so does the whole liquidy cookie.

Are snickerdoodles supposed to be soft when they come out of the oven? ›

They puff in the oven and then settle back down while cooling into a soft, thick, supremely chewy cookie with a gorgeous crinkly top. They've received nothing but rave reviews! Snickerdoodle is sort of a strange name, yes?

Why are my snickerdoodles so fluffy? ›

Why are my snickerdoodles puffy? Too much flour - spoon and level the flour correctly how I show it in my chocolate chip cookie post. Inaccurate oven temperature (too hot) - I advise using an oven thermometer for accurate baking results.

How do you fix sticky snickerdoodle dough? ›

When cookie dough is too sticky, you may have an imbalance of wet and dry ingredients. You can fix this by adding a teaspoon of flour or cornstarch at a time until your dough is just how you want. The added flour or cornstarch will absorb the excess liquid and reduce the dough's overall stickiness.

Why don t my snickerdoodles crack? ›

If yours aren't cracking, your oven may not be hot enough or your ingredients may not be fresh enough! Are snickerdoodles supposed to be undercooked? I always recommend slightly underbaking your cookies and then letting them finish baking through cooling on the pan.

Why does snickerdoodle dough need to be refrigerated? ›

"When your dough is refrigerated, the butter hardens. So when you bake them, they spread less and hold their shape better," adds Epperson. "Which means a better likelihood of a soft, chewy cookie in the center."

How do you know when a snickerdoodle is done? ›

How do you know when the cookies are baked? The snickerdoodle cookies will only take about 10 to 12 minutes to bake, so be sure to keep your eye on them! It's best to rotate the cookies after about 6 minutes so that the cook evenly. The cookies are done when the edges are just set and the centres are soft and cracked.

How to keep snickerdoodles from getting hard? ›

The secret's in the ratio of butter to leavener to flour to egg. Don't use shortening here; you'll miss the flavor of butter. Slightly under-baking the snickerdoodles also guarantees a softer cookie. Take them out of the oven after about 10-11 minutes.

Why do my snickerdoodles taste like flour? ›

Improper flour measurement is the #1 cause of your cookie dough being too dry or the cookies tasting like flour.

What is the difference between sugar cookies and snickerdoodles? ›

Snickerdoodles are sugar cookies rolled in cinnamon sugar. The cinnamon sugar gives the cookies their distinct flavor, texture, and appearance. Some food historians argue that sugar cookies recipes use baking powder to leaven the cookies, while snickerdoodles recipes use cream of tartar.

Why are my snickerdoodle cookies dry? ›

Overbaking often results in dry, crunchy snickerdoodles instead of soft, chewy ones. Make sure to pull the cookies out when they're still slightly underbaked.

Why do you need cream of tartar in snickerdoodles? ›

Mom would tell you the cream of tartar stabilizes the snickerdoodles, providing the light, soft, pillowy texture. It also adds the tangy note associated with snickerdoodles.

Why did my snickerdoodle cookies not flatten? ›

Too Much Flour

This may seem counterintuitive—after all, isn't flour a key ingredient in baking? Yes, but if you add too much flour, your cookies won't spread as they bake. Too much flour causes the dough to become dry and crumbly, which prevents it from flattening out during baking.

Why did my snickerdoodles turn out cakey? ›

If your cookies come out flat on top, with a cake-like texture, you've added too many eggs.

What does adding cream of tartar do to cookies? ›

Cream of tartar makes cookies chewy, as it precludes the sugar in the dough from crystalizing, which would lead to crispiness (ie: the opposite of chewiness).

What happens if you add too much cream of tartar? ›

Keep in mind that more cream of tartar doesn't necessarily mean a better, more stable result. “Too much cream of tartar will impart a metallic, tin-like taste,” Molly warns.

Does cream of tartar make things thicker? ›

No. Cornstarch is a starch used for thickening, while cream of tartar is an acid used for leavening, stabilizing, and preventing crystallization. They play totally different roles in baking and are not considered substitutes for one another.

How do you thicken Snickerdoodle cookie dough? ›

Soft – Dough that's “soft” or “runny” can be thickened by adding one or two tablespoons of flour to your mix. This will help keep your batch from “Spreading” and coming out of the oven looking like flat, not-so-cookie-like puddles.

References

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