How to Make Cookies From Scratch

Have you ever wondered how other people get their homemade cookies to look and taste so good? It's all down to the right ingredients, techniques, and tools. Here's what you need to know to make cookies from scratch.

Cookies come in all shapes, sizes, and flavors — but one thing they have in common is they depend on the right ingredients, techniques, and tools to make them the best they can be. Because there are so many different kinds of cookies, we can offer general guidelines on how to make cookies — but you should always follow the instructions for the particular cookie recipe you're making.

Let's get straight to our top 10 tips for making better cookies, then we'll look at how to make cookie dough and we'll trouble-shoot common cookie-making problem. Finally, we'll take a deeper dive into choosing the right cookie ingredients and highlight some essential cooking-making tools you'll need.

How to Make Cookies: 10 Quick Tips

Christmas Cookies
Christmas Cookies | Photo by Meredith.
  1. Find a trusted cookie recipe and follow the instructions. Once you feel comfortable with making a type of cookie, you can start to put your own personal spin on it.
  2. Unless your recipe says otherwise, you'll always use large-size eggs, unsalted butter and nuts, and pure extracts of vanilla or almond.
  3. Successful baking relies on the correct ratio of ingredients, so be sure to measure accurately.
  4. Most cookie recipes call for all-purpose flour. For the best results, lightly spoon flour into a dry measuring cup and level with a knife. Do not sift unless the recipe specifically says to do so.
  5. Unless you are baking with non-stick pans and cookie sheets, use parchment paper for stick-free baking and easy clean-up.
  6. Chill dough for cut-out cookies, and soften it up at room temperature for a few minutes before rolling out.
  7. Leave at least two inches of space between cookies so they don't spread into each other.
  8. Adjust baking times to achieve the cookie texture you crave. A little less time produces chewier cookies; a little more time makes them crispy.
  9. Bake bar cookies in the pan size indicated in the recipe so bar cookies don't turn out too tall or too short.
  10. Cool cookies completely before decorating.

How to Make Cookie Dough

There are a couple of important steps to making cookie dough that make all the difference: ingredient temperature and the mixing itself.

Cookie Dough
Photo by Meredith.

Ingredient Temperature

Have all ingredients at room temperature before mixing the dough, unless your recipe specifically says otherwise. This helps all the different kinds of ingredients come together evenly. After you mix the dough, you can chill it for 30 minutes before baking so it holds its shape better as it bakes. Rolled and cut-out cookies should be refrigerated before baking for sharper, clearer edges. Drop cookies, such as chocolate chip or oatmeal cookies, can be at room temperature before baking; the spoonfuls of dough will spread and flatten out to the desired result.

  • Room temperature butter is best for creaming together butter and sugar.
  • Chilled butter is best for cutting butter into flour.

How to Mix Cooke Dough

Mixing cookie dough doesn't require as delicate a touch as mixing cake batter or quick bread, but it's still important to get it right. Some cookie recipes require a creaming step in which the fat and sugars are beaten together until light-colored and fluffy. Other cookie recipes require a sandy texture, so the fat is cut into the flour. Over-mixing can incorporate too much air into the dough, resulting in flat, overly spread-out cookies. Always read through and follow the recipe instructions.

Troubleshooting Cookie Problems

If you have a cookie recipe that you love, but aren't getting the desired results, use these tips to get your perfect cookie:

  • How to make cookies flatter: If you want your cookies on the flat side, you can do some or all of the following things: Use all butter, use all-purpose flour or bread flour, increase the sugar content slightly, add a bit of liquid to your dough, and bring the dough to room temperature before baking.
  • How to make cookies puffier: For light, puffy cookies, use shortening or margarine and cut back on the amount of fat; add an egg, cut back on the sugar, use cake flour or pastry flour, use baking powder instead of baking soda, and refrigerate your dough before baking.
  • How to make cookies chewier: Try melting the butter before adding it to the sugars when mixing. Remove cookies from the oven a few minutes before they are done, while their centers are still soft but are just cooked through. The edges should be golden. Use brown sugar, honey, or molasses as a sweetener. Let cookies cool on the pan for several minutes after baking before transferring to cooling rack.
  • How to make cookies crispier: For crisp, crunchy cookies, use all butter and a proportion of white sugar. Use egg yolks in place of a whole egg. Cookies should be baked completely. Let cool on the baking sheet for one minute before transferring to a cooling rack.

Cookie Ingredients: What They Are and What They Do

Using the correct ingredients in their proper ratios is crucial to good baking. For best results, follow the recipe and measure ingredients correctly. Here's an overview of the most common cookie ingredients and how to use them.

Flour

Most cookie recipes call for all-purpose or pastry flour. If you use bread flour with its high gluten protein content, or cake flour, which is high in starch, you'll end up with cookies that tend to spread less when you bake them. Recipes for shortbread cookies or other cookies with a crumbly texture usually have a higher flour-to-liquid ratio.

Cookie Ingredients
Photo by Meredith.

More: Get the inside scoop on different types of wheat flour and gluten-free flour, including coconut flour.

Leaveners

Leaveners are the ingredients that make baked goods puff up. In cookie recipes, the two most common leaveners are baking soda and baking powder.

  • Baking soda is simply bicarbonate of soda. It neutralizes the acidity of the dough, allowing the cookies to brown in the oven.
  • Baking powder is a combination of bicarbonate of soda plus cream of tartar, an acidic ingredient. Since baking powder already contains its own acid, it will not reduce the acidity in the dough, and the resulting cookies will be puffier and lighter in color.

More: Learn how to use baking soda and baking powder in your recipes for best results.

Fats

Fats are all about flavor and spread — what a cookie tastes like, and whether it keeps its shape or flattens as the fats heat and liquify in the oven. In general, more fat in the recipe produces flat, crispy cookies, while less fat produces puffier, cake-like cookies. The kind of fat you use also makes a difference. Cookies are made primarily with butter, margarine or shortening, and each behaves differently. Note that whipped spreads are not suitable for baking.

3-Ingredient Peanut Butter Cookies
Photo by Buckwheat Queen.
  • Cookies made with butter tend to spread out because it melts at body temperature — a much lower temperature than other solid fats — resulting in a "melt-in-your-mouth" burst of flavor. In fact, butter is an essential flavor agent in certain cookies, such as shortbreads. If cookies spread more than you'd like them to, try lowering the amount of butter, sugar, or baking soda in the recipe.
  • Cookies made with shortening won't spread as much and will hold their shape better because shortening has a much higher melting point than butter.
  • Cookies made with margarine will spread about the same amount as cookies made with butter because margarine has a only a slightly higher melting point than butter.

More: Learn more about the difference between using butter and margarine in your baking recipes.

Sugars

Like fats, sugars liquefy when they heat in the oven. The type and amount of sugar both play a big role in cookie-making.

Adding Sugar to Whipped Cream
Photo by Meredith. Meredith
  • White sugar makes a crisper cookie than does brown sugar or honey.
  • Brown sugar makes a moister, chewier cookies. Most chocolate chip cookie recipes contain both brown and white sugars.
  • Decreasing sugar in a cookie recipe makes it spread less, but the cookies turn out drier and less flavorful depending on how much sugar you leave out.

More: Find out how to bake with different sugars and sugar substitutes.

Eggs and Liquids

Eggs are a binding agent, holding ingredients together. Egg yolks add richness and give a crisp texture after baking, but egg whites tend to make cookies dry and cakey. To make up for the drying effect of the egg whites, extra sugar is often added. This is why cookies made with just egg whites tend to be so sweet — think of light and airy French macarons. Liquids can either cause cookies to puff up or spread. If egg is the liquid, it will create a puffy, cake-like texture. Just a tablespoon or two of water or other liquid will help your cookies spread into flatter and crisper rounds. More: Learn more about eggs, plus decode the difference in egg grades. Also, discover the 9 ingredients every baker needs.

Cookie Tools: Baking Sheets and More

Different kinds of baking sheets produce different results.

Baking Sheet
Photo by Meredith.
  • Thin baking sheets might allow the bottoms to brown too fast.
  • Insulated baking sheets allow air movement and help cookies bake evenly, but they can be expensive.
  • Rimless cookie baking sheets allow cookies to easily slide off the sheet when they're used with a liner (see below).
  • Semi-thick rimmed baking sheets — also called jellyroll pans — are available just about everywhere, and are a fine multipurpose baking choice.

Baking Sheet Liners

To keep cookies from sticking to the baking sheet, buy an inexpensive roll of parchment paper or invest in a nonstick silicone baking mat to make cookie removal and clean-up easy. Inexpensive parchment paper can be used again and again, and slides right off the sheet onto the cooling rack. Note that silicone baking mats don't slide off cookie sheets as easily as parchment paper. Don't use waxed paper as a baking sheet liner.

Cookie Dough Scoops

When you're baking mass batches of cookies, or when you really want to make sure your cookies come out the same size, use a spring-loaded scoop to measure out the dough quickly and evenly. Scoops come in various sizes, and you'll find yourself using them for more than cookie dough.

Cookie Scoops
Photo by Meredith.

Oven Temperature

Buy an oven thermometer to be sure your oven temperature is calibrated correctly. They don't have to be expensive, and you'll be surprised by how different your actual oven temperature can be from what it says on your oven dial or digital read-out. Generally, cookies are baked in a moderate oven — 350 degrees F (175 degrees C) — for 8 to 12 minutes, depending on the size of the cookie.

  • For chewy cookies, allow them to cool on the baking sheet for 3 to 5 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack.
  • For crispier cookies, let cookies cool for one minute on the baking sheet before transferring to a cooling rack.

More: This handy temperature conversion chart shows Fahrenheit to Celsius equivalents.

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