The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (2024)

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The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (1)

posted by Chef Lindsey

on Oct 03, 2020, Updated Feb 29, 2024

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This is the Best Snickerdoodle Recipe! They are soft and chewy with that characteristic tangy flavor. These easy cookies come together in under 30 minutes and don’t need to be chilled before baking! The cinnamon sugar is just a touch crunchy and adds a little extra sweetness.

The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (2)

My original snickerdoodle recipe was delightful and was based on a vintage cookbook recipe but they weren’t thick or chewy enough by my standards. In my professional pastry chef life I test and tweak every single recipe until I deem it perfect. This is how I bring you the best snickerdoodle recipe! They are thick, soft and still chewy. There is the perfect ratio of cinnamon sugar on the outside with just a little crunch.

I used the same regimented magic on these chewy sugar cookies (with the perfect amount of spread and chew), peanut butter chocolate chip cookies, and double chocolate cookies. I even went through a phase where I was obsessed with perfecting classic yellow cake, white cake and a one bowl chocolate cake.

Table of Contents

  • Why This is the Best Snickerdoodle Recipe
  • Professional Tips for Making Snickerdoodles
  • Ingredients Needed
  • Variations
  • What makes it a Classic Snickerdoodle Cookie?
  • How would it change the taste to omit the cream of tartar?
  • How to Make the Best Snickerdoodle Cookie Recipe
  • Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • The Best Snickerdoodle Cookie Recipe
  • Before You Go

Why This is the Best Snickerdoodle Recipe

  • Developed by a professional chef. These cookies were developed in a commercial kitchen for my bakery business. They were tested, tweaked and retested until they were perfect!
  • Thick, chewy cookies that you don’t have to chill! These easy cookies can be made start to finish in under 30 minutes!
  • 3 secrets to the best texture. The addition of milk after creaming the butter and sugar adds just enough extra moisture to the dough to create extra soft, pillowy cookies. The high ratio of the flour and sugar to butter also contribute to the thickness, and lastly the cream of tartar and the baking soda react more intensely than baking powder, giving you that tall, puffed cookie!
The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (3)

The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (4)

Professional Tips for Making Snickerdoodles

  • Do not store the cookie dough for longer than 1 month frozen. Baking soda reacts once (instantly) in the presence of an acid (cream of tartar) and produces carbon dioxide. Once this reaction is over and the resulting gas has dissipated, the dough will not rise at all in the oven. Trust me, I learned that the hard way on a large scale.
  • Chilling the dough does make a better cookie. Baking right after mixing will make an amazing cookie BUT chilling the dough before baking will make an exceptional cookie! They will be thicker and more chewy than cakey.

Ingredients Needed

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  • Granulated Sugar: Granulated sugar is obviously here for sweetness, but if you add too much in proportion to the butter and flour, the cookies will spread rather than stay tall and chewy.
  • Butter: I use unsalted butter for baking, because you want to control the amount of salt you are adding. Every brand is different and it makes adjusting the recipe a challenge.
  • Whole Egg: The eggs are here to add fat, moisture and leavening. The fat from the yolk adds richness and helps keep the cookies chewy. Beating in the eggs just enough will add a little or a lot of leavening depending on the desired texture. Eggs also emulsify the batter and keep everything texturally perfect.
  • Milk: Just the right amount of whole milk pulls the dough together but not so much to make them tough. The addition of a liquid means we have to be extra careful not to over mix the dough and activate the gluten in the flour.
  • Vanilla Extract: Vanilla Extract adds a beautiful flavor itself but it also boosts the flavor of other ingredients around it.
  • All-purpose flour: All-purpose flour has just the right amount of gluten to make the best snickerdoodle cookie that is soft, chewy and thick.
  • Cream of Tartar: Cream of tartar is a bi-product of wine making and is very acidic. It adds that characteristic tanginess to the dough and also reacts with the baking soda for the dramatic pillowy texture!
  • Baking Soda: Baking soda reacts with an acid, cream of tartar in this instance, to leaven the cookies. It reacts more powerfully than baking powder and will create a more dramatic rise, but will not continue to react in the heat of the oven or without the presence of an acid.
  • Kosher Salt: Kosher salt is lass salty than table salt and a teaspoon weighs less than other finer ground varieties. It heightens the flavor here and will keep your cookies from tasting dull or flat.
  • Cinnamon Sugar: Cinnamon sugar is essential for snickerdoodles. The dough is rolled in the sugar mixture just prior to baking.

Variations

  • Mix up the Mix: use a different spice mix like my pumpkin pie spice mix, apple pie spice or speculoos spice mix with the exterior sugar coating for a different twist! You could also brown the butter like I did in these brown butter cardamom snickerdoodles. Phenomenal.
  • Triple Cinnamon: Add 1 teaspoon of cinnamon to the dough and toss in some cinnamon chips for a cinnamon party!
  • Stuffed Snickerdoodles: Wrap the dough around a dollop of cream cheese (frozen) or a caramel candy for an easy stuffed cookie!
  • Snickerdoodle Bars: Press the dough into a baking dish then sprinkle with the cinnamon sugar like Averie does here. Or just dispense with the cookie all together and make snickerdoodle cake!

What makes it a Classic Snickerdoodle Cookie?

True snickerdoodles must have cream of tartar in the dough and a beautiful coating of cinnamon sugar on the outside. It is also my personal opinion that there is no cinnamon in the dough itself, but that is a much debated opinion. Snickerdoodles are thick and have a slight chew to them. This will be contentious but I’m going to put it out there: snickerdoodles without cream of tartar are just sugar cookies.

How would it change the taste to omit the cream of tartar?

Omitting the cream of tartar in snickerdoodles will eliminate that classic tangy flavor and it will also change the texture. Cream of tartar is very acidic and it reacts powerfully with the baking soda to create the soft, subtly chewy texture. Omitting it will produce more flat cookies with a denser texture.

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How to Make the Best Snickerdoodle Cookie Recipe

Use these instructions to make the perfect snickerdoodles every time! Further details and measurements can be found in the recipe card below.

Step 1: Preheat oven to 325°F convection or 350°F conventional (no fan). Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

Step 2: In a medium bowl whisk together flour, baking soda, cream of tartar, and salt; set aside.

Step 3: In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.

Step 4: Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stop the mixer and scrape down the sides of the bowl and under the bottom to ensure an even creaming. The image below still needs to be mixed a bit before continuing to the next step. You want it to be emulsified.

The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (7)
The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (8)

Step 5: Add the milk and vanilla and beat to combine.

It’s a little unconventional but be sure to follow the order of mixing. Add the milk with the vanilla extract before the dry ingredient mixture. This will ensure pillowy, soft cookies rather than tough cookies.

Step 6: Reduce mixer speed to low and slowly add dry ingredients in several additions. Add the next portion when the last addition is almost incorporated. After adding all the flour, mix just until just incorporated.

Step 7: Scoop with a medium cookie scoop or roll about 2 tablespoons sized pieces of dough into balls.

This step is optional but for the best cookies I recommend chilling the dough completely before baking. This will only take about 30 minutes or wrap and chill overnight.

Step 8: In a small bowl, whisk together the cinnamon and sugar. Roll the chilled dough in the cinnamon sugar mixture and place on parchment-lined baking sheets about 2 inches apart.

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The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (10)
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Step 9: Bake in preheated oven about 10 minutes or until puffed and set around the edges. The centers will look matte and no longer shiny.

Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip

For the perfect texture I use soft, pliable but still cool butter. It shouldn’t be room temperature and it should still feel cool to the touch. Warmer butter will still work but the cookies will be cakier.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do you store snickerdoodles?

Store baked cookies up to 5 days at room temperature or freeze cookie dough in balls. Store in plastic bags in the freezer for up to 1 month. The longer the dough sits, the flatter the cookies will be.

Can you bake them from frozen?

Roll and freeze cookie dough balls in a gallon storage container or on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Store cinnamon sugar in an airtight container at room temperature. Roll frozen cookie dough in cinnamon sugar and bake according to the recipe instructions. They will take an additional 5 minutes to bake.

Will these cookies ship Nicely?

Snickerdoodles are great shipping cookies! They stay soft and won’t shatter like lace cookies. Package with thick chocolate chip cookies, white chocolate macadamia nut cookies and chewy peanut butter cookies for the perfect gift!

If you tried thisrecipeand loved it please leave a 🌟star ratingand let me know how it goes in the commentsbelow. I love hearing from you; your comments make my day!

The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (12)

4.50 from 4 ratings

The Best Snickerdoodle Cookie

This is the Best Snickerdoodle Recipe! They are soft and chewy with that characteristic tangy flavor. These easy cookies come together in under 30 minutes and don’t need to be chilled before baking! The cinnamon sugar is just a touch crunchy and adds a little extra sweetness.

Prep: 18 minutes mins

Cook: 10 minutes mins

Total: 28 minutes mins

Servings: 36 Cookies

Ingredients

For the Cookies:

For the Cinnamon Sugar:

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 325°F convection or 350°F conventional (no fan). Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

  • In a medium bowl whisk together flour, baking soda, cream of tartar, and salt; set aside.

  • In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment or in a large bowl with a hand mixer, cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy.

  • Add eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition. Stop the mixer and scrape down the sides of the bowl and under the bottom to ensure an even creaming.

  • Add the milk and vanilla and beat to combine.

  • Reduce mixer speed to low and slowly add dry ingredients in several additions. Add the next portion when the last addition is almost incorporated. After adding all the flour, mix just until just incorporated.

  • Scoop with a medium cookie scoop or roll about 2T sized bits of dough into balls.

  • This step is optional but for the best cookies I recommend chilling the dough completely before baking. This will only take about 30 minutes or wrap and chill overnight.

  • In a small bowl, whisk together the cinnamon and sugar. Roll the chilled dough in the cinnamon sugar and place on parchment-lined baking sheets about 2 inches apart.

  • Bake in preheated oven about 10 minutes or until puffed and set around the edges. The centers will look matte and no longer shiny.

Video

Notes

Yield – 36 cookies
Technique – It’s a little unconventional but be sure to follow the order of mixing. Add the milk with the vanilla extract before the dry ingredient mixture. This will ensure pillowy, soft cookies rather than tough cookies.
Storage – Store baked cookies up to 3 days at room temperature or freeze cookie dough in balls. Store frozen for up to 1 month. The longer the dough sits, the flatter the cookies will be.

Nutrition

Calories: 137kcal | Carbohydrates: 20g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 6g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 23mg | Sodium: 68mg | Potassium: 31mg | Fiber: 0.4g | Sugar: 10g | Vitamin A: 171IU | Vitamin C: 0.004mg | Calcium: 6mg | Iron: 1mg

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Calories: 137

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Before You Go

I hope you enjoyed this professional chef tested recipe. Check out our other delicious, chef-developed cookie recipes!

The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (13)

Hi, I’m Chef Lindsey!

I am the baker, recipe developer, writer, and photographer behind Chef Lindsey Farr. I believe in delicious homemade food and the power of dessert!

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The Best Snickerdoodle Recipe (2024)

FAQs

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.

What is the difference between sugar cookies and snickerdoodles? ›

Sugar cookies are usually rolled and cut out with cookie cutters (but not always). Snickerdoodles have cream of tartar in the dough and are rolled into balls then rolled in a mixture of cinnamon and sugar before baking. They puff up and then flatten out to make circle shaped cookies. Both are delicious!

Why are my snickerdoodles so flat? ›

Why are my snickerdoodles flat? Snickerdoodles can come out flat if 1) the leaveners you used (for this recipe, it's both the baking soda and the cream of tartar) are on the old side and no longer work, and 2) if you baked them at a lower temperature. First, figure out if it's your leavener.

What happens if you don't use cream of tartar? ›

Without cream of tartar, you'll get the same baked good in the end, but the consistency may not be as flawless. If you're worried about your cake coming out too flat or your lemon meringue pie going runny, adding cream of tartar is an effective way to prevent it.

Why do my snickerdoodle cookies get hard? ›

Snickerdoodles might turn out hard if they are overbaked or if the dough is too dry. Be sure to keep an eye on them as they bake – when the edges are set but the centers are still soft and puffy, they are done. Also, make sure you're not adding too much flour.

Why does snickerdoodle dough need to be refrigerated? ›

Refrigerating snickerdoodle dough lets the butter resolidify and prevents the cookies from flattening out in the oven. I recommend giving the dough at least 45-60 minutes of chilling time in the fridge before baking.

How do you tell if 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.

Why did my snickerdoodles come out cakey? ›

Generally when baking, cakey texture is from more flour and less sugar. The ratio of fat, sugar and flour is what achieves the texture of the cookie. Also, when you are whipping the eggs in the recipe as well.

Why do my snickerdoodle cookies taste like flour? ›

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

Why is snickerdoodle called snickerdoodle? ›

The Joy of Cooking claims that “snickerdoodle” comes from “Schneckennudel,” a German word that literally means “snail noodles.” Schneckennudels don't have anything to do with snails or noodles, though—they're actually delicious-looking German cinnamon rolls.

What is the other name for snickerdoodles? ›

Snickerdoodles are often referred to as "sugar cookies".

Why are my snickerdoodles spreading so much? ›

Cookies spread because the fat in the cookie dough melts in the oven. If there isn't enough flour to hold that melted fat, the cookies will over-spread. Spoon and level that flour or, better yet, weigh your flour. If your cookies are still spreading, add an extra 2 Tablespoons of flour to the cookie dough.

How do you fix snickerdoodle dough? ›

There are a few things you can do to fix dry and crumbly cookie dough. There are a few things you can do to add liquid to your cookie dough if it is too dry and crumbly. One option is to add milk, water, or another liquid until the dough is the right consistency. You can also try adding melted butter or shortening.

Why is my snickerdoodle sour? ›

Because cream of tartar is slightly more acidic than baking powder, it gives the cookies a slight sour-flavored tang unique to snickerdoodles.

What is the purpose of cream of tartar in cookies? ›

What Does Cream of Tartar Do in 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 is the purpose of cream of tartar in this recipe? ›

The most common recipes that call for cream of tartar are those that call for egg whites to be whipped, like angel food cake, genoise cake, meringue, and macarons. Jampel says that is because cream of tartar works as an egg white stabilizer that increases both the volume and shelf life of the meringue.

Can you skip cream of tartar in cookies? ›

Baking Powder

Baking powder is a good cream of tartar substitute for cookies because it is synergistic with baking soda. You'll need 1.5x the amount of baking powder substitute for the cream of tartar called for in the recipe. Baking powder is a great cream of tartar replacement because it doesn't impart any flavor.

Does cream of tartar matter in cookies? ›

Adding it to cake or cookie batters prevents sugar from banding together and crystallizing, meaning that it results in more of a tender chew—snickerdoodles and sugar cookies wouldn't be the same without cream of tartar. The same effect is why it's added to some frostings and syrups, where it helps keep things smooth.

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