Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

Bless This Mess Recipes Desserts Cookies Christmas Cookies

By Melissa

on Dec 05, 2018, Updated Mar 19, 2020

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These soft Christmas sugar cookies are easy to make, hold their shape and are perfect for holiday decorating! This is my Grandma Lucy’s formerly secret recipe and it’s one we’ve been enjoying for years. Decorate these cookies with sanding sugar or frosting with sprinkles!

Looking for more Christmas cookies? Try these soft gingerbread cookies, or these amazing chocolate chip cookies!

Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (2)

Grandma Lucy’s Easy Christmas Sugar Cookies

There are very few things that Thomas pulls the “but they aren’t like my mom’s” card when it comes to my cooking, but sugar cookies is one of those recipes. My mother-in-law Lucy makes the BEST sugar cookies. I’m so excited to share her recipe with you today because it’s one she’s been making for years and years and we all love it best.

Grandma Lucy sugar cookies are the stuff childhood memories are made of. They are thick, puffy, super soft, and keep their shape perfectly. Bonus: you don’t have to chill the dough before rolling them out BUT you can if you want to make the dough ahead of time (win-win!). These aren’t just Christmas sugar cookies in our world either, Grandma makes them for most major holidays and invites all the grandkids over to decorate them with her. You’ve never seen such a mess!

What Makes These the Best Christmas Sugar Cookies?

The secret to the very best soft and chewy cookies is a combination of three things when it comes to Lucy’s sugar cookie recipe. Lots of eggs makes the dough tender but hold together well. A generous amount of baking powder helps them to be light and fluffy. The third secret is using butter-flavored shortening. There are very, very few things I make with shortening, but this recipe is one of them. Using shortening helps the cookies to keep their shape while baking (because it doesn’t melt like butter) and it helps them to be very tender.

Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (3)

Tips and Tricks for Making Christmas Sugar Cookies:

  • You cake make the dough in advance: If you want to make the dough and let it sit in the fridge a few hours or overnight until you are ready to bake them, that works great.
  • How to add sprinkles that stick to the cookies: You can press sprinkles or colored sugars into the uncooked cut cookies before baking and then bake as directed. This is a simple way to add a few decorations without much work on your part.
  • Our favorite cookie cutters: Because we make this cookie recipe all year long, we LOVE this 101 Cookie Cutter set. It has it all! Plus, you can’t beat the price (around $10). It makes a fun gift idea, too.
  • Flavor variations: Want to change up the flavor just a bit? I love to add 1 teaspoon vanilla and then add 1/2 teaspoon almond extract and 1/2 teaspoon coconut extract. Delicious!
  • How to roll the dough without it sticking to the rolling pin: Make sure you get a little flour on the rolling pin and flour the surface before rolling out the dough.
  • How to cut the dough without it sticking to the cutter:Press straight down firmly with the cookie cutter, and pick it straight back up. Don’t wiggle or move it around much. If you find the dough is sticking, press the cutter into some flour so it becomes more nonstick. You can also put your cookie cutters in the freezer for 10 minutes to chill them and make the surface less sticky.
  • How to transfer the cut dough without breaking the shape: Use a thin and sturdy spatula (like a metal spatula) to safely transfer cookie dough shapes to the baking sheet.
  • How to tell if the cookies are done baking: They’re done when the cookies are golden-brown in the center, about 10 minutes.
  • How to make thinner/crispier cookies vs. thicker/softer cookies: For thicker and softer cookies, roll the dough out into a 1/2 inch thickness. For thinner cookies that are crispier, roll it out to 1/4 inch thickness.

How do you store soft sugar cookies?

Because these are extra fluffy and soft, it’s best to store them in/on something like a baking sheet or a baking dish. Then cover the dish well with a lid or plastic wrap. They can be stacked, but not more than 2 high. If you need to stack more than 2 cookies, you’ll want to place a piece of parchment paper in between. These cookies also freeze well. Store and freeze before adding icing for best results. Thaw and ice right before eating, gifting, or sharing these cookies.

Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (4)

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Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (5)

Grandma Lucy’s Sugar Cookies for Christmas

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5 from 4 reviews

  • Author: Melissa Griffiths - Bless this Mess
  • Total Time: 45 minutes
  • Yield: 6 dozen medium cookies 1x
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Description

These soft Christmas sugar cookies are easy to make, hold their shape and are perfect for holiday decorating! This is my Grandma Lucy’s formerly secret recipe and it’s one we’ve been enjoying for years.

  • 1 cup butter flavored shortening
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 4 large eggs
  • 78 cups of all-purpose flour +1 more for rolling
  • 3 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla
  • 1 cup of milk
  • 1 tablespoon white vinegar

For frosting:

  • 1/2 cup butter, at roomtemperature

  • 3-4 tablespoons heavy cream, at room temperature

  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

  • 2.5-3 cups powdered sugar

Instructions

  1. Cream shortening and sugar together in a medium bowl until light and fluffy, about 3 minutes.
  2. Add your eggs and mix to combine. Add the vanilla and mix again.
  3. Add 3 cups of flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt to the bowl and mix well to combine.
  4. Mix the milk and vinegar together and add it to the cookie dough mixture. Mix well to combine.
  5. Add the remaining 4 cups of flour and stir until well combined. The dough should be tacky but not gloopy. If you pick it up in your fingers it shouldn’t stick to them though it’s a very soft dough. Add up to 1 cup additional flour as needed.
  6. Working with ¼ of the dough at a time, roll it out on a well floured surface to ¼ to ½ inch thick. Be generous with your flour on the rolling surface since the dough is very tender, it will stick easily.
  7. Use cookie cutters to make shapes and transfer to a lightly greased baking sheet.
  8. Bake at 350 degrees F for about 10 minutes.
  9. Repeat with remaining dough, gathering and re-rolling the scrap dough as you go along.
  10. Decorate cooled cookies with icing and sprinkles, the messier the better.
  11. To make the frosting:Add the butter and cream to the bowl of your stand mixer. Mix on medium speed with the whisk attachment, until the butter and cream combine.
  12. Increase the speed to high and mix for 3 to 5 minutes, until the mixture is light and fluffy, stopping to scrape down the sides a time or two.
  13. Add the vanilla and 2.5 cups of the powdered sugar. Mix on low until combined, and then increase speed to medium and whip for 1 to 2 minutes.
  14. The consistency of the icing is important if you are going to ice sugar cookies with it. It should be a soft-medium consistency and firm, but soft enough to spread with a butter knife.
  15. If the icing is too thick, mix in a little cream. If it needs to be a little thicker, add a 1/4 cup of powdered sugar, and whip to combine until it’s sturdy enough.
  16. Use icing to frost around 2 dozen medium sugar cookies. It also pipes well, if you’d like to put it in piping bags with tips.

Notes

  • Grandma’s Notes: If you want to make the dough and let it sit in the fridge a few hours or overnight until you are ready to bake them, that works great.
  • These are super soft, puffy, and cakey cookies. If you are looking for a more traditional sugar cookie, this is myMy Favorite Sugar Cookie Recipe.
  • Prep Time: 10 minutes
  • Cook Time: 10 minutes
  • Category: Cookies
  • Method: Oven
  • Cuisine: American

I took this picture just a few days ago while the grandkids were decorating cookies with Grandma Lucy! Isn’t she a cute grandma? We are so lucky to live right next door to her.

Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (6)

Other great Christmas cookie recipes you might enjoy:

  • Soft Gingerbread Cookies(literally the best, ask the thousands of people who have made them!)
  • Christmas Magic Cookie Bars
  • How to Ship Christmas Cookies
  • No-Bake Chocolate-Covered Fluffernutter Cookies
  • Chewy Ginger Molasses Cookies from my friend Alie at Gimme Some Oven

About Melissa

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Grandma Lucy's Secret Christmas Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the least popular Christmas cookie? ›

On the naughty list of cookies, Americans gave the lowest win records to anise cookies, which only won 29% of its matchups.

What is a Nazareth sugar cookie? ›

The sugar cookie is believed to have originated in the mid-1700s in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. German Protestant settlers created a round, crumbly and buttery cookie that came to be known as the Nazareth cookie. Jumbles are the earliest form of sugar cookies.

What was the first Christmas cookie? ›

History. Modern Christmas cookies can trace their history to recipes from Medieval Europe biscuits, when many modern ingredients such as cinnamon, ginger, black pepper, almonds and dried fruit were introduced into the west.

What is the number one cookie in the world? ›

Oreo is the best-selling cookie in the world. It is now sold in over 100 countries. Oreo was first produced in 1912 by the National Biscuit Company, now known as Na-Bis-Co.

What is the #1 cookie in the United States? ›

The chocolate chip cookie is far and away America's favorite cookie This should come as no surprise to anyone who enjoys the tasty treat. More than 53% of American adults prefer the cookies over the next most popular kind, peanut butter.

What is a Navy Seal sugar cookie? ›

McRaven describes the experience of Navy SEAL trainees who are subject — often randomly — to a punishment where they are directed to get wet and sandy on the beaches. By the time they are finished the trainees, covered in sand, look like “sugar cookies.”

Why are they called cowboy cookies? ›

Some claim cowboy cookies hail from Texas, a state many cowboys call home. Others say the treats were named for their ability to withstand long days in saddlebag. Whatever its origin, the combination of oats, chocolate, pecans, and coconut is undeniably delicious.

Why are they called Jesus cookies? ›

She found a delicious recipe for gluten-free “Jesus cookies.” My daughters call those really puffy, soft sugar cookies with lots of icing and sprinkles you find in the grocery store “Jesus cookies” because they seemed to get them during Sunday School A LOT.

What cookie was not invented until 1938? ›

It wasn't until very recently, around 1938, that chocolate chip cookies were first invented. Unlike a lot of other things, the chocolate chip cookie was not invented by accident. During the 1930s, a chef named Ruth Graves Wakefield decided to give something different to her customers.

What Hallmark movie was the cookie recipe stolen? ›

A Christmas Cookie Catastrophe

A Hallmark Channel original movie. Annie faces her first obstacle as CEO of Cooper's Cookies when grandma's secret recipe is stolen. While investigating the theft, she works with local baker Sam to recreate the beloved recipe.

What is the most popular Christmas cookie every year? ›

Based on this data from General Mills, Peanut Butter Blossoms are the most popular Christmas cookie in the country; it's the most-visited cookie recipe in seven states, which means it's the most common favorite cookie in the U.S. That's a pretty high honor!

What is the secret to cut-out cookies? ›

Pull off the top sheet of parchment, then slide the sheet of dough onto a baking sheet, then pop it in the freezer. (You can stack as many sheets of dough onto one baking sheet as you'd like.) Sandwich your dough between two sheets of parchment, roll, then freeze; it makes cut-out cookies a breeze!

How do you shape sugar cookies without a cookie cutter? ›

You can use the tip of a small, sharp knife (like a paring knife) to cut the dough into any shape you like. Use a stencil or cardboard cutout to help, if you like. You can roll the dough into a long strip and twist it into a “pretzel” shape, or a candy cane shape.

What is a cookie cutter response? ›

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.

What is the least favorite Girl Scout cookie? ›

Toffee-Tastic

These cookies lack everything: flavor, looks, sweetness, texture, ect. They're even boring to look at. The cookie is described by The Girl Scouts of the USA as “rich, buttery cookies with sweet, crunchy toffee bits”, however I disagree with their description.

What is Santa's second favorite cookie? ›

2. Holiday Candy Cookie Bites – Number two on the list of Santa's favorite cookies is Holiday Candy Cookie Bites, which is a holiday version of the year-round favorite, Chocolate Chip Cookies. Instead of traditional chocolate chips, these cookies are studded with red and green candies and white baking chips.

What is the most Googled Christmas cookie? ›

If you're curious, Italian Christmas cookies are fairly similar to sugar cookies in appearance and taste. This sweet treat was the most searched Christmas cookie in a number of states, including Texas, Georgia, Florida, Tennessee, Wyoming, and Pennsylvania.

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