Soft and Chewy Sugar-Doodle Vanilla Cookies โ Part soft sugar cookie, part chewy snickerdoodle, with tons of rich vanilla flavor! The best vanilla cookies you’ll ever make!
The Best Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe
Although these cookies are simple and unassuming, they’re a new favorite. Sometimes the simplest things really are the best.
They’re a chewy hybrid of a sugar cookie and a snickerdoodle. They have the buttery flavor of sugar cookies without any of the dryness. Too often sugar cookies are dry, bland, and horribly crumbly.
We all know those dried out poor excuses for cookies that are typically found on holiday platters and that disintegrate into a million crumbs all over your lap as you’re trying to eat neatly from a paper plate at someone’s holiday party and not get crumbs all over their carpet and couch. These are not those and they also don’t need to be rolled out or frosted or doctored up with sprinkles in order to be palatable, like many sugar cookies do.
They’re soft and pliable, with the chewy texture of a snickerdoodle, minus the cream or tartar or cinnamon-sugar coating, and I decided to call them a Sugar-Doodle.
When I made the New York Times Chocolate Chip Cookies, although those cookies didn’t end my quest for the perfect end-all-be-all chocolate chip cookie, the recipe opened my eyes to the chewy, texture-filled, jaw-workout powers of using bread flour in cookie dough.
That recipe calls for both bread flour and cake flour, and although I believe cake flour is better being suited for cake-making and I’ll likely never use it in cookies again, bread flour can hop over from bread-making and into my cookies all it wants. Bread flour has a higher protein content than all-purpose flour, usually by one to two percentage points, and the extra protein means extra gluten, translating into baked goods that have excellent structure and increased chewiness.
The cookie dough is classic, old-school cookie dough like my mom and grandma made. Cream together butter, sugars, an egg, splash of cream, vanilla, add the flour, baking soda and that’s it. Then, chill the dough for at least three hours because in order to create cookies that don’t turn into flat pancakes while baking, you need to start with well-chilled dough.
Normally I prefer cookies that are made with a higher ratio of brown to granulated sugar because brown sugar keeps cookies softer, moister, and helps impart greater chewiness and a richer flavor, but in this recipe, the equal ratios worked out perfectly.
I infused plenty of vanilla flavor into these golden discs without needing to scrape out 14 dollars worth of vanilla bean seeds from a Tahitian vanilla bean. Instead, I used a liberal dousing of homemade vanilla extract, but a heavy-handed stream of store-bought will work if you haven’t started your own vanilla-making distillery yet. The resulting cookies are well-scented with vanilla, but balanced so that the buttery sweet dough shines.
Rather adding a kitchen sink medley of different kinds of chocolate, white chocolate, or butterscotch chips, I kept the ingredient list very simple. I want to get back to basics and some classic recipes and not every cookie recipe needs candy bars stuffed into it to be successful.
These back-to-basics cookies stand on their own two feet incredibly well and are for those who can appreciate the cookie itself; the actual dough, rather than all the extras that seem to be found in cookies lately. Cookies made from cookie dough rather than leftover Halloween candy is nice for a change.
Sometimes I love well-stuffed cookies that can’t seem to hold one more chocolate chip, or decadent cakes with a myriad of flavor and textural elements going on, but sometimes rustic simplicity trumps all.
My other favorite part of these cookies, in addition to their flavor and texture, is that the recipe makes just 11 cookies. You could probably squeeze a dozen out if you like round numbers, but I weighed each mound of cookie dough out to exactly 2.25-ounces each, and yielded eleven generously-sized cookies. Heidi made similar cookies using the recipe from this cookbook and she yielded just nine cookies.
I’ve wanted to make some Lofthouse-style sugar cookies, but the popular recipes I’ve seen make four to five dozen cookies and have a pesky three-egg situation, making them tricky to halve. We are a family of three. We don’t need four dozen anything, and small batch sizes of six cupcakes or eleven cookies is plenty and perfect.
I fear the pictures don’t do my new favorite cookies justice. It’s hard for that which seems plain and basic to compete with monster-this and stuffed-to-the-gills-that, but if you’re looking for a lightly-sweetened, buttery cookie with vanilla tones, with chewy edges and pillowy soft centers, these good-old fashioned cookies are where it’s at.
I loved them so much that I made another batch because we tore through the first eleven in record time.
What’s in Vanilla Cookies?
To make this simple vanilla cookie recipe, you’ll need:
- Unsalted butter
- Granulated sugar
- Brown sugar
- Egg
- Milk
- Vanilla extract
- All-purpose flour
- Bread flour
- Baking soda
- Salt
How to Make Vanilla Cookies
Cream together the butter and sugars until light and fluffy, then add in the vanilla, egg, and milk. Mix in the dry ingredients, then chill the dough for at least 3 hours.
Once chilled, scoop the dough into balls and place on a Silpat-lined baking sheet.
Bake the cookies until they’re pale golden and the edges have just set, even if slightly undercooked in the center, as cookies will firm up as they cool. Let them cool for 10 minutes before enjoying!
Do I Have to Use Bread Flour?
I made these cookies using about a half-and-half ratio of bread and all-purpose flour, and although I haven’t tested the recipe solely using all-purpose flour, the cookies will turn out, but just won’t be as chewy.
I am not one to recommend seventeen dollar strands of saffron, nor advocate that it’s the organic way or the highway, and when it comes to recommending ingredients, I don’t flippantly say things matter unless I really think they do.
For five bucks for a bag of bread flour, it’s a good one to have around. Plus, you can make bread with it.
Do I Have to Chill the Dough?
Yes! I baked a trial batch of three cookies with dough that had only been chilled 30 minutes rather than 3 hours and although they weren’t paper thin, they were definitely flatter than those shown.
Can I Freeze the Cookie Dough?
Yes! I typically keep a bowl of cookie dough in the refrigerator for up to five days after I initially make it. As desired, I bake off a couple cookies for that just-baked perfection that can’t be beat. If I happen to not use the dough within five days, I from balls and toss them into a ziplock, and then freeze it.
As needed, I can dole out the frozen balls and bake as many cookies we want. Frozen dough doesn’t even have to be pre-thawed prior to baking. Simply take it out of the freezer while the oven is preheating, and if necessary, extend the baking time by an extra minute or two.
Tips for Making Vanilla Sugar Cookies
Be sure not to overbake these cookies if you want soft and chewy results. About nine minutes in my oven is perfect based on the size of dough used and that I prefer very soft, tender, and moist cookies. Even at about nine minutes, they look quite under-done on the tops, which are set but just barely.
In general, if you wait to pull cookies from the oven until the tops are well-set, by the time they cool, they harden up too much. Plus, the bottoms will become too browned for my liking.
Cookies can fool you into thinking they’re not done but somehow they always seem to set up dramatically as they cool. If you prefer crunchier cookies, extend the baking time to your liking.
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Soft and Chewy Sugar-Doodle Vanilla Cookies
Ingredients
- ยฝ cup unsalted butter, softened (1 stick)
- ยฝ cup granulated sugar
- ยฝ cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1 large egg
- 2 tablespoons cream or milk
- 1ยฝ teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 cup all-purpose flour
- ยพ cup bread flour*
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ยผ teaspoon salt, optional and to taste
Instructions
- To the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, beat the butter on low speed until smooth, 1 to 2 minutes.
- Add the sugars and beat on medium-high speed until creamed and well combined, 2 to 3 minutes.
- Stop, scrape down the sides of the bowl, and add the egg, cream, vanilla, and beat on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, 4 to 5 minutes.
- Stop, scrape down the sides of the bowl, and add the flours, baking soda, salt, and mix until just combined, about 1 minute.
- Transfer dough to an airtight container and refrigerate for at least 3 hours, up to 5 days.
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF, line a baking sheet with aย Silpat Non-Stick Baking Mat, parchment, or spray with cooking spray.
- Using a 2-ounce cookie scoop, form heaping mounds weighing 2ยผ-ounces each (weighed on a scale, which is approximately a scant ยผ-cup measure) and place them on the baking sheet, spaced at least 2 inches apart.
- Bake for 8 to 10 minutes, or until pale golden and edges have just set, even if slightly undercooked in the center, as cookies will firm up as they cool (The cookies shown in the photos were baked for 9 minutes and have chewy edges with soft pillowy centers. For crunchier cookies, extend baking time by 1 to 3 minutes).
- Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes before removing.
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
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I love this combination you’ve come up with! They look so soft and chewy. My fave!
I really like sugar cookies, especially when they are soft. I love this recipe because I always have all of these ingredients on hand so this is something I could easily whip up on a whim after work, before dinner.
These are totally ‘whim’ cookies – they are a small batch, everyone has the ingredients and they turn out far better than their seemingly simple ingredients list if I do say so :)
This is my kind of cookie! I always want snickerdoodles to be more chewy than crisp – these look perfect!
Hey girl! I just showed Zoe this post as she loves sugar cookies and snicker doodles. She totally wants to make them over winter break all by herself. The recipe looks simple enough for her to do all by herself! I will take a photo of her when she makes them and email it to you!
Have a great night girl! I’m off to catch up on Monday’s RHBH :)
Jackie
These are perfect teenage girl cookies, or younger. They are a basic cookie but somehow taste way better than the sum of their uncomplicated parts. I think Zoe will love them and I KNOW she will be able to make them. Can’t wait to hear all about it.
Wow, I love the sound of your sugardoodles…and they’re exactly the kind of cookie my family loves. I’d have to add some white chocolate chips like in your white chocolate chip snickerdoodles! In fact, I could eat every single one of your cookies!
These are gorgeous! I need to remember to chill my dough longer. But I’m so impatient! ;)
These cookies are so cute. I love the name!
I bake snickerdoodles every Christmas just because they’re so crinkly wrinkly cute! Can’t wait to try these!
crinkly wrinkly = I love that!
I love snickerdoodles, they are one of my favorite cookies! I love that you added the vanilla to them!! I have to make them! I have so many of your recipes bookmarked to make this weekend! I can’t wait!
Well I feel pretty honored! And please keep me posted! I remade the bread btw with 1/4 cvital wheat gluten and about 1/4th of the wheat replaced with white bread flour, much less temperamental rising situation, just fyi
Averie I think you and I need to form a vanilla lovers anonymous club, these are calling to me, loudly!
I am loving all your white/vanilla-based cakes and the cookies and yes, we need a club! lol
I just love the name: Sugardoodle. Awesome! Your pictures absolutely DO do these babies justice. They look soft and chewy and moist and honestly, out of this world. I am typically a texture gal when it comes to my preferred cookie, i.e., various layers of textures like chocolate chips, coconut, etc. but these could definitely tempt me any day! I have never tried bread flour in cookies but I love your results so I am thinking I must give it a try. Another great recipe, Averie! Do you ever have an off day??! ;-)
I am normally a texture girl but these are sort of a special exception! They do have chewiness so there is texture there – but the flavor is just so good, not having anything in them to ‘clutter’ it is really nice!
Day off? Not so much :)
There is nothing plain about a vanilla cookie! SImple, sure, but plain? NO way! My favorite recipe that I posted around this time last year was for vanilla cookies. They are always a hit when I make them.
https://cookiesandcrafts.wordpress.com/2011/10/24/cookies-a-refined-vanilla-cookie-and-one-for-the-kid-in-your-heart/
These would become a very fast favorite of mine. The texture looks so perfect!
I never knew about that tip to chill cookie dough before using it – thanks for the advice; I’ll be sure to use it in the future!
Makes a huge difference in results!
Your cookies have such adorable wrinkles! That’s a sign of a perfect cookie. Love the marriage of sugar cookies and snickerdoodles!
I use them as a ‘perfect cookie sign’ too! I always reach for the ones with the most wrinkles, first!
Why YES, I’ll take about a dozen of those… Thanks for asking!
What do you do with all of these sweets that you make every day?! It seems so unhealthy!
Not sure if you read the part in the post where I mentioned this makes a batch size of 11 cookies. They go pretty fast when you’re feeding a family!
And what we don’t eat, there is always school parties, office parties, co-workers, friends, etc who are more than happy to take anything extra off our hands.