Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

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posted by Zainab Mansarayon Mar 24, 2020 5 comments »

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Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (1)

Hi friends! I have a special recipe for you today. I am sharing my husband’s grandma’s best sugar cookie recipe! It’s a soft and chewy sugar cookie recipe that is definitely a keeper. I added in some fresh Meyer lemon zest to a batch of the cookies to spruce them up for spring.

March is Women’s International Month. In honor of International Women’s Day earlier this month, I am sharing this special recipe in collaboration with other talented women of color bloggers.

As many of you know, I started this blog a little over 8 years ago to teach myself how to bake just after I got married. I didn’t grow up baking (I grew up in Sierra Leone, where I am from!) and so I don’t have any baking recipes passed down from generations. When I moved here to the US many moons ago, I noticed that most people treasured the memories of baking with their mom and grandmas and love having their recipes. It makes sense as food is always a part of a culture, a way of showing love and passing on traditions.

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (2)

Even though I grew up learning to cook from my mom and aunts, there are no recipes that were passed down. Yet, there was something special about the baking memories I observed and I wanted to make sure I passed down some recipes to my future offsprings.

And so I started teaching myself to bake and through the process, I am accumulating recipes I love and ones my family enjoys for my children. Also sharing these favorites with you here on the blog.

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (3)

This Christmas, my husband’s cousin gifted me with a recipe book from their grandmother. It was the best Christmas present I received and I’ve been enjoying making the recipes for my husband and kids.

He has always mentioned how his grandmother’s chocolate chip cookies were the best and how he remembers having the sugar cookies after school some days. Now, I can make them for him and he can fondly remember the memories of his grandmother.

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (4)

These sugar cookies were the first ones I made from the recipe book. Her recipe didn’t need much tweaking as it was easy and a very forgivable recipe for soft, pillowy cookies.

After the first batch according to her recipe, I decided to add in some Meyer lemon zest as I had some laying around after making this winter citrus cake. It was a great sweet and citrusy burst to the cookies that I think is perfect for Spring and Easter baking.

These cookies are also very stable to use as cut-outs. I experimented with cookie cutters and they turned out great, I will share those in another post as I’d like to decorate the cutout cookies.

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (5)

For now, enjoy my husband’s grandma’s best sugar cookies. Her great-granddaughter (my daughter) sure is enjoying them and she was my little helper while taking these pictures.

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (6)

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (7)

Yield: 5 dozen cookies

Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe

These soft and chewy sugar cookies are my husband's grandma's best sugar cookie recipe.

Prep Time30 minutes

Cook Time10 minutes

Total Time40 minutes

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter
  • 2 cups granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 cup extra virgin olive oil or vegetable oil
  • 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
  • 5 cups all-purpose flour
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • a pinch of salt
  • Topping: 1/2 cup granulated sugar

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a large bowl or the bowl of a stand mixer, cream together the butter and sugar on medium-high speed until light and fluffy, about 3-4 minutes.
  3. Beat in the eggs, one at a time until combine. Add in the oil and vanilla extract. Beat on low until combined.
  4. In another large bowl, sift together the flour, baking soda, cream of tartar and salt. After sifting, use a whisk to combine the dry ingredients together.
  5. With the mixer on low, gradually add in the dry ingredients. Mix until combined on low. Transition to a rubber spatula if your mixer can't handle mixing.
  6. Using a medium cookie scoop, scoop out cookie dough and roll into balls between palms of hands.
  7. Roll each rolled dough into sugar. Place balls on the prepared cookie sheet, two inches apart. Press down with a fork or small glass.
  8. Repeat for each rolled cookie dough.
  9. Bake cookies for 8-10 minutes until lightly golden on edges.
  10. Transfer cookies to a cooling rack.
  11. Store cookies in an air-tight container at room temperature or freeze for longer periods in a ziplock bag.

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published on Mar 24, 2020

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5 comments on “Grandma’s Best Sugar Cookie Recipe”

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  1. Wendy ThielReply

    Definitely not a fan of the olive oil in the cookie as it leaves an aftertaste but the version made with vegetable oil was good.

    • Zainab MansarayReply

      I am glad to hear you liked the vegetable oil version.

  2. MacyReply

    Omg what a beautiful baby!

  3. Naomi RobinsonReply

    We all love sugar cookies here so this recipe is happening here soon! Nothing better than recipes handed down from generation to generation.

    • Zainab MansarayReply

      Knowing that the recipe has survived the test of times, you know it is a solid one!

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Grandma's Best Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why put cream of tartar in sugar 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 are the ingredients in grandma cookies? ›

Ingredients
  • 340 g. butter.
  • 170 g. Soft brown sugar.
  • 1 tbsp. Vanilla essence.
  • 1½ tsp. baking powder.
  • 85 g. caster sugar.
  • Beaten egg.
  • 468 g. Plain flour.
  • 340 g. chocolate chips.

What does brown sugar do to a cookie vs granulated sugar? ›

In that role, white sugar aerates the dough when creamed with butter for thick and puffy cookies. Brown sugar, meanwhile, is dense and compacts easily, creating fewer air pockets during creaming—that means that there's less opportunity to entrap gas, creating cookies that rise less and spread more.

Why use powdered sugar instead of granulated in cookies? ›

The powdered sugar in the recipe helps absorb moisture from other ingredients, giving the cookies a unique bumpy looking appearance and an extra tender and chewy texture.

How important is baking soda in sugar cookies? ›

Baking soda also serves another important purpose when it comes to cookies: It encourages spreading by raising the mixture's pH, which slows protein coagulation. This gives the dough more time to set before the eggs set, which results in a more evenly baked cookie.

What are grandmas cookies allergic to? ›

Grandma's Cookies is not an allergen-free environment. Although not all of our products contain food allergens, all of our products are baked or prepared in an environment where eggs, milk, wheat, soy, peanuts and/or tree nuts are present.

Who owns Grandma's cookies? ›

Nancy's niece, Theresa Rubio, took over the business several years later and reopened Grandma's Cookies in 2010 in the original location that Grandma Thompson had her business for 24 years. Customers today continue to enjoy the same recipes and hand-made treats that began decades ago..

What company makes Grandma's cookies? ›

GRANDMA'S® Chocolate Chip Cookies | FritoLay.

How to jazz up sugar cookies? ›

Take plain sugar cookies up a notch with exciting mix-ins like chocolate chips, rainbow sprinkles, toasted chopped nuts, chopped dried fruit or M&M's. Add these after blending your butter and egg into the sugar cookie mix.

Why do my sugar cookies taste weird? ›

The ingredients you used could be the culprit – using different sugars, melted butter, baking powder or baking soda can alter a cookie's texture and taste.

What happens if you add too much sugar to sugar cookies? ›

Sugar sweetens the cookies and makes them an enticing golden brown. Adding too little sugar can affect the taste and texture of cookies. Adding too much can cause them to be brittle.

What happens if you forget to add brown sugar to cookies? ›

What happens when you bake without brown sugar? To be succinct, the resulting baked good could be slightly drier or more crisp. Without the excess moisture from the molasses in the brown sugar, the final cookie won't be as chewy and the final bread might be drier.

Which sugar is best for cookies? ›

Because of this caster sugar is generally the most versatile and preferred of the two when baking – its small granules mixes more easily and dissolve more readily when combined with other ingredients giving biscuits, cakes, pastries etc. a more even, less coarse texture.

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.

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 help cookies rise? ›

When combined with baking soda, it becomes a leavening agent (the stuff that makes baked goods puff up in the oven) by producing carbon dioxide gas. If you ever run out of baking powder, you can substitute 1/4 teaspoon baking soda plus 1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar for 1 teaspoon baking powder.

Can you leave out cream of tartar in cookies? ›

The Best Substitute for Cream of Tartar

For every 1/2 teaspoon of cream of tartar in the recipe, use 1 teaspoon lemon juice or white vinegar. As an example, if your cookie recipe calls for 1 teaspoon baking soda, add 2 teaspoons lemon juice instead of the cream of tartar.

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