Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

Table of Contents[Hide][Show]
  • Sugar Cookies from the Early 1900s+
    • This Recipe Only Needed One Substitution
    • Make Sugar Cookie Cake if Pressed for Time!
  • Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies+
    • Ingredients
    • Instructions
    • Recipe Notes

Authentic sugar cookie recipe from the early 1900s using old-fashioned, whole ingredients with a flavor most have never experienced before!

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (1)

My paternal Grandmother was not much of a cook, but wow, could she ever bake!

Every year during the first week of December, she would go on a baking binge. Over one weekend, she would make dozens of cookies for the Christmas holiday.

My two favorites were her incrediblegingerbread cookies and the old-fashioned sugar cookie recipe below. She and Grandpa lived down the street. So, my siblings and I could bike over after school and grab a couple for an afternoon snack.

It’s hard to believe, but if Grandma was alive today, she would be over 125 years old! Born in 1890, she grew up without fast food, vegetable oils, refined flour, or GMOs.

As you can see from her yellowed, handwritten recipe card below, butter and cream were considered essential for cookies back then.

Eating plenty of nourishing fats with your sweets greatly mitigates the blood sugar spike, thus reducing the chances of a mood-altering sugar crash later.

Compare this simple, wholesome 7 ingredients list to the nasty, dangerously lowfat sugar cookies at the supermarket!

The ingredients’ lists are eye-popping including synthetically fortified refined flour, GMO sugar and rancid polyunsaturated oils, chemicals, synthetic flavors, and additives of all kinds.

I’m thankful that I grew up knowing what real sugar cookies taste like. This helped me to avoid the temptation of those sugar cookie imposters of today.

I know that Grandma would be thrilled that I am sharing this recipe for others to learn from and enjoy.

Sugar Cookies from the Early 1900s

If you notice from Grandma’s well-worn index card below, she wrote that the recipe came from the “Home Bureau”. What was that you might wonder?

Home Bureaus were established across New York State in the early twentieth century to provide information on household economics and management to its citizens.

My Grandparents lived in Chautauqua County, New York until they retired and moved to Florida in the 1950s. That is where she originally came across this recipe for sugar cookies in the early 1900s!

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (2)

This Recipe Only Needed One Substitution

The only change I’ve made to my Grandma’s sugar cookie recipe with my own family is the choice of flour.

I use sprouted flourmade with ancient grain to add additional nutrition and digestibility to the cookies (see my frequently updatedshopping guide for quality sources).

Feel free to use whatever grain-based flour you choose, including a homemade gluten-free flour mix.

However, note that I have not tested this recipe for sugar cookies using anything but sprouted ancient grain. If you make them with another flour, please post in the comments and tell us all how they turned out!

Make Sugar Cookie Cake if Pressed for Time!

If you are pressed for time and can’t bake three dozen individual cookies, spread the batter out on a large pizza pan and make a sugar cookie cake!

This recipe for a chocolate cookie cake describes the process in more detail.

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (3)

4.08 from 14 votes

Print

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies

My Grandmother's sugar cookie recipe reinvented using sprouted ancient grain flour to add a boost of nutrition and extra digestibility.

CourseDessert

CuisineAmerican

Keywordclassic, old fashioned, traditional, whole food

Prep Time 10 minutes

Cook Time 10 minutes

Total Time 20 minutes

Servings 3 dozen cookies

Calories 117 kcal

Author Sarah Pope

Ingredients

  • 4cupssprouted floursifted
  • 1/4cupcreamraw or pasteurized, NOT ultrapasteurized
  • 1cupbuttersoftened, preferably grassfed
  • 2eggswell beaten, preferably pastured or free range
  • 2cupscane sugarpreferably organic
  • 3tspbaking powder
  • 1/2tspground nutmegpreferably organic
  • 1Tblvanilla extract
  • 1tspsea salt

Instructions

  1. Mix cream and softened butter in a large bowl (I use these).

  2. Blend in sugar.

  3. Blend in eggs and vanilla extract.

  4. Sift baking powder, salt and ground nutmeg together with the sprouted flour.

  5. Slowly add flour mixture to the wet ingredients a cup at a time. Blend well before adding the next cup.

  6. When all the flour has been blended into the cookie dough, start to form cookies on baking sheets lined with unbleached parchment paper. Spread them a good distance apart, as the cookies will expand a lot while baking!

    Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (4)

  7. Bake cookies at 400 F/ 204C for 10-12 minutes. Remove from oven when the cookies are very light brown.

  8. Repeat until all the cookies are baked.

  9. Cool and store in airtight containers or a cookie jar.

Recipe Notes

Expeller pressed coconut oil may be substituted for butter. I do not recommend virgin coconut oil for this recipe as it would add a faint coconut flavor to the cookies.

Coconut cream may be substituted for dairy cream.

Sprouted gluten-free flour may be substituted as needed.

Nutrition Facts

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookies

Amount Per Serving (1 cookie)

Calories 117Calories from Fat 54

% Daily Value*

Fat 6g9%

Saturated Fat 3g15%

Polyunsaturated Fat 1g

Monounsaturated Fat 2g

Carbohydrates 13g4%

Protein 2g4%

* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2000 calorie diet.

Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (5)
Old Fashioned Sugar Cookie Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What happens if you don't add enough sugar to cookies? ›

When you decrease the sugar in a cookie recipe, you won't just get a result that's less sweet. You'll get cookies that are harder, drier, crumblier, and spread far less. It was also interesting to note that decreasing the sugar also yielded 1 less cookie dough ball.

What can I add to sugar cookie mix to make it better? ›

Add extracts

A teaspoon or two of extracts will noticeably boost flavor when blended into your sugar cookie mix. Vanilla is the obvious choice. For a more intriguing flavor, add both vanilla and almond extracts. Rum, maple and anise are other delicious varieties to consider.

How do you make sugar cookie dough taste better? ›

Almond Extract: For a twist on the traditional sugar cookie flavor, try adding a small amount of almond extract. Start with 1/2 teaspoon and adjust according to your preference. Citrus Zest: Incorporate the zest of citrus fruits like lemon, orange, or lime into the dough. The zest adds a bright and refreshing flavor.

What makes sugar cookies puff up? ›

Baking soda encourages spreading while baking powder puffs the cookies up. If your recipe calls for 1 teaspoon of baking soda, you would use 3 to 4 teaspoons of baking powder. Caution: This could result in an unwanted flavor shift.

What happens if you don't have enough sugar for a recipe? ›

For basic baked goods like sugar cookies or pound cake, using maple syrup or honey instead of sugar lends the finished product a little extra flavor. You'll need a little less of these sweeteners for your recipe—just ¾ cup of maple syrup or honey replaces a full cup of granulated sugar.

What happens when you add too much butter to sugar cookies? ›

Butter is an emulsifier and it makes cookies tender. It also adds in the crispy-around-the-edges element. Adding too much butter can cause the cookies to be flat and greasy. Adding too little butter can cause the cookies to be tough and crumbly.

Can you over mix sugar cookie dough? ›

Over-working the dough yields a tough cookie, which is not at all what you want. The very best sugar cookies are soft and tender. → Follow this tip: One of the keys to great sugar cookies is mixing the dry ingredients only until they're just incorporated, and not a second longer.

Do you cool sugar cookie dough? ›

So, if you can't wait the entire time requested by your cookie recipe, at least try to chill your dough for at least 30 minutes. It'll be worth it! Test your patience with this collection of our best sugar cookie recipes.

How to jazz up sugar cookie dough? ›

This is another really easy store-bought sugar cookie dough hack. Take a lined baking sheet and dump out sprinkles--a lot of them. Roll your cookie dough log in the sprinkles, slice, and bake as directed. For extra color, you can mix in jell food coloring.

Why do you chill sugar cookie dough? ›

Chilling cookie dough before baking solidifies the fat in the cookies. As the cookies bake, the fat in the chilled cookie dough takes longer to melt than room-temperature fat. And the longer the fat remains solid, the less cookies spread. In addition, the sugar in the dough gradually absorbs liquid.

How do you keep sugar cookie dough from spreading? ›

Chilling cookie dough helps prevent spreading. The colder the dough, the less the cookies will over-spread into greasy puddles. You'll have thicker, sturdier, and more solid cookies. Whenever I make cookies, I plan ahead and chill the cookie dough overnight.

Why do my sugar cookies turn into blobs? ›

If the oven's hot enough, the fat melts before the cookies set. And since their flour/liquid matrix hasn't yet had a chance to harden, the cookies spread – becoming those dreaded cookie blobs.

How important is sugar in cookies? ›

Sugar creates texture

Sugar easily binds with water, which accomplishes two main things. 1) It locks in moisture, keeping your baked goods from drying out; and 2) It inhibits the development of gluten which keeps your cookies, cakes and sweet breads softer. Variances in sugar type will create different outcomes here.

What makes cookies fluffy and not flat? ›

Room temperature butter is just the right consistency to incorporate air when it's creamed with sugar. These trapped air pockets result in risen, fluffy cookies. If the butter is any warmer, it won't incorporate enough air and your cookies will have less rise.

What happens if you don't add brown sugar to cookies? ›

Brown sugar adds a dense chewiness to certain types of baked goods like cookies. When brown sugar is replaced with white sugar, you may end up with a slightly crispier result. Still, this isn't necessarily a bad thing. White sugar can be used to replace brown sugar, producing only slight changes in texture and flavor.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Chrissy Homenick

Last Updated:

Views: 5592

Rating: 4.3 / 5 (54 voted)

Reviews: 93% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Chrissy Homenick

Birthday: 2001-10-22

Address: 611 Kuhn Oval, Feltonbury, NY 02783-3818

Phone: +96619177651654

Job: Mining Representative

Hobby: amateur radio, Sculling, Knife making, Gardening, Watching movies, Gunsmithing, Video gaming

Introduction: My name is Chrissy Homenick, I am a tender, funny, determined, tender, glorious, fancy, enthusiastic person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.