Homemade Butter Cookies

These homemade Danish butter cookies are festive Christmas cookies! Unlike the store-bought version you may be used to, these are soft in the center with irresistible buttery vanilla and almond flavors. Make lovely designs with a large piping tip and dip in chocolate and sprinkles for a festive touch!

butter cookies with sprinkles

Welcome to Sally’s Cookie Palooza, my annual Christmas cookie countdown tradition. Tuck away your pie crust recipe and break out all your cookie baking tools!

These Butter Cookies Are:

  • Not your regular butter cookies
  • Mega flavorful with almond and vanilla
  • Super buttery and soft like snowball cookies
  • Crisp on the edges
  • Piped with a piping tip like chocolate swirled meringue cookies
  • Quick—only 30 minutes of chill time
  • Extra festive with chocolate, cherries, and/or sprinkles

This butter cookie recipe is adapted from my spritz cookies and sugar cookies, both well-loved recipes on my website. You already know you’re in for something incredible!

stack of butter cookies

Butter Cookies Video Tutorial

Let’s watch and learn how to make butter cookies. You’ll notice that this cookie dough comes together easily with only 8 ingredients. You need a mixer for the dough, plus a piping bag and large tip to pipe the cookie dough.

YouTube video

Aren’t they pretty?


butter cookies on a white plate

Ingredients in Butter Cookies

This is a 1-bowl cookie recipe! There’s no leavening, so the texture is closer to a shortbread cookie. The dough is like my spritz cookies, but with a little milk to make it pipe-able.

  1. Butter: 1 cup of butter adds flavor, structure, and buttery goodness in each bite. Make sure it’s properly softened to room temperature before beginning.
  2. Sugar: Like many cookie recipes including these dreamy shortbread cookies, creamed butter and sugar is the base of today’s dough.
  3. Vanilla & Almond Extract: Flavor and more flavor! Almond extract is a welcome addition. If you’re not a fan of almond, see my recipe notes below.
  4. Egg: 1 egg adds structure, stability, and flavor.
  5. All-Purpose Flour: Add the flour directly to the wet ingredients. No need to mix it up in a separate bowl.
  6. Salt: By offsetting the sugar, salt adds flavor.
  7. Milk: I don’t usually add milk to cookies like this, but we need to thin out this cookie dough so it flows through the piping tip. You don’t need much, about 1–2 Tablespoons.
butter cookie dough in a mixing bowl and in a piping bag
piped butter cookie dough on baking sheet

How to Pipe Butter Cookies

As you saw in this video tutorial above, this cookie dough is piped onto the baking sheet. That’s how the butter cookies get their lovely shape.

Line the cookie sheet? Some swear by using a PLAIN cookie sheet, but lining with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat is fine. (I use silicone baking mats for all my cookies and these are no different.) If you don’t line the pan, don’t grease it either.

2 Success Tips:

  1. Start Small: Place the cookie dough in the piping bag. Start with a little bit of dough so you can determine if it’s creamy enough to pipe. If it’s too thick, it’s impossible to pipe and you’ll have to put the dough back in the bowl and add a little more milk.
  2. Chill: I find it’s easiest to stick with simple designs like a swirl or even just a line. Whatever design you pipe, I highly recommend chilling the piped cookies on the baking sheet for at least 20–30 minutes before baking. Without this chill time, the cookies will likely lose their piped shape.
homemade butter cookies

Best Piping Tips to Use

The cookie dough is thick, so it’s imperative to use a large piping tip with about a 1/2-inch opening. (That’s big!) The smaller the size, the harder it will be to pipe. I highly recommend an open star piping tip, but I actually use Ateco 849 which is a closed star tip. The opening is so large that it still works wonderfully!

Here are some options:

The popular Wilton 1M works too, but you may need to add more milk to the cookie dough to thin it out since the piping tip is smaller. Remember, the more milk you add, the longer you need to chill the shaped cookies or else they will over-spread in the oven.

Don’t forget your piping bags, too! (Disposable or Reusable)

By the way, these piping tips and a set of bags would be a great holiday gift for any baker. I always include them in my complete guide of Holiday Gifts for Bakers!

butter cookies with chocolate
homemade butter cookies in cookie tin

3 Butter Cookie Varieties!

Make 3 varieties from 1 batch. 🙂

  • Dip baked cookies into melted chocolate and add sprinkles.
  • Stick a maraschino cherry in the center before baking.
  • Add sprinkles or coarse sugar before baking.

If you love chocolate, don’t miss these chocolate butter cookies. And for even more flavors of butter cookie dough, you’ll love these mint chocolate checkerboard cookies, pinwheel cookies, and neapolitan cookies.

See Your Homemade Butter Cookies!

Many readers tried this recipe as part of a baking challenge! Feel free to share your recipe photos with us on social media. 🙂

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    homemade butter cookies in cookie tin

    Butter Cookies

    5 Stars 4 Stars 3 Stars 2 Stars 1 Star 4.6 from 194 reviews
    • Author: Sally
    • Prep Time: 30 minutes
    • Cook Time: 14 minutes
    • Total Time: 1 hour, 15 minutes
    • Yield: 30 cookies
    • Category: Desserts
    • Method: Baking
    • Cuisine: Danish
    Save Recipe

    Description

    Using just 8 basic ingredients and a large piping tip, make these soft vanilla-almond-flavored butter cookies. There’s no leavening, so the texture is similar to shortbread cookies. I recommend chilling the piped cookies for at least 20–30 minutes before baking.


    Ingredients

    • 1 cup (16 Tbsp; 226g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
    • 3/4 cup (150g) granulated sugar
    • 1 and 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
    • 1 teaspoon almond extract
    • 1 large egg, at room temperature
    • 2 and 1/4 cups (281g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled)
    • 1/2 teaspoon salt
    • 12 Tablespoons (15–30ml) milk

    Optional Toppings


    Instructions

    1. Read through the recipe and recipe Notes before beginning. Make room in your refrigerator for a baking sheet so the shaped cookies can chill for 20–30 minutes. Without chilling, the piped cookies will over-spread. If you chill the dough prior to shaping, the dough will be too cold/stiff to pipe.
    2. Line 2–3 large baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats, or leave unlined. If unlined, do not grease the pan.
    3. In a large bowl, using a handheld mixer or a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter and granulated sugar together on medium-high speed until smooth, about 2 minutes. Add the egg, vanilla extract, and almond extract, and beat on high speed until combined, about 1 minute. Scrape down the sides and up the bottom of the bowl and beat again as needed to combine.
    4. On low speed, beat in the flour and salt. Turn up to high speed and beat until completely combined. On medium speed, beat in 1.5 Tablespoons of milk. You want a dough that’s creamy and pipe-able (but still thick), so you may need up to 2–2.5 Tablespoons of milk. The more milk you add, the more the cookies will spread, so chilling in step 6 is imperative. I recommend keeping the amount of milk small and using a large enough piping tip, like the ones I suggest in the post above.
    5. Add your large piping tip to the piping bag. Spoon a little bit of dough into the piping bag and pipe a 1–2-inch swirl or line on the prepared baking sheet. The reason I suggest only a little bit of dough to start is because the dough may still be too thick to pipe. If it’s too thick, transfer that dough back to the mixing bowl and add another 1/2 Tablespoon of milk. If the dough is creamy enough to pipe, continue piping the dough in 1–2-inch swirls or lines, 3 inches apart on the baking sheet. See video for a visual if needed. If desired, place a maraschino cherry in the center of the swirl or sprinkle the dough with sprinkles and/or coarse sugar.
    6. Transfer the baking sheet to the refrigerator and chill the shaped cookies for 20–30 minutes.
    7. Meanwhile, preheat oven to 350°F (177°C).
    8. Bake the chilled cookies for 12–15 minutes or until lightly browned on the sides. The cookies will spread like all cookies do, but not completely lose their shape, especially if you chilled the shaped dough. If the cookies are smaller, they will take closer to 12 minutes. Keep your eye on them. They’re done when the edges lightly brown.
    9. Remove from the oven and allow to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
    10. Optional Chocolate: You can melt the chocolate in a double boiler or the microwave. If using the microwave: place the chopped chocolate in a medium heatproof bowl. Melt in 20-second increments in the microwave, stirring after each increment until completely melted and smooth. Dip the cookies in chocolate and top with sprinkles, if desired. Allow the chocolate to set completely at room temperature for about 1 hour or in the refrigerator for 20 minutes.
    11. Plain cookies stay fresh in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 week. Cookies with chocolate or cherries stay fresh in an airtight container at room temperature for 4 days or in the refrigerator for 1 week.
    YouTube video

    Notes

    1. Make Ahead Instructions: You can chill the shaped cookies on the baking sheet in the refrigerator for up to 2 days before baking. If chilling for longer than 30 minutes, cover with plastic wrap or aluminum foil. Sometimes I pipe all the swirls close together on 1 baking sheet, then refrigerate for up to 2 days. (Since my refrigerator can’t fit 2-3 sheets at once.) After chilling, the shaped dough is cold, so you can use a flat spatula to pick up the cold shaped dough and arrange on 2-3 baking sheets. You can also freeze the un-baked shaped dough for up to 2-3 months. Bake the frozen shaped dough (no need to thaw) for an extra couple minutes. Baked cookies, with or without chocolate/cherries/sprinkles, freeze well for up to 3 months.
    2. Special Tools (affiliate links): Baking Sheets | Silicone Baking Mats or Parchment Paper | Electric Mixer (Handheld or Stand) | Piping Bag (Reusable or Disposable) | Large Piping Tip (such as Ateco 849 (pictured), Wilton 8B, Ateco 826, or Ateco 827) | Cooling Rack | Double Boiler (optional for melting chocolate)
    3. Almond Extract: Almond extract adds such a wonderful flavor and I don’t recommend skipping it. If desired, you can leave it out completely or add another 1/2 teaspoon of pure vanilla extract in its place. You can also substitute with 3/4 teaspoon peppermint extract, 1 teaspoon lemon extract, or another flavor extract you enjoy. (Some are more potent than others.) Adding 1/4 teaspoon of ground cinnamon is delicious too!
    4. No Piping Tip & Using a Cookie Press: This recipe is similar to my spritz cookies where I use a cookie press. If you don’t have a large piping tip and/or you want to use a cookie press, make the spritz cookies (they do not need the milk). If you don’t have a cookie press or large piping tip, snip a 1/2 inch corner off the end of a plastic bag and pipe lines/flat swirls.
    5. Optional Chocolate: For the best results, use a 4 ounce “baking chocolate” bar found in the baking aisle. I prefer Bakers or Ghirardelli brands. You can use semi-sweet, milk chocolate, or even white chocolate. Candy melts or almond bark work too. Do not use chocolate chips, as they contain stabilizers preventing them from melting into the proper consistency. After you melt it, if the chocolate is too thick for dipping, stir in 1 teaspoon of canola oil to help thin it out.

    Sally’s Cookie Palooza

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      About the Author

      Sally McKenney

      Sally McKenney is a professional baker, food photographer, and cookbook author. Since 2011, she has been sharing meticulously tested recipes and step-by-step tutorials, helping home bakers gain confidence in the kitchen. Over the years, her dedication to approachable baking has built a loyal community of millions. Her work has been featured on Good Morning America, in People Magazine, and on popular sites like BuzzFeed, HuffPost, The Kitchn, and Country Living.

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      Reader Comments and Reviews

      1. Andrea Armstrong says:
        January 29, 2025

        The flavour was great; but I did have a problem piping them. If I feel the dough is too stiff to pipe, is it ok to continue adding more milk till I get a better piping consistency? I’m a senior and have problems with the strength in my hands at times…

        Reply
        1. Lexi @ Sally's Baking says:
          February 3, 2025

          Hi Andrea, we’re glad you enjoyed the cookies! You can add more milk but risk the cookies spreading while baked. Do you have a cookie press? If so, you could try these similar spritz cookies.

          Reply
      2. Catherine S says:
        January 14, 2025

        These worked out well for me! I’m always on the lookout for a cookie recipe I’ve never made before. Mine were not as beautiful as yours, of course, but they held their shape enough. The video was very helpful!

        Reply
      3. Ike says:
        December 17, 2024

        Tastes amazing! But hard to nail the perfect piping consistency.

        Reply
      4. Matt M. says:
        December 16, 2024

        I just made these cookies tonight and they turned out beautifully. They taste exactly like the butter cookies I get from the Italian bakery.

        I love how much detail there is in the instructions. Between the notes, video, and detailed step by step instructions, I was 100% confident I could produce a good result. I followed the recipe verbatim, and did not need to add any additional milk in order to pipe the cookies.

        The piping was the one aspect of this recipe that had me a little worried. I’ve never piped anything other than “happy birthday”, and that wasn’t very good lol. The good news is they look perfect! I made one straight cookie as a test to see how the piping felt, then jumped straight into making swirls and stars. I had a few cookies that were a little smaller than the rest, but the shapes were great. Definitely no issues with spreading like some have reported.

        Thank you so much for this recipe and all the time you take to produce recipes that make this weekend-baker feel like a pro. Wish I could post a photo of my cookies to go with this review.

        Reply
      5. Diane C says:
        December 16, 2024

        Love this recipe. But every year I forget not to overfill the piping bag and I break my hands trying to pipe the first row of cookies. I want to freeze the unbaked cookies this year and bake before Christmas. If I do this— do I apply sprinkles and cherries before or after freezing?

        Reply
        1. Beth @ Sally's Baking says:
          December 27, 2024

          Hi Diane, we recommend adding the cherries and sprinkles after freezing, before baking. Sorry if this reply came too late!

          Reply