Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (2024)

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This is a fabulous Snickerdoodle recipe for chewy cookie lovers – and these Snickerdoodles are so good that this recipe made it into my first cookbook as well! We make these every year and this is a no-fail, delicious recipe that your family will love!

Snickerdoodles are a long time love of mine, with the love affair always ignited by a trip to Disneyland. In one of their coffee shops-the one at the end of Main Street to be exact- they make the biggest…thickest…puffiest Snickerdoodles you ever want to lay your lips on. I do believe I had one for breakfast three days in a row while we were at Disneyland.

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (1)

Chewy And Tasty Snickerdoodle Cookies

These plain and often under appreciated cookies are undeniably tasty. When you bite into one, the sugary coating breaks into a chewy center of buttery awesomeness. Mike couldn’t stop eating them. For a man who up until the moment he tried them had no idea what a Snickerdoodle was, he sure fell in love hard and fast. There is just something perfect about this buttery goodness covered in white sugar and cinnamon.

Snickerdoodles Are Not Sugar Cookies

Snickerdoodles are so very close to the sugar cookie, however snickerdoodles have cream of tartar in them, which is used for the tangy taste AND that chewy texture that we all love. It’s not a huge difference, but it IS a difference! I prefer snickerdoodles to a sugar cookie. Except for my lemon sugar cookies, of course! THOSE are amazing! You also don’t traditionally roll sugar cookies in cinnamon and sugar, they are more for cutting out and decorating. With that said, you definitely cannot roll out this snickerdoodle dough for cut-out cookies, it will not work! So that is the huge difference between the two cookies if you are looking for it.

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (2)

Can you make snickerdoodles without cream of tartar?

You sure can, but they won’t have that classic tang to them. You can add a teaspoon of lemon juice or vinegar to get a tanginess to your cookie instead if you don’t have cream of tarter in your pantry. If you don’t have either lemon juice of vinegar, simply replace the baking soda and the cream of tartar with an equal amount of baking power in the recipe.

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (3)

Tips & Tricks for Making Snickerdoodles

  • Use shortening if you want your snickerdoodles to be a little puffier. If you like it to maintain the buttery goodness, then use all butter in them. I prefer the butter taste to the puffier texture, it really is all about your personal preference!
  • Make sure that the entire surface of each mixture is covered with cinnamon and sugar. This makes it evenly coated individually, which brings out the buttery goodness within.
  • Under bake them slightly, as I suggest with almost all of my cookie recipes.It just helps them be chewier!
  • Make these for Santa this year. He’ll love you for it!
Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (4)

No matter how I plan ahead, Christmas seems to sneak up on me so I am trying to re-make and take new photos of all my favourite Christmas cookies that I have made on The Kitchen Magpie over the years! Some are SO old – this recipe for snickerdoodles is already 7 years old, it was time for new photos! And just like always, these cookies were gone in a flash!

Happy baking! Who is gearing up nice and early for the Christmas season this year? I am just skipping right over Halloween and heading on to the jingling bells of my favourite time of year!

Try some of my newest cookie recipes:

  • Russian Tea Cakes
  • Thumbprint cookies
  • No Bake Oatmeal Cookies
  • Chocolate Mint Kiss Cookies

Love,

Karlynn

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (5)

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Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (6)

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe

There is nothing like a fabulous Classic Snickerdoodle Cookie for your holiday baking! We make these year round as they are a family favourite.

5 from 25 votes

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (7)

Review

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Prep Time
29 minutes
Cook Time
10 minutes
Total Time
39 minutes
Course
Dessert
Cuisine
American
Servings
36
Calories
174
Author
Karlynn Johnston

Ingredients

Snickerdoodle Cookie Dough Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups of butter
  • 2 1/4 cups white sugar
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 3 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 3 teaspoons cream of tartar
  • 1 1/3 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt

Cinnamon Sugar Coating Mixture

  • 1/3 cup white sugar
  • 1 tbsp ground cinnamon

Instructions

  • Pre-heat your oven to 375 degrees.

  • In a bowl attached to a stand mixer ( using the paddle attachment) cream together the butter and white sugar completely. Alternately you can use a large bowl and a handheld mixer with beaters as well.

  • Add in the eggs one at a time, incorporating each one thoroughly into the dough after adding.

  • Mix the vanilla into the batter completely.

  • In a medium sized bowl, whisk together your dry ingredients, then mix into the butter mixture until completely combined together.

  • Combine the white sugar and cinnamon in a bowl.

  • Roll a tablespoon sized amount of the snickerdoodle cookie dough into a ball, then roll in the cinnamon/sugar topping, making sure to cover the cookie dough ball completely with the cinnamon mixture.

  • Place the cinnamon/sugar covered cookie dough balls on a parchment lined baking sheet about 2 inches apart.

  • Bake for 8-10 minutes, watching closely, until the bottoms of the cookies are browned nicely and the edges are baked .Remove from the oven and let cool for 2-3 minutes.

  • Remove from the baking sheets onto a cookie rack and cool completely.

Recipe Notes

You can try all shortening for the REAL old fashioned Snickerdoodle cookie recipe, or half butter and half shortening. It really is up to your personal likes!

Nutrition Information

Calories: 174kcal, Carbohydrates: 24g, Protein: 1g, Fat: 8g, Saturated Fat: 4g, Cholesterol: 33mg, Sodium: 129mg, Potassium: 61mg, Sugar: 14g, Vitamin A: 255IU, Calcium: 8mg, Iron: 0.7mg

All calories and info are based on a third party calculator and are only an estimate. Actual nutritional info will vary with brands used, your measuring methods, portion sizes and more.

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Karlynn Johnston

I’m a busy mom of two, wife & cookbook author who loves creating fast, fresh meals for my little family on the Canadian prairies. Karlynn Facts: I'm allergic to broccoli. I've never met a co*cktail that I didn't like. I would rather burn down my house than clean it. Most of all, I love helping YOU get dinner ready because there's nothing more important than connecting with our loved ones around the dinner table!

Learn more about me

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Reader Interactions

Comments & Recipe Tips Share a tip or comment!

  1. Emilia says

    Reply

    Have made these many times, they always turn out perfectly. I put the cookie dough in the fridge for 10 minutes before baking them, though. This makes it so much easier to handle the dough.Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (12)

  2. Helene LeBarron says

    Reply

    Hi I have been looking for the recipe for 2 different squares that were online a few weeks ago.One had a cream cheese icing.Would love to have them.

  3. Maria halsdorfer says

    Reply

    Awful so upset dough was so soft couldn’t roll added another cup of flour I had just dropped them on the cookie sheet looked awful tasted awful so sweet and this recipe is so different then other ones, 2/14 cups sugar really so sorry I wasted my time and ing. Not even 1 star!!!

  4. Annalee says

    Reply

    Is the measurement for the baking soda really 1 1/ 3 tsps? Not 1 1/4 tsps or 1 1/2 tsps? Thank you

  5. Andrea Manthorne says

    Reply

    Have them in the oven now. They smell heavenly

  6. Alesha says

    Reply

    So the dough isn’t think enough to roll into a ball. I don’t understand why.Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (13)

  7. MalcPike says

    Reply

    Do you think I could freeze the dough after rolling the balls in sugar/cinnamon?

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (14)

    • Karlynn says

      Reply

      Yes that would work great!

  8. James Lori Shipley says

    Reply

    I think a visit to your house to pu some yummy treats is in order-I will share chocolates lol!!!!

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (15)

  9. DottieBast says

    Reply

    I make this recipe for friends every so often and they will literally jump through hoops to get me to bring them some by they love them that much! Today, one of those friends told me he was going to try making some from one of his own cookbooks.. He texted me a couple of hours ago and told me they came out all wrong (not like yours). Iprinted your recipe for him. 🙂

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (16)

    • thekitchenmagpie says

      Reply

      DottieBast This one would be good for my first cookbook, what do you think?

      • DottieBast says

        Reply

        thekitchenmagpieDottieBast for some reason I wasn’t notified you had replied 🙁 I sincerely hope these made your cookbook because even afterall this time, I’m still in love with this recipe 😀

        Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (17)

        • thekitchenmagpie says

          Reply

          DottieBast;) I’m sure they made the cookbook!

  10. Krista Michelle Gray says

    Reply

    Made ’em on Christmas Eve morning!!! Love ’em!!!! The recipe is cookie dough PERFECTION!! They taste like a cookie version of the famous Beaver Tail!!! That slight “crunch” when you bite, and then the soft interior!?!? Gahh!!! PLUS! Santa loved them – true story!!!! Kitchen Magpie? My family would like to know … “Where does the name, “Snickerdoodles” come from!?” ALSO …. Look what I found at Target yesterday for $5? A Snickerdoodle cookie mix … Meh … but, I only bought it for the adorable cast iron skillet! Neat-o! Best cookie!!! Thank you!!!

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (18)

  11. The Kitchen Magpie says

    Reply

    A) I’m totally making a skillet snickerdoodle next Christmas
    B) so glad you liked them!
    C) Disney handed out snickerdoodles to give to Santa too! Santa was SO happy!!!!

    I also have no idea where the name came from…

  12. Genevieve Olivier says

    Reply

    Hey these would be awesome to take to a family gathering but was wondering if you have ever made a gluten free kind? My sister is intolerant. Would be nice to be able to share with everyone.

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (19)

  13. Amy Moeller-Stiles says

    Reply

    So good

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (20)

  14. Lois Maillet Lynn says

    Reply

    Ok, not now, tomorrow

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (21)

  15. Deb McKay says

    Reply

    I have never had one.

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (22)

  16. The Kitchen Magpie says

    Reply

    WHAT!!!?? OMG bake them now! They are so amazing!

  17. Lois Maillet Lynn says

    Reply

    Never tried..

  18. Sue04kids says

    Reply

    The BEST snickerdoodle cookies ever!! Thanks for sharing

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (23)

    • thekitchenmagpie says

      Reply

      @Sue04kidsSo glad that you liked them!! Thanks for letting me know!

  19. CampClan says

    Reply

    This recipe calls for vanilla extract but does not say where to add it in! HELP!

  20. aGhost_eek says

    Reply

    I think this is the first recipe calling for Cream of Tartar I’ve seen that wasn’t for making playdough.

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (24)

    • thekitchenmagpie says

      Reply

      I know! They are such an old cookie recipe that you use cream of tartar in them. You can switch it out, but it does give them a unique tang…I thought about changing it but really wanted classic Snickerdoodles.

      Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (25)

  21. Rhonda Blundell says

    Reply

    You might actually get me baking!

    Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (26)

    • Dena Roberts says

      Reply

      Can these snickerdoodles be frozen?

Leave a Comment or Recipe Tip

Classic Snickerdoodle Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why are they called snickerdoodles? ›

A few cookbooks explain that snickerdoodles are German in origin. They state that the cookie's name comes from the German word shneckennudel (which is a kind of cinnamon bun). Others trace its origin to New England's tradition of whimsical cookie names.

Are snickerdoodles supposed to be soft when they come out of the oven? ›

They puff in the oven and then settle back down while cooling into a soft, thick, supremely chewy cookie with a gorgeous crinkly top.

What is the difference between a snickerdoodle and a cookie? ›

Snickerdoodles are often referred to as "sugar cookies". However, traditional sugar cookies are often rolled in white sugar whereas snickerdoodles are rolled in a mixture of white sugar and cinnamon. Cream of tartar is added for its signature texture as another main difference.

Why are my snickerdoodles always flat? ›

Too little flour and too much sugar are often the source of flat cookies, so measure carefully and accurately by using dry measuring spoons and cups for dry ingredients (so that you can spoon the ingredients into them and sweep away the excess) and use cups with pouring spouts for liquids.

What happens if you add too much cream of tartar? ›

Keep in mind that more cream of tartar doesn't necessarily mean a better, more stable result. “Too much cream of tartar will impart a metallic, tin-like taste,” Molly warns.

What can I substitute for cream of tartar in snickerdoodles? ›

You can either replace cream of tartar with baking powder at a 1:1.5 ratio (1 teaspoon cream of tartar : 1 ½ teaspoons baking powder), or you can replace cream of tartar with the combination of baking soda and either lemon juice or vinegar (as with this recipe).

Why are my snickerdoodles raw? ›

If your oven runs too hot or cold, it can affect the baking time and result in undercooked cookies. Make necessary adjustments to ensure the temperature is accurate. Cookie size and placement: Consider adjusting the size and placement of your cookie dough on the baking sheet.

What is an interesting fact about snickerdoodles? ›

The Joy of Cooking claims that “snickerdoodle” comes from “Schneckennudel,” a German word that literally means “snail noodles.” Schneckennudels don't have anything to do with snails or noodles, though—they're actually delicious-looking German cinnamon rolls.

Why do my snickerdoodles get hard? ›

Snickerdoodles might turn out hard if they are overbaked or if the dough is too dry. Be sure to keep an eye on them as they bake – when the edges are set but the centers are still soft and puffy, they are done. Also, make sure you're not adding too much flour.

Why are my snickerdoodles spreading so much? ›

Baking cookies in a too-cool oven will cause the fat to melt before your cookies set up, leading to spreading,” Dawn says. Grab an oven thermometer the next time you're in the grocery store so you can be sure your oven is at the correct temperature.

Why do my snickerdoodles taste like flour? ›

Improper flour measurement is the #1 cause of your cookie dough being too dry or the cookies tasting like flour.

What is the nickname for a snickerdoodle? ›

Snickerdoodles are often referred to as "sugar cookies". The Joy of Cooking claims that snickerdoodles are probably German in origin, and that the name is a corruption of the German word Schneckennudeln ("snail noodles"), a kind of pastry.

What are snickerdoodles called in England? ›

“Snickerdoodles, also called snipdoodles or cinnamon sugar cookies, have been around since the late 1800s. They probably originated in New England and are either of German or Dutch descent. Unfortunately there is no clue as to how they got such a peculiar name.”

Why are snickerdoodles so good? ›

Tangy Flavor: Cream of tartar contributes a subtle, tangy flavor to the cookies. This tangy note helps balance the sweetness of the cookie dough and enhances the overall flavor profile of snickerdoodles. It gives the cookies a unique taste that sets them apart from other cinnamon-sugar-coated cookies.

What is the benefit of cream of tartar in baking? ›

Culinary uses

Bakers often use cream of tartar in baked goods by mixing it with egg whites to help create stiff peaks in meringue. This prevents the formation of sugar crystals. Cream of tartar can be a substitute for anything from buttermilk to baking powder and lemon juice in your favorite recipes.

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.

Why do my snickerdoodles come out hard? ›

Snickerdoodles might turn out hard if they are overbaked or if the dough is too dry.

What is the purpose of cream of tartar in this recipe? ›

The most common recipes that call for cream of tartar are those that call for egg whites to be whipped, like angel food cake, genoise cake, meringue, and macarons. Jampel says that is because cream of tartar works as an egg white stabilizer that increases both the volume and shelf life of the meringue.

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