Cookie Recipe: Peppermint Cream-Filled Butter Cookies (2024)

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Emma Christensen

Emma Christensen

Emma is a former editor for The Kitchn and a graduate of the Cambridge School for Culinary Arts. She is the author of True Brews and Brew Better Beer. Check out her website for more cooking stories

updated May 2, 2019

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Cookie Recipe: Peppermint Cream-Filled Butter Cookies (1)

Makes2 dozen cookies

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Cookie Recipe: Peppermint Cream-Filled Butter Cookies (2)

I won’t lie: these are some fussy little cookies. They involve a great deal of rolling and filling and pressing and coating. And also waiting until you can finally (finally!) take your first buttery, peppermint-filled bite. But oh my, what a bite that is. Which is why my brother and I begged for them every Christmas, and why my mother required very little persuasion before pulling out the baking sheets.

These are supremely tender cookies, snapping like shortbread when you bite into them and then melting on your tongue. The combination of the peppermint coating and the peppermint cream filling give the cookies a sweet mintiness that can only be described as just right. I have never seen or tasted anything quite like them.

My mother thinks it likely that my grandmother originally found this recipe in an old Lutheran church cookbook. All she knows for sure is that she grew up begging for them every Christmas as well.

My grandmother made these cookies as balls, shaping nubs of dough around her thumb before stuffing each cookie with peppermint cream. My mother decided it was easier and more festive to sandwich the filling between two cut-out cookies and press the edges closed. I agree and have continued making them this way. Rounded shapes like hearts and bells work better than skinny or delicate shapes like stars and candy canes.

Peppermint pillow candies or peppermint straws are an absolute must for this recipe. These candies are lighter and more porous than the normal hard peppermints and can be ground easily. Unfortunately, these candies are getting harder and harder to find these days and are most easily picked up online. If you can only find the hard kind, smash them with a hammer inside a plastic bag rather than risk damaging your food processor blade.

Another persnickety aspect to this recipe is the dough. When first mixed, it’s too soft to roll out. But after some time in the fridge, it’s too hard. Let it rest on the counter for a good half hour before rolling it out. Even so, the dough may crack as you roll it. That’s fine (though admittedly aggravating). Just smoosh the cracks closed and carry on. You can also re-roll the scraps several times without fear of toughing the cookies.

Persistence is rewarded. These cookies speak for themselves.

Peppermint Pillows, $9.50 on Amazon
Peppermint Straws, $8 on Amazon

Comments

Makes 2 dozen cookies

Nutritional Info

Ingredients

For the Dough:

  • 1 cup

    (8 ounces) butter, softened

  • 1/2 cup

    (2 1/2 ounces) powdered sugar

  • 2 1/2 cups

    (12 1/2 ounces) all-purpose flour

For the Peppermint Coating:

  • 30

    peppermint pillow candies (enough to make 1/2 cup crushed)

  • 1/2 cup

    (2 1/2 ounces) powdered sugar

For the Filling:

  • 1 tablespoon

    cream cheese

  • 1/2 tablespoon

    milk

  • 1/2 cup

    (2 1/2 ounces) powdered sugar

  • 3 tablespoons

    peppermint coating mixture

  • red food coloring

  • milk for sealing the cookies

Instructions

  1. To make the dough: Beat together the butter and powdered sugar at high speed until creamy and light lemon colored. Scrape down the sides of the bowl, add the flour, and be1t at low speed until the dough comes together and no more dry flour is visible.

  2. Turn the dough out on the counter and gather it into a ball. Separate the dough in two and flatten each into a 1-inch thick disk. Refrigerate for at least two hours or up to a day.

  1. To prepare the coating: Place the peppermint candies in the bowl of a food processor. Process continuously until the candies are ground into a powder. Be forewarned: this will make an unholy racket that will scare the cats and wake the neighbors. Alternatively, place all the candies in a plastic bag, go outside, and smash the candies with a hammer. Mix the powdered candies with the powdered sugar and set aside.

  1. To prepare the filling: Whisk together the cream cheese and milk. Whisk in the powdered sugar, three tablespoons of the powdered peppermint coating, and 1-3 drops of food coloring (one drop makes a pink filling, three will make a red filling). Whisk to form a smooth frosting-like paste.

  1. To assemble the cookies: Sprinkle the counter with a little powdered sugar and set one of the rounds of dough on top. Let the dough warm for about a half an hour until it has softened enough to roll out.

  2. Preheat the oven to 350°F.

  3. Sprinkle the top of the dough and the rolling pin with more powdered sugar. Roll the dough from the middle outwards to make a circle roughly 1/8" thick. If the dough cracks as you roll it, just smoosh it back together with your fingers and carry on. Cut out shapes with cookie cutters, making sure you end up with an even number of each shape. Cookie shapes with large spaces in the middle work best for these cookies. (Think hearts and bells as opposed to stars or candy canes.)

  4. Transfer half of the cookies to a parchment-lined baking sheet and space them an inch apart. Place a dab of filling in the middle of each cookie, no more than 1/4 teaspoon. Try not to get ambitious here or the filling will ooze out in the oven. Brush the edges of the cookies with a little milk and then sandwich the filling with another cookie. Seal the edges with the tines of a fork.

  5. Gather up the dough scraps and re-roll it to cut out a few more cookies. Continue until the scraps are too small or the dough too soft. Refrigerate the remaining to combine with the scraps from the second disk of dough.

  6. Bake the cookies for 12-15 minutes until the edges of the cookies just start to turn golden-brown. While the cookies are still hot from the oven, drop them one at a time into the peppermint coating. Turn the cookie over to make sure it's are coated evenly, then transfer it to a wire rack to cool completely. Repeat with coating the remaining baked cookies, then repeat the whole process with the second disk of refrigerated dough.

  7. Store cookies in an airtight container on the counter. They will keep for several days. Leftover filling can be mixed with more powdered sugar to make a frosting for other sugar cookies.

Related: My Tussle with Royal Icing

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Cookie Recipe: Peppermint Cream-Filled Butter Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to moist cookies? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

What happens when you add extra butter to cookie dough? ›

But one unexpected error bakers can make is adding too much of a good thing, butter. Although butter generally makes it all better, bakers who go overboard with it are dooming their cookies to a greasy and crumbly texture.

What happens if you don't add enough butter to 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.

What makes a cookie hold together? ›

Flour is the main ingredient that provides structure in a cookie – without it, there would be no cookie! The gluten in flour forms a web of sorts – the framework that catches the air bubbles/gasses given off during rising. This helps provide the structure.

What is the secret ingredient to keep cookies soft? ›

Light corn syrup is another ingredient that you can add to cookie dough that will help it stay softer longer. The corn syrup you buy at the grocery store is not the high-fructose corn syrup that soft drinks are made with; it's a sugar that is liquid at room temperature and helps other sugars say liquid at high heat.

What ingredients keep cookies moist? ›

To keep it simple, cookie recipes that contain a lot of butter, brown sugar or egg yolks are going to yield soft and chewy cookies, because those ingredients add moisture and retain it for a longer amount of time.

What happens if you use melted butter instead of softened for cookies? ›

Cookies made with melted butter often deflate and become denser when they cool, resulting in a perfectly cooked fudgy center — a similar textural result to brownies that get rapped (aka banged against an oven rack mid-bake to deflate them) or Sarah Kieffer's iconic pan-banging cookies that turn out pleasantly compact.

Should I use baking soda or baking powder in cookies? ›

Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies. Since baking powder is comprised of a number of ingredients (baking soda, cream of tartar, cornstarch, etc.), using it instead of pure baking soda will affect the taste of your cookies.

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.

Is it better to bake cookies with cold or room temperature butter? ›

Most cookie recipes call for beating room-temperature butter.

What will happen to my cookies if I use oil instead of butter? ›

Due to its liquid nature, using oil in cookies typically results in a denser texture. Also, because oil is 100% fat, it doesn't react with flour the way butter does (butter contains water). Because of that, your cookies won't be as fluffy. If you're a fan of flat cookies, then using oil is an excellent option.

Why should you use shiny pans when baking cookies? ›

Dark cookie sheets absorb extra heat – which causes cookies to burn or overbrown. Shiny cookie sheets reflect heat, which prevents cookies from browning evenly. Thin cookie sheets can warp, which means they'll heat unevenly.

Does brown sugar make cookies softer? ›

How Sugars Behave in Dough. In recipes that involve baking soda, the primary role of acidic brown sugar is to react with sodium bicarbonate and produce carbon dioxide, making cookies thick, puffy, and soft (cakey at first, then crunchy if they continue to bake).

What keeps cookies chewy? ›

The key to keeping cookies fresh and soft is to seal them in an airtight container, like a resealable freezer bag. And here's a nifty little trick: add a piece of bread to the bag. You might think that the bread trick works because the cookies absorb moisture from the bread.

What adds moisture to cookie dough? ›

To avoid this, try using as little flour as possible while preparing to roll your dough. Dry – “Dry” or “Crumbly” dough is a product of over-mixing or using too much of any ingredient during the mixing process. This can be reversed by adding one to two tablespoons of liquid (water, milk or softened butter) to your mix.

How do we prevent cookies from becoming moist and soggy? ›

“To keep cookies soft, store them in an airtight container and not in a cookie jar,” Amanda recommends. “While cookie jars are cute, they usually don't have airtight lids.

What does adding cornstarch to cookies do? ›

As Levy Beranbaum writes in The Baking Bible, replacing a little bit of the flour in the dough with cornstarch results in “a more delicate cookie that is also easier to pipe or push through a cookie press.” Adding cornstarch helps tenderize tough gluten, contributing to a softer cookie dough with a finer crumb after ...

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