White Chocolate Snickerdoodle Cookies

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What’s the difference between a sugar cookie and a snickerdoodle?

White Chocolate Snickerdoodle Cookies

Not too terribly much from what I can discern.

Sugar cookies are only rolled in sugar whereas snickerdoodles are rolled in both cinnamon and sugar.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodle Cookies stacked

There’s also some splitting hairs over the type of leavening agent used: baking powder or a combination of baking soda + cream of tartar.

Some recipes call for shortening and butter rather than solely butter when making snickerdoodles.

I did more research on the finer points of sugar cookies and snickerdoodle cookies than one should unless your name is Alton Brown.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodle Cookies stacked

But I’m all about field research when it has to do with cookies.

I wanted to add a little extra somethin’ somethin’ to these and decided to add white chocolate chips.

White chocolate chip bags in shopping cart

Then again, I love white chocolate as evidence by stockpiling the TJ’s chocolate chips before they became seasonally unavailable which happens after Christmas in my area.

I wish I could stockpile cookie butter but that’s currently a sad storySigh.

You can omit the white chocolate chips if you’re a snickerdoodle purist or you don’t like white chocolate.  I don’t understand you people who don’t like white chocolate but to each her own.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

These cookies are on the thin side but don’t let that deceive you into thinking they’re crunchy.

They’re not.

In fact they’re incredibly chewy.  I only like very soft and chewy cookies and these are so chewy you can bend them.

The brown sugar helps with the chewy factor and keeps them soft and flexible.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

The flavor is spot on to my memories of working at the mall in high school and devouring Mrs. Field’s snickerdoodle cookies on my breaks.  Between Mrs. Field’s and Cinnabons I was in food court heaven.

The cinnamon and sugar granules on these cookies and the teeny bit of graininess that I could feel from the sugar crystals as I chewed reminded me of my fond Mrs. Fields’s days.

My cookies have a hint more vanilla flavoring, by design, too.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

And of course, there’s white chocolate chips, by design.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

 

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White Chocolate Snickerdoodle Cookies (with Vegan and Gluten Free options)

Makes 21 small to medium-sized cookies using my 1 inch cookie scoop.  Or, approximately 12 to 15 larger-sized cookies.

1/2 cup butter, softened

1/2 cup white sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar, packed

1 large egg

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 teaspoon cinnamon

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1 1/4 cups flour

optional: 1/2 c white chocolate chips (increase to 2/3 to 3/4 c if you like a lot of chips, or use a combo of white/dark, white/butterscotch, all dark, etc or if you want more traditional sugar cookies, omit chips)

Plus: 1 tbsp cinnamon & 1/4 c white sugar, mixed in a small bowl for dipping/rolling the dough (to retain a true “sugar cookie” rather than snickerdoodle, omit the cinnamon and just roll in sugar)

Directions:

Preheat oven to 350F.  Cream together (by hand or in a mixer) softened butter and sugars until very smooth and fluffy.  Add the egg and vanilla extract and beat until well combined.  Stir in the cinnamon, baking soda, and flour and mix until just combined.  Do not overmix.

Stir in the white chocolate chips and place the whole mixing bowl into the freezer for about 10 minutes so that it chills a bit.  You can also chill the dough for an hour or longer in the refrigerator.

While the dough is chilling, prepare the cinnamon sugar mixture for rolling.

After approximately 10 minutes, remove the chilled dough from the freezer and form 1 inch balls.  I highly recommend this cookie scoop.  It has changed the results of my baking dramatically.  Available at Bed Bath & Beyond for about $4 dollars.

Roll the balls through the cinnamon sugar mixture and place on Silpat-lined, parchment-lined or sprayed cookie sheets.

Bake at 350F for 8 to 10 minutes or until just barely set.  Remove cookies from the oven even if they look a bit underdone as they will firm up.  Allow the cookies to cool, well, on the cookie sheets before attempting to remove them.

To make gluten free, use a gluten free flour blend.

To make vegan, use margarine or Earth Balance in place of the butter and use 1 chia/flax egg instead of the egg.  Use vegan white chocolate chips, omit them, or use another chip of your choice.

Notes/Tips:

Cream your butter and sugar very well; make it fluffy which will ensure fluffier cookies.

Do not over-mix the flour once you’ve added it.  This will result in tough cookies.

Chilled dough is key to these cookies retaining some height and not flattening out completely.  If you prefer to chill your dough in the refrigerator for an hour or longer, feel free.

Some recipes call for shortening.  I have read many that use half butter and half shortening, i.e. 1/4 cup of each in a recipe this size, and the shortening will make them puffier, but also crunchier.

Some recipes call for baking soda in addition to or instead of baking powder.  I don’t think it could hurt to add 1/2 teaspoon baking powder.  I will trial this in future batches to see the impact and if that makes them puffier.

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This recipe is easy and I got what I wanted: soft and chewy cookies that remind me of the Mrs. Fields snickerdoodles I used to inhale.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

I purposely kept the batch size small.  If you make slightly bigger cookies than I did, we’re talking a dozen to 15 cookies, max.

Around the holidays or post-holidays for all you who are have those pesky New Year’s resolutions, the last thing any of us needs is 3 or 4 dozen of anything.  So that’s your nudge to try these.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

And if you’re a white-chocolate-in-your-cookies fan, one of my favorite recipes of 2011 was the

Peanut Butter Oatmeal White Chocolate Chip Cookies

Peanut Butter Oatmeal White Chocolate Chip Cookies

New Years Resolutions are overrated anyway.

Now, it’s time for a cookie.

White Chocolate Snickerdoodles Stacked

 

Do you like snickerdoodles?  Or sugar cookies? Do you use the names interchangeably?

Do you have any cookies, or food or recipes in general, that you pine away for in your memory?

I have to say, Auntie Annie’s Pretzels dipped in butter and cream cheese, Cinnabons with extra frosting, and Mrs. Field’s Snickerdoodles rank right up there for me.

And who says you can’t get a balanced diet from the choices at the mall food court.

And from cookies to stevia, thanks for the NuNaturals Stevia Giveaway entries.

 

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Please note: I have only made the recipe as written, and cannot give advice or predict what will happen if you change something. If you have a question regarding changing, altering, or making substitutions to the recipe, please check out the FAQ page for more info.

Comments

  1. They are totally different to me, because I don’t like sugar cookies, but snickerdoodles are awesome! My grandma always made snickerdoodles and they were the best ever. But, adding white chocolate and making them so chewy you can bend them? That sounds awesome! I just gotta experiment with some gluten-free flours.

  2. These look and sound wonderful, great recipe! Sugar cookies need tone soft and moist to work for me and I guess the names could be interchanged.

  3. these are gorgeous! I love that you love white chocolate…I think a lot of people gravitate toward milk or dark chocolate, but I love white chocolate just as much :)

  4. Oh my goodness these look amazing!! I am concerned if I make these and I don’t give a lot of them away I would eat WAY to many!!

  5. I love that you added white chocolate chips to the cookies – I think that sugar cookies and snickerdoodles get a little dry after a couple days on the counter but I bet the white chocolate eliminates that.

    1. And these are NOT dry, not at all. With or without the choc chips, not dry at all. Between the recipe and slight underbaking, they’re not dry :)

  6. These look amazing! They look so chewy and soft. I refer to snickerdoodles if they have a cinnamon sugar outside but if they don’t, I call them a sugar cookie. I didn’t know that people interchanged them so often.

    1. Me neither until I started reading so many holiday cookie recipes and what some people call a sugar cookie, others were calling a snickerdoodle. To me, these are snickerdoodles, a close relative of a sugar cookie, but not the same.

  7. I’m not a sugar cookie fanatic, but with white chocolate chips they could be a top contender in my “top 10 cookies” list. I’m definitely a classic chocolate chip girl all the way! They remind me of when I was a little girl and when my mom used to make them at Christmastime. Also, I made a clone of cinnabon recipe that I posted a few days ago. My brother is a tough critic and he said that they definitely conquered that food court favorite :)

  8. I used to LOVE snicker doodles-favorite cookie. Never was a fan of sugar cookies for some reason….maybe because I never had a good one (they were always not moist and too sugarryy-ha!)

    1. And these are moist AND full of cinn sugar flavor…no worries of dryness with these!

  9. Snickerdoodles and sugar cookies are two TOTALLY different things, and I love them both. The sugar ones are best served with that thick layer of grocery store frosting (in high school we called them “fluffy cookies”), and the snickerdoodles are best when they’re really, really, really soft and covered in cinnamon sugar. Ahh, now I want a cookie!

    1. The sugar ones are best served with that thick layer of grocery store frosting = omg those are so good. I have learned some people call those Lofthouse cookies.

      Lots of blog reading and holiday cookie post reading :)

  10. I love snickerdoodle cookies! My mom used to make them when I was little, and they were always my favorite. Love that you added in white chocolate! :)

  11. These look SO good! I wish we had some vegan white chips in my area… can’t wait ’till I move to Milwaukee soon!

    At the end of your post, there was no mention of drenching the cookies in a cinnamon-sugar mix. Is that because there’s enough in the cookie itself that you don’t need to? Either way, looks mouth-watering (literally.) :)

    1. In the recipe body I wrote this:
      Roll the balls through the cinnamon sugar mixture and place on Silpat-lined, parchment-lined or sprayed cookie sheets…

      So that’s the only time I rolled them thru the cinn/sugar mix. I’m sure you could roll or sprinkle again at the end but I did not feel it was needed.

  12. Great Snickerdoodle photos, so pretty! And I love that you included white chocolate chips!

    I was never in to food court cookies because I love homemade so much more, but Cinnabon was pretty major when I was allowed to indulge on special occasions as a kid!

  13. Hey these look so delicious! The first snickerdoodle recipe I’ve seen that has thin, soft, CHEWY cookies! I want to go and make them right now! And I love that they remind you of Mrs Fields :-)
    ps. love your photos