Our best gingerbread cookie recipe! These festive treats are soft and warmly spiced, with a rich molasses flavor. Perfect for spreading holiday cheer!
What could be more festive than gingerbread cookies?! With Christmas just a few weeks away, I’m ready to turn up the holiday cheer around here, and making this gingerbread cookie recipe seems like a great place to start. For one, it makes the house smell amazing, filling it with the comforting aroma of cinnamon, ginger, and cloves. It’s also a blast to make–rolling out the dough, cutting out gingerbread people, baking them, and decorating them once they cool.
But more important than all of that, these gingerbread cookies are delicious! They’re soft, warmly spiced, and richly flavored with molasses and brown sugar. To me, they’re the perfect holiday treat, especially with a mug of hot chocolate to drink. I hope you love them too.
Gingerbread Cookie Recipe Ingredients
Here’s what you’ll need to make this gingerbread cookie recipe:
- All-purpose flour – Spoon and level it to avoid packing too much into your measuring cup.
- Unsalted butter – Allow it to come to room temperature before you start to bake.
- Brown sugar and molasses – They sweeten the cookies and add rich molasses flavor. We’ve had success baking these cookies with Wholesome and Brer Rabbit blackstrap molasses.
- An egg yolk – It makes the cookies extra-soft and chewy.
- Baking soda – It helps the cookies rise.
- Ground ginger, cinnamon, and cloves – They give these gingerbread cookies their signature spice.
- Vanilla extract – For warm depth of flavor.
- Almond milk – For moisture. Any other milk, such as cow’s milk or oat milk, would work here too.
- And sea salt – To make all the flavors pop!
Find the complete recipe with measurements below.
How to Make Gingerbread Cookies
Once you’ve assembled your ingredients (is your butter at room temperature?), this gingerbread cookie recipe is simple to make:
First, make the dough. Using an electric mixer or a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter and brown sugar together until light and fluffy. Mix in the molasses, egg yolk, and vanilla.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the dry ingredients–the flour, spices, baking soda, and salt. Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet mixture, mixing after each addition. Finally, mix in the almond milk.
Then, chill the dough. Divide it into two equal disks, wrap it tightly in plastic wrap, and refrigerate it for at least 2 hours. Chilling the dough allows it to firm up, making it easier to roll out.
Next, roll out the dough. Use a rolling pin to roll out the first disk on a lightly floured surface until it’s 1/4-inch thick. Use cookie cutters to cut out your desired shapes (I always do gingerbread men and snowflakes!). Re-roll and cut out the dough scraps as necessary. Repeat with the remaining dough disk.
Finally, bake the cookies. Arrange the cut-outs on parchment-lined baking sheets, and bake in a 350°F oven until the edges are just set but the middles are still soft. I like to bake one sheet at time on the center oven rack so that the cookies bake evenly. Let them cool for 5 minutes on the baking sheet before transferring them to wire racks to cool completely.
Decorate, or enjoy as they are!
Gingerbread Cookies Recipe Tips
- Don’t skimp on the chilling time. I’m usually all for not chilling cookie dough (you get to eat the cookies faster that way!), but in this recipe, it’s 100% necessary. The dough is soft and sticky when you first mix it together. Chilling it for at least 2 hours gives it a chance to firm up so that you can easily roll it out. The cut-outs also hold their shape better when baked.
- The timing will depend on your cookie cutters. Differently sized and shaped cookies bake at different rates! For a perfect soft texture, I typically bake a 3-inch gingerbread man for 8 minutes. If you have smaller cut-outs, you’ll likely need to bake your cookies less. If you have larger cut-outs, you might need to go a bit longer.
- Decorating is half the fun. As delicious as these soft gingerbread cookies are plain, they’re even tastier (and more festive!) with icing on top. For detailed lines and patterns like the ones in these pictures, use the royal icing recipe from this post. For a simpler glaze, stir together 1 cup powdered sugar and 2 tablespoons almond milk, adding more milk as needed to reach your desired consistency. Sprinkles, gumdrops, and other candies are fun decorations too!
Make-Ahead and Freezing Instructions
Make-ahead option 1: Make the gingerbread cookie dough ahead of time! Wrap it in plastic wrap and refrigerate for up to 2 days, or freeze it for up to 3 months. Allow frozen dough to thaw overnight in the fridge before rolling it out.
Make-ahead option 2: Make the cookies ahead! Gingerbread cookies keep well in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. (I actually like them best on day 2 or 3! They become even softer and chewier, and their spiced flavor deepens.)
These cookies also freeze well. Sealed in a freezer bag or container, they keep for up to 3 months. They thaw perfectly at room temperature.
More Favorite Christmas Cookies
If you love these gingerbread cookies, try one of these festive cookie recipes next:
- Chewy Molasses Cookies
- Thumbprint Cookies
- Mexican Wedding Cookies
- Peanut Butter Blossoms
- Snickerdoodles
- Easy Sugar Cookies
- Lemon Shortbread Cookies
- Or any of these 21 Best Christmas Cookie Recipes!
Gingerbread Cookies
Ingredients
- ½ cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- ⅔ cup packed dark brown sugar
- ⅓ cup unsulphured blackstrap molasses, we like the Wholesome brand
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2¼ cups all-purpose flour, spooned and leveled
- 2 teaspoons cinnamon
- 2 teaspoons ground ginger
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt
- ¼ teaspoon ground cloves
- 1 tablespoon almond milk, or any milk
Instructions
- In the bowl of a stand mixer, or using an electric mixer, cream the butter and brown sugar. Add the molasses, egg yolk, and vanilla and mix again.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cinnamon, ginger, baking soda, salt, and cloves. Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, mixing after each addition. Mix in the almond milk.
- Form the dough into a ball, divide the ball in half, and flatten each half into a 1-inch-thick disk. Wrap in plastic and chill for at least 2 hours.
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and line two large baking sheets with parchment paper.
- Roll out the dough on a lightly floured surface until about ¼-inch thick. Use cookie cutters to cut out desired shapes, then transfer the cut-outs to the prepared baking sheets, re-rolling the dough scraps as necessary.
- Bake, one sheet at a time, for 7 to 9 minutes, or until the edges of the cookies are just set but the middles are still soft. The cookies might seem underdone, but taking them out at this point will ensure that they stay soft once they cool. I typically use a 3-inch cookie cutter and bake my cookies for 8 minutes. The exact timing will depend on your oven, the size of your cookie cutters, and how soft or crunchy you like your gingerbread cookies.
- Let cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Decorate as desired.
My daughter said save that recipe as it is perfect. It isn’t too hard like most gingerbread cookies. Great cooking club recipe.
My daughter said save that recipe because it is perfect and not too hard like most gingerbread cookie recipes. Great choice for cooking club.
Made the gingerbread cookies for December cooking club. Thet were great tasting cookies. Will make again before Christmas.
My dough was very dry and difficult to get it to stay together. It would help to know what to do if this happens. I’ve never made gingerbread so I wasn’t sure how to fix it so I just kept going. I ended up having to warm my dough up because it was too dry to roll out cold. The flavor seems pretty good though. They baked up very cracked so not very pretty though.
We made these cookies today for the December’s cooking club, and they turned out really nicely. Gingerbread cookie baking and decorating is always a fun thing to do during the Christmas season.
Can you double the recipe recipe?
Yummy! These were for sure chewy and satisfyingly spicy! Love this time of year and enjoying the fun of decorating cookies! Thank you!
I’m so glad you loved them!
Can you make a gingerbread house with this recipe?
Hi Mardi, I think it’s possible although we haven’t tried.
as someone easily intimidated by baking projects, I found these really fun to make with my 3 year old. They turned out great- the texture and flavor came out really nice 🙂
Aww, I’m so glad you loved making them 🙂
These Gingerbread Cookies turned out really nice. Not too hard or spicy for my family’s taste. Just right!
I’m glad you enjoyed them!
I had given up on making Ginger Bread cookies. Tried several recipe to lack lustre results . This recipe is yummy, just right on the spices and soft enough.
My sister got the recipe from your daughter at your store 😉
Merry Christmas
I’m so glad these hit the spot!
These cookies are the bees knees! Soft and chewy with the perfect Christmas spice. I am now a lover of gingerbread thanks to this recipe. We had a lot of fun decorating them and ever more eating them!
Hi Nicole, I’m so glad you loved them!
The best gingerbread cookie recipe ever. I made the dough the night before and baked them in the next morning. The flavor is perfect, just the right ratio of spices. The cookies are firm enough not to break easily but soft enough to melt in your month. This is the only gingerbread recipe you will ever need.
I’m so glad they were a hit!