A Spice Cookie to Share Recipe (2024)

By Dorie Greenspan

A Spice Cookie to Share Recipe (1)

Total Time
45 minutes, plus chilling and cooling
Rating
4(108)
Notes
Read community notes

The only thing better than a plate of cookies is one big cookie meant to be shared by everyone around the table. It’s the kind of dessert that will encourage your friends and family to linger at the table and to keep the conversation going. It’s a brown-sugar cookie redolent of ginger, honey, cinnamon and clove that carries the scent of the season and tacks between crisp and slightly chewy, between gingersnap and gingerbread. That it has ground coffee in it marks it as a sweet for grown-ups. It’s a roll-out cookie, but not a fussy one – any shape works and ragged is better than perfect. I usually sprinkle the cookie with sanding sugar, but you can drizzle it with melted chocolate or frost it, if you’d like. For extra fun, put out chocolate or caramel sauce (or both) and invite everyone to dip.

Featured in: A Big, Shared Cookie Is an Invitation to Stay and Talk Into the Night

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Ingredients

Yield:About 8 servings

  • cups (170 grams) all-purpose flour
  • ½cup (68 grams) whole-wheat flour
  • teaspoons ground coffee
  • 1teaspoon ground cinnamon
  • 1teaspoon ground ginger
  • ¾teaspoon ground cloves
  • 1stick plus 1 tablespoon (4½ ounces; 128 grams) cold, unsalted butter, cut into small pieces
  • ½cup packed (100 grams) brown sugar
  • ¼cup (50 grams) sugar
  • ¼teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1large egg
  • 1tablespoon honey
  • Sanding sugar, for sprinkling (optional)
  • Chocolate or caramel sauce, homemade or store-bought, for dipping (optional)

Ingredient Substitution Guide

Nutritional analysis per serving (8 servings)

293 calories; 13 grams fat; 8 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 4 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 41 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 18 grams sugars; 4 grams protein; 87 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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A Spice Cookie to Share Recipe (2)

Preparation

  1. Step

    1

    Whisk together the flours, coffee and spices; set aside.

  2. Step

    2

    Working with a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment (or a hand mixer), mix the pieces of cold butter, both sugars and the salt on low speed for about 3 minutes, until the mixture forms clumps and then comes together. You’ll see pieces of butter here and there — you’re supposed to. Add the dry ingredients all at once, and then pulse the mixer on and off, just until the risk of flying flour has passed. Mix on low-medium speed until you’ve got a bowl of crumbs, about 3 minutes. Lightly whisk the egg and honey together. With the mixer on low, add the egg mixture gradually, and then continue to mix until the dough forms clumps. Squeeze a bit of the dough, and it will hold together. Reach into the bowl, and press the dough into a ball. Turn it out onto a sheet of parchment paper.

  3. Press the dough down, cover it with another sheet of paper and roll it out until it’s about ⅛-inch thick. It can be any shape — round, oval, rectangular, raggedy-edged or pristine. It will probably be about 12-by-15 inches, but the thickness is more important than the dimensions. Being neat doesn’t buy you anything with this cookie. Slide the sandwiched dough onto a baking sheet, and refrigerate it for at least 1 hour (or up to 3 days). If you prefer, you can wrap the dough well and freeze it for up to 2 months; keep it at room temperature for about 20 minutes before baking.

  4. Step

    4

    When you’re ready to bake, center a rack in the oven, and heat it to 350. Remove the top sheet of paper; leave the dough on the paper-lined baking sheet. If you’re using the sanding sugar, sprinkle the dough with about 2 tablespoons’ worth.

  5. Step

    5

    Bake the cookie for 20 to 24 minutes — the edges will be darker than the middle. Press the center of the cookie, and it should be firm with just a tiny bit of give; it will feel firmer as you work your way out. Transfer the baking sheet to a rack, and allow the cookie to come to room temperature. If you’re not eating it immediately, you can wrap the cookie well, and keep it at room temperature for about 4 days. Make sure the room is dry — humidity is a crisp cookie’s nemesis.

  6. Step

    6

    You can serve the cookie whole, letting everyone break off pieces (of course, there will be crumbs — they’re part of the cookie’s charm), or you can break or cut it in the kitchen and serve the pieces as you would any cookie. Chocolate or caramel sauce (or both) for dipping is optional, but scrumptious.

Ratings

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108

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Private Notes

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Cooking Notes

lupi

I am puzzled by how often recipe instructions call for something to be put in the freezer or refrigerator on a baking sheet. Am I the only one without a mostly empty professional size refrigerator/freezer? How about an alternative suggestion? Anyone?

candaceb108

When I saw the recipe in the NYT Magazine, I was intrigued. I love crisp cookies, well, also chewy cookies, well, cookies. So I made the cookie today. I gotta say, this is the biggest bunch a nuthin I have ever baked. The coffee and the spices just sit across from each other staring, they do not merge, nor really express themselves. It tastes like a cookie you'd find at the bottom of your kid's beach bag in September, complete with sand. Totally not worth the ingredients or calories.

Janine Gross

What is sanding sugar and is there a substitute that non-professional home bakers are more likely to have on hand?

Nicholas L.

You are not, and I completely agree with you. They often lose sight of the fact that they are writing these recipes for home cooks with home kitchen, even apartment kitchens, which are often considerable smaller. Well intentioned with their details, but thoughtless at the same time.

Shalby

If you live in Iowa like I do, set it outside. My refrigerator expands to the garage and backyard deck in winter!

Jackie

Try using turbinado sugar. It works great with my ginger biscotti.

JC

A search for “sanding sugar” says it’s a larger sugar crystal. Also called “pearl sugar”. The decorating sugar in the baking aisle. If you want to use regular, it should work. Won’t be as crunchy.

jet

Winter is Wisconsin is a big old walk-in fridge/freezer. I just put what I need to chill on the gas grill and close the lid. Admittedly not much help for apartment dwellers or folks in Florida...

Andrea

Do the coffee grounds "cook" in the cookie? It seems as though ground coffee would add a grittiness to the dough.

Susan Jacobsen

Make it in the winter and place outside or in garage. It’s a bog cookie and most of us don’t have room in the fridge for a big cookie sheet.Also, my cookie started to burn around the edges so keep an eye on it. I found just shy of 20 minutes is good.

Che

I was wondering about the Coffee Grounds as well. Is that dry, ground up coffee, or Instant coffee? Unclear. To any respondents, Thanks in advance!

Sara Aase

I too was afraid of coffee grit, so I substituted espresso powder for the ground coffee and it came out deliciously. This was the plainest but my favorite holiday cookie this year!

Tobi

I love this cookie, in fact I just made it last night to serve alongside a honey semifredo. Unfortunately...... I forgot to bring it to the table! I love having guests linger at the table breaking off pieces, nibbling and chatting. Maybe sipping a little rum. I do always amp the spices...alot! This time I did not add the coffee but usually use a fine grind. I just use regular sugar .

Sara Aase

I too was afraid of coffee grit, so I substituted espresso powder for the ground coffee and it came out deliciously. This was the plainest but my favorite holiday cookie this year!

Che

I was wondering about the Coffee Grounds as well. Is that dry, ground up coffee, or Instant coffee? Unclear. To any respondents, Thanks in advance!

michelle

I love this cookie! It’s really crisp and the spices are there without being too overpowering. I served it with the mango kulfi and the cookie became a dipping device to scoop up the ice cream.The best thing about this giant nummy is how it kept my friends sitting around the dinner table talking well into the night while breaking off pieces of the cookie to make a point. Or ponder on what had just been said. It’s one of those “I’ll just take another little piece” kind of dessert until gone.

Susan Jacobsen

Make it in the winter and place outside or in garage. It’s a bog cookie and most of us don’t have room in the fridge for a big cookie sheet.Also, my cookie started to burn around the edges so keep an eye on it. I found just shy of 20 minutes is good.

dfreinkel

I use Turbinado sugar. Enjoyed this recipe, as most The Wisconsin solution is great but you have to go out there from a warm kitchen with baking. I'm going to consider keeping my pastry marble slab in the refrigerator until i need it to chill the dough.

Lorie

This is a great cookie! Dividing the dough into two portions makes it more manageable, and I found that refrigerating was not absolutely necessary. This will become one of my go-to recipes. Thank you, Dorie!

Ellen Nichols

Question: Is there any reason I can't use this dough to roll out and cut shapes before baking? I would love to use this to make my football shaped cookies as it is the right color. It sounds really delicious, and the coffee is sitting right behind me. Then I can add to the serving tray with regular sugar cookies in the pennant shapes.

Andrea

Do the coffee grounds "cook" in the cookie? It seems as though ground coffee would add a grittiness to the dough.

Sue

when do you remove the parchment...before or after baking...cooling?

candaceb108

When I saw the recipe in the NYT Magazine, I was intrigued. I love crisp cookies, well, also chewy cookies, well, cookies. So I made the cookie today. I gotta say, this is the biggest bunch a nuthin I have ever baked. The coffee and the spices just sit across from each other staring, they do not merge, nor really express themselves. It tastes like a cookie you'd find at the bottom of your kid's beach bag in September, complete with sand. Totally not worth the ingredients or calories.

Jeangros

In Michigan, the porch or deck cooler works beautifully. Just set it outside on a TV tray, to cool. Check occasionally for raccoon bandits. This winter the outside cooler is malfunctioning...unseasonably warm weather; not even any snow.

Stephanie

Anyone try to substitute for or omit the egg??

Janet

I hate cloves. Any suggestions for a substitution?

Marc

Allspice.

elle

omit them. it'll never be missed.

lupi

I am puzzled by how often recipe instructions call for something to be put in the freezer or refrigerator on a baking sheet. Am I the only one without a mostly empty professional size refrigerator/freezer? How about an alternative suggestion? Anyone?

jet

Winter is Wisconsin is a big old walk-in fridge/freezer. I just put what I need to chill on the gas grill and close the lid. Admittedly not much help for apartment dwellers or folks in Florida...

Nicholas L.

You are not, and I completely agree with you. They often lose sight of the fact that they are writing these recipes for home cooks with home kitchen, even apartment kitchens, which are often considerable smaller. Well intentioned with their details, but thoughtless at the same time.

Shalby

If you live in Iowa like I do, set it outside. My refrigerator expands to the garage and backyard deck in winter!

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A Spice Cookie to Share Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What does butter do to the appearance and texture of the cookie? ›

Butter also plays a critical role in cookie structure; the fat and moisture can enhance or inhibit gluten development, which directly impacts the shape, spread, and texture in your cookies. In short, the temperature of your butter for cookies directly impacts how cakey, crispy, or flaky your cookies will be.

How does each ingredient affect a cookie? ›

Baking soda increases browning and spreading, resulting in a flatter cookie. Baking powder will give you a puffier cookie. Binding agents are the liquid in the recipe that hold the cookie together. Examples of binding agents are eggs, milk, honey, and fruit juice.

How to spice up boxed cookie mix? ›

Add different flavors.

Dig around in your pantry or explore the baking aisle and pick out different flavor add-ins that can change up your cookie mix. You could use peppermint, lemon, or almond extract instead of vanilla, dump in plenty of rainbow sprinkles, or even mix in chopped nuts or dried fruit!

What ingredients contribute to the spread of a cookie? ›

Fats like butter and margarine tend to melt during baking, causing the cookies to spread. Higher fat content will spread more, while lower fat content will yield less spread. Sugar content: The sugar content in your cookie dough also affects the spread.

Does melted butter make cookies more chewy? ›

Key Ingredients for Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

It's the ratios and temperature of those ingredients that make this recipe stand out from the rest. Melted butter: Melted butter produces the chewiest cookies. It can, however, make your baked cookies greasy, so I made sure there is enough flour to counteract that.

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

Melted butter will make your cookies delightfully dense on the inside and crisp on the edges. This is because cookie dough with melted butter will give you extra moisture and spread out more during baking, giving you a softer inside and with thinner, crisper edges.

What makes cookies fluffy and not flat? ›

Flour adds fluff and texture to the cookies. Adding too little flour can cause cookies to be flat, greasy, and crispy. Most recipes assume you'll use all-purpose, but if you want a lighter, crumblier cookie texture, choose one with a lower protein content such as cake-and-pastry flour.

What ingredient holds cookies 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.

Does adding more baking powder make cookies fluffier? ›

So, contrary to popular belief, it's not excess baking powder that makes a cookie cakey. Baking powder just regulates how air cells expand—whether or not a dough can handle that expansion depends on gluten. Recipes that are relatively acidic, lean, low in sugar, and high in moisture favor gluten development.

How to spice up sugar cookies? ›

Take plain sugar cookies up a notch with exciting mix-ins like chocolate chips, rainbow sprinkles, toasted chopped nuts, chopped dried fruit or M&M's. Add these after blending your butter and egg into the sugar cookie mix.

How to spice up Pillsbury cookies? ›

Use flavored water, add some flavor extract, stir in some sprinkles or baking chips, or broken up candy canes, roll in sugar before flattening and baking.

What ingredient makes a cookie rise? ›

Baking Powder. The type of leavening you use in your cookies doesn't just help them rise while baking, it affects their texture and structure too. Baking soda in cookies yields a denser cookie with craggy tops, while baking powder causes cookies to rise higher during baking for a cakier texture.

Does butter make cookies spread? ›

When butter is too warm, it is too soft. When butter is too soft, your cookies will spread all over the baking sheets. Room temperature butter is actually cool to touch, not warm.

What is the effect of butter in cookies? ›

The job of butter in baking (besides being delicious) is to give richness, tenderness and structure to cookies, cakes, pies and pastries. We alter the way butter works in a recipe by changing its temperature and choosing when to combine it with the other ingredients.

How does butter affect the appearance of baked goods? ›

Since butter plays an essential role in the flavor (it's rich and creamy), the tenderness, the structure (the steam generated from the butter during baking aids in the rising and lightening of cakes and cookies), the texture (it adds richness and a smooth mouthfeel to baked goods), and the browning (butter promotes ...

What is cookie butter texture? ›

It is similar to peanut butter in appearance and texture but melts on the tongue and palate much more quickly. It is smooth and velvety when first blended, almost like a smooth custard. The real magic happens when the butter is allowed to set up in the fridge, it transforms into a thick and velvety spread.

Does butter add texture? ›

As the dough is baked, the butter melts and creates steam, trapping it in the dough and creating air pockets. Once the dough has cooled, these air pockets become delicate layers of flaky dough. By this point, you've realized that butter adds more than flavor—it develops texture.

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