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My Gingerbread Cookies are ultra thick, soft & chewy, deeply flavored, and easy to make! A simple trick makes rolling the dough a breeze, and these can easily be made vegan. Decorate with a dusting of powdered sugar or a quick royal icing, and watch them fly off the platter anywhere you take them. This truly is the WORLD’S BEST gingerbread cookie recipe – and I’ve tried them all, as a true gingerbread connoisseur.

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These gingerbread cookies are easy to make – I’ve included tips and tricks for making the cutout cookie process much easier, along with lots of make-ahead tips. These festive, chewy cookies are the perfect thing to make for cookie exchanges or cookie decorating parties!

Why you’ll love these Gingerbread Cookies:

  • Soft Cookies – No hard cookies here! These gingerbread are perfectly soft-baked, and are nice and thick, with a chewy texture.
  • Gingerbread Flavor – These gingerbread cookies are packed with classic gingerbread flavor and warm spice flavor.
  • Decorating Options – These cookies are fabulous plain, but can also be dressed up a bit with powdered sugar, royal icing, or buttercream frosting.

Ingredient Overview:

As always, the full recipe with measurements & directions can be found in the recipe card at the bottom of this post. Use the table of contents (back at the top, below the first image, to navigate).

  • Butter – I always use salted buter for the best flavor, but feel free to use unsalted butter if you prefer.
  • Molasses – Find this in the baking aisle at your grocery store. Do NOT use blackstrap molasses! It’s not the same thing and will taste unpleasant. Do use full flavor molasses (the Brer Rabbit brand has mild flavor, full flavor, and blackstrap. I’ve made these cookies with every type and full flavor Brer Rabbit far surpasses any other variety from any other brand.) If you love Molasses, be sure to try my Chewy Molasses Cookies, too!
  • All-purpose flour – Spoon & level your flour for best results. Scooping the measuring cup directly in will lead to too much flour. Or use a scale, and weigh 130 grams of all-purpose flour per cup.

Recipe Substitutions & Variations:

  • Dairy-free – Swap the butter for your favorite dairy-free buter sticks.
  • Vegan – This recipe is vegan with the swap above – there are no eggs!
  • Recipe Variations:
  • Glaze – If you want to use a glaze, use the plain glaze from my Pumpkin Muffins (feel free to swap the maple syrup for milk), or my Buttery Maple Glaze, and lightly dunk cooled cookies into the glaze (or drizzle it on!) for a quick and easy decorating option. 
  • Powdered sugar: For a very simple decoration, lightly dust the cookies with powdered sugar just before serving. 
  • Plain – You can also serve these plain if you prefer not to add any decorations – they’re incredibly delicious on their own. 
  • Cookie Cake – I turned this recipe into a delicious single-layer Gingerbread Cookie Cake that can be decorated with frosting, royal icing, or a dusting of powdered sugar!

How to Make Gingerbread Cookies:

Step 1: Make the Gingerbread Cookie Dough. Cream together the butter & sugar. Then, add your molasses and mix until well combined.

Two images - one of a bowl of butter and sugar creamed, and one of the mixture after adding molasses.

Mix in the dry ingredients until a semi soft dough forms. If it seems a bit dry, add 1-2 tsp of milk. (See photos below). If you measured your flour correctly, this shouldn’t be a problem.

Two images - one of a bowl of crumbly dough, and the other of the dough as it should look - a bit more cohesive.

Step 2: Chill & Cut Shapes. Divide dough in half, and roll each ball of dough out between two sheets of parchment paper as soon as you’ve made it -no more trying to roll out rock-hard cookie dough! 

Pop the rolled dough on a baking sheet to chill in the fridge or freezer, then cut out your shapes – make gingerbread people, trees, snowflakes, or stars!

Step 3: Bake the Cookies. Bake as directed in the recipe card below. Let cookies cool completely on a cooling rack before decorating. They’ll look a tad underdone on the tops when they come out of the oven, but set up as they cool.

Step 4: Decorate your Gingerbread. I’ve included directions and tips in the recipe card below for decorating your cookies. Use royal icing, a simple glaze, a dusting of powdered sugar, or leave them plain.

How to Make Royal Icing:

Royal icing is quite easy to make – it’s just powdered sugar, meringue powder (find this at craft or baking supply stores), and water. Beat these ingredients together in a large bowl until stiff – use the photos below as a guide.

When the icing is the right consistency, you should be able to drizzle some of it into the bowl, and watch it sit on the surface of the mixture for 5-10 seconds before melting back in. Adjust the thickness by adding more water to thin, or beating longer to thicken.

Pipe this onto your cookies using a very thin piping tip like a Wilton #1 or Wilton #2, and a pastry bag. The royal icing recipe can be found with the recipe below. Before the royal icing sets, I like to sprinkle on a little white sanding sugar for sparkle.

Three photos showing the proper consistency of royal icing.

Expert Success Tips:

  • Cookies that hold their shape – To ensure that the cookies turn out, and hold their shapes in the oven, the dough must be cold when it goes into the oven. Pop the cookie dough or cut out shapes back in the freezer to chill for 5-20 minutes (depending on how long they’ve been out) before baking if at any time they no longer feel nice and cold.
  • Thick Cookies – Don’t skimp on cookie thickness! This recipe is at it’s absolute best when the dough is 3/8″ thick (or even 1/2″ thick – my preference!). This means the cookies are not only thick and chewy, but helps the cookies hold their shape, too.
  • Oven Thermometer – An oven thermometer will tell you if your oven is actually running at the temperature you set it to. Your oven may not be accurate. Accurate oven temperature is crucial for most bakes, so I leave an oven thermometer in at all times to keep an eye on my oven’s calibration.
  • Kitchen Scale – A food scale is the best way to make sure your flour is at the proper weight, since amounts will vary SO widely based on how you measure it, as well as the measuring cup you use, as they are not standardized.
A close-up of a gingerbread man on a pile of cookies.

FAQs:

Can I make these cookies ahead?

Yes! The dough can be made, rolled out, and wrapped in plastic wrap and placed on a baking sheet. Store in the fridge for 1-2 days before baking. The cut out shapes can be frozen on a lined baking sheet in a single layer, then transferred to a freezer container, with parchment between layers, and frozen for 1-2 months. Bake the dough from frozen or thaw in the fridge overnight. The gingerbread cookies can be baked, cooled, and stored in an airtight container at room temp for up to 2 days before decorating.

Royal Icing Make-Ahead Tips:

Royal icing can be made and stored in the fridge in an airtight container, with plastic wrap over the surface, for 1-2 days before using, or leftovers can be stored in this same way and used for other decorating within 1-2 days. Simply re-mix for about 10-20 seconds with a mixer to loosen things back up after being in the fridge. The same guidelines from the recipe can be used to adjust the consistency.

Gingerbread cookies in the shape of gingerbread men, stars, and snowflakes, decorated with royal icing.

Serving + Storing:

Store baked & cooled cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for 4-5 days. If they start to get a bit dry at the end, you can extend their life for a few more days by adding a piece of bread to the container. It helps keep them soft!

A close-up of a snowflake shaped gingerbread cookie in a silver tray.

Did you make this recipe? Leave a comment & star rating! 

Click the little stars in the header of the recipe card below to leave a comment & star rating, letting me know how you liked the recipe. I take all feedback seriously, & leaving a rating helps my small business immensely!


Gingerbread cookies piped with royal icing, in a silver tray surrounded by gold ribbon and mini ornaments.
4.99 from 92 votes

Best Soft & Chewy Gingerbread Cookies

By Stephanie Simmons
These classic Gingerbread Cookies are ultra thick, soft and deeply flavored! These cookies can easily be made vegan, and a simple trick makes rolling out the dough a breeze. Decorate these easy cookies with a dusting of powdered sugar or a quick royal icing, and watch them fly off the platter anywhere you take them. This truly is the BEST gingerbread cookie recipe.
Prep: 1 hour
Cook: 10 minutes
Total: 1 hour 10 minutes
Servings: 16 to 24 cookies
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Ingredients 

  • 1 cup salted butter, softened at room temperature, 226 grams
  • 1 cup dark brown sugar, packed, 220 grams (light brown sugar works too!)
  • 1/2 cup molasses, 170 grams – do NOT use blackstrap, see notes below
  • 3 cups all-purpose flour, spooned & leveled or weighed out , 390 grams
  • 2 1/2 tsp ground ginger
  • 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon
  • pinch of nutmeg
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp salt

Royal Icing

  • 2 cups powdered sugar, 230 grams
  • 1 and 1/2 tbsp meringue powder, See note below
  • 4-6 tbsp water, 56 to 85 grams

Instructions 

  • Make the Cookie Dough: Beat butter in a large mixing bowl with an electric mixer on high speed until creamed. Add the brown sugar and mix until well creamed together, about 1 minute. Add the molasses and mix until combined. Add the dry ingredients, and mix until a dough forms. Add 1-2 tsp of milk if your dough is a bit crumbly (see photos above).
    1 cup salted butter, softened at room temperature, 1 cup dark brown sugar, packed, 1/2 cup molasses, 3 cups all-purpose flour, spooned & leveled or weighed out , 2 1/2 tsp ground ginger, 1 1/2 tsp cinnamon, pinch of nutmeg, 1/2 tsp baking soda, 1/2 tsp salt
  • Roll and Chill: Divide the dough into two halves, and roll each one out to 3/8" thickness between sheets of parchment paper. (Use a ruler to check this, or just eyeball halfway between 1/4 and 1/2 inch. This is the perfect thickness for these cookies – trust! Even 1/2" is perfect – but don't go lower than 3/8")
    Place the rolled dough, still sandwiched in parchment paper, on a baking sheet and cover loosely with a clean kitchen towel. Chill for 1-2 hours in the fridge or shorter in the freezer, until completely chilled and firm.
  • Cut out Cookies: Preheat your oven to 350° F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats. Cut shapes out of the chilled dough and place cookies a couple of inches apart on your prepared baking sheet. If the cookies are no longer firm and cold to the touch from working with the dough, pop the pan back in the fridge or freezer for 5 to 15 minutes to re-chill so that the cookies hold their shape when baked (it's fine to bake them from frozen).
    While the cookies are baking, combine your dough scraps, roll back out, and cut out more cookies. Repeat this until all remaining dough is gone! You will need to chill the dough for a bit again once you roll the scraps back out so that it's firm enough to cut the shapes easily. (Roll it back out between the parchment each time to keep things easy.)
  • Bake: Bake cookies for 8-9 minutes. The cookies should appear just set, and will look a tad puffy. The centers may look a tad underdone. Don't be tempted to over bake them! They will set up to the perfect soft baked cookies. Let them cool on baking sheet for about 10 minutes before and transferring to a wire rack to finish cooling.
    Tip: Bake a single test cookie first if you’re worried you’ll underbake them – you’ll see that 8 minutes yields the perfect cookie! HOWEVER – the cookies may take a few additional minutes if your oven is running cold (check with an oven thermometer), or if you use a light-colored cookie sheet vs. a dark colored one. If you have other pans of cookies in the oven at the same time, this will also result in the cookies taking a little longer to bake.
  • Decorate: Decorate by dipping the cooled cookies in this glaze (swap the maple syrup for milk, if desired), dusting them with powdered sugar, or piping them with royal icing.
  • Make Royal Icing: Combine all ingredients in a large bowl, starting with 4 tablespoons of water, and mix on high speed with an electric mixer for about 1 and 1/2 minutes. When the icing is the right consistency, you should be able to drizzle some of it into the bowl, and watch it sit on the surface of the mixture for 5-10 seconds before melting back in. If it's too thick, add 1 tablespoon of water at a time. If it's too thin, beat it for another 30 seconds to a minute, or add a bit more powdered sugar, a little at a time, beating between each addition.
    Add the royal icing to a piping bag fitted with a wilton #1 tip (this is what I use to create the details on the cookies pictured). Pipe desired designs. Snowflakes are easy – you basically draw lines to connect the points, then make little Vs on each line. You can even use gel food coloring to tint the royal icing. While the icing is still wet, sprinkle on a little white sanding sugar for a pretty sparkle (optional, but that is what I use).
    2 cups powdered sugar, 1 and 1/2 tbsp meringue powder, 4-6 tbsp water
  • Serve + Store: Enjoy cookies once decorated! Be sure to let the icing set completely before storing. Store cooled, set cookies in an airtight container at room temp for 4-6 days, or in the fridge for 6-8 (let cookies come to room temperature for a bit if they've been chilled before serving).
  • Cookie Dough and Cookie Make-Ahead Tips: The dough can be made, rolled out, and covered well and stored in the fridge for 1-2 days before baking. The cookies can be baked, cooled, and stored in an airtight container at room temp for 1-2 days before decorating.
    Royal Icing Make-Ahead Tips: The royal icing can be made and stored in the fridge in an airtight container for 1-2 days before using, or leftovers can be stored in this same way and used for other decorating within 1-2 days. Simply re-mix for about 10-20 seconds with a mixer to loosen things back up after being in the fridge. The same guidelines from above can be used to adjust the icing's consistency.

Notes

Molasses: My absolute favorite molasses is “full flavor” molasses from Brer Rabbit. Their mild molasses or Grandma’s Molasses are my second choice. Do NOT use blackstrap molasses – it is more bitter and contains less sugar.
Meringue Powder: You can find this in the baking aisle of stores like Michael’s and Joann’s, or at baking supply stores. 
Yield: Cookie yield will vary based on the size of cookie cutters you use.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie, Calories: 330kcal, Carbohydrates: 55g, Protein: 3g, Fat: 12g, Saturated Fat: 7g, Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g, Monounsaturated Fat: 3g, Trans Fat: 0.5g, Cholesterol: 31mg, Sodium: 207mg, Potassium: 206mg, Fiber: 1g, Sugar: 36g, Vitamin A: 355IU, Vitamin C: 0.01mg, Calcium: 42mg, Iron: 2mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Stephanie Simmons

I’m a Mom & Grandma-taught cook + baker, and I’m excited to share my love of all things food with you!

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156 Comments

  1. Bella Buccino says:

    5 stars
    Absolute BEST gingerbread cookie recipe. Perfectly chewy for days on end. Will be in my holiday cookie boxes again next year. And the year after that.

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      Thanks so much, Bella!

  2. Nancy says:

    5 stars
    My oh my! Soft and scrumptious! I have been making these since last year and they are heaven! Best recipe I found and if you follow the instructions to a t, you will have the best gingerbread cookies in 8 minutes!! I substitute the flour to make it gluten free, but there is no taste difference! Stephanie thank you for making these recipes easy to follow and with stunning outcomes!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      So glad to hear you enjoyed this recipe, Nancy! So glad that they turned out well with gluten-free flour.

  3. Brittanie says:

    5 stars
    Making these for my best friend’s December wedding and THEY ARE PERFECTION. They are super chewy and melt I. Your mouth, but sturdy enough to be iced with royal icing and transported!! The recipe is amazing, they bake exactly as expected and for the EXACT time you say is best (8 minutes). SOOOO impressed and this will forever be my go to!!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      I’m so honored to hear these will be at a wedding! I am so glad you enjoyed these, Brittanie!

  4. Aubrey Knofla says:

    5 stars
    This recipe is GOLDEN!! I would highly recommend anyone looking for a life long gingerbread recipe to use, time and time again, save this one. Really all of Blue bowl recipes are spot on!! Love, love, love!!!!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      So glad to hear you enjoyed this recipe, Aubrey! And thanks so much for your kind words! Please be sure to leave a comment & star rating on any other recipes on my site you’ve tried, letting me know how you liked them!

  5. Kate says:

    5 stars
    Love love love this recipe!
    Highly recommend, and a major request for Christmas baking in my household. They work so well for cookie swap boxes, and the recipe is so simple I’ve memorized it.
    I tend to grate fresh ginger into the butter instead, and add half the amount if powdered. But that’s just my taste preference.
    Happy baking!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      So glad to hear you enjoyed this recipe, Kate! Happy baking!

  6. Donna says:

    Hi im just wondering which cookies are good for about 8 days I’d like to cook some that last as I’m going away thankyou
    Or also to pur in jars for xmas presents but I’ll be leaving about a week prior to Xmas day , I’d like to prepare these before leaving cheers

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      Hi Donna! These gingerbread cookies stay nice and soft and fresh for about 8-9 days. Let me know how you like the recipe!

  7. Chelsea says:

    5 stars
    These are absolutely delicious!! I made them for the first time today and let me tell you these are going to be a new holiday tradition!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      So glad to hear you enjoyed this recipe, Chelsea!

  8. Ashley says:

    5 stars
    These are by far the best gingerbread cookies I have ever made. Incredibly chewy and they stay fresh (and super chewy!) for days. I’ve also recommended this recipe to one of my momma friends who has a little with an egg allergy. The perfect, easy to follow, no fail recipe! If you haven’t made these yet, you absolutely have to! My favorite way to serve them is to dip them in white chocolate and sprinkle them with a gingerbread spice sprinkling mix I have!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      Thanks so much, Ashley! Oo I love the idea of adding white chocolate & gingerbread spice on top!

  9. Valentina says:

    Hi there! My family and I usually like to make and chill our cookie dough a few days before baking, so that the flavors can meld together. It’s also easy have the dough premade on Christmas; the kids can just cut the shapes out haha
    I wanted to ask if this dough recipe would store well in the fridge for a few days before baking? Or do you suggest just baking them the day of 😅
    Thanks so much!

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      Hi! Yes, these should be ok in the fridge for 24-48 hours before baking. You can also cut the shapes and refrigerate for a day or two, then freeze them for easy baking straight from the freezer whenever you want some cookies! Let me know how you like the recipe!

  10. Debbie H says:

    5 stars
    If I.were to chill in the freezer how long would I do it for?

    1. Stephanie Simmons says:

      Hi Debbie! Just as long as it takes for them to become very cold and firm – about 10-20 minutes for the cut out shapes, I’d guess. Sorry – I never time that part! I just bake them once they’re solid, haha. Let me know how you like the recipe!