Valentine's Day Cookies (2024)

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These Valentine’s Day Cookies are a cut out sugar cookie decorated with an easy royal icing. These cut out sugar cookies are made with just 7 ingredients in one bowl and they hold their shape when baked! I’ll show you how to decorate them simply with icing or with dehydrated strawberries.

Valentine's Day Cookies (1)

Dress up your Valentine’s Day or Galentine’s Day cookies with a little royal icing, crushed strawberries, white sprinkles or rose petals. The sugar cookie recipe uses melted butter and can be mixed by hand in one bowl. Roll out immediately before refrigerating.

I used my royal icing with meringue powder for these heart shaped sugar cookies but you could also use this easy cookie icing instead. Omit the food dye and decorate plain white icing with rose petals, dehydrated strawberries and white sprinkles.

Table of Contents

  • Why You Will Love these Valentine’s Day Cookies
  • Professional Tips for Making Valentine Cookies
  • Ingredients Needed
  • Variations
  • How to Make Valentine’s Day Cookies
  • Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip
  • Frequently Asked Questions
  • Valentine’s Day Cookies Recipe
  • Before You Go

Why You Will Love these Valentine’s Day Cookies

  • Flavorful soft cookies. You don’t have to choose between flavor and beauty with these cookies! The vanilla sugar cookie base is delicious without any decoration, but is outstanding when paired with my lemon royal icing!
  • Versatile decorations. These cookies are beautiful with just a simple icing or try your hand at making tiny hearts! Sprinkle with jimmies, sprinkles or dehydrated berries for a pop of color!
  • Easy to make ahead. Don’t you hate when V-Day falls on a weekday?! Same. These decorated Valentine’s Day Cookies stay fresh and soft at room temperature for over a week!
Valentine's Day Cookies (2)

Valentine's Day Cookies (3)

Professional Tips for Making Valentine Cookies

  • Roll the dough immediately. This dough firms up when refrigerated, so it is best to roll it immediately after mixing. This also makes for a faster chill time!
  • Reroll & cut the scraps. This dough is rolled using two pieces of parchment paper, which means you can press all the scraps together and roll back out again and again! Using parchment eliminates the need for bench flour, so the third round will taste just as good as the first!
  • Decorate with any icing you want! I love the flavor of royal icing but my easy cookie icing is also an excellent choice. You could also use this cream cheese icing for cookies for a fun twist.

Ingredients Needed

Valentine's Day Cookies (4)
  • All-Purpose Flour: Both all-purpose flour or pastry flour would work in these cookies. There is just enough gluten to create structure without making them tough. Don’t even consider looking at bread flour in this recipe. No, ma’am.
  • Baking Powder: There is just enough baking powder to leaven these cookies without making them puffy. Too much will create a dome on the top of the cookies.
  • Kosher Salt
  • Butter: I use unsalted butter for baking, because you want to control the amount of salt you are adding. The melted butter adds fat and moisture and makes these simple cookies chewy and soft.
  • Granulated Sugar: There is just enough sugar for the perfect flavor, but not so much that makes the cookies spread. Unlike chewy sugar cookies, which are intended to spread, these soft sugar cookies hold their shape.
  • Whole Egg: The eggs are here to add fat, moisture and emulsify the dough. The fat from the yolk adds richness and helps keep the cookies chewy.
  • Vanilla Extract

See the recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities.

Variations

  • Experiment with icing: Try with this cream cheese icing for cookies or simply brush with beaten egg white then dip in sanding sugar or sprinkles.
  • Flavor the dough: Tired of plain vanilla? Heard. Try using a little almond extract instead. You can also zest lemon, orange or another citrus into the sugar before mixing. Try my chocolate sugar cookies for a soft chocolate variation.
  • Add sprinkles, chocolate chips or other add-ins: That’s right, you can (and should) add some fun mix-ins to the dough. Try chopped nuts, mini chocolate chips, sprinkles or other small additions that will still allow you to roll and cut the dough.
Valentine's Day Cookies (5)

How to Make Valentine’s Day Cookies

Use these instructions to make decorated heart cookies! This tutorial will focus on the decorating. You can find more detailed instructions for the cut out sugar cookies in this post or more than you even knew you could know about royal icing in this post!

Make & Bake the Cookies:

Step 1: In a large bowl whisk together flour, baking powder, and kosher salt. Set aside. Whisk the butter and the sugar together in a large bowl, followed by the egg and vanilla. Whisk vigorously until the mixture is emulsified. You shouldn’t see any streaks of butter or egg. Last, slowly stir in the flour mixture.

Valentine's Day Cookies (6)
Valentine's Day Cookies (7)

It does look like a dry dough, so I like to finish by hand, squeezing the dough together. This incorporates the flour faster without developing too much gluten.

Step 2: Roll your dough while it is at room temperature. Roll the dough to approximately ¼ inch. You will have the best results if rolled between two pieces of parchment, but you can also roll out on a lightly floured surface. Refrigerate the dough until chilled.

This will only take 30 minutes, but I like to give it a full 2 hours or overnight to let the gluten relax.

Step 3: When you are ready to bake, preheat your oven to 325° F convection or 350° F conventional, and line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Unstick the parchment from both sides of the dough, then cut shapes with a heart shaped cookie cutter. Chill the cookies before baking. It will only take about 20 minutes.

Step 4: Bake in preheated oven for 7-9 minutes or until the cookies look matte in the center and have a few small cracks. Some of the edges might have begun to brown. Cool completely before icing.

Valentine's Day Cookies (8)
Valentine's Day Cookies (9)
Valentine's Day Cookies (10)

Make Royal Icing:

Step 1: In a large bowl or in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the dried egg whites (or meringue powder) and lemon juice. Whisk until soft peaks form.

Step 2: Add all the powdered sugar and whisk to combine. Separate the icing into different bowls and add food dye. Be sure to keep an eye on the consistency and stop adding if it gets too thin.

I recommend using gel food coloring for the most vibrant colors. You can use liquid food coloring but the resulting icing will be pastel. If you add enough for vibrant colors, the icing will be too thin to set or outline.

Step 3: For outlining using the ribbon test. The icing should cascade slowly off your spatula and remaining clearly visible on the surface for a few moments (about 5-6 seconds) before slowly disappearing.

Step 4: For flooding using the same ribbon test, the icing should cascade off your spatula and almost disappear instantly into the rest of the icing.

You can make the icing too thin and then it won’t set hard. It will take a little practice to get your perfect consistency: thin enough to easily spread but not so thin as to not set or be transparent.

Step 5: Transfer outline and flooding icings to separate bags.

How to decorate cookies for Valentine’s Day:

Step 1: Starting smaller than you think, cut the tip off the outline piping bag. Test a line. If it squiggles when you squeeze it, cut it just a little bigger. Test and repeat until you get a thin straight line. Repeat the same process with the flooding bag but cut it large enough to get a nice flow of icing without squeezing too hard.

Step 2: Working with 1-3 cookies at a time, use the outline bag to trace the outline of the cookie. Leave a 1/16th in border around the edges so it doesn’t run off the cookie!

Step 3: Switch to the flooding bag and squeeze a squiggle of icing inside the outline across the cookie you are icing. Use a cake tester, wooden skewer, or be lazy like me and use the tip of the flooding piping bag, to spread the icing around into one even layer.

Valentine's Day Cookies (11)
Valentine's Day Cookies (12)
Valentine's Day Cookies (13)

You should not be able to see the cookie through the icing, but it should not be so thick that it flows over the outline. The outline should blend perfectly with the filling. If it doesn’t and you have a visible line, you can try to blend them or you can just outline fewer cookies before flooding next time.

Step 4: To make the little hearts, you will need to work quickly. I typically only decorate 1 cookie at a time when doing this technique. Make dots of the second color along the edges or wherever you want the hearts. Take a cake tester or toothpick and drag the tip through the center of each dot. This will make little hearts!

Valentine's Day Cookies (14)
Valentine's Day Cookies (15)
Valentine's Day Cookies (16)

Step 5: For the other style of heart cookies, decorate up to 3 cookies with the icing then sprinkle on your décor. Try crushed dehydrated strawberries or blueberries, sprinkles, mini hearts, or gold jimmies. The options are limitless.

Valentine's Day Cookies (17)
Valentine's Day Cookies (18)
Valentine's Day Cookies (19)

Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip

Royal icing needs to dry at room temperature overnight. I always let them dry unwrapped for at least 3 hours before wrapping. I don’t freeze them. Don’t even look at the refrigerator. The moisture will be absorbed by the icing and it will soften and bleed. You didn’t work this hard for that.

Frequently Asked Questions

How to store decorated Valentine’s Day Cookies?

Store uniced cookies at room temperature for up to 3 days before decorating, but I prefer to store them frozen. Store iced cookies at room temperature for up to 10 days. The royal icing will keep the cookies soft! After drying overnight, wrap the cookies well for best freshness.

Can you freeze decorated cookies?

I would not advise freezing icing sugar cookies. They will absorb moisture and the icing will bleed.

Do these cookies ship well?

These are excellent shipping cookies! The icing keeps them fresh for longer and more durable. Package in a closed container with ample padding. I like to put bakery paper as a cushion in the tin or box.

Valentine's Day Cookies (20)

Valentine's Day Cookies (21)

5 from 2 ratings

Valentine’s Day Cookies

by Chef Lindsey

These Valentine’s Day Cookies are a soft sugar cookie decorated with an easy royal icing. These easy sugar cookies are made with just 7 ingredients in one bowl and they hold their shape when cut! I’ll show you how to decorate them simply with icing or with dehydrated strawberries.

Prep: 20 minutes mins

Cook: 8 minutes mins

Chilling Time: 30 minutes mins

Total: 58 minutes mins

Servings: 40 Cookies

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Ingredients

For the Cookies:

For royal icing:

  • 4 cups powdered sugar 1, 1 pound box
  • 6 ½ tablespoons Lemon Juice juice from approximately 2 medium lemons
  • ¼ cup dried egg whites or meringue powder 22g
  • 2 tablespoons whole milk as needed

Instructions

Make the cookie dough:

  • In a large bowl whisk together flour, baking powder, and kosher salt. Set aside.

  • In another large bowl, melt the butter (I used the microwave) just until melted but not hot. Whisk in the sugar followed by the egg and vanilla. Whisk vigorously until the mixture is emulsified. You shouldn’t see any streaks of butter or egg.

  • Slowly stir in the flour mixture.

  • It does look like a dry dough, so I like to finish by hand, squeezing the dough together. This incorporates the flour faster without developing too much gluten.

  • Roll your dough while it is at room temperature. Roll the dough to approximately ¼ inch. You will have the best results if rolled between two pieces of parchment, but you can also roll out on a lightly floured surface.

  • Refrigerate the dough until chilled. This will only take 30 minutes, but I like to give it a full 2 hours or overnight to let the gluten relax.

Cut & bake cookies:

  • When you are ready to bake, preheat your oven to 325° F convection or 350° F conventional, and line two baking sheets with parchment paper.

  • Unstick the parchment from both sides of the dough, then cut shapes with a lightly floured cookie cutter. Chill the cookies before baking. It will only take about 20 minutes.

  • Bake in preheated oven for 7-9 minutes or until the cookies look matte in the center and have a few small cracks. Some of the edges might have begun to brown. I bake all the same shapes on one sheet to ensure even baking.

  • Cool completely before icing.

Make Royal Icing:

  • In a large bowl or in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the dried egg whites and lemon juice. Whisk until soft peaks form.

  • Add all the powdered sugar and whisk to combine.

  • Separate the icing into different bowls and add food dye. Be sure to keep an eye on the consistency and stop adding if it gets too thin.

  • For outlining using the ribbon test. The icing should cascade slowly off your spatula and remaining clearly visible on the surface for a few moments (about 5-6 seconds) before slowly disappearing.

  • For flooding using the same ribbon test, the icing should cascade off your spatula and almost disappear instantly into the rest of the icing.

Notes

Yield – 40, 2-inch cookies rolled ¼ inch thick.
Variations – Try using lemon or orange zest in the sugar, different extracts or small mix-ins like mini chocolate chips or sprinkles.
Storage – Store soft sugar cookies with royal icing at room temperature for up to 10 days. Allow the icing to set 24 hours before stacking, and allow it to set 3 hours before wrapping with plastic wrap (not touching the surface).

Nutrition

Calories: 124kcal | Carbohydrates: 23g | Protein: 2g | Fat: 3g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.1g | Cholesterol: 10mg | Sodium: 74mg | Potassium: 31mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 17g | Vitamin A: 78IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 8mg | Iron: 0.4mg

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Calories: 124

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Before You Go

I hope you enjoyed this professional chef tested recipe. Check out our other delicious, chef-developed Valentine’s Day recipes! You might also love these Valentine’s Day Desserts or Easy Chocolate Desserts!

Hi, I’m Chef Lindsey!

I am the baker, recipe developer, writer, and photographer behind Chef Lindsey Farr. I believe in delicious homemade food and the power of dessert!

More About Me

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Valentine's Day Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What to write on a Valentine's cookie? ›

Here are some ideas for Valentine cookie surprises for those you love!
  1. You Float My Boat.
  2. U Have the Key to My Heart.
  3. I Heart You Bear-y Much.
  4. U R Cute As A Button.
  5. Some Bunny Loves You.
  6. You Are Toad-aly Cool.
  7. U R The Apple Of My Eye.

How to make heart shape cookies without cutter? ›

If you don't have a heart shaped cookie cutter, don't worry! To make heart shaped cookies without a cutter you need to shape the balls of cookie dough on the tray before resting and baking. You can then help them along during baking by using a teaspoon to press the edges and keep them in a heart shape.

What is the most loved cookie? ›

Chocolate chip cookies

What is the most popular type of cookie? It might just be this one.

What is a Nazareth sugar cookie? ›

The sugar cookie is believed to have originated in the mid-1700s in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. German Protestant settlers created a round, crumbly and buttery cookie that came to be known as the Nazareth cookie. Jumbles are the earliest form of sugar cookies.

What are cookie quotes? ›

Cookie Quotes
  • “A balanced diet is a cookie in each hand.” – ...
  • “C is for cookie that's good enough for me.” – Cookie Monster Sesame Street.
  • “If you can't change the world with chocolate chip cookies, how can you change the world?” – ...
  • “Make the world a better place one cookie at a time.” – Unknown.

What are popular Valentine words? ›

Fall In Love With 14 Captivating Valentine's Day Words
  • cupid. A cupid is kind of like the official mascot of Valentine's Day. ...
  • star-crossed. People sometimes mistake the term star-crossed to mean that people are destined to be together. ...
  • admirer. ...
  • smitten. ...
  • unrequited. ...
  • woo. ...
  • lovebirds. ...
  • betrothed.
Feb 14, 2024

What to do if you don't have a heart cookie cutter? ›

Use a small, sharp knife or pizza cutter to cut any shape of cookie you like after rolling out the dough. If needed, use an aid to help cut specific shapes: Create a stencil out of cardboard or parchment, wax, or plain paper for simple shapes like hearts, shamrocks, eggs, and flowers.

What is the #1 cookie in the world? ›

Oreo is the best-selling cookie in the world. It is now sold in over 100 countries. Oreo was first produced in 1912 by the National Biscuit Company, now known as Na-Bis-Co.

What is a drop cookie? ›

a cookie made by dropping batter from a spoon onto a cookie sheet for baking.

What is America's favorite cookie? ›

OREO® is America's favorite cookie, available in more than 100 countries around the globe. Over 60 billion OREO® cookies are sold each year with more than 20 billion of those cookies sold in the U.S. annually. An estimated 500 billion OREO® cookies have been sold since the first OREO® biscuit was developed in 1912.

What is Snoop Dogg cookies? ›

I prepared the Rolls Royce PB-Chocolate Chip Cookies recipe from Snoop Dogg's “From Crook to Cook” as mentioned below. I must note that natural, creamy peanut butter worked fine. The dough is supposed to make three dozen. I made two because I like fat cookies.

What is a Navy Seal sugar cookie? ›

McRaven describes the experience of Navy SEAL trainees who are subject — often randomly — to a punishment where they are directed to get wet and sandy on the beaches. By the time they are finished the trainees, covered in sand, look like “sugar cookies.”

Why are they called cowboy cookies? ›

The origins of "cowboy cookies" are unknown although they have been variously attributed to Texas or the Old West. The story that describes them in originating in the Old West claims that they were eaten by cowboys as a high energy snack that could be easily carried.

What do I use to write on cookies? ›

Etch or write with edible marker on the cookie before writing with icing. Start with the center letter(s) and work out to make sure your word is centered. For really complicated text designs, you can trace the design onto the cookie.

How do you write a cute Valentines letter? ›

Personalizing your love letter
  1. Create a playlist of all the songs that remind you of them.
  2. Write a short romantic poem that's just for them—such as an ode or sonnet.
  3. Draw or include artwork that symbolizes your relationship.
  4. Include a mini activity list that you plan to do with them.
Feb 8, 2024

How do you say will you be my Valentine in a cute way? ›

Send her a gift as a cutesy token of your affection.

For example, buy her a pizza decorated with a heart formed out of pepperoni and scrawl, “I know it's cheesy, but…will you be my valentine?” on the lid. Or, get her a small stuffed animal holding a sign with the same question.

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