Cookie baking is practically a winter sport. There’s planning, prepping, baking, and packaging (and shipping!). How many cookies do you need for the perfect holiday cookie plate? Which is the best roll-out cookie recipe for decorating? Should you make classic chocolate chip cookies or a brown butter version?

Don’t worry, we’re on your team, and have prepared a long list of classic Christmas cookies and other holiday favorites to bake this year. Peruse the list below and bookmark your favorites — there’s a lot of baking to do.

Roll-Out Sugar Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Roll-Out Sugar Cookies are the ideal base for all your cookie decorating this season.

1) Roll-Out Sugar Cookies

If you’re decorating Christmas cookies or other holiday cookies, you need a reliable base. That’s where this recipe comes in: These cookies are buttery and tender, but most importantly, they don’t spread. Which means all your cookie shapes stay intact after baking and look extra-sharp on the plate.

Get the recipe: Roll-Out Sugar Cookies 

Shop the recipe: Double-Sided Round Cutters

 

Gingerbread Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
A Gingerbread Man Cookie Cutter is key to this cookie shape. 

2) Gingerbread Cookies

What’s a Christmas cookie platter without gingerbread? This recipe is flavored with ginger, cinnamon, and allspice, plus a hefty pour of dark molasses for its earthy-sweet flavor and added chew. Spend an afternoon decorating with Royal Icing or Simple Cookie Glaze.

Get the recipe: Gingerbread Cookies (or Gluten-Free Roll-Out Gingerbread Cookies)

Shop the recipe: Ginger, cinnamon, and allspice

Thumbprint Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Thumbprint Cookies add a pretty pop of color to any holiday cookie plate.

3) Thumbprint Cookies

These cookies are crisp, buttery, and studded with nuts; using almond flour in the dough lends them a moist texture and subtly nutty flavor. Fill your cookies with an array of fillings for eye-catching color on holiday cookie platters: This raspberry hibiscus jam is a lovely ruby hue.

Get the recipe: Thumbprint Cookies

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour

Sugar Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Using high-quality vanilla makes simple sugar cookies shine.

4) Sugar Cookies

Don’t sleep on sugar cookies. When done right — as in this beloved recipe — they can entice you with a little crunch, a tender center, and a familiar undertone of vanilla.

Get the recipe: Sugar Cookies (or Gluten-Free Cream Cheese Sugar Cookies)

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Pure Vanilla Extract and Pure Almond Extract 

Rugelach Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Rugelach are a Hanukkah staple.

5) Rugelach

This Hanukkah cookie is made with a satiny-soft, rich dough, thanks to the trio of cream cheese, butter, and sour cream. Wrapped inside is a filling of brown sugar, chopped walnuts, and dried fruit, though you can swap in more options by following the tips at the bottom of the recipe page.

Get the recipe: Rugelach (or Gluten-Free Rugelach)

Shop the recipe: Sparkling Sugar 

Checkerboard Sablés Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Add a pretty pattern to your holiday dessert spread.

6) Checkerboard Sablés

It’s hard to standout on a crowded Christmas cookie plate, but with their iconic black-and-white pattern, these Checkerboard SablĂ©s have no problem catching anyone’s eye. Don't be intimidated — these cookies are easier to pull off than they look!

Get the recipe: Checkerboard SablĂ©s

Shop the recipe: Rolling pin 

Oatmeal Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Add a garnish of flaky sea salt to make an oatmeal cookie that adults will love too.

7) Oatmeal Cookies

Featuring the nutty taste and nubbly texture of oats, these mildly spiced cookies are crunchy around the edges and invitingly soft in the center. Plus there’s a surprising ingredient, vinegar, to cut the sweetness and give your baking soda a boost.

Get the recipe: Oatmeal Cookies (or Gluten-Free Oatmeal Cookies)

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Jammy Bits 

Holiday Butter Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
These cookies are buttery, tender, and ready for decorating. 

8) Holiday Butter Cookies

These buttery, subtly sweet cookies roll out smoothly, and they hold their shape through baking. Using confectioners’ sugar, instead of granulated sugar, makes the dough easy to work with and the baked cookies extra tender. Use them for all your Christmas cookie decorating, or for any other cookie designs you make this winter — they’re infinitely customizable.

Get the recipe: Holiday Butter Cookies

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Fiori di Sicilia 

No-Bake Almond Butter Bars Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Give your oven a break with no-bake bars this holiday season.

9) No-Bake Almond Butter Bars 

When your oven needs a much-deserved break, make these easy, no-bake almond butter bars. The almond butter layer includes a touch of honey, vanilla, and salt for amped-up flavor, plus graham cracker crumbs for a pleasant crunch and cookie-like texture.

Get the recipe: No-Bake Almond Butter Bars 

Shop the recipe: Semisweet chocolate wafers

Chocolate Peppermint Snaps Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Seasonal flavors of chocolate and peppermint are combined in one chewy-crispy cookie.

10) Chocolate Peppermint Snaps

The perfect combination of chocolatey and minty, these cookies have an irresistibly chewy center and crisp edges. Bakers across the country have loved them for years, like one reviewer in North Carolina who declared them “a holiday staple.”

Get the recipe: Chocolate Peppermint Snaps

Shop the recipe: Peppermint Oil

Chocolate Chip Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
They're a classic for a reason.

11) Classic Chocolate Chip Cookies

You know chocolate chip cookies, you love chocolate chip cookies, you’re probably already planning to bake chocolate chip cookies. True, they’re more of an everyday classic, but what are the holidays if not a chance to indulge in some tried-and-true favorites? And this recipe, endorsed with over 370 perfect five-star reviews, is a major favorite. (But if you prefer chewy chocolate chip cookies instead, we have a recipe for you: Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies.)

Bars of shortbread dipped in tempered chocolate and sprinkled with salt and pistachios Photography by Kristin Teig; food styling by Liz Neily
Dip your shortbread in chocolate for an extra-indulgent touch.

12) Shortbread 

Dense, buttery, and just the right amount of crumbly, these deceptively simple shortbread cookies might steal the show at your holiday party. Our recipe calls for salted butter (that’s right, salted), since our Test Kitchen has found that table salt doesn’t disperse evenly in this thick dough.

Get the recipe: Shortbread

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Pure Vanilla Extract 

Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
A soft and cakey pumpkin cookie, studded with chocolate chips.

13) Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

These pumpkin cookies are delightfully soft and cakey, with melty pockets of chocolate throughout. Cinnamon and ginger add a dash of holiday spice to amp up the pumpkin.

Get the recipe: Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies

Shop the recipe: Cinnamon and ginger 

Chocolate Crinkles Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
These cookies' snowy appearance gives way to a dense and fudgy center.

14) Chocolate Crinkle Cookies 

These eye-catching cookies are fudgy and deeply chocolatey beneath their snow-dusted exterior. To nail the perfect crinkled appearance, follow the recipe exactly; we recommend weighing with a scale to ensure accuracy.

Get the recipe: Chocolate Crinkle Cookies 

Shop the recipe: Volume and Weight Scale

Crisp Molasses Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Look at that crackly, sugary crust! 

15) Crisp Molasses Cookies 

A classic recipe, these cookies are crunchy at the edges and a little softer in the middle. Their traditional, robust molasses flavor is highlighted by hints of ginger, cinnamon, and clove.

Get the recipe: Crisp Molasses Cookies 

Shop the recipe: Tablespoon Cookie Scoop 

Soft and Chewy Vanilla-Orange Cranberry Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Don't forget the Sparkling Sugar for added glitz.

16) Soft and Chewy Cranberry Orange Cookies

Cranberry and orange is a beloved holiday flavor combination, and here, it manifests in delightfully soft, chewy cookies. A coating of sparkling sugar gives them some holiday glam.

Get the recipe: Soft and Chewy Cranberry Orange Cookies

Shop the recipe: Sparkling Sugar

Snickerdoodles Photography and food styling by Shilpa Iyer
You only need one bowl to make this snickerdoodle dough.

17) Snickerdoodle Cookies

One of the most nostalgic cookies around, snickerdoodles ooze comfort and warmth. They’re quick to make — the dough comes together in one bowl — and set apart by a cinnamon-sugar coating.

Get the recipe: Snickerdoodle Cookies (or Gluten-Free Snickerdoodles made with baking mix)

Shop the recipe: Cinnamon Sugar Plus

Fudgy-Chewy Pumpkin Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Pumpkin cookies that dare to be chewy, not cakey.

18) Fudgy-Chewy Pumpkin Cookies 

Most pumpkin cookies (like the Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookies on this list!) are cakey; these pumpkin cookies, however, are chewy. Their fudgy texture comes from a genius step: The pumpkin purĂ©e is cooked down on the stovetop in brown butter to stave off some moisture. It’s a worthwhile step to a unique pumpkin cookie texture. 

Get the recipe: Fudgy-Chewy Pumpkin Cookies 

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Pumpkin Pie Spice

Lemon Snowball Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Snowy and citrusy, these cookies are worth the mess of confectioners' sugar. 

19) Lemon Snowball Cookies 

A delightful citrus riff on classic Snowball Cookies, these buttery, tender treats feature bright lemon flavor in both the cookie and its snowy coating. The tangy citrus punch will be a welcome bright spot on every holiday and Christmas cookie plate.

Get the recipe: Lemon Snowball Cookies 

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Lemon Juice Powder

Cream Cheese-Stuffed Red Velvet Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Is it possible these cookies are even better than red velvet cake?

20) Cream Cheese-Stuffed Red Velvet Cookies

These vibrant red velvet cookies have it all: a gorgeous crinkled appearance; a rich, fudgy flavor; and — perhaps best of all — a decadent cream cheese filling.  

Get the recipe: Cream Cheese-Stuffed Red Velvet Cookies 

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Triple Cocoa Blend

Chocolate Drop Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Chocolate on chocolate is all you need. 

21) Chocolate Cookies 

For all the chocolate lovers in your life, we have these deep, dark cookies, which provide a double dose of chocolate if you choose to stir in the optional chocolate chips. But honestly, why wouldn’t you?

Get the recipe: Chocolate Cookies

Shop the recipe: Dutch-Process Cocoa or King Arthur Triple Cocoa Blend 

Peanut Butter Blossoms Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Nostalgic Peanut Butter Blossoms are always welcome in holiday cookie packages. 

22) Peanut Butter Blossoms

These sweetly shaped cookies are favorites of both kids and adults. With a rich peanut butter cookie cradling a soft chocolate kiss, they offer a candy-inspired bite on the dessert plate.

Get the recipe: Peanut Butter Blossoms

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Cookie Sheet

Cowboy Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
When you want a little bit of everything in your cookies, make this recipe.

23) Cowboy Cookies 

Cowboy cookies have a little bit of everything — literally. Stuffed with oats, chocolate chips, pecans, and toasted coconut, they’re deeply flavorful and bursting with texture.

Get the recipe: Cowboy Cookies

Shop the recipe: Chocolate chips

Linzer Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Customize your cookies with just about any flavor you want.

24) Linzer Cookies

Nothing could be more festive on the holiday table than a tray of these buttery, confectioners’ sugar-dusted, jam-packed cookies. The hint of lemon in the dough nicely complements any number of fillings, from raspberry jam to lemon curd.

Get the recipe: Linzer Cookies

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour

Rainbow Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Soft and squishy, Rainbow Cookies are really more cake than cookie. 

25) Rainbow Cookies 

The layers of rainbow cookies — more like soft, spongy almond cake than an actual cookie — are traditionally red, white, and green for the Italian flag, but that also makes them well-suited as a Christmas cookie. A coating of chocolate glaze gilds the lily. (And for a chocolate version, try these Ombre Chocolate Cake Bars.) 

Get the recipe: Rainbow Cookies

Shop the recipe: Semisweet chocolate wafers

Chai-Glazed Almond Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
These cookies are distinguished by their chai-spiced glaze.

26) Chai-Glazed Almond Cookies 

A sweet, spicy glaze adorns these tender, buttery cookies, providing visual flair and complex flavor. Using almond flour in the dough ensures the cookies turn out soft and moist.

Get the recipe: Chai-Glazed Almond Cookies 

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour

Stack of three magic bars on a white plate. Photography by Rick Holbrook; Food styling by Kaitlin Wayne; Prop styling by Brooke Deonarin
These bars are rich, gooey, and oh-so-decadent.

27) Chocolate Magic Cookie Bars 

Magic cookie bars get a chocolate makeover! Also known as seven-layer bars, dream bars, or Hello Dolly bars, this updated version of the classic gets a touch of cocoa powder and chocolate chips, all sandwiched between a graham cracker crust and a crunchy coconut topping.

Get the recipe: Chocolate Magic Cookie Bars

Shop the recipe: Triple Cocoa Blend and bittersweet chocolate chips

Butterscotch Macadamia Nut Cookies Photography and food styling by Shilpa Iyer
Macadamia nuts are often overlooked, but here they get the spotlight. 

28) Butterscotch Macadamia Nut Cookies 

Crunchy, sweet, and salty, these one-bowl cookies are quick to make and always satisfying. Make sure to use quick-cooking oats, as the recipe calls for: Old-fashioned oats will cause the cookies to spread much more, sometimes to the point of becoming lace cookies.

Get the recipe: Butterscotch Macadamia Nut Cookies

Shop the recipe: Tablespoon Cookie Scoop 

Gingersnaps Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
These Gingersnaps taste like winter in cookie form.

29) Gingersnaps 

Distinguished by their cracked, sugary tops, these crunchy cookies taste prominently of ginger and molasses — exactly what you want in a winter cookie. If you prefer softer cookies, substitute butter for the vegetable shortening.

Get the recipe: Gingersnaps

Shop the recipe: Ginger

Baked cookies laying in rows on a blue background. Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
If you love almond, you'll love these cookies.

30) Almond Cloud Cookies 

These cookies are a perennial favorite at our bakery for their chewy texture, prominent almond flavor, and snowy appearance. Gooey and dense, they’re like baked marzipan in cookie form. 

Get the recipe: Almond Cloud Cookies 

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour

Light Spice Holiday Cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
If you find sugar cookies too boring and gingerbread too spiced, try this hybrid of the two. 

31) Light Spice Holiday Cookies 

These golden brown, spiced cookies are a hybrid of sugar cookies and gingerbread. They make an excellent foundation for any Christmas cookie shapes you’re baking, from reindeer to ornaments to Christmas trees.

Get the recipe: Light Spice Holiday Cookies 

Shop the recipe: Gingerbread Spice

Classic Pizzelle Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
To achieve these Italian cookies' classic pattern, you need a Pizzelle Iron.

32) Pizzelle 

Crisp and buttery, pizzelle are classic Italian cookies pressed in a thin, pretty pattern using a pizzelle iron. We flavor ours with vanilla, but for a more traditional version, you can add a splash of anise extract instead.

Get the recipe: Pizzelle 

Shop the recipe: Pizzelle Iron

Classic Peanut Butter Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Add raspberry jammy bits to this recipe to create peanut butter and jelly cookies.

33) Classic Peanut Butter Cookies

These cookies are called classic for a reason — they’re exactly what you want and expect from a peanut butter cookie. Slightly soft and mildly chewy, they’re basically designed for dunking in a glass of milk or eggnog.

Get the recipe: Classic Peanut Butter Cookies (or Gluten-Free Classic Peanut Butter Cookies)

Shop the recipe: Tablespoon Cookie Scoop

Chocolate Cutout Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Who says cut-out cookies have to be vanilla?

34) Chocolate Cut-Out Cookies

Holiday cookies don't always have to be sugar and spice — they can also be deep, dark, and delicious. Our black cocoa is the secret to these cookies’ midnight-black hue.

Get the recipe: Chocolate Cut-Out Cookies 

Shop the recipe: Black Cocoa

 

Joy's Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies with Pecans Photography by Kristin Teig; food styling by Liz Neily
What's better than chocolate chip cookies? Brown butter chocolate chip cookies, of course. 

35) Joy’s Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies with Pecans 

These brown butter chocolate chip cookies are an employee-owner favorite. With nutty depth from the browned butter, perfectly crispy edges and chewy middles, and plenty of chocolate, they satisfy everyone’s fiercest chocolate chip cookie craving.

Get the recipe: Joy’s Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies with Pecans

Shop the recipe: Bittersweet chocolate chips 

Baked cookies placed decoratively on a red background. Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Simply swap in Gluten-Free Measure for Measure Flour to make gluten-free cookies.

36) Chocolate Molasses Thumbprints 

It’s hard to pick the best part of these rich chocolate cookies: Is it the pool of bittersweet chocolate ganache in the center or the crunchy, glittery sugar-coated exterior? Make them and decide for yourself.

Get the recipe: Chocolate Molasses Thumbprints

Shop the recipe: Bittersweet chocolate wafers

Plate of Italian Christmas cookies Photography and food styling by Shilpa Iyer
These Italian Christmas cookies pack an almondy punch.

37) Pignoli (Italian Cookies with Pine Nuts) 

These chewy little Italian Christmas cookies are nutty and rich. Coated in pine nuts, they pack an almondy punch thanks to the inclusion of both almond flour and almond extract.

Get the recipe: Pignoli (Italian Cookies with Pine Nuts)

Shop the recipe: Pure Almond Extract and King Arthur Almond Flour

Spiced Star Cookies (Speculaas) Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
These cute cookies are made with almond flour for a tender crumb.

38) Spiced Star Cookies (Speculaas)

Speculaas are traditionally thin, crisp, dark-brown windmill-shaped cookies that originated in the Netherlands. But you don’t need a special mold to enjoy them — roll out the dough and use your favorite cutters to make these snapping crisp, delightfully spicy cookies.

Get the recipe: Spiced Star Cookies (Speculaas)

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour

Wedding Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Bring the snowstorm inside with sugar-coated Snowball Cookies.

39) Snowball Cookies

Mexican Wedding Cookies, Vanilla Snowballs, Russian Teacakes ... these tender, crumbly cookies, full of ground almonds and covered with a blizzard of confectioners' sugar, go by many additional names. But one thing is constant: their melt-in-your-mouth texture and distinctive, attractive appearance.

Get the recipe: Snowball Cookies

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Almond Flour and  Pure Almond Extract

Two plates of Chocolate Caramel Thumprint Christmas cookies Photography and food styling by Liz Neily
Chocolate and caramel might be our new go-to holiday flavor combo.

40) Chocolate Caramel Thumbprint Cookies

For this variation on classic thumbprint cookies, we’ve chosen the decadent flavor combination of chocolate and caramel, dressing it up with chopped nuts for a rich, buttery, gooey treat.

Get the recipe: Chocolate Caramel Thumbprint Cookies

Shop the recipe: King Arthur Triple Cocoa Blend 

Peppermint Bark Cookies Photography by Rick Holbrook; Food Styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Is there anything more festive than peppermint and chocolate?

41) Peppermint Bark Cookies

Peppermint bark meets cookies in these delightful slice-and-bake treats. These cookies have all the elements of the candy you know and love: minty flavor, crunchy texture, and plenty of chocolate — both white and dark. If you don’t have peppermint chips, you can simply crush up a few peppermint candies to use instead.

Get the recipe: Peppermint Bark Cookies 

Shop this recipe: Slice-and-Bake Cookie Dough Keeper Set and Peppermint Oil 

Cranberry-Studded Melted Butter Shortbread

Our new Slice-and-Bake Cookie Dough Keeper Set makes it easier to shape, store, and slice your cookies all season long.

Polvorones Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
These brightly colored cookies add a dash of fun to festivities.

42) Polvorones

Polvorones are delightfully crumbly cookies (their name comes from the Spanish word for "powdery") that are traditionally enjoyed year-round in Mexico and during Christmastime in Spain. This tricolor version features the flavors of orange, chocolate, and hibiscus in the form of soft and irresistibly buttery cookies.

Get the recipe: Polvorones

Shop this recipe: Orange Blossom Water and Black Cocoa

Cranberry-Studded Melted Butter Shortbread Photography by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne
Make your kitchen smell like the height of the holidays.

43) Cranberry-Studded Melted Butter Shortbread

These crumbly cookies are fragrant with rosemary and pack a tart-sweet punch with dried cranberries, but what really makes them stand apart is the butter. Using melted butter in the dough provides all the tenderness of traditional shortbread, but there’s no waiting for your butter to reach room temperature or need to cream it with sugar. 

Get the recipe: Cranberry-Studded Melted Butter Shortbread

Shop this recipe: Sparkling Sugar and Slice-and-Bake Cookie Dough Keeper Set 

Cover photo by Rick Holbrook; food styling by Kaitlin Wayne 

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About Rossi Anastopoulo

Rossi Anastopoulo grew up in Charleston, South Carolina, which is how she fell in love with biscuits. She didn’t have any bakers in her household (with the exception of her grandmother’s perfect koulourakia), so she learned at a young age that the best way to satisfy her sweet tooth was to make dess...
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