I've been a professional baker for over 10 years. Here are my top 8 tips for making perfect cookies.

After working in grocery stores and my own bakery, I've learned that chilling dough and creaming butter and sugar can drastically improve cookies.

I've been a professional baker for over 10 years. Here are my top 8 tips for making perfect cookies.
christmas sugar cookies baking
I've learned the best tips for making all kinds of different cookies.
  • As a baker with over 10 years of experience, I've learned some great cookie-baking tips.
  • Properly creaming the butter and sugar is key for achieving great texture.
  • For soft, chewy cookies, let them cool on the baking sheet before transferring them to a wire rack.

Whether you're baking for one or a whole party, homemade cookies are always a hit.

After working at a grocery store and owning my own bakery, I have several tricks I use every time I make cookies.

Cream the butter and sugar properly

creaming butter and sugar together in a mixing bowl with a hand mixer
You'll want to mix the butter and sugar together for about three to five minutes.

Creaming butter and sugar is the first step for countless cookie recipes.

Simply mixing softened butter with granulated sugar or brown sugar until combined isn't enough. It's important to really whip the ingredients together for several minutes to create air bubbles in the mixture.

Those bubbles play a key role once the dough is in the oven by creating steam, which ultimately results in a great texture.

Proper creaming typically takes three to five minutes, depending on your mixer. The final product will be pale and fluffy and ready for room-temperature eggs.

Use pure vanilla extract

Most cookie recipes call for vanilla extract — especially chocolate-chip and sugar cookies.

However, the flavor will only be as good as the ingredients you add.

Vanilla extract is used to enhance the flavors of other ingredients and add its own distinct flavor, so it's best to stick to a pure, high-quality option. Artificial extract won't achieve the same incredible results.

Pay attention to chilling time

Not all recipes call for chilling time, but if your dough does, be sure to follow it. It's a crucial step to preventing cookies from spreading too much while baking.

Part of what controls the spread is the butter.

At room temperature, it's quite soft. Chilling the dough gives the fat time to solidify again, which ultimately takes longer to melt in the oven.

Use a cookie-dough scoop

cookie scoop scooper ice cream chocolate chip cookies parchment paper
Using the scooper ensures your cookies end up the same size.

Want cookies that are uniform in size and shape? Use a cookie-dough scoop to evenly divide the dough.

They look like mini ice-cream scoops and can be found in multiple sizes.

Just scoop the dough, roll it into a ball, and place it on your baking sheet.

Always line your baking sheets

The key to preventing cookies from sticking is lining your baking sheet with parchment paper.

Many recipes suggest greasing the sheet, but that can often impact the way the cookies spread.

Parchment paper on its own prevents sticking without affecting the dough. Plus, it can be reused multiple times while baking several sheets of cookies.

Give the cookies some space

It varies depending on the type of cookie, but pretty much every dough will spread while baking — even if it's just the slightest amount.

When you're placing dough on a baking sheet, give each cookie 1 ½ to 2 inches of space to ensure they don't merge together while baking.

Keep an eye on your cookies in the oven

Even set to a uniform 350 degrees Fahrenheit, every oven will bake a bit differently.

It's important to check your cookies a few minutes before the recipe's baking time is up.

Cookies are usually done when the edges are lightly golden brown, which may be several minutes before or after the timer actually goes off.

For softer cookies, let them finish baking out of the oven

chocolate cookies on a baking sheet sprinkled with sea salt
The cookies can continue baking a little on the hot baking sheet.

If you're a fan of soft, chewy cookies, the key is to pull them out at the right moment.

Once the edges of the cookies have just started to brown, remove the baking sheet from the oven and set it on the stovetop.

Allow the residual heat from the baking sheet to finish off the cookies for two to three minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack.

This story was originally published in December 2022 and most recently updated on December 9, 2024.

Read the original article on Business Insider