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Vegan Sugar Cookies Bring All The Homey Good Feels

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Because Sugar Cookies are so much fun!

vegan sugar cookies for a Hamptons Vegan potluck

I remember enjoying decorated sugar cookies since I was very young. And I bet you do too!

My Grandma loved to bake and some of my fondest memories from childhood revolved around my Grandma’s cookies. She would have a big plate of Christmas cookies on a table in her dining room that I could not stop staring at. It was the focus of my Christmas eve night. And that means a lot considering they were in competition with Christmas eve festivities like listening for Santa’s reindeer bells!

And I remember my Mom buying the slice-and-bake sugar cookies from the grocery store so we could bake them and decorate them ourselves.

Then when my children were young, I made my own when I could, but also bought the slice and bake for convenience. And we kept the tradition alive. We made sugar cookies year-round.

Because sugar cookies work for all the holidays depending on how you decorate them. It just takes some icing and some sprinkles or jimmies to go with the theme. Cookie cutters make them extra special, too.

But think of all the occasions for sugar cookies.

We decorate our sugar cookies for Christmas, Valentine’s Day, St. Patrick’s Day, Easter, Independence Day, Halloween, and Thanksgiving. But that’s not all! We make cookies for birthdays, baby showers, anniversaries, fund-raisers, milestones, celebrations, autumn, winter, spring, and summer, too! And sugar cookies are good any old time. Rainy days, snow days, bored days, teaching children about measurements, the list is endless.

Easter Egg Sugar Cookies
Easter Bunny Sugar Cookies
Christmas Sugar Cookies
Christmas Sugar Cookie Assortment
Autumn Leaf Sugar cookies
Ghost Sugar Cookies on a Stick
Mermaid Tail Sugar Cookie Cupcake Toppers

So what better time than now to make some cookies?

Let’s Get Started

If you already have a family sugar cookie recipe that needs to be veganized, we can work with that. Replace an egg with 1 tablespoon of ground flax seed and 3 tablespoons of water mixed together. It’s my go-to replacement. But there is also egg replacers like Bob’s Redmill Egg Replacer, sold at many grocery stores.

Replace any milk in a recipe with non-dairy varieties. I prefer Westsoy Soy Milk because it has a higher amount of protein and just two ingredients- organic soy and water. I don’t like some of the non-dairy milk on the market with so much added sugar and unwanted things like titanium, etc.

Some sugar cookie recipes have sour cream in them or buttermilk. That’s easy to substitute as well. Many vegan sour creams are readily available now like Follow You Heart Sour Cream or Tofutti Sour Cream. And buttermilk is replaced in a recipe by mixing 1 tablespoon of lemon juice or apple cider vinegar into every cup of non-dairy milk. You’ll see it thicken and curdle in 5 to 10 minutes.

And of course, most sugar cookie recipes use butter or shortening. But vegan butter is easily found in grocery stores now too, thank the stars! Our favorites are Miyokos Cultured Vegan Butter, Violife Plant Butter, and Trader Joe’s Vegan Buttery Spread. And we’ve used Earth Balance as well. But I prefer not to use palm oil as much as possible after reading about the devastation the palm oil business has inflicted on the environment. Also, if you need a substitute for shortening there is Nutiva Shortening.

Make Our Recipe Your Recipe!

But if you don’t have a sugar cookie recipe, have ours! We are more than happy to share the one that we use and we know you’ll really like it. Because it works consistently. And it’s made with easy-to-find ingredients. Plus it tastes amazing.

So give this recipe a try. And have a happy sugar cookie day any day of the year.

Do You Need A Variety Of Cookies?

Then you must try some of our other cookie recipes!

Start with the Classic Chocolate Chip Cookie. That’s everybody’s favorite.

Then make our easy-peasy Peanut Butter Cookie.

And for a fancier cookie, we can help with that too! Make the Lovely Linzer Cookie to impress your guests.

Or create our Half-Moon Cookies for your next lunar event (solar eclipse, full moon, whatever!)

But if all these cookies conflict with your desire to forego sugar and less desirable ingredients, it’s okay. Because if you want something that tastes like dessert but is made of healthy ingredients, bake up the Chocolate Chip Chickpea Cookie! It’s surprisingly good.

Print

Sugar Cookies

Easy go-to vegan sugar cookie recipe for all your celebrations
Course Dessert
Cuisine vegan
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
1 hour chill time for dough plus 1 day drying time after frosting cookies 1 day 1 hour
Total Time 1 day 1 hour 50 minutes
Servings 36 3-inch cookies
Author thehamptonsvegan

Ingredients

  • 2 3/4 cups flour (384 grams)
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/8 teaspoon salt
  • 1/8 teaspoon nutmeg optional
  • 1 cup vegan butter or shortening (or a combination of both)- at room temperature (227 grams)
  • 1 cup organic sugar (200 grams)
  • 2 tablespoons ground flax seed (meal)
  • 6 tablespoons water
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla

Vegan Royal Icing

  • 3 cups confectioners sugar -sifted (360 grams)
  • 1/4 cup warm water
  • 1 tablespoon light corn syrup Make our corn syrup substitute recipe or use store-bought.
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 teaspoon almond extract
  • few drops food color optional

Instructions

Cut-Out Sugar Cookie Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 F.
  • Mix together flax meal with water in a small bowl and set aside for about 5 minutes to gel.
  • In a medium-size bowl, whisk together flour, baking powder, salt and nutmeg.
  • In a large bowl, cream together room temperature butter (or shortening) with the sugar until mixed well. Add flax mixture and vanilla and beat until light and fluffy.
  • Add the flour mixture to the wet mixture and combine into a dough.
  • Divide dough into 3 parts, wrap each one in cling wrap, shape into disk shape, and chill in the refrigerator for 1-3 hours. (overnight is okay, too. Or freeze the 3 wrapped dough pieces together in a freezer bag for up to 3 months, until ready to use.)
  • Have two sheets of parchment paper ready. Remove chilled dough. Sprinkle a little flour on one sheet of parchment paper to prevent dough from sticking to the surface. Then place dough on the parchment and sprinkle a little more flour onto top of dough before adding top sheet of parchment. Roll dough with rolling pin, between the two sheets, to approximately 1/4-inch thick or a little thinner. Thinner than that will make a crispier, more fragile cookie.
  • Next, peel off top sheet of parchment from dough carefully and set aside for the next dough. Have a shallow bowl or plate with a little flour to dip your cookie cutter in so it doesn't stick to dough. After dipping, start cutting out shapes in the rolled dough.
  • Using a very thin/flexible spatula, dip it into a little flour, then gently lift cut cookie shapes onto parchment lined baking sheets. (Do not use wax paper in the oven.)
  • Re-roll scraps of dough and repeat the process until it's all used. Then repeat the process with the other two disks of chilled dough.
  • Bake cookies in the preheated oven for about 8-10 minutes depending on the size and thickness of your cookies. You should just start to see a little light golden shade around the rim. They will continue cooking a bit on the cookie sheet after taking them out of the oven so don't overbake.
  • When done, cool baking sheet of cookies on a wire rack for a few minutes, then carefully transfer them off the baking sheet to the wire rack with the thin spatula to finish cooling.

Royal Icing Instructions

  • In a small bowl, stir warm water, corn syrup, and extracts until all are dissolved together. Add food color now if using just one color.
  • In a large bowl, sift your confectioners sugar.
  • Add liquid mixture to the large bowl with the sugar and beat together until smooth. Frost cookies and let dry overnight.
  • * If using more than one food color, divide icing into separate bowls according to how many colors you are using. Then add a few drops of individual colors to each bowl and mix together well.
  • ** If using decorations like sprinkles, add to iced cookies while they are still wet or they won't stick.
  • *** Icing can be stored in an air-tight container at room temperature, away from heat and light, for up to a week. Stir well before using.

Notes

Make our Corn Syrup/Honey Substitute Recipe.
Our favorite spatula to use in this recipe is the OXO Flexible Turner.
Our favorite store-bought light corn syrup is Wholesome Light Corn Syrup.
 
 

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