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These tender Danish Butter Cookies are dipped in chocolate and decorated with your favorite sprinkles. They’re melt-in-your-mouth delicious and super easy to make!
If you want to try more easy cookie recipes that are perfect for the holidays or any time of year, check out these vanilla butter cookies, gingersnap cookies, and soft sugar cookies!
Table of Contents
- Why You’ll Love These Danish Butter Cookies
- What Are Butter Cookies?
- Recipe Ingredients
- How to Make Danish Butter Cookies
- Watch This Danish Butter Cookies Recipe Come Together
- How to Make These Cookies Ahead
- Tips for Success
- How to Store Butter Cookies
- Can I Freeze These Cookies?
- More Easy Cookie Recipes
- Get the Recipe
This Danish butter cookies recipe is a longtime favorite of mine. Here’s why I think you’ll love it just as much as I do:
- Perfectly soft make-ahead cookies. Danish butter cookies are wonderfully buttery and tender – especially after sitting for a day. They’re ideal for making ahead!
- Quick and easy. The cookie dough comes together super quickly. There’s no need to refrigerate it and no need to make cookie dough balls. Just pipe the cookies onto the pan and bake.
- Chocolate-covered crowd-pleaser. I’m a lover of any cookie dipped in chocolate, and these are no exception. The chocolate adds flavor and texture to the cookies and helps seal in their moisture so they stay fresh for longer. I added red, green, and silver sprinkles to these cookies to give them a festive Christmas flair, too!
I would describe butter cookies as a cross between a cutout sugar cookie and shortbread. Sugar cookies are generally a little softer and use a leavening agent, which these don’t. But shortbread is often more dry and crumbly, and it doesn’t use egg.
With the addition of the egg to these cookies, they are more tender and don’t fall apart when you bite into them. Instead, they melt in your mouth. So, they’re kind of a mix between the two cookies.
These butter cookies are perfect if you have a family where some like cookies that are more crunchy and some like cookies that are more soft. These fall right in the middle as long as you don’t overbake them.
Recipe Ingredients
You only need 8 ingredients to make these buttery, chocolatey cookies. I’m willing to bet that you already have them all on hand! (If you’re looking for exact amounts, check out the recipe card below.)
- Unsalted butter – Remember to bring your butter to room temperature before you begin.
- Granulated sugar – Regular white granulated sugar is all you need for today.
- Egg – To bind all of the ingredients for the cookie dough together.
- Vanilla extract – Pure vanilla extract provides the best, strongest flavor.
- All-purpose flour – I recommend using a food scale to weigh your flour in order to avoid over-measuring it.
- Salt – You can use kosher salt, sea salt, table salt, etc. Also, if you prefer to bake with salted butter, simply omit this extra salt.
- Milk – I generally use 1 or 2% milk when I make these cookies.
- Melting chocolate – Feel free to also use milk chocolate, dark chocolate, or whatever kind you prefer.
- Sprinkles – If desired, add your favorite sprinkles onto the chocolate part of your cookies.
These cookies are not only easy to make, but it’s also really easy to make them look good. They’re piped onto the baking pan rather than scooped, and you can use a fancy piping tip to give them a cool pattern!
- Prepare for baking. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line baking sheets with silicone baking mats or parchment paper.
- Cream the butter and sugar. Cream the butter and sugar together in a large bowl on medium speed until the mix is light in color and fluffy (about 3-4 minutes). You should be able to see the mixture lighten in color and get a creamy texture.
- Add the egg and vanilla. Add the egg and mix until well-combined. Then, add the vanilla extract and mix again.
- Stir in the flour and salt. Add in the flour and salt and mix until the dough is just combined, then remove the bowl from the mixer and finish combining with a rubber spatula, if needed. Do not over-mix.
- If needed, pour in some milk. Pour in the milk a teaspoon at a time, as needed, to get the dough to a pipeable consistency. The best way to test this is to put a little bit in a piping bag and see if it pipes. You don’t want to add milk if you don’t need it, because then the cookies will spread more.
- Pipe the cookies. Pipe the cookies onto the prepared baking sheet. I used Ateco tip 825 and found that to be the best size. I recommend an open star tip, as opposed to a closed star. You don’t want it to be too big or your cookies will spread more.
- Bake the cookies. Bake the cookies for about 8-10 minutes, or just before they turn golden on the edges. Timing can vary by oven as well as the size of your piping tip and the size of cookie it makes.
- Let the cookies cool. Remove your cookies from the oven and allow them to cool on the baking sheet for 2-3 minutes, then transfer them to a cooling rack to finish cooling.
- Melt your chocolate. To dip the cookies in chocolate, melt the chocolate according to the package directions.
- Dip the cookies in the chocolate. Dip about half of each cookie into the chocolate and then shake off the excess. Place the cookies on parchment paper to dry and add the sprinkles of your choice, if desired.
Check out the video below to see the step-by-step process for making these Danish butter cookies!
These cookies are great to make in advance because they taste even better a day or two after they’re made! Once the chocolate has hardened onto the cookies, store them in an airtight container at room temperature. You can make them up to a week ahead of time, but I recommend making them one or two days in advance for the best results.
Tips for Success
These butter cookies are pretty straightforward, but I’ve got a few decorating pointers to share that you might find helpful!
- Use an open star piping tip. An open star tip produces a better ridge than a closed star, which makes a deeper ridge that tends to kind of fall over when baking and not hold its shape. If you can find the Ateco 825 tip, or have time to order it, I definitely recommend it. If you can’t get the Ateco 825 tip, I recommend going a touch smaller.
- Test the cookie dough before piping it. Before adding any milk to your dough, check to see if it’s the right consistency for piping by adding a small amount of dough into the piping bag and testing it. If it’s too thick, add a teaspoon of milk at a time and keep testing the dough.
- Add coarse sugar. If sprinkles aren’t your thing, you can sprinkle some coarse sugar over your cookies instead.
- Make them colorful. If you’re using white chocolate for your cookies, you can add a drop or two of gel icing color to make them really pop or get colored candy melts!
Once the chocolate has set on your cookies, store them in an airtight container on the counter. They’re best if eaten within 5-7 days. I recommend saving at least a few cookies for the day after you bake them, because they taste even better after sitting overnight!
These cookies are freezer-friendly if you want to store them long-term. You can store the cookies with the chocolate and sprinkles already on or add them later so that they look more fresh. Frozen butter cookies will last for up to 3 months! Just thaw them out in the fridge before enjoying.
On the lookout for more classic cookie recipes? Take a look at these ones!
- Buttery Classic Spritz Cookies
- Italian Ricotta Cookies
- Peanut Butter Blossoms
- White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 10 minutes
- Total Time: 25 minutes
- Yield: 30
- Category: Dessert
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: Danish
Description
Danish butter cookies are ultra-buttery and tender. Dip them in sweet melted chocolate and decorate them with your favorite sprinkles, and they’re a guaranteed crowd-pleaser!
Ingredients
- 1 cup (224g) unsalted butter, room temperature
- 2/3 cup (138) granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 1/4 cups (293g) all purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1–3 teaspoons milk
- 6–8 ounces melting chocolate
- Sprinkles, optional
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C). Line baking sheets with silicone baking mats or parchment paper.
- Cream the butter and sugar together in a large mixer bowl on medium speed until light in color and fluffy, about 3-4 minutes. You should be able to see the mixture lighten in color and get a creamy texture and know it’s ready.
- Add the egg and mix until well combined.
- Add the vanilla extract and mix until well combined.
- Add the flour and salt and mix until the dough is just combined, then remove the bowl from the mixer and finish combining with a rubber spatula, if needed. Do not over mix.
- Add milk a teaspoon at a time as needed to get a pipeable consistency. The best way to test this is to put a little bit in a piping bag and see if it pipes. You don’t want to add milk if you don’t need it, because then the cookies will spread more.
- Pipe the cookies onto the prepared baking sheet. I used Ateco tip 825 and found that to be the best size. I recommend an open star tip, as opposed to a closed star. You don’t want it to be too big or your cookies will spread more.
- Bake cookies for about 8-10 minutes, or just before they turn golden on the edges. Timing can vary by oven as well as the size of your piping tip and the size of cookie it makes.
- Remove cookies from the oven and allow to cool on the baking sheet for 2-3 minutes, then transfer to a cooling rack to finish cooling.
- To dip the cookies in chocolate, melt the chocolate according to the package directions.
- Dip about half of each cookie into the chocolate and then shake off the excess. Place on parchment paper to dry and add the sprinkles of your choice, if desired.
Notes
- Be careful not to over-measure your flour. Too much flour can lead to a thick cookie dough that’s hard to pipe and dry cookies. A food scale is always the best way to ensure it’s accurate.
- To store. Once the chocolate has set on your cookies, store them in an airtight container on the counter. They’re best if eaten within 5-7 days. I recommend saving at least a few cookies for the day after you bake them, because they taste even better after sitting overnight!
- To freeze. These cookies are freezer-friendly if you want to store them long-term. You can store the cookies with the chocolate and sprinkles already on or add them later so that they look more fresh. Frozen butter cookies will last for up to 3 months! Just thaw them out in the fridge before enjoying.
Nutrition
- Serving Size:
- Calories: 147
- Sugar: 8.7 g
- Sodium: 48.7 mg
- Fat: 8.7 g
- Carbohydrates: 15.9 g
- Protein: 1.7 g
- Cholesterol: 24 mg
Do these have to be piped or can I roll these? Chill them for a few then place them on my cookie sheet. Thank you for your time.
You don’t have to pipe them, but they don’t really spread. So you can roll the cookie dough into a log and slice and bake them or something along those lines. You don’t want to roll them into balls. They won’t spread. I hope that helps!