4.88 from 108 votes

Shortbread Cookie Recipe

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301 Comments

Servings: 44 cookies (see note)

1 hr 25 mins

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My shortbread cookie recipe makes tender, buttery, classic shortbread cookies that hold their shape in the oven and melt in your mouth. Dipping in chocolate is optional, but highly recommended! Recipe includes a how-to video!

Heart shaped cookies made from a shortbread cookie recipe.

I’m very excited to be sharing my updated shortbread cookie recipe with you today! While I enjoyed the original for years, my old version started to feel more like a sugar cookie. I wanted to make some tweaks for more tender, soft, and melt-in-your-mouth results that still held their shape beautifully. This is true, classic, perfected shortbread.

Why Try This Recipe

  • They’re a classic. Everyone should have a good staple shortbread recipe in their repertoire, and now, this is mine. No, it’s not super flashy, but it’s a classic and it’s a good, solid recipe.
  • It’s simple. Shortbread uses only 6 ingredients and comes together quickly with just a brief stint in the refrigerator. No, it’s not as flashy as praline cookies or apple pie cookies, but that’s the nature of shortbread.
  • It tastes good! It has a buttery flavor and a texture that slightly crumbles beneath your teeth and absolutely melts in your mouth.
  • It’s versatile. Include or omit the vanilla extract, or substitute it for vanilla bean paste. Level up the cookies by substituting classic butter for European style. Add chocolate chips or dip in chocolate, and cut them into any shape you’d like (I opted for hearts, but you could skip the cookie cutter and just use a knife to cut into rectangles).

This is the perfect addition to your Christmas cookie tray. I can’t wait to hear how you like this updated version ❤️

What You Need

Classic shortbread is made with just butter, sugar, and flour, but I’ve found a few small adjustments make for even better results. Here’s what you need for my recipe.

Overhead view of ingredients including butter, flour, powdered sugar, and more.
  • Butter. European butter is a great upgrade here! Since shortbread uses so few ingredients, the quality of each of them can really make a difference in the final outcome. I don’t often splurge for it and you do not have to, but you will have more tender and buttery results if you use European-style butter (this is because it has a higher fat content!).
  • Powdered sugar. Similar to my shortbread-esque crust for my fruit tart, we’ll be using powdered sugar in this shortbread cookie recipe. This is also known as confectioner’s sugar, 10x sugar, or icing sugar.
  • Flour. Use all-purpose (also often known as “plain”) flour. Self-rising flour will not work here. I highly recommend using a kitchen scale to measure this; if not, you could over-measure and end up with a dry dough.
  • Cornstarch. This promotes tender, melt-in-your-mouth results. It also helps prevent the cookies from spreading too much in the oven, so they hold their shape beautifully!
  • Vanilla extract. This is not a traditional ingredient and you can leave it out if you’d like; however, I love the way it deepens the flavor of the shortbread. Vanilla bean paste or a scraped vanilla bean would also work!

Note that there is no baking powder or baking soda in this recipe–this is intentional and expected with shortbread cookies!

SAM’S TIP: Add your dry ingredients gradually! This dough is fairly stiff, and if you add them all at once, you will have a very tough time bringing everything together.

Remember, this is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!

How to Make Shortbread Cookies

Collage of four photos showing shortbread cookie dough being prepared.
  1. Cream the butter with an electric mixer until lightened in color and creamy.
  2. Add the sugar gradually and keep mixing until the mixture is smooth.
  3. Stir in the vanilla extract until well incorporated.
  4. Whisk the dry ingredients together in a separate bowl, then gradually add them to the wet ingredients.
Four photos showing cookie dough being rolled out, cut into hearts, and baked.
  1. Use your hands to form the dough into a flat disc, then wrap in plastic wrap and place in the fridge to chill for at least an hour.
  2. Roll the dough out onto a lightly floured surface until it is ⅛-¼” thick.
  3. Cut shapes with a cookie cutter, making the cuts as close together as possible. Transfer the cookies to a parchment lined baking sheet and space 2″ apart. Re-roll the scraps and repeat this process to make more cookies.
  4. Bake until the edges are just starting to turn a light golden brown. This is about 9-11 minutes for my 2″ cookie cutter, but can vary depending on the size you use.

SAM’S TIP: If you don’t want to bake your dough right away, you can let it sit in the fridge for up to five days. It might be a bit tough to roll if chilled longer than an hour though, so you may need to let it warm up at room temperature a bit before rolling.

Overhead view of heart shaped shortbread cookies half dipped in chocolate on a cooling rack.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I make this shortbread cookie recipe with chocolate chips?

Absolutely! I’d recommend mini chocolate chips as regular-sized ones could be too thick and bulky in the dough. I’d probably add around a cup, fold them in using a spatula after adding all the dry ingredients to the dough.

Can shortbread cookie dough be frozen?

Yes! If you’d like to do this, follow the instructions for cut-out cookies in my how to freeze cookie dough post.

What’s the difference between a sugar cookie and shortbread cookies?

The main difference between these two cookies is the ingredients and the ratios of the ingredients. Sugar cookies typically contain eggs, while shortbread cookies do not. Shortbread also has a higher ratio of butter to flour and are usually more crumbly and tender as a result.

If you’re on the hunt for a great sugar cookie recipe, try my easy sugar cookie recipe!

Stack of shortbread cookies with the top cookie missing a bite.

I’d love to hear how you like this new shortbread cookie recipe, especially if you were a fan of the old one!

Enjoy!

Let’s bake together! Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified of all the newest recipes, and find my free recipe tutorials on YouTube 💜

Heart shaped cookies made from a shortbread cookie recipe.
4.88 from 108 votes
This shortbread cookie recipe makes tender, buttery, classic shortbread cookies that hold their shape in the oven and melt in your mouth. Dipping in chocolate is optional, but highly recommended!
Recipe includes a how-to video!
Prep: 25 minutes
Chilling Time: 1 hour
Total: 1 hour 25 minutes
Servings: 44 cookies (see note)
YouTube video

Equipment

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Ingredients

Instructions 

  • In a large mixing bowl, use an electric mixer to beat butter until lightened, smooth and creamy.
    1 cup (226 g) unsalted butter
  • Gradually add sugar, stirring until light and creamy.
    ¾ cup (95 g) powdered sugar
  • Add vanilla extract and stir well.
    1 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • In a separate bowl, whisk together flour, cornstarch, and salt and whisk until combined.
    2 cups (250 g) all-purpose flour, 2 Tablespoons cornstarch, ½ teaspoon table salt
  • Gradually add flour mixture to wet ingredients and stir until completely combined.
  • Form dough into a disc, wrap in plastic wrap, and chill in the refrigerator for at least 60 minutes.
  • Once cookie dough is nearly done chilling, preheat oven to 350F (175C) and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
  • Remove dough from the refrigerator and roll out on a lightly floured surface until the dough is between ⅛”-¼” thickness. Press a cookie cutter directly into dough, making cuts close together, and place cookies on baking sheet spacing at least 2” apart. Combine any remaining scraps of cough into a ball and re-roll to make more cookies.
  • Transfer baking sheet to center rack of 350F (175C) oven and bake for 9-11 minutes or until edges are just beginning to turn a very light golden brown (bake time will vary depending on thickness of dough and size of cookie cutter).
  • If desired, melt 1 cup/6 oz/170g chocolate and dip completely cooled cookies into chocolate. Place cookies on a wire rack and allow chocolate to set before serving.

Notes

Number of cookies

This will vary depending on the size of the cookie cutter used and how thick or thin you roll the dough. I use a 2” cookie cutter and get about 44 cookies.

Butter

Upgrade to European-style butter for richer-tasting, more buttery cookies.

Vanilla

Elevate your cookies by substituting 2 teaspoons of vanilla bean paste or the seeds of a scraped vanilla bean for the vanilla extract.

Variations

Make a brown sugar shortbread by reducing the powdered sugar to ½ cup (63g), cream ¼ cup (50g) of brown sugar with the butter, and increase cornstarch to 3 Tablespoons.

Original recipe

Original recipe can be found here.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 67kcal | Carbohydrates: 7g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 3g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.2g | Monounsaturated Fat: 1g | Trans Fat: 0.2g | Cholesterol: 11mg | Sodium: 27mg | Potassium: 8mg | Fiber: 0.2g | Sugar: 2g | Vitamin A: 129IU | Calcium: 2mg | Iron: 0.3mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.

Like this? Leave a comment below!

Recipe and photos updated 11/30/23. If you’d like the original recipe, you can find it here.

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4.88 from 108 votes (35 ratings without comment)

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301 Comments

  1. Shea says:

    the cookies were delicious but i followed the exact recipe and it only came out with 22 cookies instead of 44 cookies. i did use a 2 1/2 inch cookie cutter which i understand might affect the amount. but i just wanted to see if u knew what i did wrong.

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Shea! Your cutter was a little bit bigger which will contribute, but you may have also just rolled it a little bit thicker than I did. I’m glad you enjoyed them! 🙂

  2. Kim says:

    5 stars
    Really good! Reminds me of the ones my mom used to make. I made the dough one evening, and it sat in the fridge ~24hrs wrapped in Saran Wrap. When it was time to bake, I let the dough sit out at room temp for a while and really had to knead and work the dough until it was the right consistency and no longer crumbling. My kids helped me roll and cut out the shapes and they baked up beautifully! Kid and husband approved! Keeping this recipe to use again 🙂

  3. Theres says:

    I followed the recipe exactly as written but am not able to keep them from informing when I cook them. They just separate and go completely flat. I even just rolled them in balls and they still flattened right out, not sure why that is happening.

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Hi Theres! Did you make any substitutions? Did they chill long enough? Did you weigh your flour?

      1. Erin Fromson says:

        is there a way to make this a chocolate dough??? anybody tried?

  4. Joni Levy says:

    5 stars
    Fabulous cookies. I roll mine in saran wrap, refrigerate for an hour, and then slice. I need to bake mine a minimum of 15 minutes and they are perfect. I didn’t make any changes, thank you for the recipe My husband loves them.

    1. Shelley says:

      1 star
      Every year my kids and I pull up a recipe for shortbread cookies. We came across this one and followed the directions and it made the worst dough we’ve tried. The dough was very tough for us to work with, especially for the kids that want to roll it themselves. It was so crumbly and unmanageable. I wouldn’t ever try this recipe again.

      1. Sam Merritt says:

        I’m so sorry to hear this happened, Shelley! It sounds like you accidentally added too much flour? Did you use a scale? Did you make any other alterations?

  5. Ronda D says:

    5 stars
    I just tried this recipe and I LOVE it! I’m not sure where the negative comments are coming from, but I followed the recipe exactly…though I only weighed the flour, not the other ingredients. The only problem I had was that the dough came out of the refrigerator very hard and crumbly…not rollable. But after letting it warm up a bit and working it with my hands to warm all of it to the same temperature, it was perfect! I was able to use and reroll every scrap. I tempered some good chocolate and dipped and/or drizzled them. Yummy!! Thank you so much! I wonder if some of the commenters are using fake butter/trans fat junk? Real butter is necessary in this kind of thing I think. Don’t quit because of those negative comments. You’re doing a great job. 🙂

    1. Sam Merritt says:

      Thank you so much, Ronda! I’m so glad you enjoyed the cookies! 🙂

  6. Lisa says:

    Not happy with this recipe. Followed the directions exactly and also weighed my ingredients. I chilled the dough after I did the cutouts and the dough spread out and lost its shape. I’ll have to start all over again.

    1. Sam says:

      I’m so sorry to hear this happened, Lisa! Sounds like you did everything right, but sometimes things just don’t turn out right. 🙁 I hope they go better next time. 🙂

  7. Kelly says:

    5 stars
    These are the best shortbread cookies! My friend and I baked these anticipating to share them with others, but we are the whole batch ourselves. They lasted several days without losing their quality. Love love love these!

    1. Emily @ Sugar Spun Run says:

      We’re so happy they were such a hit, Kelly! 🥰

      1. Shannon Murray says:

        Do you know if I can double this recipe?

      2. Sam Merritt says:

        Sure thing! 🙂

      3. T says:

        Hey I made this exactly to the recipe twice and it came out absolutely horrible! The dough was crumbly and completely unusable both time

      4. Sam Merritt says:

        I’m so sorry to hear this! Did you mix the dough long enough? Did you weigh your flour?

    2. Emmie says:

      These biscuits are so delicious!

      I think I didn’t chill them enough as the first batch did spread out a bit in the oven, but I don’t mind if they look a bit wobbly as long as they taste good!

      Such a great recipe and really great directions.

  8. Mike says:

    These crumbled as soon as I tried to remove them from the parchment paper. The flavor was lacking as well.

    1. Sam says:

      Oh no! Sounds like too much flour was accidentally used or they were a bit overbaked 🙁
      I would recommend using a kitchen scale if you aren’t already and making sure to watch them carefully in the oven. I do have a video tutorial in the recipe card, if that helps with a visual!

    2. Stephanie says:

      mine were also so crumbley like the dough I didn’t do anything different

      1. Sam Merritt says:

        I’m so sorry to hear this happened, Stephanie! Did you weigh your flour by chance?

  9. Linda Carlisle says:

    5 stars
    I’ve made this recipe several times now. It’s perfect every time. I’ve won a local shortbread contest 2 years in a row with it. Delicious!

  10. Kristi says:

    2 stars
    I’ve been baking for 32 plus years and decided for fun to branch our and try a different dough. I’m so sorry to say that this was the most disappointing shortbread dough with which I have ever worked. Also the flavor is a bit flat. It could use more vanilla. And many fell apart while I was trying to get them off of a nonstick baking rack. I usually use parchment, but decided to stick to the directions on this recipe.

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Kristi, did you bake them on the baking rack? Something definitely went wrong, I’d be happy to help you troubleshoot but take a peek at the video and you can see you shouldn’t have had the results you experienced Also the recipe and video do both call for parchment paper when baking so I’m not sure what you mean by that 🙁

  11. Allison says:

    5 stars
    Perfect flavor and texture! I had to sub rice flour for the cornstarch because I ran out, but the dough still stayed great in the oven. Thanks for the recipe!

  12. Miriam Rose Blanar says:

    5 stars
    These are so yummy! I tried one right out of the oven and it was so delicious. I can’t wait to try it with chocolate!

    1. Sarah says:

      5 stars
      Excellent recipe! Easy to make and an incredibly satisfying cookie. Thank you for sharing!

  13. Toni says:

    Why powdered sugar? I want to make a shortbread cookie using maple sugar, and although I have found one I can order that says ‘powdered’ the reviews indicate that it is ‘very fine’ and dissolves well, but that it may not be the same as white powdered sugar. How would using a non-powdered sugar affect this recipe? Thank you!

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Toni! Powdered sugar is ideal for the proper true shortbread texture. If you’re trying to use a granulated sugar, I would click the link for the original recipe at the very bottom of the recipe card, which was made with granulated sugar and works well. I do want to say I’m not sure how this recipe works with maple sugar, though.

  14. Sarah says:

    Hi Sam, these cookies look great. I will certainly try them. I have a question. Can I decorate these cookies with royal icing? Thanks

    1. Emily @ Sugar Spun Run says:

      We don’t see why not! Enjoy, Sarah 🙂

      1. Abbie says:

        4 stars
        These turned out pretty well! However, my cookies bubbled in the oven- not sure how that happened. I want to frost them with royal icing but feel like it’ll look weird now because the cookie isn’t flat? Any insight would be great!

      2. Sam says:

        Hi Abbie! That’s really odd. Did you make any additions to the recipe. Is it not well combined? If there are pockets of flour this could potentially happen. Was it the scrap portion?

  15. Kelly says:

    Hi Sam! These cookies are perfection! Would chilling the dough for more than an hour affect anything? I need to make the dough in the morning and then make the cookies in the evening when I get home from work. Thanks so much!

    1. Sam says:

      Hi Kelly! You can refrigerate the dough longer, it may just be a bit more difficult to roll out so may need to sit at room temperature to soften a little bit. 🙂