Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (2024)

Still searching for a soft and chewy gluten free vanilla sugar cookie recipe? I've got you covered with this gluten free roll out cookie recipe that doesn't need to be chilled and won't spread!!

Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (1)

I'm not super good at doing things "the right way" or even "the way any sane person would do them." I eat candy while running. I do my Christmas shopping the week after Halloween. I use tipless piping bags...with tips. I shower at 2 in the afternoon...sometimes. I am completely at ease talking to a room full of hundreds of adults...and 100% terrified to talk to just a handful of teenage girls. I rarely wear anything even remotely fashionable, but when I do... you can be sure that I am also wearing an over sized nondescript gray sweatshirt on top of it. And apparently, I open bananas from "the wrong end." Who even knew that there was a RIGHT and a WRONG end to open a banana?! Not this girl!

My very first recipe on this blog was for

CHOCOLATE

sugar cookies...and it was months before I ever posted a traditional vanilla cookie recipe. I pretty much took the same direction when I started branching out into gluten free recipes. When Bob's Red Mill reached out to me in the spring, I jumped at the chance to make a

gluten free version of my chocolate cookies

. And...between you and me... the gluten free version rivaled the original. It split my household - half of my family actually liked it better than the original. I was satisfied with that, in spite of all my sweet friends that kept asking me when I was going to create a gluten free version of my vanilla recipe.

But with the holidays coming, I really wanted to be able to love ALL of my friends and family through sugar and baking (like I do.) So when Bob's Red Mill reached out to me again, I took it like a sign in a holiday themed Hallmark movie. You know...the one where Bob's Red Mill turns out to be a handsome prince in disguise and evvvvvvveryone knew three minutes into the movie that he was going to save the girl. That one.

Just a note about

Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour

in case you haven't heard of it or used it before. It's designed to be used in place of a regular all-purpose wheat based flour with straight across substitutions. There's no searching endlessly for xanthan gum. You don't even have to know how to say xantham gum. Just use this flour cup for cup the way you would regular all purpose flour.

Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (2)

That being said...I'm neurotic about my cookie recipes. When I substituted this flour straight across with my Vanilla 2.0 recipe, it made a GOOD cookie. My husband loved it just the way it was. But I can't leave well enough alone and modified my 2.0 recipe just a smidgeon. Or two. The end result is this recipe that I am happy to say is a no-chill, non-spreading, CHEWY gluten free vanilla sugar cookie!!


Author: Georganne Bell

Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (3)

Gluten Free No-Chill No-Spread Vanilla Roll Out Sugar Cookie

A gluten free, soft and chewy vanilla roll out sugar cookie recipe that doesn't need to be chilled and won't spread.

ingredients:

1 cup unsalted butter, slightly softened

1 1/4 cup packed brown sugar

3 large eggs

2 teaspoons vanilla

1/2 teaspoon baking powder

1 teaspoon salt

4 1/2 cups Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour

instructions:

1. Preheat oven to 375°F. Line baking sheets with silicone baking mats or parchment paper.

2. Cream butter and sugar together.

3. Add eggs, vanilla, baking powder and salt and mix well.

4. Add flour. Mix until the flour is completely incorporated and the dough holds together in a ball. Add additional flour if necessary to keep it from feeling sticky. If it seems crumbly...just keep mixing. It will get there.

5. Roll out between two sheets of parchment paper. Bake at 375° F for 6-9 minutes. (I roll my cookies 1/4" thick and bake 3 inch cookies for 7 minutes.)

Created using The Recipes Generator




NEED MORE??

Check out my Gluten Free Chocolate Cookie recipe.

Grab the moose cutter HERE.

Learn how to make the decorated moose cookies here.

Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (4)


Gluten Free Vanilla Sugar Cookies Recipe - No Spread and No Chill!! (2024)

FAQs

What happens if you don't chill sugar cookies? ›

Chilling the dough is a key step in making sugar cookies, especially when you're making cut-outs. Even if you're tight on time, make sure to get the dough in the fridge, or even the freezer, even if it's only for a little while. Skip this step, and the dough will be sticky, and much harder to work with.

How do you keep gluten free sugar cookies from spreading? ›

6- If your cookies still insist on spreading, add an extra 1/4 cup of my gfJules Gluten Free All Purpose Flour to the remaining dough to help hold them together (also helps at high altitude!).

What happens if you don't chill cookies before baking? ›

Popping your dough in the fridge allows the fats to cool. As a result, the cookies will expand more slowly, holding onto their texture. If you skip the chilling step, you're more likely to wind up with flat, sad disks instead of lovely, chewy cookies.

Why do sugar cookies have to chill? ›

It gives the liquid in the egg a chance to hydrate the starch in the flour, making the dough firmer, which helps the cookie spread less in the oven (hello, thick cookies!). And it allows the enzymes in the flour and egg yolk to break down the carbohydrates into their component sugars, fructose, and glucose.

Why are my gluten-free cookies spreading? ›

Removing gluten makes cookie dough less springy. So the cookies spread as they bake. And then they spread some more. This is why my gluten-free cookies in the first experiment were so much wider than wheat-based cookies.

Why didn't my gluten-free cookies spread? ›

Temperature Of Ingredients

If the temperature of your ingredients isn't just right, you won't get the results you want - like when your cookie dough refuses to spread out evenly on the baking sheet. This could be caused by too-cold butter or eggs that haven't been brought to room temperature.

Should I refrigerate gluten free cookie dough before baking? ›

Scoop the cookie dough into an airtight container then chill in the refrigerator for 24 — 48 hours. If you just can't wait, let the dough chill for at least 2 hours.

Why do my cookies always spread? ›

If your cookies repeatedly turn out flat, no matter the recipe, chances are your oven is too hot. Here's what's happening. The butter melts super quickly in a too-hot oven before the other ingredients have firmed up into a cookie structure. Therefore, as the butter spreads so does the whole liquidy cookie.

Why do my cookies spread out when I bake them? ›

Heat: As the cookies bake, the heat causes the dough to soften and the air pockets within the dough to expand. This expansion leads to the cookies spreading out.

Should I use baking soda or baking powder in cookies? ›

Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies. Since baking powder is comprised of a number of ingredients (baking soda, cream of tartar, cornstarch, etc.), using it instead of pure baking soda will affect the taste of your cookies.

Why do my sugar cookies turn into blobs? ›

If the oven's hot enough, the fat melts before the cookies set. And since their flour/liquid matrix hasn't yet had a chance to harden, the cookies spread – becoming those dreaded cookie blobs.

Do you have to refrigerate sugar cookies? ›

Unless a recipe tells you otherwise, you should always store sugar cookies at room temperature to make sure that they taste as good on day three as they did on day one. Keep them in a cool, dry area of your kitchen; any additional humidity may change their texture, particularly with frosted sugar cookies.

What happens if you don't cool cookies? ›

Too-hot cookies can burn your fingers and mouth (melty-hot sugar is really, really hot!). Plus, you need to cool cookies to give them a chance to firm up and keep their shape. Finally, too-hot cookies will likely fall apart in your hands.

How long do sugar cookies last unrefrigerated? ›

The best way to store sugar cookies is in an airtight container at room temperature, with a layer of parchment paper or wax paper between each layer of cookies. Sugar cookies can last for up to two weeks at room temperature, up to a month in the refrigerator, and up to three months in the freezer.

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