• Welcome
  • Book
  • Classes
    • Recipes
    • Index
  • Writing
  • Press
  • Shop
  • Contact
Menu

Sonya Michelle Sanford

  • Welcome
  • Book
  • Classes
  • Recipes
    • Recipes
    • Index
  • Writing
  • Press
  • Shop
  • Contact

Simple Salted Butter Cookies

May 18, 2015

Remember those Danish sugar cookies that come in the blue tins? I haven't had them in forever, but they were THE staple cookie of my childhood. My parents and my grandparents often had them on hand for a sweet treat and their tins were always repurposed into excellent storage containers. I liked the crinkly paper that contained the different shapes of cookies that all tasted exactly the same. I never thought much of them because they were so unassuming and plain, but before I'd know it I'd eat ten of them. They were addictively satisfying in their simplicity.

That's the inspiration for these cookies. I just wanted to make a cookie that had almost no frills and tasted mostly of butter. Good butter.

If you've made pie crust from scratch then this recipe will feel familiar. If you have never made pie dough, this recipe is still on the easy end of the baking spectrum. A food processor helps the cause, but a pastry cutter or hands will work too.

The key for simple dishes is that all of the ingredients should be great. For these cookies you'll want to invest in very good butter above all else. A nice fleur de sel, sel gris, or flake salt would be helpful, too. And that's it... anyway, there are only about 5 ingredients in this cookie. It's the perfect recipe for when you're in a baking mood but not in a going-to-the-store-to-get-what-you-need mood.

These buttery crumbly crisp things are especially perfect dunked into a hot beverage. Good strong black tea or coffee with a drop of cream.

Salted Butter Cookies

Adapted from

Dorie Greenspan's

Salted Butter Breakups

 recipe

Makes 22-24 cookies, depending on size (or one sheet-pan's worth)

  • 1 3/4 cup all purpose flour

  • 1/3 cup vanilla sugar or regular granulated sugar (I throw discarded vanilla bean pods into a jar and fill it with sugar. Voila! Vanilla sugar is born and used all the time)

  • 1/2 cup organic cane sugar (I like the texture of this - it's usually coarser - and I like it in baking. You can use 100% vanilla sugar, 100% cane sugar, 100% regular sugar)

  • 1 teaspoon flake salt or sel gris (gray salt), or flake salt, or 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt

  • 1/2 cup (1 stick) very cold good quality unsalted butter, small cubed

  • 3-5 tablespoons ice cold water

  • 1 cold egg yolk + a few drops of cold water beaten together

  • Turbinado sugar to sprinkle on in the end (optional)

In a food processor (or using a whisk), pulse the flour, sugars, and salt together.

Cube the butter into small chunks and drop them into the processor. Pulse a few times until the pea-sized clusters form. You want this pretty coarse so that you don't overwork the butter. Small chunks of butter will be visible in the finished dough. If you don't have a food processor, you can combine the butter and flour mixture using a pastry cutter, or you can even use your hands.

Add the cold water to the food processor one tablespoon at a time and pulse again. Pulse until the mixture sticks together when you press it with your hands (or using your hands to combine if you're skipping the FP). Only pulse to combine everything. Again, don't overmix or your dough will be tough and gross instead of crumbly and wonderful.

Transfer your mixture to a flat surface. Form it into a large disc or ball (flatter round disks are easier to roll out later). Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate.

Here's where patience is a virtue: refrigerate for at least 1 hour. You could keep it in the fridge for hours before you're ready to use it, but definitely you need at least one solid hour of chilling.

Preheat the oven to 350°F.

Lightly dust a flat surface with flour. Roll the dough out until it is 1/4-1/3-inch in thickness. Using a fork, run the tines of the fork into long stripes in the dough. I go in one direction and then I do the second direction after. I like a crisscross shape (see cookie above). This step is so optional... it's mostly for aesthetics but it is also nice texturally. You can go pretty deep, the dough will rise and the lines fade as it bakes.

Cut out the cookies and transfer them to a parchment-lined baking sheet. I used a square cookie cutter, but you can use any size/shape/style cookie cutter you'd like. Alternatively, you could cut it into squares using a knife.

Beat together one cold egg yolk with a few cold drops of water. Using a pastry brush, lightly (!) brush the tops of the dough with the egg wash. Sprinkle the cookies with Turbinado sugar (or coarse sugar) if you like that kind of thing. You can skip this step and it will be fine. You can also sprinkle with a tiny bit more salt if you're into saltier cookies.

Bake for 30 minutes, rotating the pan after 15 minutes, or until golden brown. Watch carefully, ovens vary and you don't want them to get too dark/browned. Remove from the oven and let the cookies sit on the baking sheet for 2 minutes. Transfer the cookies to a rack and let them fully cool. The texture will be better once they're room temp.

Cookies can be stored in an airtight container for 2-3 days (or longer if you can make them last that long).

Tags Baking, Cookies, Dessert, butter, easy, shortbread, simple, sugar
Comment

Latest

Featured
IMG_3606.jpeg
May 27, 2025
Sheet-pan Lemony Potatoes and Baby Artichokes
May 27, 2025
May 27, 2025
IMG_3784.jpeg
May 12, 2025
The Secret to Crispy Tofu Every Time + A Sweet & Spicy Gochujang Glaze
May 12, 2025
May 12, 2025
snackingcakeslices copy.jpg
Apr 11, 2025
One-bowl blueberry lemon snacking cake (gluten-free/grain-free)
Apr 11, 2025
Apr 11, 2025
IMG_5075.JPG
Feb 24, 2025
Manti (meat dumplings) in brothy tomato sauce
Feb 24, 2025
Feb 24, 2025
matzoballsontablecloth.jpg
Jan 20, 2025
Golden Chicken Soup with Matzo Balls
Jan 20, 2025
Jan 20, 2025
harissatofuandchickpeas.jpg
Dec 18, 2024
Sheet-Pan Crispy Harissa Tofu, Chickpeas, and Broccolini
Dec 18, 2024
Dec 18, 2024
caracaracake.jpg
Dec 4, 2024
Cara Cara Orange Olive Oil Cake
Dec 4, 2024
Dec 4, 2024
IMG_0640.JPG
Nov 6, 2024
Easy Roast Turkey for Thanksgiving
Nov 6, 2024
Nov 6, 2024
IMG_3282.JPG
Sep 19, 2024
Apple and Honey Dumplings
Sep 19, 2024
Sep 19, 2024
IMG_7173.jpeg
Jul 31, 2024
Galette with any kind of fruit
Jul 31, 2024
Jul 31, 2024
IMG_4004.jpeg
May 9, 2024
Cheddar Cheese Coin Crackers
May 9, 2024
May 9, 2024
DSC02602.JPG
May 2, 2024
Asparagus, Gruyere & Swiss Tart
May 2, 2024
May 2, 2024
whitebeansoupwithzhug.JPG
Mar 11, 2024
Yemenite White Bean Soup with Zhoug
Mar 11, 2024
Mar 11, 2024
DSC02301 (1).jpeg
Jan 24, 2024
Celery, kohlrabi, date salad with toasted almond and sesame
Jan 24, 2024
Jan 24, 2024
DSC02138.jpg
Dec 3, 2023
Sweet potato latkes with cranberry salsa
Dec 3, 2023
Dec 3, 2023
kompot_main photo.JPG
Jul 11, 2023
Ukrainian Summer Fruit Kompot
Jul 11, 2023
Jul 11, 2023
cherryvareniki mainphoto.jpg
Jun 15, 2023
Cherry Vareniki
Jun 15, 2023
Jun 15, 2023
tzimmescaketopdown.jpg
Apr 19, 2023
One-Bowl Tzimmes Cake
Apr 19, 2023
Apr 19, 2023

Sign up with your name and email address to join my mailing list.

I respect your privacy.

Thank you!

Privacy Policy can be found here

All photos copyright of Sonya Sanford unless otherwise indicated