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Every December, my kitchen turns into a snow-dusted workshop where butter, sugar, and memories mingle in the stand mixer. These Classic Butter Cookies with Almonds were born the year my grandmother downsized and passed her embossed tin of cookie cutters to me. I wanted a dough that would hold the delicate ridges of the reindeer and star shapes, taste like the vanilla-perfumed cookies she used to set out with Baileys after midnight mass, and still travel well to the neighborhood cookie exchange. After six test batches, I landed on this recipe: crisp edges that snap, tender centers that melt, and tiny flecks of toasted almond that whisper of holiday cheer. The dough slices cleanly after a quick chill, bakes to a pale-gold hue, and keeps its shape so well that friends swear I bought them from a boutique bakery. If you’re hunting for the cookie that disappears first from the exchange table, the one that prompts texts the next day (“Can I PLEASE have that recipe?”), you just found it.
Why You'll Love This Classic Butter Cookies with Almonds for Christmas Cookie Exchange
- Make-Ahead Magic: The dough keeps beautifully in the fridge for up to 5 days or frozen for 2 months, so you can bake in small batches whenever the mood strikes.
- Shape-Perfect: No spreading! Each scalloped edge and tiny snowflake cut-out stays razor-sharp, making decorating a joy rather than a rescue mission.
- Almond-Kissed Flavor: Toasted almonds ground with sugar add a gentle nuttiness that pairs like velvet with vanilla—no almond extract needed.
- One-Bowl Dough: No separating eggs, no alternating dry ingredients. Cream, mix, roll, chill, slice—simple enough for kids to help.
- Customizable Canvas: Dip in chocolate, dust with snowy powdered sugar, or sandwich with raspberry jam—each variation feels like a new cookie.
- Cookie-Exchange Star: They stack without crumbling, ship without breaking, and taste even better after 48 hours—ideal for gifting tins.
Ingredient Breakdown
Great butter cookies start with great butter—European-style, 82% fat. The higher fat ratio means less water, translating to crispier edges and a melt-in-your-mouth crumb. I splurge on Kerrygold for holiday baking, but any cultured high-fat butter works. Granulated sugar sweetens and helps the cookies caramelize to a pale gold; a whisper of powdered sugar shortens gluten strands for tenderness.
Almonds are the stealth hero. Toast whole almonds at 325°F for 10 minutes until fragrant, cool completely, then blitz with sugar to create a fine almond meal that disperses evenly—no oily nut-butter pockets. All-purpose flour provides structure; cornstarch is my secret for that shortbread snap. A single egg yolk enriches and binds without adding too much moisture, while pure vanilla extract perfumes every bite. A pinch of fine sea salt balances sweetness and heightens butteriness. If you like a whisper of spice, swap ¼ tsp of the vanilla for almond extract or add ⅛ tsp cardamom—both are traditional in Scandinavian versions.
Step-by-Step Instructions
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1
Toast & Grind Almonds
Preheat oven to 325°F (165°C). Spread ½ cup (70g) whole almonds on a rimmed baking sheet and toast for 10 minutes, shaking halfway, until fragrant and just golden. Cool completely. In a food processor, combine cooled almonds with ¼ cup (50g) of the granulated sugar. Pulse until finely ground—stop before it turns to paste.
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2
Cream Butter & Sugars
In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle, beat 1 cup (225g) softened high-fat butter with remaining ¾ cup (150g) granulated sugar and ¼ cup (30g) powdered sugar on medium for 3 minutes until pale and fluffy, scraping sides twice.
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3
Add Yolk & Vanilla
Beat in 1 large egg yolk and 2 tsp pure vanilla extract until combined, about 30 seconds.
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4
Incorporate Dry Ingredients
Whisk 2 cups (260g) all-purpose flour, 2 Tbsp (16g) cornstarch, and ½ tsp fine sea salt. Add almond-sugar mixture. Mix on low just until dough comes together and no dry streaks remain—over-mixing causes toughness.
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5
Shape Logs
Turn dough onto a lightly floured counter and knead 2–3 times to bring together. Divide in half. Roll each portion into a 10-inch (25cm) log about 1¾ inches (4.5cm) thick. Wrap tightly in plastic wrap, twisting ends to compress and eliminate air pockets.
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6
Chill Thoroughly
Refrigerate logs at least 3 hours or up to 5 days. For longer storage, freeze up to 2 months; thaw 30 minutes at room temp before slicing.
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7
Slice & Decorate
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Line two baking sheets with parchment. Unwrap logs and slice ¼-inch (6mm) thick using a sharp chef’s knife, rotating log every few cuts to keep round. Place 1 inch apart. If desired, press a single almond slice on top of each cookie for extra crunch.
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8
Bake to Perfection
Bake 12–14 minutes, until edges are just turning gold. Rotate sheets halfway for even coloring. Cookies will feel soft; they firm as they cool. Cool on pan 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
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