Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (2024)

Easy, adorable chewy little bright red sugar cookies with a heart in the center! These Red Velvet Sugar Cookies make the softest, chewiest sugar cookies and the hearts in the center are just store-bought candy! This recipe makes a small batch of cookies because Valentine's Day desserts should serve two.

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (1)
Why Red Velvet?

I discovered something really important about red velvet, and I'm ready to tell the world. If you've never had red velvet, it's a tender cake with a touch of cocoa powder. It loves to be paired white chocolate, and it loves cream cheese, but what you didn't know is how much a white chocolate peanut butter heart brings to the party.

If you remember (and laughed at) my Valentine's Day candy review, you'll recognize these Reese's white chocolate peanut butter hearts. It was hard to save 6 for this red velvet sugar cookies recipe, but I did it. If I can do it, you can do it! This small-batch sugar cookie recipe just makes 6 cookies, so all you have to save is 6 hearts. That's reasonable, right?

To be honest, though, any heart-shaped chocolate is welcome here. The caramel hearts from my small-batch brownies would be great, and even the Dove dark chocolate hearts, though they are a bit smaller.

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (2)

Let's Get Baking

Creating these Red Velvet Sugar Cookies for two is really easy and doesn't take much time. Here's what you need:

  • Unsalted Butter
  • Sugar
  • Egg Yolk
  • Vanilla Extract
  • Red Gel Food Coloring
  • All-Purpose Flour
  • Unsweetened Cocoa Powder
  • Baking Soda
  • Salt
  • White Chocolate Peanut Butter Hearts

Combine the melted butter, sugar, egg yolk, vanilla extract, and red gel food coloring. Then add the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt and stir to combine. Flatten the dough and divide into six parts. Roll each part into a ball and cover in sugar. Bake and allow to cool. Add the heart into the middle and enjoy!

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (3)

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies for Valentine's Day:

I've got a soft spot for red velvet. I've gone years without it, because, as you know, as a society, we are very into beet and spirulinapowder these days, and we are certainly avoiding red food coloring. But, um, it's Valentine's Day and I just can't resist a festive dessert for two. It's just how I roll.

This sugar cookie recipe is based on one from my next cookbook, Sweet & Simple: Dessert for Two, and I love it for so many reasons. The recipe uses melted butter, which is always loaded easier for a person like me who is a) impatient and b) never remembers to put butter on the counter to soften. These cookies bake up soft, crackly and perfect, no matter what size you scoop them. I've rolled them into 10 dough balls, and I've beefed it up to 6 balls (like I did here)--no matter what I do, they always bake up perfect. They also bake up perfectly round, even if you do a half-ass job shaping them into balls.

They're essentially the perfect sugar cookie recipe that you need in your arsenal.

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (4)

If you're looking for the perfect easy sugar cookie recipe without red food coloring, I've got you covered.

These cookies only use an egg yolk, so be sure to check out my recipesto use leftover egg whites.

Yield: 6 cookies

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies

Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (5)

Small batch sugar cookies: red velvet sugar cookies with hearts for Valentine's Day!

Prep Time10 minutes

Cook Time10 minutes

Total Time20 minutes

Ingredients

  • 4 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted
  • ⅓ cup granulated sugar, plus extra for rolling
  • 1 large egg yolk
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon red gel food coloring
  • ½ cup + 1 tablespoon all-purpose flour
  • 2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda
  • ⅛ teaspoon fine salt
  • 6 white chocolate peanut butter hearts (like Reese's)

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350, and line a small baking sheet with parchment paper (or use a silicone mat).
  2. Stir together the melted butter, sugar, egg yolk, vanilla extract and red food coloring. Stir very well to combine.
  3. Next, sprinkle the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda and salt evenly over the dough, and stir just to combine.
  4. Press the dough flat and evenly in the bowl, and then divide it in half by eye. You should get 3 cookies from each half.
  5. Roll each dough ball in your hands, roll lightly extra granulated sugar, and then space evenly on the prepared baking sheet.
  6. Bake for 10-12 minutes, until they spread, start to crackle and appear dry on top.
  7. Let the cookies rest on the baking sheet for 2 minutes before moving them to a wire rack to cool completely.
  8. After the cookies have cooled for 10 minutes, press a white chocolate heart into the center of each cookie. Move the cookies to the fridge (so the hearts don't melt too much) to set for 30 minutes.
  9. Bring to room temperature before serving.

Nutrition Information:

Yield:

6

Serving Size:

1

Amount Per Serving:Calories: 325Total Fat: 22gSaturated Fat: 8gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 11gCholesterol: 82mgSodium: 225mgCarbohydrates: 27gFiber: 3gSugar: 18gProtein: 8g

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Red Velvet Sugar Cookies Recipe | Dessert for Two (2024)

FAQs

What happens when you add extra sugar to cookies? ›

What happens if you increase the amount of sugar called for in cookies? Conversely, when you increase the sugar in cookies, you'll get cookies that spread more and have an ultra moist and chewy texture in addition to a sweeter flavor.

How many decorated sugar cookies per person? ›

Homemade Cookies & Icing

Recipes I use are sugar cookies, gingerbread cookies, and/or chocolate sugar cookies. 6-8 cookies for each person to decorate is usually plenty and have extras in case any break, drop, etc.

How to make packaged sugar cookie mix better? ›

How To Make Boxed Cookies Better
  1. Use butter instead of margarine or oil.
  2. Add powdered milk. Sprinkling about 2 to 3 tablespoons of powdered milk per cup of cookie mix may seem kind of unconventional, but it is the best hack! ...
  3. Add brown sugar. ...
  4. Add vanilla extract. ...
  5. Brown the butter. ...
  6. Include an extra egg yolk.
Jan 3, 2024

How to jazz up sugar cookies? ›

Take plain sugar cookies up a notch with exciting mix-ins like chocolate chips, rainbow sprinkles, toasted chopped nuts, chopped dried fruit or M&M's. Add these after blending your butter and egg into the sugar cookie mix.

What happens if you don't add enough sugar to cookies? ›

Sugar sweetens the cookies and makes them an enticing golden brown. Adding too little sugar can affect the taste and texture of cookies. Adding too much can cause them to be brittle. Take your time creaming the sugar and butter together at the beginning.

How far in advance can you make sugar cookies to decorate? ›

If you want to make your cookies in advance… totally doable! 1 week before event: I start the process UP TO 1 week before the event and don't do any freezing in this time period (either of the icing or cookies).

How much do people sell homemade sugar cookies for? ›

Many simple cookies sell for between $2.00 and $5.00 each, but it's not uncommon to see a dozen cookies cost $55 or more depending on the time and ingredients that went into making them. Some people charge $10 or more per cookie because of their decorative, custom designs.

What can you add to sugar cookies to make them taste better? ›

Add a teaspoon of good quality cinnamon, 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg, and 1/4 teaspoon ginger. Zested Orange, Lemon, or Lime Sugar Cookies. Add a tablespoon of zest and a teaspoon of orange flavor, lemon flavor, or lime flavor to your cookies to give your sugar cookies a zesty flavor.

Why is my Betty Crocker sugar cookie mix so dry? ›

You may not have used enough water, margarine or egg. Be sure to measure ingredients carefully.

Why do you put powdered sugar in cookies? ›

The powdered sugar in the recipe helps absorb moisture from other ingredients, giving the cookies a unique bumpy looking appearance and an extra tender and chewy texture.

Do you put sprinkles on sugar cookies before or after baking? ›

You can also try adding sprinkles to your cookies before baking, but depending on the recipe, they may melt in the oven. Try it out with one cookie before committing to an entire batch.

Why do my sugar cookies taste bland? ›

The ingredients you used could be the culprit – using different sugars, melted butter, baking powder or baking soda can alter a cookie's texture and taste.

Can you over mix sugar cookies? ›

Working the dough too much.

And then mixing the dough even more, for no good reason. Thankfully I was eventually steered in the right direction. Over-working the dough yields a tough cookie, which is not at all what you want. The very best sugar cookies are soft and tender.

What does more sugar do to cookies? ›

Sugar creates texture

Sugar easily binds with water, which accomplishes two main things. 1) It locks in moisture, keeping your baked goods from drying out; and 2) It inhibits the development of gluten which keeps your cookies, cakes and sweet breads softer. Variances in sugar type will create different outcomes here.

What happens when you add too much sugar in your baked goods? ›

However, if too much sugar is added (these simple vanilla cupcakes had twice as much as they should have), then not only do they rise to the extreme but the structure takes so long to set (these were baked for 15 minutes longer than a normal batch) that they then collapse dramatically towards the end of baking.

Does too much sugar flatten cookies? ›

Mistake 3: There's too much sugar or not enough flour

If you're heavy-handed when measuring, that extra sugar means extra liquid and more spread when baking in the oven. Using too little flour could lead to flat cookies, too.

What to do if you put too much sugar in a recipe? ›

Continue adding an acidic ingredient already in the recipe to taste. For example, if the recipe calls for lemon or lime juice, try doubling the citrus to keep the sugar content from overwhelming the taste of the food.

References

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