Sugar cookie
A sugar cookie is a cookie with the main ingredients being sugar, flour, butter, eggs, vanilla, and either baking powder or baking soda (depending on the type of sugar used).[1] Sugar cookies may be formed by hand, dropped, or rolled and cut into shapes. They are commonly decorated with additional sugar, icing, sprinkles, or a combination of these. Decorative shapes and figures can be cut into the rolled-out dough using a cookie cutter.
Plain sugar cookies | |
Type | Cookie |
---|---|
Main ingredients | Flour, butter, sugar, eggs, vanilla, baking powder or baking soda |
In North America, sugar cookies are popular during the holidays of Children's Day, Christmas, Halloween, and Hanukkah.
History
Sugar cookies have a plain, classic flavor and have been made for centuries. The popularity and availability of sugar cookies rose when sugar became widely available. The sugar cookie is believed to have originated in the mid-1700s in Nazareth, Pennsylvania. German Protestant settlers created a round, crumbly and buttery cookie that came to be known as the Nazareth Cookie.
In the late 1950s, Pillsbury began selling pre-mixed refrigerated sugar cookie dough in US grocery stores, as a type of icebox cookie.[2]
- Dropped sugar cookie
- Undecorated sugar cookies, rolled out and cut into the shape of a flower
- The six-pointed stars are filled with hard candy. The others are decorated with frosting.
- Sandwich cookies made with sugar cookies and buttercream frosting
See also
References
- Sugar Cookie Recipe from the Food Network Retrieved February 12, 2009.
- Mercuri, Becky (2013). "Cookies". In Smith, Andrew F. (ed.). The Oxford Encyclopedia of Food and Drink in America (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Oxford University Press. p. 521. ISBN 978-0-19-973496-2. OCLC 781555950.
External links
- Media related to Sugar cookies at Wikimedia Commons