Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (2024)

By Mary | 10 Comments

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Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (1)

Less than two weeks until Christmas! That means EAT ALL THE COOKIES!!

Last week Portland got a good ol' Portland snow storm, which means like 1" of snow that turns to ice and shuts down the entire city for two days. I am definitely not complaining, since it meant I got to work from home Thursday and Friday — AND MAKE COOKIES! I thought we'd go to the office Friday, and therefore I'd take cookies in, but ... we ended up being closed both days, so I just sat at home and ate 300000 of these soft toffee cookies: a personal favorite.

Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (2)
Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (3)

These are one of my favorite Christmas cookies, and bring back super strong memories from my childhood — we'd request more of these all throughout December since they'd be gone in a flash! I'm not sure why they're called "toffee cookies" though — they're more like soft, cinnamon bars. Also, super easy to make: no frosting, rolling, cutting, etc.

Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (4)
Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (5)

If you need more cookie inspiration, check out everyone else participating in a virtual cookie swap today, hosted by The Modern Proper! We'll all be sharing with #CalmandBrightCookieNight, and sharing some of our favorite holiday cookie recipes. Here's a list of what everone else made:

What are your favorite holiday cookies? Any I should definitely try this year? We're moving into the new place THIS WEEK, so I'll have a week before Christmas to unpack and bake bake bake! And decorate. AAH!

Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (6)

The general gist of this recipe is: cream the butter and sugar together, add egg yolk and vanilla, then the three dry ingredients (flour, salt, cinnamon). The dough comes together really easily, and isn't sticky! Press it into a buttered baking sheet, spread with egg-white, and press in the pecans. Bake! Cut! Eat! Enjoy! Repeat! Srsly, easy.

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Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (7)

Soft Toffee Cookies

  • Author: Mom's Christmas Cookbook
  • Prep Time: 5 mins
  • Cook Time: 50 mins
  • Total Time: 55 minutes
  • Yield: 50+ 1x
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Ingredients

UnitsScale

  • 2 cups butter, room temperature
  • 2 cup brown sugar
  • 2 eggs, yolk and whites divided
  • 2 tsp vanilla
  • 4 cups flour
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 4 Tbsp cinnamon
  • 2+ cups chopped pecans

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 250F.
  2. In a stand mixer, cream together the butter and brown sugar together.
  3. Add egg yolk and vanilla, mix until incorporated.
  4. In a separate bowl, combine flour, salt, and cinnamon. Add to butter mixture and mix until combined.
  5. Pat out ¼-1/3″ thick on a greased 12″ x 18″ pan*. Use your hands to thinly spread one unbeaten egg white over the top, then sprinkle and gently press in chopped pecans.
  6. Bake for 45 minutes. Cut into 1.5" squares while still warm.

Notes

This is a double recipe, since I use a rather large baking sheet and like my toffee cookies thick. You can make a half recipe, but you'll want a baking sheet on the smaller side. BAKING TIME will be affected based on double/single recipe, and how thick you end up pressing them! You can tell they're done when the edges are set and slightly golden, and the egg-white over the entire thing is nicely browned.

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Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. 2pots2cook says

    Thank you for Soft Toffee Cookies and the list too ! have a pleasant day !

    Reply

  2. Joan says

    Bake at "250 degrees"? Is that correct?

    Reply

    • Mary says

      Hi Joan! Yep, 250F!

      Reply

  3. Jamie Slater says

    Ah i think this soft tofee cookies are so yummy and thanks for the recipe i hope i made tonight this ice-cream

    Reply

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Soft Toffee Cookies Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to soft cookies? ›

Baking cookies quickly in a hot oven – at 375 degrees F as opposed to a lower temperature – will make for soft results. They'll bake fast instead of sitting and drying out in the oven's hot air. Ever so slightly underbaking your cookies will give you softer results than cooking them the full amount the recipe says.

Why is my toffee chewy and not crunchy? ›

Low and slow

Simmering the syrup for English toffee to the requisite 300°F temperature can (and should) be a slow process — up to 20 minutes or so. Don't hurry this gradual transformation; syrup that doesn't reach 300°F, or close to it, will make candy with timid flavor and chewy (not crunchy) texture.

What makes a cookie too soft? ›

The butter or dough was too warm.

If the dough seems too soft, chill it for 10 to 15 minutes before baking.

How do you make cookies soft and chewy vs hard and crisp? ›

Different types of sugars affect the texture because they absorb different amounts of water. Remember moisture is the key! White sugar creates crispier cookies and brown sugar creates chewier cookies.

Is it OK to use melted butter instead of softened? ›

Softened butter and melted butter are not the same. Using melted butter will change the texture of whatever you're baking. If you only want the butter to soften for spreading, microwave it on the Defrost setting (30%) in 5-second increments until it's softened as desired.

How to make cookies that are hard soft? ›

Wrap them immediately

Just wrap each individual cookie in plastic wrap while they are still warm and the moisture created should soften them back up. You could also try putting all the cookies into a container to lock the heat in and steam them a bit.

What can go wrong when making toffee? ›

Stirring too quickly or too often can cause the toffee to separate. Moderate the heat as needed – turn it down if the toffee is boiling or cooking too fast so it doesn't burn. Cook until the toffee registers 285-290 degrees on an instant-read or candy thermometer and is deep amber brown in color, about 20-25 minutes.

Should toffee be hard or soft? ›

Toffee is a hard candy made by cooking a sugar syrup with butter to the hard crack stage, 300–310°F (149–154°C), and then pouring it out to cool. It can have inclusions or not, and it can be made either very dense and hard or can be lightened by adding baking soda when the candy is almost done cooking .

How do you make cookies chewy and not hard? ›

The science is simple: According to the flour authorities over at Bob's Red Mill, cornstarch can help “soften the rigid proteins of the flour, resulting in a light and chewy dessert.” “The cornstarch complements the flour in absorbing the liquids, but won't develop gluten structure like the flour will,” stresses ...

Why are my cookies hard instead of soft? ›

Hard cookies: you are over mixing, baking too long, baking at too high a temperature, or some combination of these. Cakey cookies: not enough brown sugar, too much or too little egg, too much flour, maybe you used baking powder instead of baking soda?

What does adding cornstarch to cookies do? ›

As Levy Beranbaum writes in The Baking Bible, replacing a little bit of the flour in the dough with cornstarch results in “a more delicate cookie that is also easier to pipe or push through a cookie press.” Adding cornstarch helps tenderize tough gluten, contributing to a softer cookie dough with a finer crumb after ...

What are 3 factors that contribute to a chewy cookie? ›

The ingredients you use and how you shape your cookies both play an important role in whether your cookies turn out crispy or chewy. The type of flour and sugar you use, if your cookie dough contains eggs, and whether you use melted or softened butter all factor into the crispy-chewy equation, too.

What does brown sugar do in cookies? ›

Brown sugar, meanwhile, is dense and compacts easily, creating fewer air pockets during creaming—that means that there's less opportunity to entrap gas, creating cookies that rise less and spread more. With less moisture escaping via steam, they also stay moist and chewy.

What makes cookies chewy and not hard? ›

If you enjoy your cookies soft and chewy, chances are likely the recipe contains a common ingredient that serves a very specific purpose. No, it's not granulated sugar, nor the butter. It's not the egg, all-purpose flour, or even the vanilla extract. The simple, yet oh-so-necessary component is cornstarch.

What keeps cookies soft and chewy? ›

The key to keeping cookies fresh and soft is to seal them in an airtight container, like a resealable freezer bag. And here's a nifty little trick: add a piece of bread to the bag. You might think that the bread trick works because the cookies absorb moisture from the bread.

How do you make cookies fluffy instead of flat? ›

Melted butter incorporates more easily into the dough, creating a more cohesive and pliable dough. Use a mixture of baking powder and baking soda as leavening agents. Baking powder provides lift and helps create a fluffy texture, while baking soda helps to densify the cookie and create a chewier texture.

What determines the moistness of a cookie? ›

Butter contributes milk solids and water to a cookie, both of which soften it. Brown sugar contributes molasses – again, a softener. Using lower-moisture sugar (granulated) and fat (vegetable shortening), plus a longer, slower bake than normal, produces light, crunchy cookies.

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