Chewy Gingersnaps Cookies
Chewy Gingersnaps AKA Ginger Snaps were a childhood favorite. Those crinkled molasses cookies were spiced with cinnamon, ginger & cloves.
Scroll down for all sorts of delicious holiday cookies plus my tips for making perfectly crackled and chewy ginger cookies! And if you’re planning ahead for Christmas, check out the Best Edible Gifts from my kitchen.
Why You Must Make
- If you love boxed gingersnaps, you’ll go crazy for this homemade version.
- The triple dose of spices, molasses, and sugar coating make these super flavorful.
- They’re soft and chewy, not to mention irresistible!
- I’ve had to give away this recipe dozens of times!!! They’re one of my most requested recipes.
Ingredient Notes
- Kitchen Staples – Butter, Sugar, Brown Sugar, Flour, Salt, Baking Soda
- Molasses – Mild molasses is key.
- Spices – Ginger, Cinnamon, Cloves; Replace if they’ve been in your pantry for decades. Spices will lose flavor over time.
How to Make
- Make the cookie dough, cover, and chill. Use a medium cookie scoop and roll dough balls in sugar.
- Bake as directed, cool, and dig in!
Expert Tips
- The original recipe called for shortening, but I’ve always made these gems with butter. The flavor is much better. But butter has changed over time. There is more water in some of the less expensive brands which then causes the cookies to spread.
- PRO-Tip: Use a European-style butter or, at the very least, a name brand vs. generic. Less expensive brands tend to have a higher percentage of water and less fat. The cookies won’t be as puffy if you don’t use good-quality butter.
- Chill the dough well before rolling it into balls. I chilled this batch overnight and they baked up perfectly.
- PRO-Tip: Place dough balls on a cold baking sheet. Allow used baking sheets to thoroughly cool before baking another batch or your cookies will spread.
- If your cookies are still too flat, add a couple of tablespoons of extra flour to your dough.
Frequently Asked Questions
Both are spiced cookies, but ginger cookies are rolled into balls, then baked. Gingerbread dough is rolled flat, then cut into shapes before baking.
Gingersnaps have a crackled exterior because they form a crust across their tops before they finish rising. Once they rise, the upward motion cracks the surface.
There are a few reasons that cookies spread. First, the dough may have gotten warm. Make sure to have your dough well chilled. Also, if the cookie sheets are warm when you add the dough balls, they will start to spread before they start to bake. The oven temperature may be off as well, so get an oven thermometer to see if your oven needs an adjustment.
You May Also Like
- Gingerbread Snowflake Cookies by Grumpy’s Honeybunch
- Triple Ginger Cookies
- Amish Sugar Cookies
- Chocolate Crackle Cookies
- Old Fashioned Butterscotch Cookies Recipe
- Plus How to Host a Cookie Exchange
- More of the Best Cookie Recipes
Chewy Gingersnaps Recipe
These chewy gingersnaps are a childhood favorite and my most requested recipe!
Ingredients
- 3/4 cup (1 1/2 sticks) butter, at room temperature
- 1 cup brown sugar
- 1/4 cup molasses
- 1 egg
- 2 1/4 cup flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1 teaspoon ginger
- 1 teaspoon cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon cloves
- Granulated sugar
Instructions
- Cream (mix) together butter and brown sugar. Mix in molasses and egg till well combined.
- Stir in flour, baking soda, salt, ginger, cinnamon, and cloves.
- Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and chill for at least an hour (I usually chill overnight).
- Preheat the oven to 375º.
- Scoop out dough with a medium-sized cookie disher (about 1½ tablespoons of dough).
- Roll dough balls in sugar and place them on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Bake for 12 minutes. Cool on a baking sheet, then remove the cookies to a cooling rack.
Notes
To avoid flat cookies, make sure to chill the dough before baking.
Use mild molasses for the best flavor.
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Nutrition Information:
Yield:
18Serving Size:
2 cookiesAmount Per Serving: Calories: 114Total Fat: 0gSaturated Fat: 0gTrans Fat: 0gUnsaturated Fat: 0gCholesterol: 10mgSodium: 208mgCarbohydrates: 26gFiber: 1gSugar: 14gProtein: 2g
My mom would buy the occasional box of gingersnaps for us girls to munch on when we were growing up. It didn’t take long before there were only crumbs remaining. It was my best friend’s mom who introduced me to homemade, chewy gingersnaps. Well, maybe not her mom, but HER.
Mary had a tendency to get in a bit of trouble. I remember being addressed as “Elizabeth,” and sent home after she took a pair of scissors to her blue jeans to mimic those raggedy demins fashionable in the late 1970s. I’m sure her mother wasn’t thrilled when we raided their deep freeze and ate more than our fair share of frozen gingersnaps. That stash was certainly being stored for some future occasion.
They tasted incredible even cold and rock hard. I finally had my mom ask her dear friend, and Mary’s mother, for the ginger cookies recipe. I bake up at least a double batch each year to add to my holiday goodie boxes. Check out more of my best cookie exchange recipes.
68 Comments on “Chewy Gingersnaps Cookies”
Such a tasty classic!
I love gingersnaps but in a chewy cookie – OMG! I cannot wait to take a bite!
christmas is coming so that means cookies!!
These are a must have cookie at my house during the holidays.
Love these perfect holiday cookies- a big time fave!
They look perfect. They will be perfect for the holiday. Thanks
I absolutely love gingersnaps! Great recipe!
I love soft ginger cookies and these look so good. One question, are they really 1049 calories per cookie? Yikes! I would only be able to have a bite…but How they look I would never stop at one!! LOL
LOL, Susan, I didn’t notice that! The recipe app must have given the calories for the whole batch! Let me see if I can fix it 🙂
How about freezing the balls of raw cookie dough to bake at a later time? When ready to bake, roll them in sugar & bake at 375 degrees, for 12 minutes to begin with & additional time as needed. Have you ever done this with your gingersnap cookies?
YES! I’ve even written a post about this. Thanks for the reminder!
Good grief, Miss Lizzy…I baked these this morning for a Bake Sale to raise money for our Art Center. Well, it is so totally obvious I am going to bake more for myself only. So delicious, so chewy in the center. Thank you for getting this recipe from your friend and sharing it. It is going to the top of my list of favorites. Merry Christmas to you and your family, and that includes the sweetest 4-legged friend.
Beautifully done, but I expect no less from you!
These look amazing! I can’t wait to try them, my mouth is watering just thinking of the baking aromas.
Yum! These look absolutely delicious. I have never actually had a gingersnap. Will definitely be trying these.
Can you believe I just started liking ginger cookies last year?!? These look phenomenal!
These look like such perfect chewy ginger cookies! Such a classic!
I need to try my hand at gingersnaps! These look so soft and delicious!
I have mostly used gingersnaps as a base for cheesecakes but think I like to try them as is. Thanks so much for the tips and the round up.
Everyone needs that friend they can get in “trouble” with! 🙂
Your cookies look absolutely magazine worthy.
Wow Liz, these gingersnaps look just the way my mother used to make them. Beautiful 🙂
Gingersnaps from the bag are one of my Dad’s favorite cookies and we could easily take down the whole thing! I have slightly more restraint these days but the love remains! Yours look fabulous!