Orange Vanilla Sugar Cookies
These cookies are inspired by the sugar cookies my mother, Virginia, made each year for Christmas. I fine-tuned the original recipe over the years, replacing shortening with butter, eliminating milk, and increasing the orange flavor–but the wonderful aroma, subtle sweetness level, and crisp texture remain very much the same.
These are meant to be decorated either with sanding sugar or sprinkles before baking or with a simple buttercream or royal icing after baking. Either embellishment adds just the right amount of sweetness. On the other hand, I also love these cookies unadorned and only moderately sweet with afternoon tea.
This recipe makes a Christmas-size (large) batch of cookies. It can be cut in half if you like.
5 cups King Arthur’s unbleached all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon fine sea salt
2 cups (4 sticks) unsalted butter, cool room temperature (15 minutes out of the refrigerator)
2 cups superfine sugar (regular sugar works also)
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
½ teaspoon orange oil (or 1 teaspoon orange extract)
finely grated zest of 2 large oranges
2 eggs, lightly beaten
Decoration
colored sanding sugar or sprinkles
-or-
Buttercream Icing or Royal Icing
- In a large mixing bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, and salt. Whisk thoroughly to distribute the baking powder. Reserve.
- Using a stand mixer, cream the butter, sugar, orange zest, vanilla extract, and orange oil until light and creamy, about 3 minutes.
- Add the eggs, a little at a time, and continue beating until very light and fluffy, scraping the sides of the bowl several times, about 3 minutes.
- Add the flour mixture and mix very briefly in short bursts, just until incorporated.
- Divide the dough into four equal portions and flatten each portion to a ½-inch thick disk on a sheet of plastic wrap. Seal the plastic wrap around each portion of the dough and refrigerate for at least 2 hours, or overnight. (The sealed dough can be refrigerated for 2-3 days if necessary.)
- On a lightly floured pastry cloth, using a covered rolling pin, roll out the dough to 3/16- to ¼-inch thickness. Use a little flour to keep the dough from sticking if necessary, but try not to work too much additional flour into the dough.
- Cut out shapes with cookie cutters and place cookies on a lightly greased baking sheet.
- If desired, sprinkle with sanding sugar.
- Bake at 375° for 7-10 minutes, until edges are just beginning to lightly brown.
- Using a thin, flexible offset spatula, remove cookies from the baking sheet and cool on a wire rack.
- After cooling, cookies can be decorated with icing if desired.
Store cookies, layered with rounds of wax paper, in airtight metal cookie containers. These cookies keep well for weeks in a cool, dry place; they may also be frozen.
Makes about 8 dozen small to medium size cookies.
Royal Icing
This versatile cookie icing can be thinned with water (1 teaspoon at a time; a little usually does it) to any desirable consistency, making it perfect to spread with a small offset spatula or to put into a pastry bag with a plain tip and pipe.
For the coloring technique used in the blue trees and stars shown here, I piped a rather fluid colored icing on top of a still wet white iced cookie and then drew a pick through the two icings to create a moiré effect.
For a demonstration on royal icing techniques, see Martha Stewart’s Ideal Sugar Cookies video.
¼ cup powdered egg whites (or meringue powder)
¼ cup water
4 cups (1 pound) powdered sugar, sifted
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
¼ teaspoon orange oil (or 1/2 teaspoon orange extract)
- Using a stand mixer fitted with the whisk attachment, combine the powdered egg whites and water, and beat slowly for a few minutes to dissolve the powder.
- Increase mixer speed to medium and continue mixing until the mixture is frothy.
- Add the powdered sugar, cup by cup, and mix until incorporated.
- Add the vanilla and orange extracts.
- Increase mixer speed to medium-high, and mix until the icing is thick and glossy, about 5 minutes.
- Remove the icing to a plastic storage container. Put a damp paper towel directly on top of the icing to keep a crust from forming.
- If not using within a couple of hours, cover the bowl with plastic and refrigerate.
- When ready to ice your cookies, thin the icing to the desired consistency using 1 teaspoon of water at a time. You may also want to divide the icing between several small bowl and add a different color food coloring to each.
Makes 1 cup icing.
Copyright 2008-2015 Susan S. Bradley. All rights reserved. ..
Kat
Hi, I can’t click on the ‘jump to recipes’ button.. : (
Susan S. Bradley
Kat, this seems to be the week the jumps are malfunctioning. Just corrected this jump. Please try again. If you get stuck again, for any post with a jump, simply add 2/ to the url. That will get you to page 2. Thanks! 🙂
Karen
These are beautiful!And the orange flavor sounds extra special. I’m going to give them a try.
smsb
Andrea, you are so kind, thank you! 🙂
smsb
Thank you Hillary! I found the silver sprinkes at a wonderful little shop in Ballard Washington called:
Cookies in Seattle
2211 NW Market Street
Seattle, WA 98107
206-297-1015
They sell online as well and the link to their website is at the conclusion of The Twelve Days of Christmas Cookies post.
Hillary
I love the way you decorated these trees. Where do you find the silver sprinkles?
Andrea
I’ve never made royal icing, but that’s what they use on my favorite sugar cookies at Eli’s. And guess what. Yours are 20 times better looking than theirs, and this is the famous Eli Zabar that I’m talking about. Just beautiful!