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Every fall for the last few years my blog lights up with new visitors. New visitors who have come to my blog is search of THE Taylor Swift Chai Cookies. We all know our dear Taylor loves to bake, loves cats, she seems to be a cozy, flannel wearing, autumn loving gal… I mean, it absolutely makes sense that she pop by Joy the Baker for this VERY vintage Giant Vanilla Sugar Cookies.
Taylor Swift took that old 2009 sugar cookie recipe, mentioned adding chai spices and an eggnog glaze, and because she’s Taylor Swift – set the internet ablaze. Good on ya, girl! You’re doing it right, and your baking has so many people searching for the perfect sugar and spice cookie.
Apparently if you live like Taylor Swift for a week you must make a batch of these cookies. I mean… I knew those Giant Vanilla Sugar Cookies were perfectly chewy and tender, but I finally took our friend Tay’s advice and spiced them up just right.
Here’s what you’ll need for Taylor Swift Chai Cookies:
• softened unsalted butter and a neutral oil. We’ll use a mix of fats to bring together this soft and tender cookie.
• granulated sugar and powdered sugar. The powdered sugar will help absorb some of the moisture from the oil and make the cookies tender and chewy.
• all-purpose flour, baking soda, and kosher salt.
• chai spices: ground ginger, ground cinnamon, allspice, cardamom, cloves, and a pinch of black pepper.
• an egg for binding
• vanilla extract
• powdered sugar for the glaze
• a hint of nutmeg
• milk or eggnog to create a glaze
First, whip the butter alone in a bowl just to ensure it’s softened super well.
Beat in the oil as best you can. The oil may not fully incorporate into the butter and that’s ok. Just get it all in the bowl.
Add the granulated sugar, powdered sugar and spices to the bowl with butter and oil.
I like to add the spices to the sugar and fat for this Taylor Swift cookie recipe because the fat helps distribute the warm spice flavors really well. Fat always helps flavor.
Add the egg and vanilla extract.
Add the dry ingredients. Set aside the hand mixer and stir in the flour into the wet ingredients with a wooden spoon or spatula.
The batter will feel soft – somewhere between a cookie dough and a cake batter.
Cover and refrigerate the dough for at least an hour to allow the flour to absorb the moisture and the butter to rechill.
Once chilled, scoop the dough into two tablespoon portions. I use a cookie scoop then shape the dough into thick disks.
Coat each cookie dough round in cinnamon sugar before placing a few inches apart on a parchment lined baking pan.
While the cookies bake, whisk together an easy glaze with powdered sugar, milk (or better yet, eggnog) and extra ground nutmeg.
Spoon a teaspoon of glaze into the center of each cookie and sprinkle with nutmeg and allow to set.
Taylor is on to something. These are the sweetest fall cookies. Soft and tender for days!
Serve with chai tea? Too much? More is just enough.
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Taylor Swift’s Chai Sugar Cookies
- Prep Time: 1 hour 30 minutes
- Cook Time: 12 minues
- Total Time: 1 hour 45 minutes
- Yield: about 2 dozen cookies 1x
- Category: dessert
Description
A perfect Autumn cookie with chai spices and extra nutmeg inspired by Taylor Swift.
Ingredients
For the Cookies:
- 1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1/2 cup vegetable oil (I like canola or sunflower oil)
- 1/2 cup (100 grams) granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup powdered sugar
- 1 1/2 teaspoons ground ginger
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 1/2 teaspoon ground allspice
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/4 teaspoon ground cardamom
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
- Pinch of fresh cracked black pepper
- 1 large egg
- 2 teaspoons of vanilla extract or the seeds of 1 vanilla bean pod
- 2 cups (250 grams) all-purpose flour
- 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
- Cinnamon sugar for rolling
For the Glaze:
- 1 1/2 cups (180 grams) powdered sugar
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg, plus more for sprinkling the top of the cookies
- 3 tablespoons whole milk or eggnog
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Using a mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter in a large bowl on medium speed for about 1 minute. Add the vegetable oil. It may not fully incorporate with the butter, but that’s ok. Add the granulated sugar, powdered sugar, and all of the spices. Beat to combine.
- Add the egg and vanilla, beating on medium speed until completely incorporated.
- Stir in the flour, baking soda and salt all at once using a wooden spoon or the mixer set on low.
- The dough will be soft. Refrigerate the dough for 1 hour or freeze for 15 minutes just so it’s easier to handle.
- For large cookies, dollop 2 Tablespoons of cookie dough onto the cookie sheet about 2 inches apart. For smaller cookies use 1 Tablespoon for each cookie. Press the dough evenly with your fingers or palm to 1/4-inch thickness. Roll each cookie dough in a small bowl of cinnamon sugar.
- Bake for 12 to 14 minutes for larger cookies or 8 to 10 minutes for smaller cookies. Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for at least 10 minutes before transferring to racks to cool completely.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the glaze ingredients to thick but spreadable. Spread each cooled cookie with graze just over the center, leaving the edges of the cookie free of glaze. Sprinkle with a bit of fresh nutmeg if you have it. Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days.
Photos with my friend Jon Melendez!
Mel
Just pulled these out of the oven & the texture is samdy. Think I am going to try with more butter next time because I don’t like crispy cookies & I don’t like sandy cookies. Hmmm.
★★★★
Marty
Hi. Made this batter last night and it ended up in fridge overnight which in cookie making usually is a good thing as it intensifies flavors. However, having tasted the first batch, they are flavorful but super sandy :( very bummed out about this as I was so looking forward to adding them to my holiday cookie rotation. I don’t believe I will be making them again, as I don’t enjoy this texture at all.
Amy
I made these last year and they were fabulous! I made them last night and I ran into the same problem a few others had….the sandy texture. Any tips on what could have caused it? I’m making another batch tonight and will see what happens. I’m thinking something to do with the butter or maybe because I sifted the confect. sugar? I had a few lumps so I sifted but maybe that made it too light. Would love to not do a repeat fail! :)
★★★★★
addy
i am a huge swiftie and made these the night before midnights came out. i ate these and cried while listening. amazing album and cookies ????
★★★★★
Rachel
Okay, I made these cookies yesterday side by side with the way that Taylor made them using the chai tea bag. I will say that these are good. If you like and are looking for a really spice filled cookie they are excellent. But I have to say using the chai tea bag creates a softer spice and gives this slightly delicate tea flavor that is wonderful. I do not want to take away from these because they are very good. They are just two different cookies.
★★★★
Courtney
I would recommend these! The spice was bold but not too much. I loved the texture – soft yet relatively sturdy. I had to add extra powdered sugar to my glaze because it was spreading too much, maybe because my kitchen was a little warm. Yum! Definitely perfect cookies to eat with a cup of tea or chai!
★★★★
Claire
I made these this morning and there are only 4 left. My family ate all of them in one day! Will definitely make these again.
Julie
This recipe is easy but produces INCREDIBLE cookies. I used 3 teaspoons of chai powder instead of the spices. These cookies are so tender and SO delicious. Thank you!
★★★★★
MJ
I have chai powder but it’s sweetened. Did you omit the sugar at all?
R
Hi, I’m so excited to try this recipe out but I was wondering how to use cookie cutters with this recipe, Im thinking I should I roll the dough flat then use the cookie cutter and sprinkle the cinnamon sugar on it, is there a better way to do this though?
Veronika
I would think this would be pretty difficult with this dough but if you attempt this, I would chill the dough, roll into disks between wax paper and freeze again until solid before attempting to cut. They also spread a bit in the oven so they would need to be cold before baking as well. Even with all of these steps, I’m not convinced it would work out very well. You’re probably better off adding chai spices to a dough meant for cutting into shapes.
Hope Mollenkamp
These are delicious. I would say I’m an experienced baker. Not a professional by any means but I am the baker in my friend group lol. I made these and they ended up having the texture of compressed sand. I’m not sure what I did wrong. I thought maybe not enough butter? I used one egg like the recipe said. I did accidentally use soybean oil, so I’m wondering if maybe that could be why? I googled it and apparently a lot of people use soybean oil in pastry recipes so idk what happened :/ I guess I just want a professionals opinion on what I did wrong so I can remake them perfectly thank you so much!
Amanda
Mine did the same thing! The texture was very off-putting. I’m also a baker and have no clue what went wrong. Hopefully they reply soon!
Joy the Baker
Hi Holly! I’m so sorry you had a sandy cookie – that’s certainly not what you want! This is a unique cookie recipe because it includes vegetable oil and powdered sugar – creating amore crisp cookie. I wonder if this is an issue with the sugar. Perhaps it needs to be worked into the batter better after the egg is incorporated. I’m going to make a batch of these cookies this week to be sure.
Kim
Hi Joy – checking in to see if you had a sandy texture, and any recommendations you have. Looking forward to baking these this week! Thanks so much xo
Cait
Hi! Also checking in about the sandy texture. I love everything else about the cookie and enjoy them as is, but getting rid of that texture issue would make them A++ :)
★★★★
Sara I
Hello, I haven’t made these cookies yet, but looking at the comments I was wondering what kind of powdered sugar (conventional or organic) was used in the recipe? I’m asking, since organic powdered sugar is all I have and since it has a different starch, I wonder if that would affect my cookie’s texture.
Thanks.
Joy the Baker
I didn’t use organic powdered sugar. I just used regular.
Ellen S
This has happened to me too, whenever I make them. Slightly dry, sandy texture. I tried using just a touch more butter (2/3 a stick) and I thought that helped. I also don’t flatten mine and just let them cook like little biscuits so maybe that has an effect on the texture.
Afsara
Did you move the cookies right after you took them out? When I picked a warm one up it crumbled, but after I waited for the rest to cool completely, they hardened a little and didn’t fall apart.
★★★★
Em
I had a question about the chai spice. If we don’t have all the ingredients for chai spice, can we use chai tea bags instead? And if so how many?
Abby Mallett
Hi there! I think you could use chai bags in a pinch but it’s mostly black tea leaves and a little spice. Even if you had some of the spices (say cinnamon, ginger, cardamom, nutmeg and pepper are easier to get than maybe star anise especially if you don’t use it often) it would be more potent. I say experiment with the tea bags it might be a pleasant surprise!
Chris
I tried it with teabags and there was no discernable chai flavor.
★★★★★
Angelica
Hi! Can the batter be frozen?
Nz
This recipe is adding way too much “grease”. 2 cups total (oil and butter) for 2 cups flour?
Its the greasiest dough ever!
Its a 1.15 cup butter/oil for 2 cups max.
I’m so disappointed :((
Kim
I’ve had this recipe bookmarked for a while and finally made during a snowstorm this week. It seemed fitting. They are so warm and comforting. And the icing made them feel like a real dessert rather than a snack, which is how I normally think of cookies. Thanks for sharing this recipe.
★★★★★
sequoia
can i sub the flour for whole wheat or oat flour?
Melanie
These are so deceivingly delicious!! The gentle whisper of chai is so warm and inviting. I didn’t even make the glaze yet and I’m sold on these cookies! Thanks for a very cool twist on the sugar cookie??
★★★★★
Dennie
I have made a number of GF sugar cookies and they have all come out tasty and easy roll out. I have used ready made flour blends and homemade blends. I will try with this spice combination of this recipe and I am sure they will come out great
Shay
While these cookies were tasty, the mouth feel was a bit off putting. Not sure if the oil and butter mixture or mixture of icing sugar and granulated creates this texture.