Kris Kringle Crinkles
Kris Kringle Crinkles are light and fluffy on the inside and sweet and crunchy on the outside. A yummy homemade Crinkle cookie recipe that is not made from cake mix.

Chocolate Crinkles are one of our favorite cookies. We’ve seen a lot of fun variations on this classic cookie but they are usually made from a boxed cake mix. We really think that can’t taste too good so here is a yummy crinkle cookie recipe made from scratch. We added a little red and green food coloring and some peppermint extract and voila … Kris Kringle Crinkles! This is a great Crinkle Cookies recipe – and so pretty in the red and green. And the peppermint flavor is perfect for the holidays. Your Holiday Party guests will love them! Merry Christmas!
How to Make the Cookie Dough

Step 1: To make the Kris Kringle Crinkle dough, cream the butter and sugar until completely combined. Add in eggs, vanilla, and peppermint extract and mix until the dough is fluffy. Add in the Baking Soda. Finally, mix in the flour, a third at a time. Refrigerate the dough for 2 hours.
How to Color the Cookie Dough

Step 2: Color each of the portions of cookie dough Red and Green. We used Wilton Color Right food coloring to color the cookie dough. Here are the combinations that we used:
Red – 5 drops of Crimson
Green – 3 drops of Yellow and 2 drops of Blue
Baking Instructions

Step 3: Roll the dough into balls. Place the cookie dough ball in a bowl or plate of powdered sugar. Roll the cookie dough ball in the powdered sugar until it is covered.
Step 4: Keep the dough in the refrigerator between batches. The Powdered Sugar on the outside of the Kris Kringle Crinkles will bake up nicer if it is applied to the refrigerated dough. Bake the cookies in a 350-degree oven for 9-10 minutes.
Storage and Serving Instructions

Step 5: These Kris Kringle Crinkle Cookies should be stored in an airtight container. They will stay fresh longer if they are completely cool before you pack them up. We usually add a layer of parchment paper between each row of cookies in our plastic container.
Expert Tips and FAQ’s
Both the eggs and the butter should be at room temperature which will help your cookies turn out lighter and fluffier. For the eggs, room temperature simply means not cold out of the refrigerator. If you forget to take the eggs out before you start making cookie dough you can put the eggs in a bowl of warm water for 5-10 minutes to warm them up. The butter also needs to be softened to room temperature which means if you touch it you should leave an indentation on the stick of butter. Do not use butter that has been over-softened or melted. If that happens you should use a different stick of butter or put it back into the refrigerator to let it set up. We have a whole post about How to Soften Butter, click here if you need more information on how to do that.
Yes. In our opinion, you need some kind of a mixer to make a good cookie dough. A stand mixer, while expensive, is a great investment if you believe you have a lot of homemade baked goods in your future. An electric hand-mixer also works well and you can probably find one for around $20. You can hand mix cookie dough in a pinch (which is how we did it growing up), but you will really have to use a lot of muscle to cream the butter and sugar, and eggs properly.
Creaming the butter, sugar and then mixing the eggs in is the most important part of the cookie dough mixing process. Creaming is when you fully incorporate the butter and sugar together and add some much-needed air to the dough. We recommend creaming the butter and sugar for 2 minutes at medium-high speed and then mixing the butter/sugar/eggs for another 3 minutes at the same speed. Once you add the flour, you want to mix the dough as little as possible. Mix it too much and you will get tough cookies. Mix in the flour at low speed and continue mixing ONLY until the dry ingredients are incorporated into the dough. Make sure you scrape down the sides and the bottom to make sure all the flour has gotten mixed in.
We always line our cookie sheets with a piece of parchment paper, it keeps the cookie from sticking to the sheet and from over-browning. You can find parchment paper either in rolls or in pre-cut sheets in most grocery stores, and we highly recommend it. Ideally, you should use at least 2 cookie sheets when baking cookies. You don’t want to add the raw cookie dough to a cookie sheet that is hot out of the oven. The dough will start baking even before you get it in the oven.
Everyone’s oven is different. We recommend starting with a test bake with a single cookie to help you hone in on the exact baking time for your oven. You should set your timer for 2 minutes less than whatever the recipe recommends. Once the timer goes off, open up the oven and see how your cookie is baking. Make corrections accordingly. Our oven has a hot spot in the back so we always rotate the cookie sheet halfway through the baking time to get a more even bake. Although this may seem like an unnecessary step, it is better to do this than burn a whole tray of cookies.
Cookies should always be stored in an airtight container. They should be completely cooled before storing them. Cookies stored at room temperature should stay fresh for 3-4 days. You can also keep them in the refrigerator and that extends their freshness for up to a week. If you need them to last longer, you can freeze them for up to 3 months. You can pull them out of the freezer and leave them on the counter for 1 hour and they will be ready to eat.

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Step-by-Step Video Tutorial
Kris Kringle Crinkles
Kris Kringle Crinkles are light and fluffy on the inside and sweet and crunchy on the outside. A yummy homemade Crinkle cookie recipe that is not made from cake mix.
Ingredients
- 1 cup Butter (Sweet Cream, Salted, Softened)
- 1 1/2 cups Granulated Sugar
- 2 Large Eggs
- 1 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
- 1 teaspoon Peppermint Extract (or Almond, Lemon or Mint)
- 1/2 teaspoon Baking Soda
- 3 cups All-Purpose Flour
- 1 cup Powdered Sugar
Instructions
- Cream the butter and sugar until completely combined.
- Add in eggs, vanilla and peppermint extract and mix until the dough is fluffy.
- Add in the Baking Soda.
- Mix in the flour, a third at a time.
- Split into two portions and color one red and one green.
- Refrigerate the dough for 2 hours.
- Roll dough into balls.
- Place the cookie dough ball in a bowl or plate of powdered sugar and roll the cookie dough ball in the powdered sugar until it is covered.
- Bake in a 350 degree oven for 9-10 minutes.
Did you Make this Recipe? Leave a review below, then snap a picture and tag @twosisterscrafting on Instagram so we can see it!




These are so good! The first batch was a little flat and the powdered sugar kind of melted into the cookie. For the remaining batches, we prepared the cookie balls, coated liberally with powdered sugar and stored the prepared balls in the refrigerator until time to bake. We placed cookies in room temp cookie sheet for baking. This resulted in beautiful cracked cooking.
They are firm in the top but so soft!
Most cookie recipes take less cook time than the recipients calls for my liking but 10 minutes was perfect for these.
Thanks so much for sharing this. I offered these to my kids for Christmas but could only find the cake mix version. So happy to find this. And the comments are helpful too.
These are beautiful … other than the peppermint flavor, do you recommend any other flavor? While it’s perfect for the season, I’m just not a fan of mint, but would love to make them with something more than just vanilla. Any recommendations are appreciated! Thank you!!
Hi! How about Almond? Or Lemon?
Very pretty cookies…Made them yesterday. I thought there wasn’t enough peppermint flavor. I used McCormick peppermint extract. Did you use a different brand? If not I will add 1/2 tsp vanilla & 1 1/2 tsp peppermint next time. Love the red & green…They will look nice with my less colorful cookies. Thanks much…❤️
Hi Lorrie, we did use McCormick peppermint extract. We went light on the flavoring because that is our preference but you could definitely add more.
Hi. Tried these and found they didn’t turn out as crinkled as the site images. Some turned out better than others, even though they were all baked at once on the same tray. Did I handle some longer than others? Did I ice some of them more than others? Any thoughts? After the first 2 trays I started cooling the baking trays too. It didn’t help.
Hi Sandra – hard to say what the issue could have been. Tips for good crinkle cookies is to use new Baking Soda, make sure the butter and sugar is thoroughly creamed but do not overmix when you add the flour at the end and to make sure your oven is hot enough. Hope that helps!
These look so christmassy! I’d like to try them, but I am outside of the US (the Netherlands), so can you tell on how much degrees Centrigade I should preheat the oven and bake the cookies? Thanks!
Hi Karin, you should set it at 180c.
This recipe made 44 cookies total. 1.25″ to 1.5″ dough balls. Was much better tasting than the crinkle cookies I made from a white cake mix, but cake mix recipe looked better. Mine didn’t look as crinkly as the pics, not sure why. The powdered sugar absorbed into cookies. This helped a bit: Coat the dough balls excessively in powdered sugar, make them look like powdered doughnuts.
Other recipes like this have 1/2 tsp baking soda AND 2 tsp baking powder AND 1/2 tsp salt. I would modify as such next time.
I find that if you let the dough chill they become more crinkly. If the dough is room tempreture, when they bake, the powdered sugar will get absorbed. They still taste good they just don’t look as pretty.
If I don’t want peppermint and have only vanilla do I add two !
Hi Patti, yes I would add extra vanilla. The cookies will be pretty bland without the extra flavor.
Do you bake them on a grease or ungreased baking pan
Hi Vickie, on an ungreased pan.
When do you put the powdered sugar on?
Hi Paula, after you form the dough into a ball, roll the ball in powdered sugar, put them on a cookie sheet and bake.
How many does this make?
Hi – You should be able to get 18-20 cookies.
Hi, can i freeze the dough?
Hi – we’ve never tried to freeze this particular dough but we have frozen other cookie doughs. I’m sure it would be fine but I would make sure to use a good air tight container to store the dough in. If ice crystals form on the dough, they might add extra moisture when the cookie dough defrosts. Good luck!
Thank you, I will let you know how it turns out
Can I wait to add the extract until I have split the dough and make half peppermint and half almond flavored?
Hi Ann – that shouldn’t be a problem at all.
Thanks! I thought it would be fun to have peppermint and almond.
Do I add coloring after mixing dough or after refrigeratoration
Hi Lisa – after mixing the dough and before the refrigeration.
Is the food scale really necessary for this recipe?
Hi Jorja – no you don’t need to measure the dough.
Can I use crisco instead of butter?
Hi Kim – sure!
Love these cookies but I used almond instead of the peppermint extract. My kids loved them!! Thank you. I also made your gingerbread crinkle cookies and they are the best!
My first batch made with butter did not turn out. The cookies did not puff up and didn’t have the crackle effect. So the second batch I used butter flavor crisco, quick chilled in freezer 30 minutes then baked for 13 minutes. They turned out perfectly crackled.My new go to Christmas cookie. ThankYou for sharing
Can these be frozen and thawed out to eat later?
Yes, just make sure they are in an airtight container.
Can I freeze these cookies?
Hi Jenny, yes you can.