Valentine Butter Cookies (2024)

Published by: Adina · Last modified: October 19, 2023 1 Comment

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Heart-shaped, blue, and pink Valentine's butter cookies with a pretty flood icing, the perfect sweet gift for your Valentine.

Valentine Butter Cookies (1)

Bake up the perfect love story with heart-shaped Valentine butter cookies. Our easy recipe will add a sweet touch to your celebration. Fall in love with baking today!

I like baking cookies, biscuits, or Plätzchen, the way we call them in Germany. You will find many recipes on the blog, like the ginger snaps with candied ginger, Vanillekipferl, or German hazelnut macaroons, to name just a few of my favorite ones. Or try these pretty Easter Mini Egg Cookies.

You might have noticed, though, that I bake most of these cookies in December; I rarely ever bake cookies at any other time of the year.

However, I got into baking for Valentine now as well. Not much, just some Cranberry Oatmeal Walnut Cookies (red dots of cranberries) and these heart-shaped blue and pink Valentine butter cookies; they are so cute, so kitschy, perfect for Valentine's Day :).

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  • Expert tips!
  • How to make heart-shaped butter cookies?
  • How to make flood icing?
  • Recipe FAQ
  • More Valentine's Day recipes
  • Valentine Butter Cookies

Expert tips!

  • Always use a kitchen scale in baking; cup measuring can lead to disasters.
  • I have several sizes of heart cutters; I used the largest one.
  • Keep an eye on the cookies while they are in the oven as well; you should not overbake them. If your heart-shaped cutter is smaller, the cookies will need a shorter baking time; make sure to check; the Valentine butter cookies should be only lightly golden.
Valentine Butter Cookies (2)

How to make heart-shaped butter cookies?

To make these Valentine's butter cookies couldn't be any easier. Making cookie dough is generally a very quick and easy matter, and this particular recipe is really fool-proof. You only need a heart cookie cutter (the Amazon affiliate link opens in a new tab), but that should not be very hard to find.

Recipe steps:

  • Dough: Mix the sugar, vanilla sugar or extract, cornstarch, and flour. Add the cold chopped butter and the egg (1). Knead the dough with the handheld mixer. Transfer to the working surface and knead shortly with your hands until the dough is nice and smooth (2).
Valentine Butter Cookies (3)
  • Cut on a lightly floured surface with a heart cutter (3). Knead the dough scraps again, roll them, and cut out more cookies. Continue in this manner until all the dough is used; you will have about 45 pieces.
  • Bake on baking trays lined with baking paper for about 12 minutes per batch or until lightly golden (4).
  • Repeat: Cut the following cookie batch while the first batch is in the oven.
  • Cool for about 5 minutes on the tray so that they can set. If you try to remove them immediately, they might break. Transfer the cookies to wire racks to cool completely. Only add the icing when the Valentine's butter cookies are completely cold.
Valentine Butter Cookies (4)

How to make flood icing?

The source for the flood icing is BBC Good Food; this is the recipe of one of the contenders from The Great British Bake Off. I don't know if he won the show, but he definitely won me with this perfect flood icing.

Flood icing:

  • Mix the icing sugar with lemon juice until smooth, thick and glossy. Place about a quarter of this mixture into a piping bag fitted with a very small round tip. Set the piping bag aside (5).
  • Add another tablespoon of lemon juice to the remaining icing in the bowl. Add only a few drops of lemon juice more if necessary; the mixture should be pourable but not thin. Mix well and divide the icing between two small bowls.
  • Color the sugar icing in one bowl in pink and the icing in the second bowl in turquoise. Place each mixture into a piping bag (6).
Valentine Butter Cookies (5)

How to decorate with flood icing?

  • Outline each Valentine cookie with the stiffer white icing from the first piping bag. Let this icing set for about 5 minutes.
  • Pipe a little of the colored icing onto the cookie to cover the surface. Use a toothpick to spread the icing evenly inside the white frame. You will find that annoying while you make the first one or two cookies, but it will get easier and much quicker by the time you get to the third cookie, so don't panic.
  • Place the cookies on the working surface in the order you flood them. After flooding about 4 to 5 cookies or so, you can start making the dots on the first cookie you've flooded. The flooding should be just a little bit set at this point but still wet enough to allow the dots to sink nicely into it.
  • Pipe the dots with the white icing. Use a clean toothpick to smooth the dots, if necessary. Some of my dots had a bit of a comet tail pointing upwards, but I could fix that with the toothpick easily.
Valentine Butter Cookies (6)

How to dry flood icing?

  • Once you have flooded all the Valentine butter cookies, arrange them on baking trays lined with baking paper and place them in the oven.
  • Set the oven at its lowest setting and leave the cookies in the oven for about 20-30 minutes to allow the icing to set hard.
  • Keep an eye on them, not that your oven is too hot!

Recipe FAQ

Can I use other cutters?

Whatever you like. You can make and decorate these cookies as Christmas cookies or whatever. If using smaller cutters, keep an eye on the cookies in the oven and reduce the baking time. They should be only slightly golden.

Do I have to flood them?

No, leave them as they are or ice them with a simple white icing without special decoration tricks. You could sprinkle the icing with sugar pearls or similar.

How long do they last?

Undecorated cookies last for at least 2-3 weeks in an airtight container.
Flooded ones should be consumed within one week. They will not exactly spoil, but the decoration might start to bleed.

Valentine Butter Cookies (7)

More Valentine's Day recipes

  • Champagne Truffles
  • Red Velvet Mini Cakes
  • The Best Red Velvet Muffins
  • Truffle Pasta

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Valentine Butter Cookies (12)

Valentine Butter Cookies

Heart-shaped, blue and pink, valentine sugar cookies with a pretty flood icing, the perfect sweet gift for your Valentine.

5 from 2 votes

Print Pin Grow Rate

Course: Cookies

Cuisine: International

Prep Time: 1 hour hour

Cook Time: 12 minutes minutes

Total Time: 1 hour hour 12 minutes minutes

Servings: 45

Calories: 125kcal

Author: Adina

Equipment

  • Baking sheets

  • Hand-held mixer

  • Rolling Pin

  • Piping bag

Ingredients

Sugar cookies (Notes 1,2):

  • 150 g granulated sugar 5.5 oz/ ¾ cup
  • ½ tablespoon vanilla sugar or ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 90 g cornstarch 3 oz/ ¾ cup
  • 330 g all-purpose flour 12 oz/ 3 ¾ cups
  • 200 g unsalted butter 7 oz/ ¾ cup + 1 tablespoon
  • 1 egg medium Germany, large US

Flood icing:

  • 500 g icing sugar 17.5 oz/ 5 cups
  • 7 + 1 to 1 ½ tablespoons lemon juice divided
  • a few drops pink food coloring
  • a few drops turquoise food coloring
  • a few toothpicks

Instructions

Sugar cookies:

  • Preheat the oven to 200°C/ 400°F (fan oven 180°C/ 360°F). Line two baking trays with parchment paper.

  • Dough: Mix the sugar, vanilla sugar or extract, cornstarch, and flour. Chop the butter into small pieces and add them to the mixture. Add the egg. Knead the dough with the hand-held mixer. Turn the dough onto the working surface and knead shortly to form a disc of dough.

    150 g granulated sugar/ ¾ cups/ 5.5 oz + ½ tablespoon vanilla sugar+ 90 g cornstarch/ ¾ cup/ 3 oz + 330 g all-purpose flour/ 3 ¾ cups/ 12 oz + 200 g unsalted butter/ 7 oz + 1 egg

  • Roll the dough on the lightly floured working surface and cut out the cookies with a heart cutter. I used the largest heart cutter.

    Next, knead the dough scraps again, roll them and cut out more cookies. Continue in this manner until all the dough is used. I had about 45 large heart-shaped cookies, but you could have more if you use a smaller cutter.

  • Bake: Place the cookies on the prepared baking tray and bake for about 12 minutes or until lightly golden. Keep an eye on them, the baking time depends on the size of the cookies as well, smaller hearts will need a shorter baking time.

  • Let cool for about 5 minutes on the trays, then transfer the cookies to wire racks to cool completely. Only add the icing when completely cold.

Flood icing:

  • Icing: Mix the icing sugar with 7 tablespoons of lemon juice until smooth, thick and glossy. Place about a quarter of this mixture into a piping bag fitted with a very small round tip. Set the piping bag aside.

    500 g icing sugar/ 5 cups/ 17.5 oz + 7 + 1 to 1 ½ tablespoons lemon juice + a few drops food coloring

  • Add 1 tablespoon lemon juice to the remaining icing in the bowl. Add only a few drops of lemon juice more if necessary; the mixture should be pourable but not thin. Mix well and divide the icing between two small bowls.

  • Color the sugar icing in one bowl in pink and the other one in turquoise. Place each mixture into piping bags.

Decorate:

  • Outline each cookie with some of the stiffer white icing. Let this icing set for about 5 minutes.

  • Pipe some of the colored icing onto the cookie, enough to cover the surface. Use a toothpick to properly spread the icing evenly inside the white icing frame.

  • Make dots: Place the cookies on the working surface in the order you flooded them. After flooding about 4 cookies or so, you can start making the dots on the first cookie you've flooded. The flooding should be just a little bit set at this point, but still wet enough to allow the dots to sink nicely into it.

    Pipe the dots with the white icing. Use a clean toothpick to smooth the dots, if necessary.

  • Let icing set: Place the cookies on baking trays lined with baking paper and place them in the oven. Set the oven at its lowest setting and leave the cookies in the oven for about 20-30 minutes to allow the icing to set hard.

Notes

  1. Use a digital kitchen scale (the Amazon link opens in a new tab) to measure the ingredients when baking; it guarantees the best results.
  2. This is my usual, fool-proof sugar cookie recipe. A whole batch makes lots of cookies, between 40 and 60, depending on the size of the cutters. If you want to make only half of the batch, halve the quantities, including the egg. To split an egg properly, beat it well in a small cup, measure it, and only add half of the liquid egg to the dough.

Nutrition

Serving: 1cookie | Calories: 125kcal | Carbohydrates: 22g | Protein: 1g | Fat: 4g | Saturated Fat: 2g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 14mg | Sodium: 3mg | Sugar: 14g

Tried this Recipe? Pin it for Later!Mention @adinabeck or tag #WhereIsMySpoon!

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Valentine Butter Cookies (17)

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Anca says

    I plan to make some biscuits for Valentine's Day, or I should say before that, so I can share the recipe. Yours look great.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Valentine Butter Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What happens to cookies without enough butter? ›

Butter is an emulsifier and it makes cookies tender. It also adds in the crispy-around-the-edges element. Adding too much butter can cause the cookies to be flat and greasy. Adding too little butter can cause the cookies to be tough and crumbly.

How do you keep cookie cutter shape? ›

To help cookies keep their shape, freeze them! I freeze each batch of cut-out cookies for 5 to 10 minutes before baking. They rise just slightly higher and keep their shape better. This really helps when using an intricate cookie cutter, but I do this even when baking circles.

What does a cookie look like with too much butter? ›

Greasy mess: Extra butter means more fat, making the dough greasy and difficult to handle. Spreading like crazy: Cookies lose their shape, spreading thin and flat instead of staying nice and round. Uneven baking: The excess fat can burn easily on the edges while leaving the center undercooked.

How do you get Pillsbury cookies to hold their shape? ›

If your cookies are spreading out too much and not holding their shape, place the entire cookie sheet of cut cookies into the fridge or freezer for a bit, maybe 5 minutes, before baking. Cool on the pan for 1 minute before removing onto a cooling rack. Letting the cookies cool allows them to firm up a bit.

What happens if you use oil instead of butter in cookies? ›

Due to its liquid nature, using oil in cookies typically results in a denser texture. Also, because oil is 100% fat, it doesn't react with flour the way butter does (butter contains water). Because of that, your cookies won't be as fluffy. If you're a fan of flat cookies, then using oil is an excellent option.

What makes a cookie chewy? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

Why do my cut-out cookies lose their shape? ›

One possible reason is the amount of baking powder in the dough. Make sure that this is measured carefully and use a level teaspoon. Also use a 5ml measuring teaspoon. Too much baking powder can cause the cookies to spread too much.

Can you shape cookies without a cutter? ›

No Problem. Even if you don't have a box full of fun holiday cookie cutters, that doesn't mean you can't enjoy cute cut-out cookies on your holiday table. A standard drinking glass with about a 3-inch opening is a great stand-in for cookie cutters.

Why do my cookies lose their shape? ›

If your butter is under mixed, it won't have the air pockets to hold it's shape. If it's over-mixed, the air pockets decrease in size and are unable to hold their shape in the oven—causing your cookies to spread. It's best to cream butter and sugar on medium speed for 2 to 3 minutes.

What happens if you use melted butter instead of softened for cookies? ›

It all makes a difference. Our control cookie, as with most cookies, uses softened butter, and this recipe tends to be a bit cakier. A cookie made with the same amount of melted butter will give you a fudgier, chewier cookie. It helps it spread out more and gives you some nice divots to catch more chocolate.

Is it better to bake cookies at 325 or 350? ›

350° is the standard temp for a cookie, and it's a great one. Your cookies will bake evenly and the outside will be done at the same time as the inside. Baking at 325° also results in an evenly baked cookie, but the slower cooking will help yield a chewier cookie. The outsides will be a little softer, too.

Why are my butter cookies not holding shape? ›

Oven Temperature

If you still notice that your cookies are spreading, another thing you can do to help cookies keep their shape, is increase the heat 10-25 degrees higher than the suggested temperature on the recipe. Every oven is different, so you may need to try this for yours.

Should you refrigerate cut-out cookies before baking? ›

Refrigerating the dough allows the flour to fully hydrate and helps to make the cookie dough firmer. Firm dough prevents the cookies from spreading too much, which is why chilling the dough is a crucial step for cut-out and rolled cookies.

Why is butter important in cookies? ›

The job of butter in baking (besides being delicious) is to give richness, tenderness and structure to cookies, cakes, pies and pastries. We alter the way butter works in a recipe by changing its temperature and choosing when to combine it with the other ingredients.

Does more butter make cookies softer? ›

Also, underbaking them by a minute or 2 will help them retain a dense, chewy bite, explains Jenny McCoy, pastry baking arts chef-instructor at the Institute for Culinary Education in New York. Adding more moisture to your dough in the form of extra butter, egg yolks, or brown sugar will make your cookies even softer.

What makes cookies fluffy and not flat? ›

Room temperature butter is just the right consistency to incorporate air when it's creamed with sugar. These trapped air pockets result in risen, fluffy cookies. If the butter is any warmer, it won't incorporate enough air and your cookies will have less rise.

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