Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Spiced Traditional Cookies

Crisp edges, tender centers, and warm baking spices in every bite. These classic cookies taste like the holidays, but they are easy enough for a random Tuesday.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.8
A plate of golden brown spiced cookies with crackly tops on a wooden table with cinnamon sticks nearby

If your kitchen could give hugs, it would smell like these cookies. They are the kind of traditional, spiced bake that feels instantly familiar: buttery, gently sweet, and loaded with warm aromatics that make you wander back to the oven “just to check” for the third time.

This recipe is my go-to when I want bold spice without a complicated ingredient list. Think cinnamon and ginger up front, a little clove for depth, and optional black pepper for that sneaky, old-school bakery warmth. The texture lands right in the sweet spot: crisp edges, soft middle, and a finish that begs for coffee, tea, or a cold glass of milk.

Cookie dough balls coated in sugar on a parchment-lined baking sheet before baking

Why It Works

  • Big aroma, zero drama: Blooming the spices briefly in melted butter wakes them up, so the cookies taste as good as they smell.
  • Classic texture: A quick chill firms the dough for thicker cookies with crisp edges and a tender, slightly chewy center.
  • Easy to scale: Double the batch and freeze dough balls for instant, bake-on-demand cookies.
  • Flexible sweetness: Brown sugar adds moisture and a caramel note that plays perfectly with cinnamon and ginger.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Storage Tips

  • Room temperature: Store cooled cookies in an airtight container for 4 to 5 days. Add a small piece of sandwich bread to the container if you like them softer (the cookies steal the bread’s moisture).
  • Freeze baked cookies: Freeze in a zip-top bag or airtight container for up to 2 months. Thaw at room temp, or warm in a 300°F oven for 4 to 6 minutes to bring back the crisp edges.
  • Freeze the dough: Scoop dough into balls, freeze on a sheet pan until firm, then transfer to a bag for up to 3 months. Bake from frozen, adding 1 to 2 minutes to the bake time.

Pro tip: If your cookies lose their snap, a quick 3 to 4 minute reheat at 325°F dries the edges right back out.

Common Questions

Common Questions

What makes these cookies “traditional”?

They are built on the classic butter, sugar, egg, and flour base, then finished with the warm spice blend you see across old-fashioned holiday tins and family cookie platters. Simple pantry ingredients, timeless flavor.

Can I make them more ginger-forward like gingerbread cookies?

Yes. Increase the ground ginger to 2 teaspoons and add 1 tablespoon molasses. The dough will be slightly stickier, so do not skip the chill.

Why did my cookies spread too much?

The usual culprits are butter that is too hot, no chill time, or a warm baking sheet. Let the butter cool after melting and blooming the spices, chill the dough, and always bake on a cool sheet pan.

Can I make these gluten-free?

You can swap in a 1:1 gluten-free baking flour blend. Results vary by brand, but chilling helps prevent spreading and keeps the texture closer to classic.

Do I have to use black pepper?

No, but a tiny pinch makes the spices taste more “alive.” It will not taste peppery. It tastes warm and bakery-style.

I originally went to school thinking I would do culinary arts the official way, then I realized I learn faster with flour on my shirt and a timer going off somewhere in the background. These cookies are that energy. They are not fussy, but they feel special, and they make the whole house smell like you have your life together, even if your sink is full of dishes. I bake them when I want something classic and cozy, and I keep a bag of dough balls in the freezer for the nights when I need a win that tastes like cinnamon and calm.