Charming Christmas Present Cookies
A few winters ago, I spent a rainy afternoon volunteering at a small church basement in East Austin. They hold a community bake exchange every December, and my brother had dragged me along mostly because he wanted free hot cocoa. The basement was crowded with folding tables and families bundled in oversized sweaters, and the smell of cinnamon, melting chocolate, and wet coats somehow blended into the kind of aroma that makes you forget the weather entirely.
While helping refill trays, I noticed a quiet older man decorating tiny square cookies with the focus of someone ironing a wedding dress. Each cookie looked like a miniature wrapped gift, complete with ribbons so straight they almost didn’t look edible. He told me he started making them after his kids grew up because he missed wrapping presents on Christmas Eve. He squeezed a little line of icing across a cookie and said, “Tiny gifts feel just as meaningful.”
That moment stuck with me. A simple cookie carrying a whole lifetime of sentiment. So later that week, in my kitchen where Chili was chasing shadows across the tiles and my brother was blasting music too loudly, I decided to try making my own gift-shaped cookies. Mine weren’t perfect that first time, but they made me smile the same way his had.
Every year since, I bake these little squares again, dressing them in new colors and decorations, filling my home with that cheerful, slow-paced holiday comfort I crave more than anything else in December.

Short Description
Christmas Present Cookies are soft sugar cookies decorated to look like tiny wrapped gifts, complete with icing ribbons and bows. They’re festive, charming, and perfect for holiday parties, cookie boxes, or cozy baking days at home.
Key Ingredients
For the Sugar Cookies
- 2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1 ½ tsp vanilla extract (or almond extract for a slightly different twist)
- ½ tsp baking powder
- ¼ tsp salt
For the Royal Icing
- 4 cups powdered sugar, sifted
- 3 tbsp meringue powder
- 8–10 tbsp water
- Food coloring in your favorite holiday shades
- Edible glitter or festive sprinkles (optional)
Tools Needed
- Mixing bowls
- Electric mixer
- Measuring cups and spoons
- Rolling pin
- Plastic wrap
- Square cookie cutter or sharp knife
- Baking sheet
- Parchment paper
- Cooling rack
- Piping bags
- Toothpicks
Cooking Instructions
Step 1: Prepare the Dough
Start by beating the softened butter and granulated sugar in a large bowl until the mixture turns pale and fluffy. Mix in the egg along with the vanilla or almond extract until everything looks smooth.
In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt, then gradually fold this dry mixture into the wet ingredients. A soft, even dough will come together.
Divide it into two portions, wrap each one well, and refrigerate for at least an hour so the cookies hold their shape. If the dough feels crumbly, knead in a small splash of water; if it’s sticky, dust in a little extra flour.
Step 2: Roll and Cut
When the dough is chilled, preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Lightly flour the counter and roll the dough to about ¼ inch thickness. Cut out gift-shaped cookies using a square cutter or a knife, then transfer them carefully to a parchment-lined baking sheet with a bit of space between each one.
If the shapes start to stretch or soften as you move them, chill the tray for a few minutes to help them firm up again before baking.
Step 3: Bake the Cookies
Slide the tray into the oven and bake the cookies for 8 to 10 minutes, just until the edges develop a light golden tint. Let them rest on the baking sheet for a couple of minutes, then transfer them to a cooling rack. Make sure they cool completely before decorating, since warm cookies can cause the icing to lose its structure.
Step 4: Prepare the Royal Icing
To make the icing, combine the powdered sugar and meringue powder in a bowl. Add water gradually, a tablespoon at a time, until the mixture reaches a soft-peak consistency.
Separate the icing into small bowls and tint each portion with the colors you want to use. Adjust the texture as needed: a touch more water if it’s too thick or extra powdered sugar if it’s too runny.
Step 5: Decorate the Cookies
Begin by piping a clean outline around each cookie and give it a moment to set. Flood the center with icing, using a toothpick to guide it neatly into the corners. Once the base layer dries slightly, add ribbons, bows, and tiny details in contrasting shades. A dusting of edible glitter or a few sprinkles adds a festive finish while the icing is still tacky.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe
Cheerful and festive: They look like tiny wrapped gifts and brighten any holiday table.
Soft and buttery: The sugar cookie base stays tender with a slight crisp edge.
Creative and customizable: Choose any color palette you love.
Kid friendly: Great for decorating with family.
Make ahead friendly: Dough and icing can both be prepared early.
Perfect for gifting: These cookies look adorable packaged in holiday tins or boxes.
Mistakes to Avoid & Solutions
Dough spreading in the oven
Solution: Chill the dough for at least 1 hour. If it still spreads, add 1 tbsp flour.
Cracked dough while rolling
Solution: Let it warm slightly on the counter for 5 minutes or knead in 1 tsp water.
Colors bleeding together
Solution: Let the base layer dry completely before adding details. A fan helps speed this up.
Icing too runny
Solution: Add extra powdered sugar until it forms soft peaks.
Uneven cookies
Solution: Use rolling guides or place silicone bands on your rolling pin for consistent thickness.
Serving and Pairing Suggestions
Serve these cookies on a holiday dessert board with peppermint brownies, ginger snaps, and hot chocolate.
Pair them with warm drinks like chai latte, cinnamon tea, or mulled cider.
Plate them individually for a festive touch at holiday dinners.
Add them to a cookie exchange basket for a playful, gift-themed treat.
Storage and Reheating Tips
Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days.
Keep decorated cookies in single layers with parchment between them.
For longer storage, freeze undecorated cookies for up to 2 months.
Thaw frozen cookies at room temperature before decorating.
FAQs
1. Can I freeze the dough?
Yes. Wrap tightly and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge before rolling.
2. Why did my cookies turn brown around the edges?
Your oven may run hot. Lower the temperature slightly or bake on the middle rack.
3. My icing won’t harden. What happened?
Too much water. Add more powdered sugar and let the cookies dry under a fan.
4. Can I use buttercream instead of royal icing?
You can, but buttercream won’t hold sharp lines or dry firm like royal icing.
5. How long should icing dry before storing?
At least 6 hours or overnight for the ribbons and bows to stay crisp.
Tips & Tricks
Tint icing in multiple shades of the same color for a luxurious palette.
Use a toothpick to pop tiny air bubbles after flooding.
Let cookies dry under a fan for glossy finishes.
Keep a damp cloth over your icing tips so they don’t dry out while you work.
Mix a drop of white food coloring into any shade to make it pastel and opaque.
Recipe Variations
Pastel Gift Cookies
Use pink, lavender, mint, and butter-yellow icing.
Add tiny white polka dots for a soft, springlike look.
Follow all standard steps, decorating with lighter tones.
Metallic Ribbon Cookies
Keep the base icing solid white.
Use edible metallic paint in gold or silver for ribbons and bows.
Let the base dry completely before painting.
Chocolate Present Cookies
Replace ¼ cup flour with ¼ cup cocoa powder in the dough.
Use white icing for contrast.
Add peppermint sprinkles for a holiday twist.
Final Thoughts
Every time December rolls around, I find myself carving out an afternoon just for these cookies. Something about shaping tiny squares and dressing them with ribbons slows the world down in a comforting way. Chili usually curls up on the counter stool while my brother sneaks the less perfect cookies when he thinks I’m not looking. These quiet kitchen moments are the ones I hold onto when the holiday rush gets too loud.
Baking these cookies feels like wrapping little pieces of joy, one icing stripe at a time. And when I set a plate of them on the table or tuck them into a gift tin, it reminds me how small gestures can brighten someone’s season. I hope they bring that same warmth to your kitchen too.
Charming Christmas Present Cookies
Course: DessertDifficulty: Easy24
servings20
minutes10
minutes1
hourChristmas Present Cookies are soft sugar cookies decorated to look like tiny wrapped gifts, complete with icing ribbons and bows. They’re festive, charming, and perfect for holiday parties, cookie boxes, or cozy baking days at home.
Ingredients
For the Sugar Cookies
2 ½ cups all-purpose flour
1 cup unsalted butter, softened
1 cup granulated sugar
1 large egg
1 ½ tsp vanilla extract (or almond extract for a slightly different twist)
½ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp salt
For the Royal Icing
4 cups powdered sugar, sifted
3 tbsp meringue powder
8–10 tbsp water
Food coloring in your favorite holiday shades
Edible glitter or festive sprinkles (optional)
Directions
- Beat butter and sugar until pale and fluffy, then mix in the egg and your chosen extract. Whisk flour, baking powder, and salt in a separate bowl, then fold the dry mix into the wet until a soft dough forms.
- Divide, wrap, and chill for at least an hour. Add a splash of water if crumbly or a dusting of flour if sticky.
- Roll chilled dough on a floured surface to about ¼ inch thick. Cut into gift shapes and place on a parchment-lined baking sheet. If the dough softens, chill the tray briefly to help the shapes hold.
- Bake at 350°F (175°C) for 8–10 minutes until the edges turn lightly golden. Cool on the sheet for a moment, then move to a rack and let them cool fully before adding icing.
- For the royal icing, mix powdered sugar and meringue powder, then add water gradually until soft peaks form. Tint portions in your chosen colors and adjust thickness with more sugar or water as needed.
- Outline each cookie, then flood the centers and nudge the icing into the corners. Once the base sets slightly, add bows, ribbons, and small details. A pinch of edible glitter or sprinkles gives a festive finish.