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Candy Corn Cookies

November 16, 2023 by Julie - The Recipe Life Leave a Comment

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This simple Candy Corn Cookies recipe yields a pillowy-soft sugar cookie full of color and delight, perfect for your fall party!

Pile of baked delicious candy corn cookies.

We were hooked on these cookies from the first batch! Candy Corn Cookies are sweet but not overly sugary sugar cookies. They are the perfect at-home snack cookie to nibble. And a coffee lover’s dream! My husband says they are amazing with a strong cup of coffee in the morning!

Candy Corn Cookies are virtually mess-free, making them perfect for ages 1-100. They are a great treat for the fall party at school, snack time at daycare, and all your Halloween and Thanksgiving parties.

A line up of candy corn cookies on a dessert board.

How to make Candy Corn Cookies

Don’t let the different colored dough scare you. These fun fall cookies are as simple as they are sweet! With ingredients already stocked in the pantry, the dough comes together seamlessly and is easy to work. Coloring the dough does take a little thought. However, I have a few tricks of the trade to share about that. Now it’s as easy as ever! These candy corn cookies are worth it!

Ingredients

  • 1 cup of butter, 2 sticks, softened at room temperature
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 teaspoon of baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract
  • 3 cups of flour
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • Food coloring, yellow and orange
ingredients to candy corn sugar cookies.

Directions for Candy Corn Cookies

First, cream the butter in a stand mixer or in a bowl using a hand-held electric mixer until smooth.

Creamed butter in a stand mixer.

Then, completely mix in the sugar. Next, add the egg, baking powder, and vanilla. Mix until creamy.

  • Completely incorporated sugar into creamed butter.
  • Mixed in egg, vanilla, and baking powder.

Now, lightly whisk the flour and salt in a medium bowl. Slowly mix them into the wet ingredients in the mixer, one cup at a time. It is done once the dough is no longer “sticky” and has a play-dough-like feel. The dough should have pulled away from the sides of the bowl and will be easy to form into a ball.

  • Adding flour: The final step to making sugar cookie dough.
  • Mixing sugar cookie dough.
  • Finished sugar cookie dough.

Next, split the dough into three equal parts. Color one part yellow, one part orange, and leave one uncolored. *See notes below for best results.* Layer them into a plastic-wrapped line bread pan on one half of the pan(for a single recipe.) The first layer is yellow, then orange, and lastly white. Chill for at least 2 hours in the refrigerator.

  • Yellow, orange and natural dough balls for candy corn cookies.
  • First layer of dough in the bread pan is yellow.
  • The middle layer of candy corn cookie dough in bread pan.
  • Layered white, yellow, and orange cookie dough in a bread pan.
  • plastic wrapped cookie dough for chilling.

Once the dough is chilled, it is time to shape it and preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line cookie baking sheets with parchment paper. Then remove the dough from the bread pan and plastic wrap and cut it into 1/4 inch thick slices. On a cutting board, take one slice and, angling the knife, cut it into a triangle. Continue making triangles all the way across the slice. Then, place the candy corn cookies on the prepared baking sheet. Pat in a sprinkle of sugar for an added touch of fun.

  • A slice of candy corn cookie dough ready to be shaped.
  • Cut candy corn cookie dough.
  • Cut candy corn cookie dough.
  • A pan of candy corn shaped sugar cookies on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.

Finally, bake these candy corn sugar cookies for 8-10 minutes. Remove them from the oven and let them sit on the baking sheet for a few minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack.

  • Candy corn cookies on a cooling rack.
  • Candy corn cookies cooling on a rack.

Store candy corn cookies in an airtight container for up to 7 days with a piece of sliced bread(to keep them super soft.) You can freeze candy corn cookies for up to one month.

Notes

Double this recipe for parties or larger families. The single recipe is perfect for a day or two of cookie-snacking heaven, but other than that, you’ll want more cookies.

A bite taken out of a yummy candy corn cookie perfect for Halloween and Thanksgiving parties.

Having trouble getting the parchment paper to lie flat? Crumple it up and smooth it out before fitting it onto the cookie baking sheet. No more curled edges!

Making yellow and orange dough: A single batch of cookies and a third of the dough takes roughly 12 drops of yellow for the yellow portion. Then, it will take 10-12 drops of yellow and 3-4 drops of red to color the dough orange. Remember, adding more color is easy, but you can’t remove it without making more dough to dilute the color.

When coloring the dough: Split the dough into three equal(ish) portions. In the bowl attached to your stand mixer, color that dough yellow using the stand mixer to blend the color. After the yellow dough is mixed, place the yellow dough in a different bowl. Transfer another uncolored portion of dough into the stand mixer bowl and color that portion orange using the red and yellow food coloring. Coloring the dough this way saves your muscles and doesn’t mix colors.

Do you have to chill the sugar cookie dough? Chilling the dough makes it easier to cut and form into candy corn shapes; however, it is not completely necessary. If you forgo chilling the dough, the candy corn cookies will spread out more during baking and potentially lose their shape. Need cookies faster? Try chilling the dough in the freezer for 30 minutes instead of the refrigerator for 2 hours.

Party ready candy corn cookies on a dessert board.

More Great Fall Recipes

Nothing says fall like a nice warm bowl of soup! From the Ranch and taco seasonings, tender ground beef, sweet shoepeg corn, and delicious pinto, kidney, and black beans, this Santa Fe Soup recipe is full of flavor! Irresistably good to eat and easy to make, this soup will make it into your meal rotation in no time.

Pumpkin everything is how we do fall, and these are our must-try recipes! This Pumpkin Pie Crunch Bake recipe marries pumpkin and pecan pie. Making every pie a slice of heaven. Then there’s this Glazed Pumpkin Cookie recipe that takes garden zucchini and makes a delightful and soft bit of pumpkin amazingness. Lastly is our scrumptious Pumpkin Bars with Cream Cheese Icing. So good! A true fall must-have!

Finally, nothing says fall other than crisp, sweet apples from the farmers market or orchid, and this Apple Dip recipe is the perfect fruit dip. This simple dip is a long-standing family recipe that will make fruit eaters out of everyone!

Baked candy corn cookies with sprinkles on top.
Pile of baked delicious candy corn cookies.

Candy Corn Cookies

This simple Candy Corn Cookie recipe yields a pillowy-soft sugar cookie full of color and delight, perfect for your fall party!
Print Recipe Pin Recipe
Prep Time 20 minutes mins
Cook Time 4 minutes mins
Chill Time 2 hours hrs
Course Dessert, Snack
Cuisine American
Servings 40 cookies

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cup butter 2 sticks, softened at room temperature
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3 cups flour
  • ¼ teaspoon salt
  • Food coloring yellow and orange

Instructions
 

  • Cream the butter in a stand mixer or in a bowl using a hand-held electric mixer until smooth.
  • Completely mix in the sugar. Next, add the egg, baking powder, and vanilla. Mix until creamy.
  • Lightly whisk the flour and salt in a medium bowl. Slowly mix them into the wet ingredients in the mixer, one cup at a time. It is done once the dough is no longer "sticky" and has a play-dough-like feel. The dough should have pulled away from the sides of the bowl and will be easy to form into a ball.
  • Split the dough into three equal parts. Color one part yellow, one part orange, and leave one uncolored. *See notes below for best results.* Layer them into a plastic-wrapped line bread pan on one half of the pan(for a single recipe.) The first layer is yellow, then orange, and lastly white. Chill for at least 2 hours in the refrigerator.
  • Once the dough is chilled, it is time to shape it and preheat the oven. Preheat the oven to 350°F and line cookie baking sheets with parchment paper. Then remove the dough from the bread pan and plastic wrap and cut it into 1/4 inch thick slices. On a cutting board, take one slice and, angling the knife, cut it into a triangle. Continue making triangles all the way across the slice. Then, place the candy corn cookies on the prepared baking sheet. Pat in a sprinkle of sugar for an added touch of fun.
  • Bake these candy corn sugar cookies for 8-10 minutes. Remove them from the oven and let them sit on the baking sheet for a few minutes before transferring them to a cooling rack.
    Store candy corn cookies in an airtight container for up to 7 days with a piece of sliced bread(to keep them super soft.) You can freeze candy corn cookies for up to one month.

Notes

Double this recipe for parties or larger families. The single recipe is perfect for a day or two of cookie-snacking heaven, but other than that, you’ll want more cookies.
Having trouble getting the parchment paper to lie flat? Crumple it up and smooth it out before fitting it onto the cookie baking sheet. No more curled edges!
Making yellow and orange dough: A single batch of cookies and a third of the dough takes roughly 12 drops of yellow for the yellow portion. Then, it will take 10-12 drops of yellow and 3-4 drops of red to color the dough orange. Remember, adding more color is easy, but you can’t remove it without making more dough to dilute the color.
When coloring the dough: Split the dough into three equal(ish) portions. In the bowl attached to your stand mixer, color that dough yellow using the stand mixer to blend the color. After the yellow dough is mixed, place the yellow dough in a different bowl. Transfer another uncolored portion of dough into the stand mixer bowl and color that portion orange using the red and yellow food coloring. Coloring the dough this way saves your muscles and doesn’t mix colors.
Do you have to chill the sugar cookie dough? Chilling the dough makes it easier to cut and form into candy corn shapes; however, it is not completely necessary. If you forgo chilling the dough, the candy corn cookies will spread out more during baking and potentially lose their shape. Need cookies faster? Try chilling the dough in the freezer for 30 minutes instead of the refrigerator for 2 hours.
Keyword Candy Corn Cookies

Filed Under: Desserts, Food & Recipes, Side Dish, Snack Tagged With: delicious dessert, kid-friendly, snack

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