These easy, homemade gingersnap cookies are thin and crispy, and rolled in sparkly coarse sugar for the perfect crunchy ginger snap cookie recipe. These ginger snaps are a great make ahead cookie - either bake them ahead, or store the frozen cookie dough in the freezer for later!

Hi hi! Just popping in to share the recipe for these homemade gingersnap cookies!
This ginger snap cookie recipe is a twist on my soft and chewy ginger molasses cookies - I tweaked the recipe to make it a little thinner, and baked them longer to give the perfect thin gingersnap cookie that is crunchy around the edges and slightly chewy in the middle. If you're familiar with gingernut biscuits, these are my perfect version of that! They make a great holiday cookie, but to be honest, I make these year round.
The best part? These are done in 30 minutes - the dough is ready to go by the time your oven is preheated.


How to make Thin and Crispy Cookies - the recipe testing process
I often get a lot of questions about how I tweak a recipe - now that I have been running my food blog for a number of years, I often turn to my own recipes as a jumping off point when working on a new recipe.
For this ginger snap recipe, I used my ginger molasses cookies as a starting point. I love the recipe, but wanted something slightly thinner and crunchier, so here are the changes that I made, which are often changes I make in other cookie recipes too to manipulate them how I like.
- Changed the ratio of brown sugar to white sugar. My ginger molasses cookies have a higher ratio of brown sugar to white, which makes them thicker and spread less. I switched up the ratios for these ginger snap cookies, meaning the cookies spread more, and have a perfect chewy texture which gets crunchy around the edges.
- Drop the flour content sightly. This increases the ratio of butter to flour, meaning the cookie spreads a little more in the oven.
- Increase the molasses. I tweaked it by just a little, but this help with spread.
- Increase baking soda. I use baking soda rather than baking powder in the cookies, and increased the quantity slightly to ensure there was enough to give the cookies a little rise and not be cancelled out by the molasses. My general rule is baking soda helps with spread, and baking powder helps with puff.
- Bake for longer. This is a pretty simple one, but to get that lovely crunchy gingersnap cookie, I increased the bake time slightly. If you want them even more crunchy, bake them for a little longer!
Community Review
“These are amazing!! Will absolutely be making again. May have smashed back one too many when soft and warm out of the oven but they're just as good when cooled and crispy. Giving me crunchy dunkable gingernut vibes which I haven't found in a recipe before!”
—Kylie



How to freeze cookie dough
This gingersnap cookie recipe is great to make ahead - the dough stores super well frozen, so you can pull it out and bake whenever you need.
It is important to not coat the balls of dough in the sugar before you freeze them, otherwise the sugar will get all weird and weepy when you bring them out to re bake.
To freeze the dough, scoop it out, roll into balls, then flash freeze the dough and store in the freezer in an airtight container or bag for up to three months.
For more tips and tricks on freezing dough and baking from frozen, check out my post: How to freeze cookie dough


How to bake Gingersnaps from Frozen
I tested this out with some of the gingersnap cookie dough that I had frozen, and found that the best way to bake the frozen dough and get the most similar outcome is to bake it at a lower temperature - 325°f / 160°c (I cover this more on other cookies in my post on how to freeze cookie dough). This gives the frozen dough more time to spread.
When you are ready to bake from frozen, remove the dough from the freezer and leave it to stand at room temperature to soften very slightly while the oven preheats. This makes the surface of the cookie dough ball slightly sticky, and means the sugar will stick to the outside.
Roll the cookies in sugar and bake for 17-18 minutes or until the cookies are your desired level of doneness.

❤️ Made this recipe and love it? ❤️
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Answers to your baking questions
Over the years, many of you have asked me questions about:
- baking in grams
- adjusting oven temperatures
- what kind of salt to use
- and many more!
I've curated and answered them all for your easy reference in this frequently asked questions post!
30 Minute Thin and Crispy Gingersnap Cookies
- Prep Time: 10 minutes
- Cook Time: 15 minutes
- Total Time: 30 minutes
- Yield: 22 cookies 1x
- Category: Cookies
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: American
Description
These easy, homemade gingersnap cookies are thin and crispy, and rolled in sparkly coarse sugar for the perfect crunchy ginger snap cookie recipe. These ginger snaps are a great make ahead cookie - either bake them ahead, or store the frozen cookie dough in the freezer for later!
Ingredients
- 225g butter, at room temperature
- 100g light or dark brown sugar
- 200g granulated sugar
- 40g unsulphured molasses (blackstrap works too)
- 1 large egg (50g without the shell), at room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
- 290g all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp (6g) baking soda
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 4 tsp (8g) ground ginger
- 1 tsp ground cinnamon
- ½ tsp ground cardamom
- Turbinado / demerara / raw sugar for rolling
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°f / 180°c. Line 2-3 baking sheets with parchment paper (you may have to bake these in several batches depending on how many trays your oven can tolerate).
- In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the butter, brown sugar, granulated sugar, and molasses together on high speed until light and fluffy. Add the egg and vanilla and mix to combine. Sift together the flour, baking soda, salt and spices in a small bowl. Add to the mixer and mix on low until just combined.
- Using a 2 tbsp spring loaded cookie scoop, scoop balls of dough (approx 45g each), and place them onto a prepared baking sheet. I like to do 6 on each sheet then increase to 8 when I know how much space they will take up. Roll each ball of dough between your hands to form a ball, then roll in the turbinado sugar before placing on the baking sheet. Leave any mixture that you are not baking off just yet in the bowl and scoop just before baking.
- Bake the cookies for 16-17 minutes or until puffy and set around the edges. Remove from the oven, and if you like, scoot the cookies into a rounder shape using a cookie cutter slightly larger than the cookie. Cool on the pan for 5 minutes - the cookies will deflate slightly as they cool. Transfer to a wire rack and allow to cool completely. Repeat the baking process with the remaining cookie dough.
- Store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to a week.
Notes
If you want your ginger snap cookies to be more crunchy, increase the bake time by 1-2 minutes.
Store gingersnap cookies in an airtight container at room temperature. They will keep for up to a week stored correctly.
I haven't tried freezing the baked cookie - I would freeze the dough as fresh baked is always so much nicer!
I also made these with my one teaspoon cookie scoop, which makes dough balls that are 6g in size. I followed the recipe as written but just scooped them smaller and did 20 per half sheet pan (they do spread a little), and baked them for 10-11 minutes for super crunchy, delicious cookies! I got about 6 pans worth, which gave me 120 cookies.


Comments
Patricia Battafarano says
They are stunning!!! I did 40 cookies (22 grs each Ball before oven). It’s going to be a delicius treat for this Holiday Season ✨🧸✨
Katie says
Best ginger cookie I've ever made. So quick and easy, and the texture is amazing. I think better than standard gingerbread as it takes way less time and is pretty foolproof 🙂 Got a lot of compliments on these!
Mike says
Really great recipe, everyone loved them. Nice spice level and they're lovely and crispy. Second time I made them I added some chopped up bits of crystallised ginger too (because I had some and I love it) and it didn't ruin the recipe (!) and that tasted good too.
Erin Clarkson says
Yummm I really want to try that too! I love crystallised ginger
Mary says
These are the best gingersnaps I have made. I highly recommend this recipe!!
Krista says
This is THE BEST ginger snap recipe. A perfect balance of spices and they are crispy but chewy. I have been looking for a good ginger snap recipe for years. My search is over. This one is a keeper! Thank you!
Aimee says
Yum my picky 5 year old who won’t even eat chocolate chip cookies LOVES these! Thanks for another great recipe
Christina says
Now that's a GREAT cookie! My idea of the perfect chewy molasses ginger cookie. Thank you for sharing it!
Colleen Delawder says
These are our new favorite cookies! Absolutely delicious. I substituted all spice for cardamom just because that’s what I had on hand. I love that you included the weight of each ingredient, no guessing. Thank you for the recipe!
Nicole McNab says
It’s not often you can follow a recipe and they come out looking like the photo in the recipe, but these do every single time. Thanks for the measurements in grams not only is it accurate but less washing up, win win. Such a nice easy recipe and absolutely delicious final product!!!!
Jess says
I took a chance on this recipe, making it for my Christmas cookie boxes without testing it first, and I’m so glad I did!! They were simple to make. The flavor and snap was perfect! Will definitely be making these again.
KAR FEI says
HELLO HELLO LADIES AND GENTLEMEN ,CHILDREN OF ALL AGES .
COULD Y’all PLEASEE TAKE A FEW MOMENT OF YOUR LIFETIME TO SEE MY COMMENT PLEASE!
This gingersnap or whatever cookie it’s called is THE BEST GINGER COOKIE RECIPE EVeR !!!!!!!!!!!!!
I baked this today and the resulting texture was gorgeous and it tasted absouloutly HEAVEN!!!!
!!!!!IF U ARE FINDING A GINGER COOKIE RECIPE, USE THISSSSSSSZ!!!!!!!!!!!!!
Thanks for wasting your lifetime reading this <3
Jodie says
Yummy!!! Just what I was looking for. A proper gingerSNAP. Thanks for the recipe! It's a keeper 🙂
Ann. Wrage says
I do ounces, cups, teaspoons etc as measurements.
Erin Clarkson says
nice! I do grams as measurements.
Seasons01 says
Are you asking her to convert it? It's better to buy a scale and measure in one bowl. No measuring cups are needed, less washing and way more accurate. Way easier.
D.J. says
Fantastic Ann, you do you!
Andrea Phillips says
Oh my gosh, these are amazing! I've never been able to eat snaps without milk, but these are fantastic all on their own. I did not include the cardamom since it was way too expensive to buy for just a small amount in one trial recipe. I didn't miss it. They are BIG if you us 45g balls as instructed. (I wouldn't put more than 6 on my baking sheet.) Next time I'll try 25g or 30g balls.
Karen says
So delicious, everyone loved them! The sugar crunch was the best part. In the future I'd make them about half the recommended size, 40g balls give very big cookies as they spread a lot.
Cordelia says
So easy to make and turned out great, perfectly crispy and chewy. I froze the dough and added about 2 minutes to bake from frozen, as recommended. This will be a go-to recipe for years to come!
Ashke says
I love this recipe, it was easy for me to follow and came together beautifully. I made these as a guft for my OH this Holiday and they loved them.
My only question is what is the bottom of these cookies meant to look like? Mine have a weird bottom, they have a light ring with a darker centre. I wonder if it may be because of my parchment paper as each cookie did leave a oil spot on the parchment paper.
Erin Clarkson says
Hmmm I'm not sure sorry I haven't had that happen before!
jasy says
Seasons01 says
They spread and are not as pictured. Taste great but that is where it ends.
Erin Clarkson says
Sorry they didn't work out! Did you make the recipe by weight? If so, your oven temp is likely off
Carmen Settineri says
Suspect my dough was a bit TOO warm after handling, because a few of the cookies had some rather crazy spreading in the oven. That being said, the cookies that spread out excessively got extra dark and the caramelized flavor was divine! Also lucky for me I had a hunch the dough might be a bit crazy before I put my trays in the oven, and I set aside some dough balls in the fridge as an experiment. Will bake the chilled dough tomorrow to see how things turn out, but even with a few of them not looking as nicely uniform, this recipe was a keeper. I just need to play around with it a bit to get everything down pat.
Michele says
Mine did not crack at all. Is that because I chose not to roll them in sugar before baking? I didn't have cardomon, so I used allspice. They taste "ok"
Maybe, I'll try recipe as exact next time??
Erin Clarkson says
Yep I would recommend making them as written!
erica says
I have made these over and over again (more times than I can count) and almost ALWAYS gluten free. I use King Arthur's Measure for Measure GF flour in the same amounts listed in the recipe and nobody knows the difference.
PMA says
Made these this morning from your quick and easy recipe to follow!
I had ghee to use up so replaced butter. Worked a treat for morning tea.
Thank you
alice says
Thank you so much for this recipe! After buying all of the retail ginger snaps and left unsatisfied... I finally made some at home. This recipe at 16 minutes in oven makes the cookie perfectly crunchy (throughout the whole cookie) and not too sweet! It was great as a "breakfast cookie" with our coffee this morning! Bonus love for how easy the cookie was to handle/relocate right out of the oven! Thanks again
Panache Kitchen & Bar says
Baking soda will only do something when there is an acid in the recipe it can react with, such as buttermilk. Your cookies will spread without the baking soda.
Baking powder is baking soda with acid which is why it makes your cookies "puff".
Erin Clarkson says
both brown sugar and molasses are acidic 🙂
Jen says
So delicious and super-easy to make. Absolute winner of a recipe!
Kal says
Loved how easily everything came together. Using grams is such a game changer. Cookies turned out just as you said - thin and crispy.. and delicious. Thanks Erin!
Cookie Monster says
It took me 5 minutes to scroll through all the chit chat and photos. By the time I got to the recipe I was no longer interested and gave up.
Erin Clarkson says
Good thing you wasted even more of your time leaving a rude comment then! If only there was a jump to recipe button at the top.
Victoria says
I’ve made these more times than I can count! They a huge family favorite ❤️! They turn out perfect every single time. Thank you Erin.
Emma says
These were delicious, wish I froze some of the dough as now I'm going to make more from scratch again after only 2 days 😛
Every recipe of Erin's I've tried as always turned out so well. Thank You!!
Becky Fishel says
Why oh why do recipes use the metric measurements?!?
If you’re going to use it add the US measurements to it.
Not every one has the tools to convert the recipe ie older generation.
Aggravating as heck.
Erin Clarkson says
I'm not in the US so why would I add US measurements? You are on the internet so there is definitely a tool to convert.... or you're very welcome to find a different free recipe if mine does not suit you.
Kelly says
It's called the WORLD WIDE WEB FOR A REASON...USE IT. ALSO NOT EVERYTHING REVOLVES AROUND YOUR STUPID COUNTRY. SHE DOESN'T EVEN LIVE IN AMERICA YOU MUPPET
Phyllis says
These were great cookies! Just enough “snap” and easy recipe. I followed the directions exactly except made the cookies a little smaller so reduced the cooking time to 12 min, came out perfect.
Sarah says
made these with my mom this weekend and added dried ginger chunks (uncrystallized) by paradise green to dough and they were DELISH. super strong ginger flavor and adds chewier texture. we LOVE this recipe and will add to our list of christmas cookies this year! thank you, erin!
Adt says
I love this recipe! Yum.
Greg says
Hi - these are incredible. I added a little cayenne because I love a fiery ginger biscuit and I was not disappointed. Love your recipes and your dedication to baking as it should be done, i.e. with scales!
Carol Sloss says
CAN YOU PLEASE PUT THE MEASUREMENTS IN CUPS OR TABLESPOONS, OR TEASPOONS INSTEAD OF GRAMS
Erin Clarkson says
Hi Carol, you're welcome to google the conversions but I do not provide them. Next time please make sure your Caps button isn't on, it's not pleasant.
AJ says
Mine didn’t crinkle like yours, even though I followed the instruction really thoroughly. What could be gone wrong?
Erin Clarkson says
Hi! Have you checked your oven is properly calibrated? It could also be the sugar that I used on the outside - if you used something slightly different it may not have crinkled as much
Heather Hulsey says
Excellent recipe. I went with the slightly underbaked version for a chewy cookie with crisp edges. They are fantastic. Thank you for sharing your recipes. I have to say, there are so many food bloggers who post recipes that just don't work and that is never the case with yours. Every recipe of yours that I've tried has been obviously well-tested. It's much appreciated.
Anneke says
These cookies are always a big hit! Just made them for a halloween party of my daughter and the batch was gone within 10 minutes, no joke. I make 30gr balls for a slightly smaller cookie also to make sure they do not touch each other while baking. Thanks Erin, for again another spot on recipe!!
Steph says
Yum. Great recipe, and thank you for doing the measurement in grams. I suspect my scoop is smaller than yours, but I adjusted the time accordingly and the cookies are delicious. I used blackstrap molasses and raw sugar to coat (what I had on hand) and the cookies not only tasted wonderful, they looked fantastic.
Kit says
Is it ok to omit cardamom? I don’t have any!!
Erin Clarkson says
Yep!
Emilie P says
Second time trying this recipe: they taste amazing! I used the grams version (I don't have cup measurements where I live :)), and first batch the cookies were too spread and flat. So I put the dough balls in the fridge for 30min and the second batch is perfect ❤️ I feel it's going to be my Christmas classic! Thank you for the detailed recipe! Greetings from France
Erin Clarkson says
So happy you loved! Thank you so much! Gingersnap cookies are my fave
Karen A Mende says
The Gingersnap cookies are amazing and very simple to make. I saw a comment inquiry about making these cookies Gluten-Free. I used Bob's Red Mill 1 to 1 GF flour, and the end result was fabulous. My family did not even know! I will add these treats to my cookie rotation. By the way, I appreciate that your ingredient list is noted in weight. Thank you Emily.
Erin Clarkson says
Ahhh amazing thank you so much, reviews like this are so so helpful!
Rachel Adams says
Could I bake one giant cookie in the size & shape of my spring form pan? To go under a pumpkin cheesecake :)? I'm going to try it. At worst, I'll just crumble it and make the crust the normal way of it fails.
Erin Clarkson says
I'm not sure sorry! It's quite a spready recipe so it may be too buttery?
Layla Hoskin says
These were absolutely amazing! Came out perfect on the first try. I toned back the molasses by 5g and they were just right 🙂
DeeAnna says
Made this recipe as written. I used coarse demarara sugar to roll the balls of dough. There's a pleasant spicy burn from the 4 tsp ginger powder, as it should be for a gingersnap.
After thoroughly cooling, these thin spicy cookies are nicely crisp around the edges with a bit of chewiness in the center.
The recipe calls for 2 Tablespoons of dough per cookie and that makes a much larger cookie than I prefer. I'll try reducing the amount to maybe 1 TBL per cookie and see how that works.
Other than that minor tweak, I think these cookies are very tasty, and I'll definitely be keeping this recipe. Thank you, Erin!
Erin Clarkson says
So happy you loved them!
Kelly Lennon says
I’m going to try this recipe for a cookie swap; do you think I can just make smaller cookies or would I have to make other adjustments? Thank you!
Erin Clarkson says
Hi, no you should be able to do them smaller - you will just have to adjust the bake time!
Joee says
This us the USA .We are not on the metric system for weights and measures so why would you publish this recipe in grams when not one in a hundred have any idea what a gram is.
Erin Clarkson says
Spoiler alert - this is actually the internet, it does exist outside of the USA strangely enough! I live in New Zealand - if you haven't heard of it it's a little country right at the bottom of the world and we are one of the very many countries which use the metric system. Hope this helps!
DeeAnna says
I have lived in the US all my life and always convert volume-based recipes to weight measurements. Even my grandmother (born 1898) had a kitchen scale, so measuring by volume isn't the only way Americans can measure ingredients. Weighing gives more consistent results especially with recipes that use a lot of flour. Not to mention weighing reduces the number of dishes that have to be washed. Sticky ingredients like peanut butter, molasses, and honey are a pain to measure by volume, but are easy to weigh. There are lots of reliable, inexpensive scales nowadays that work great in the kitchen. A US ounce (weight) is equal to 28.3 grams, so if you prefer ounces (weight) to grams, that's how you make that conversion.
Cassandra says
I was craving ginger snap cookies. I’ve never made them and I feel so fortunate to have found your delicious recipe! Thank you for putting the ingredients into grams. So much easier and precise to weigh everything out. This recipe is a keeper! Thank you
Sam says
Very good and my picky son likes them!
Courtney says
I made these yesterday for a Christmas gathering and everyone loved them. Three people even told me they were the best ginger cookies they’ve ever had! Very easy to make and relatively few ingredients - I’ll be making these again and again 🙂
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