Looking for a great Valentine’s Day sugar cookie recipe? These classic sugar cookies are decorated with royal icing in a variety of gorgeous Valentine’s Day designs. They make wonderful edible gifts!

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - a platter of assorted sugar cookies decorated for Valentine's Day | From SugarHero.com

I hope you’re ready to see a LOT of sugar cookies, because I got on a roll decorating these Valentine’s Day sugar cookies. First I couldn’t stop making different designs, then I couldn’t stop photographing them. (Then I couldn’t stop eating them, but that’s a tale for another day.) I just couldn’t narrow down my favorite designs and leave some out in the cold, so I’m sharing them all with you and you can pick and choose your favorites to recreate!

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - a platter of assorted sugar cookies decorated for Valentine's Day | From SugarHero.com

These Valentine’s Day Sugar Cookies are classic cookies in every sense of the word. They’re a basic roll-out sugar cookie, lightly flavored with vanilla (or almond, or lemon…baker’s choice!) and baked until golden around the edges but still soft in the middle, and topped with royal icing. They’re exactly what you think of when someone says “sugar cookies.” Sure, they’re not ground-breaking, but they’re the perfect blank slate for playing around and experimenting with different royal icing decorating techniques.

(If you prefer a soft baked sugar cookie or royal icing isn’t your thing, try my Big Soft Sugar Cookies. They are topped with buttercream and easily decorated with sprinkles.😉)

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - sugar cookies with swirled design and piped rosettes on top | From SugarHero.com
Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - sugar cookies with an elegant rose design made from royal icing | From SugarHero.com

I made all sorts of different designs, from simple zig-zags and hearts to more intricate roses. There are written instructions down below, and I’m also including a few step-by-step photos, and linking to a Live tutorial where I demonstrate these different cookie techniques.

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - photo tutorial showing how to outline and flood sugar cookies with royal icing | From SugarHero.com

The first step in ALL of these designs is flooding your cookie with a white royal icing base! Of course you can use any color, but I liked the clean look of starting with bright white.

There are a lot of different ways to work with royal icing, and every baker has her favorite method. I am a lazy baker, so I like to use the same consistency icing to both outline and flood my cookies. This streamlines the process, since you don’t need both a stiff and a fluid icing, but it does mean you need to be sure the icing you use is the right consistency and won’t run off the cookie. At any rate, you’ll first outline and then fill in the center of the cookie. Real Cookie Artists use something called a scriber tool to push royal icing around and fill in any gaps. Fake Cookie Artists use a toothpick because it’s what they already have in their kitchen. (Guess which one I am…?)

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - sugar cookies with a pretty heart border made out of royal icing | From SugarHero.com
Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - photo tutorial showing how to make a heart pattern out of royal icing | From SugarHero.com

Hearts are probably the easiest design to do, but that doesn’t mean they’re plain or boring! In fact, I LOVE a simple border of hearts all along the edge of the cookie–it just looks so classy and elegant.

You’ll want to work in small batches so that the white frosting doesn’t dry out before you can finish decorating the cookies. After you’ve flooded the cookies with white, immediately add dots of color either along the outer edge of the cookie, or just in random intervals all over. Take a scriber tool/toothpick and drag it through the dots, creating an elongated heart shape. Easy and cute!

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - close-up of sugar cookies with royal icing decorations | From SugarHero.com
Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - sugar cookies with a royal icing zig-zag pattern for Valentine's Day | From SugarHero.com
Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - photo tutorial showing how to make a zig-zag pattern out of royal icing | From SugarHero.com

Making abstract swirl or zig-zag designs is almost as easy as the hearts! For the swirl, just pipe random loops and squiggles on top of the white icing, then drag a toothpick through in a haphazard pattern to create a pretty swirled effect.

For the zig-zags, pipe alternating colors across your cookie, then drag a toothpick through top to bottom, then bottom to top, and continue alternating until you’ve gone across the whole cookie.

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - sugar cookies with an elegant rose design made out of royal icing | From SugarHero.com
Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - photo tutorial showing how to make an elegant rose design out of royal icing | From SugarHero.com

This elegant rose technique is one of my favorites! It’s a design I first saw on SweetAmbs (an amazing cookie site, by the way) and she gets all the credit for introducing me to this cool and easy abstract flower design.

The roses start with a blob of a light-colored frosting, then you layer on a darker shade and a dab of white in the middle. It literally only takes a few swirls of the toothpick to turn the blob into a beautiful rose! Of course, it’s more of an impressionistic rose, but once you add a few leaves around the edges, everyone will know what it is. Definitely check out the video below if you want to see this in action!

Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - close-up of hand holding a sugar cookie decorated with royal icing for Valentine's Day | From SugarHero.com

Finally, you can always use a stiff-consistency icing to pipe easy rosettes and leaves on top of your (hardened) decorated cookies, to give them a more 3D look. I liked doing this on both plain white and decorated cookies, both versions looked quite nice.

Here’s a Live video showing how to make these different designs! It was filmed vertically (oh, the follies of youth) so it’s not embedding nicely, so instead you can just click on the image and be taken to the video directly on my Facebook page.

Live Video – How to Decorate Valentine’s Day Sugar Cookies

How to Make Valentine's Day Sugar Cookies - live tutorial video with Elizabeth from SugarHero!

Tell me–which cookies are your favorite? Which ones would you want to try for Valentine’s Day?

Don’t miss our collection of the 10 Best Valentine’s Day Cookiessee the whole web story here!

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Valentine’s Day Sugar Cookies

5 from 6 votes
Looking for a great Valentine’s Day Sugar Cookie recipe? These classic sugar cookies are decorated with royal icing in a number of beautiful Valentine’s Day designs. They make wonderful edible gifts! 
Prep2 hours
Cook12 minutes
Total2 hours 12 minutes
Yields24 large cookies

Ingredients

FOR THE SUGAR COOKIES

  • 19 oz all-purpose flour, (4 ¼ cups)
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 12.25 oz granulated sugar, (1 ¾ cups)
  • 8 oz unsalted butter, (1 cup) at room temperature
  • 2 large eggs, at room temperature
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract, can substitute lemon or almond extract
  • 1 oz sour cream, (2 TBSP) at room temperature

FOR THE ROYAL ICING

TOOLS

  • Heart-shaped cookie cutter, about 3 inches wide
  • Piping tips, #2 round tip, small star tip, leaf tip
  • Piping bags
  • Pastry bag couplers

Instructions 

TO MAKE THE SUGAR COOKIES:

  • In a bowl, whisk together the flour, salt, and baking powder, and set aside for now.
  • In the bowl of a large stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, combine the butter and sugar, and mix everything together on medium speed until fluffy and well-mixed, about 1-2 minutes.
  • Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition, then add the vanilla extract and sour cream. With the mixer running on low, add the dry ingredients gradually, and mix until they’re just about incorporated. Stop the mixer when only a few streaks of flour remain. Scrape the bottom and sides of the bowl with a spatula, and finish mixing all the dough by hand.
  • Divide the dough in half and press each into a thin disc, wrapping well with plastic wrap. Refrigerate until firmer but not hard, about 30 minutes. (If you refrigerate it longer, it will probably need to sit on the counter for 10-15 minutes after refrigeration so it’s not rock-hard when you’re trying to roll it out.)
  • When you’re ready to bake the cookies, preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Place a disc of dough between two sheets of parchment or waxed paper, and roll out until it is 1/4-inch thick.
  • Use a 3-inch heart cookie cutter to cut out your cookies and place them on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Combine the scraps and re-roll the dough to cut more cookies. You should get about 24 large heart cookies. Put the sheet in the freezer for 10 minutes before baking to help the cookies hold their shape.
  • Bake the trays of cookies for 10-12 minutes, until the edges are just starting to take on color and they have lost the raw shine in the middle. Let them cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes, then remove them to wire racks to cool completely before decorating them.

TO MAKE THE ROYAL ICING:

  • Combine the meringue powder and water in the bowl of a large stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Mix them together on medium speed until foamy.
  • Stop the mixer and sift powdered sugar over the bowl. Beat on low speed until the sugar is incorporated. Scrape down the bottom and sides of the bowl, then add the corn syrup and flavoring.
  • Turn the mixer speed back to medium-high and mix for 5 minutes, until the royal icing is shiny, stiff, bright white, and voluminous. Do not mix on the highest speed, and do not mix for more than 5 minutes, or you may incorporate too many air bubbles and change the texture of your royal icing.
  • Separate out half of the icing to leave plain white, and press a piece of cling wrap on top right away so that it doesn’t form a crust.
  • Decide how many icing colors you want, and divide the remaining icing into that many bowls. Add a few drops of gel food coloring to each bowl of icing and stir by hand until the color is evenly distributed. Be aware that royal icing tends to darken a bit as it dries, so if you want pretty pastel colors, keep that in mind and don’t add too much coloring.
  • The frosting consistency right out of the mixer is fairly stiff, but for most of the designs, we’ll want a thinner consistency. The only thing that will require a thicker consistency is piping stiff rosettes onto decorated cookies. If you want to make this design, separate out a portion of stiff frosting in the color(s) of your choice, and store it in an airtight container for now. (Remember to press cling wrap directly on top every time!)
  • For all of the other designs, we’ll thin the frosting colors out by adding a small spoonful of water at a time, and stirring slowly until it’s incorporated. You have the right consistency when you lift up a spoonful of icing, let it drip back into the bowl, and it takes about 15 seconds for the trail of icing to fully disappear in the bowl. Add water a little bit at a time to each color until you achieve this consistency.
  • Place each color in a piping bag fitted with a small round tip (I recommend a #2 tip).

TO DECORATE THE COOKIES:

  • Most of the designs require piping colors onto wet frosting. I recommend working in small batches and flooding 2-3 cookies at a time with white frosting, then piping the designs on, then doing another small batch, to avoid having the royal icing dry out before the cookies are fully decorated.
  • To flood the cookies, fit a piping bag with a small round tip (I recommend a #2 tip) and fill it with white frosting. Draw a thin outline with the royal icing around the outside of a few cookies. Next fill the center of the cookie with royal icing. If you miss any spots, use the tip of the piping bag to nudge the icing into place, or use a toothpick to smooth out any rough lines. This is your blank canvas for making all the Valentine’s Day designs! Make sure to work quickly to decorate the cookies after they have been flooded.
  • To make swirled heart cookies: pipe dots of color along the outer edge of the cookie, spacing them about ½-inch apart. The dots should sink into the wet white icing fairly quickly. Take a toothpick and, starting at the top center of the heart, drag it through the line of colored dots. The dragging motion will create an elongated heart shape in each dot. You can also pipe randomly placed dots all over the cookie, and drag a toothpick through the dots individually to make hearts.
  • To make zigzag cookies: pipe lines of alternating colors horizontally across the white icing. Take a toothpick and drag it through the lines vertically. Once at the bottom of the cookie, move the toothpick over a little bit (about 1/8”) and drag it upwards, creating a zig-zag in the opposite direction. Continue this pattern until you’ve created lines across the whole cookie.
  • To make elegant rose cookies: these look best when made with two different shades of the same color, like pale pink and dark pink. Start with the pale pink and pipe several blobs on top of the cookie—refer to the picture tutorial to get a general idea of the shape. Take the darker pink color and pipe a line across the center of the blob. Finally, add a dot of white in the center. Now for the fun part! Take a toothpick and start swirling the colors together. It should only take a few swirls before they start to look like abstract roses. Add a few dots of green around the edges, and pull the dots of green out with a toothpick so they look like leaves.
  • To pipe stiff rosettes on cookies: the rosettes can be piped onto plain white cookies, or cookies that have been decorated with dots, stripes, or whatever else you like. Let the base cookies sit and dry for at least an hour before adding the rosettes on top. Place stiff consistency frosting in a piping bag fitted with a small star tip. Start in the center and pipe a small swirl outward in a rosette shape. You can do just 1 flower or several bunched together. Decorate the edges with small leaves piped with stiff green frosting, if desired.
  • The decorated cookies can be enjoyed the same day they are made, but the royal icing will probably take 8-12 hours to fully dry, so if you want to stack and store them, let them sit at room temperature overnight to dry and harden before packaging them.

Recipe Notes

A few notes on the royal icing: For the best results, the royal icing on the cookies needs to dry overnight before you package or store them, so be sure to factor this drying time into your cookie preparation. This recipe will probably produce too much royal icing for the cookies, but I greatly prefer to have a little extra icing versus not enough! If you find yourself with leftover icing, you can store it in the refrigerator in airtight container for up to a week, or freeze for 2-3 months. The icing will separate if left for more than a few hours, so when this happens, you can re-mix it to restore it to its original texture.
Original recipe: This recipe has been updated from when it was originally published. You can find the original version of the recipe here. 
Elegant Rose design: The Elegant Rose cookie is adapted from a design on SweetAmbs.com. This website is a great resource for all things sugar cookie and royal icing, and has many beautiful sugar cookie tutorials!

Measuring Tips

Our recipes are developed using weight measurements, and we highly recommend using a kitchen scale for baking whenever possible. However, if you prefer to use cups, volume measurements are provided as well. PLEASE NOTE: the adage “8 oz = 1 cup” is NOT true when speaking about weight, so don’t be concerned if the measurements don’t fit this formula.

Want to learn more about baking measurements and conversion?

Nutrition

Calories: 333kcal | Carbohydrates: 61g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 8g | Saturated Fat: 5g | Cholesterol: 34mg | Sodium: 119mg | Potassium: 66mg | Fiber: 0g | Sugar: 42g | Vitamin A: 255IU | Calcium: 19mg | Iron: 1.2mg
Tried this recipe?Snap a pic and hashtag it #SugarHero. We love to see your creations on our Instagram @elabau.

Meet Elizabeth!

Hi, I’m Elizabeth — a trained pastry chef, cookbook author, video instructor, and your new Baking BFF! I’m going to teach you everything you need to know to be a sugar hero. ❤️

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18 Comments

  1. I consider myself an expert cookie decorator and I found this to be a wonderful tutorial. Very informative with clear and consise direction not to mention the beautiful photos. Well done! So happy to have stumbled upon your post on Pinterest. Looking forward to more from you soon. Thanks!

  2. This looks great! I am making these for a baby shower and I am wondering how far in advance I can make these. I will be packaging them individually in baking bags with ribbon for guests to take home. Can you tell me the best way to store these?

    1. Vicki, you have a few options for storage; if making the cookies well in advance, you can bake the cookies and store them in an airtight container in the freezer for up to 3 months. Once the royal icing is added, they shouldn’t be frozen. I’d suggest keeping them in an airtight container (individually wrapped or not) and storing in a cool temperature room with low humidity (no fridge or freezer at this point).