Grandma's Old Fashioned Molasses Cookies Recipe on Food52 (2024)

Make Ahead

by: hardlikearmour

December16,2014

4.3

3 Ratings

  • Makes A lot o' cookies (depending on cookie cutters)

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Author Notes

These are not the molasses cookies you are thinking of. They are a rolled dough cookie that stay tender after baking. They are a family favorite passed down from my great grandmother, Anna Schwartz nee Schmidt, so they are likely German in origin. This is the one recipe I really won't tinker with. My dad's mother handed the recipe down with a couple of omissions, so when my mom first made them they didn't taste quite right. My mom sleuthed the full recipe out by watching my grandma make them -- grandma used half lard instead of all Crisco and used coffee instead of water. The other big key to these cookies is using the strongest blackstrap molasses you can find. Grandma would get hers at a local co-op. I find Plantation to be the best variety for making the cookies taste "right". Fair warning: If you're not a fan of molasses flavor, you will not be a fan of these cookies. —hardlikearmour

What You'll Need

Ingredients
  • 1/2 cupvegetable shortening
  • 1/2 cuplard
  • 1 cupbrown sugar, lightly packed
  • 3/4 cupblackstrap molasses
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cupcoffee
  • 2 tablespoonswhite vinegar
  • 1 teaspooncinnamon
  • 1 teaspoonground ginger
  • 1 teaspoonbaking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoonsalt
  • 4 1/2 cups all-purpose flour, plus additional if needed
Directions
  1. Cream the vegetable shortening, lard, and brown sugar in a large bowl until light and fluffy. Mix in the rest of the wet ingredients.
  2. Whisk dry ingredients together in a medium bowl, then gradually mix in to the wet ingredients (about a third at a time). The dough should be slightly stiff, so add up to an additional 1/2 cup of flour if needed. Chill for several hours.
  3. Preheat the oven to 350º F, with racks in the upper and lower middle positions. Roll out the dough on lightly floured surface or between 2 layers of parchment to 1/4-inch thickness. The less flour you use for rolling, the more tender the cookies will be.
  4. Cut into desired shapes and transfer to cookie sheets. Bake for 10-12 minutes. Transfer to a cooling rack. Sprinkle with sugar while warm or allow to cool and frost with American buttercream or royal icing as desired. (My grandma would top some with sugar, and some with frosting. We would commonly decorate them as a family for Christmas.)
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See what other Food52ers are saying.

  • mrslarkin

  • Bevi

  • lapadia

  • aargersi

  • hardlikearmour

Recipe by: hardlikearmour

I am an amateur baker and cake decorator. I enjoy cooking, as well as eating and feeding others. I live in the beautiful Pacific Northwest with my husband and our menagerie. I enjoy outdoor activities including hiking, mushroom hunting, tide pooling, beach combing, and snowboarding.

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12 Reviews

mrslarkin December 17, 2014

These are right up my alley. Thanks for sharing, Sara. You look a lot like your great grandma. Who else is in the photo?

lapadia December 17, 2014

I'm thinking you look a lot like the lady sitting down on the left; yes, who else is in the photo?

hardlikearmour December 18, 2014

The woman is Amelia Schmidt (nee Schwede) and the man is Carl Schmidt who are my great-great-grandparents. Their kids are Anna, Otto, Elsie, Albert, Emil, and Ella.

lapadia December 18, 2014

Thanks, love the photo, wow, GG parents, you are lucky to have it around!

Bevi December 16, 2014

My grandmother, Anna Lutter, did not make many cookies (she specialized in pastries with poppy seed and prune paste fillings) but she did make a molasses cookie with shortening. She used a glass to cut out circles.

hardlikearmour December 17, 2014

I wonder if the recipe is similar?

Bevi December 17, 2014

I remember that they were very spicy to my taste and that she used Crisco. I will ask my mom and dad when I see them in a week if they can remember the recipe.

lapadia December 16, 2014

I love molasses; so lovely to know about your Great Grandma’s “cookie legacy,” thank for sharing.

hardlikearmour December 16, 2014

I'm happy to share! I'm interested to know if other families of German descent have similar recipes.

Sue B. December 2, 2020

My grandmother (Vedesta Rademacher nee Arens) of German made these cookies. My absolute favorite ever. The coffee and the lard are the key to this cookie’s excellent taste and texture.

aargersi December 16, 2014

I love molasses! I will love these cookies!

hardlikearmour December 16, 2014

I'm always afraid that they're an acquired taste (sorta like marmite :-) ), but I think they're delicious.

Grandma's Old Fashioned Molasses Cookies Recipe on Food52 (2024)

FAQs

Why didn t my molasses cookies crack? ›

Why don't my molasses cookies crack? Molasses cookie dough won't have those signature cracks on top if the dough is too wet. The cracks happen when the surface of the dough dries up. Rolling in sugar really helps this because the sugar binds the moisture and dries out the dough.

Why are my molasses cookies bitter? ›

Avoid blackstrap molasses–it's too strong for this recipe and will make the cookies bitter.

What kind of molasses do you use for cookies? ›

Light molasses is the sweetest and mildest out of the bunch because it is made from the first boiling cycle,” she said. “I like to use this type of molasses because it adds moisture to cookies, resulting in a soft and chewy texture.”

Why are my molasses cookies cakey? ›

Baking powder or flour in excess will cause cookies to rise more, making them more fluffy and cakey. Increased sugar will make them caramelize more and increased fat will make the dough heavier and richer, all increasing retention of water in the dough- these all add up to chewier cookies.

How to get cracks in molasses cookies? ›

Use fresh baking soda.

The baking soda causes the cookies to rise in the oven, then deflate slightly as they cool. This is what causes the cracks to form. If the baking soda is too old, it won't serve that purpose.

How to get cookies to crack on top? ›

Coating the cookies with either type of sugar draws out moisture from their surface, promoting cracks by drying out their tops before the interiors set. But granulated sugar does so more efficiently because of its coarse, crystalline structure.

What happens if you add too much molasses to cookies? ›

Doubling up on molasses softened the cookies significantly.

Molasses is also extremely dark in color, so this batch of cookies turned out to be a deep brown.

Why is my molasses cookie dough so sticky? ›

When cookie dough is too sticky, you may have an imbalance of wet and dry ingredients. You can fix this by adding a teaspoon of flour or cornstarch at a time until your dough is just how you want. The added flour or cornstarch will absorb the excess liquid and reduce the dough's overall stickiness.

What kind of molasses is in Grandma's? ›

Grandma's comes in two grades: Original Molasses and Robust Molasses. Both are unsulfured molasses, making them the finest quality of sugarcane molasses available. You can trust that Grandma's Molasses will bring homemade goodness every time and add love to every meal.

What kind of molasses is Grandma's original? ›

Grandma's® Molasses is the highest quality, unsulfured, sun-ripened sugarcane molasses. It contains no preservatives, artificial flavors or artificial colors and is fat free, gluten free and Kosher. After the sugarcane is cut and crushed, the liquids are extracted and boiled.

Is grandma's unsulphured molasses the same as blackstrap? ›

Unsulphured molasses can be light, dark or blackstrap, as long as it hasn't been treated with sulphur dioxide. Most commercially produced molasses is unsulphured.

What kind of molasses is best for baking? ›

Light Molasses

How to use it: This is the most commonly sold molasses, mostly used in baking. Light molasses helps to make cookies softer and bread crustier, and it can also be used in marinades and sauces.

Are ginger snaps and molasses cookies the same? ›

What is the difference between molasses cookies and gingersnaps? They are the exact same base dough with molasses and ginger, but molasses cookies are soft and chewy and gingersnaps are historically crispy and crunchy, hence the “snap”.

Why are my molasses cookies hard? ›

Form balls and roll in sugar: Just like snickerdoodles these cookies are rolled in granulated sugar before baking. Bake soft molasses cookies on a cookie sheet for 8-10 minutes. It's very important to not over bake the cookies or they will be hard and dry instead of soft and chewy.

Why are my cookies not cracking? ›

Issues with cracking usually derive from the sugar coating, not enough or expired baking powder or baking soda, or the oven temperature isn't hot enough. Solution: Granulated sugar is more effective at drying the surface than powdered sugar.

Why did my molasses cookies go flat? ›

OVEN IS TOO HOT

Oven temperatures are a crucial factor in baking. If your cookies consistently come out flat, you may have selected the wrong baking temperature. If you bake cookies using too much heat, the fats in the dough begin to melt before the other ingredients can cook together and form your cookie's rise.

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