Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (2024)

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Pecan Sandies have a shortbread-like cookie base studded with pecans and dusted with powdered sugar. This vintage Christmas cookie recipe from my mom’s recipe binder is a delicious choice to add to your holiday baking list.

Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (1)

If you like shortbread cookies as much as I do, you are going to love my Mom’s Pecan Sandies. They are not overly sweet and such a nostalgic choice to include among all the fudge and other indulgent sweets on a holiday cookie tray.

Our new Oregon town is so festive we feel like we packed our bags and landed smack in the middle of a Hallmark Christmas movie. There are lights and decorations everywhere you look. Christmas tree farms are abundant and the cooler weather does so much to catapult you straight into the holiday vibe.

I’m sitting to write this post on an especially chilly afternoon. My mom’s old recipe binder is next to me with her typewritten recipe for these Pecan Sandies resting on top. I miss her so much at this time of year and more and more with each big change in our lives that I can’t share with her. Mom would have loved this house and this town and what I wouldn’t give to be able to show it all to her.

But, she is here with me in spirit as I write this post about her recipe for Pecan Sandies. These nostalgic Christmas cookies bring back so many great memories.

Table of contents

  • Ingredients
  • How to Make Pecan Sandies
  • The Secret to the Best Pecan Sandies
  • Can You Freeze Pecan Sandies?
    • Freezing the Dough
    • How to Freeze Baked Pecan Sandies
  • More Holiday Treats from Mom’s Recipe Binder
Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (2)

A short list of ingredients and a unique baking method creates these tasty cookies.

Ingredients

  • Wet ingredients: softened butter, powdered sugar, water, and pure vanilla extract
  • Dry ingredients: All-purpose flour and salt.
  • Pecans: Finely chopped.

How to Make Pecan Sandies

Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (3)
  1. Wet ingredients: Using an electric mixer, combine the softened butter the powdered sugar, a very small amount of water, and some vanilla extract.
  2. Dry ingredients: Combine the flour and touch of salt in a separate bowl. Add the dry mixture to the creamed butter mixture in increments. The dough will come to a coarse crumb-like consistency. Continue beating until it works into a nice, smooth cookie dough consistency.
  3. Pecans: Stir in some chopped pecans and cover the bowl and chill the cookie dough for an hour.
  4. Shape: Form the chilled dough into 1-inch balls and place them on an ungreased cookie sheet. These cookies will not spread so you can place them about 1-to 2-inches apart. You should be able to fit all 26 to 28 cookies on one large cookie sheet.

The Secret to the Best Pecan Sandies

Here is where Mom’s Pecan Sandies recipe gets unique. The cookies are baked in a 250 degree F oven for an hour. Yep, an hour! Watch them closely towards the end of the baking time. Remove them from the oven when the bottoms of the cookies are just barely golden brown.

Allow the cookies to cool completely and then roll them in powdered sugar. Sometimes I give them an extra sprinkle of powdered sugar just before serving.

Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (4)

Can You Freeze Pecan Sandies?

Cookie dough with a high fat content, like these Pecan Sandies, will freeze well. The method is called flash freezing and here is how you do it.

Freezing the Dough

  1. Roll the cookies into balls and place them on your cookie sheet. If you are freezing a lot of dough you can separate layers of cookies with wax paper.
  2. Place the cookie sheet in the freezer until the balls of dough are frozen solid.
  3. Transfer the frozen cookie dough balls to a freezer-safe plastic storage bag and store them in the freezer.
  4. When you are ready to bake them, allow them to defrost completely and then proceed with the recipe as directed.

Freezing the cookie dough balls separately ensures they won’t stick together. You can pull out and bake just as many as you need.

How to Freeze Baked Pecan Sandies

My preference is to flash freeze the dough but you can successfully freeze these cookies after baking as well.

  1. Allow the cookies to cool completely but DO NOT roll them in powdered sugar.
  2. Use the same flash freeze method to freeze the baked cookies individually.
  3. Then, wrap the frozen cookies in plastic wrap to protect them from freezer burn. Place the wrapped cookies in a freezer-safe plastic storage bag and pop them in the freezer.
  4. Unwrap the frozen cookies and then thaw them completely at room temperature. Be sure you’ve removed all the plastic wrap first to avoid any condensation from making them soggy.
  5. Roll them in powdered sugar before serving.

Taste of Home has some more good general cookie storage tips.

Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (5)

If you’re missing someone you love, bake something that reminds you of them. Pass those recipes on to your children and other loved ones to help continue the legacy they so lovingly created. It’s the very best way to celebrate the season!

More Holiday Treats from Mom’s Recipe Binder

  • The BEST Lemon Bars
  • Date Pinwheel Cookies
  • Mom’s Old-Fashioned Gingerbread
  • Apricot Bars

Sign up for my freenewsletterfor all the latest recipes and join me onFacebook,InstagramandPinterestfor more cooking inspiration!

Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (6)

Mom’s Pecan Sandies

5 from 7 votes

Pecan Sandies have a shortbread-like cookie base studded with pecans and dusted with powdered sugar. This vintage Christmas cookie recipe from my mom's recipe binder is a delicious choice to add to your holiday baking list.

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Author: Valerie Brunmeier

Keyword: pecan sandies

Print RecipePin RecipeRate Recipe

Prep Time:10 minutes minutes

Cook Time:1 hour hour

0 minutes minutes

Total Time:1 hour hour 10 minutes minutes

Servings: 28 cookies

Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter, softened
  • ½ cup powdered sugar, (plus additional for rolling and sprinkling)
  • 1 tablespoon water
  • 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup finely chopped pecans

Instructions

  • In a large mixing bowl, use an electric mixer to cream together the butter, sugar, water, and vanilla. Combine the flour and salt in a separate bowl. Add the dry mixture to the wet mixture in increments and mix again for several minutes until the coarse crumb-like mixture comes together into a nice cookie dough consistency. Use a wooden spoon to stir in the pecans. Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and chill for 1 hour.

  • Preheat oven to 250 degrees F.

  • Form the chilled dough into 26 to 28 1-inch balls and place about 1- to 2-inches apart on an ungreased baking sheet (you should be able to fit them all on one large baking sheet).

  • Bake 55 to 60 minutes until the bottoms of the cookies are just barely golden brown. Remove from the oven and allow to cool for 5 minutes on baking sheets (or just until cool enough to handle) then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.

  • Place about ¼ cup powdered sugar in a small bowl. Roll the cooled cookies in powdered sugar until well coated. For a pretty effect,sprinkle with additional powdered sugar before serving, if desired.

Notes

Check on the cookies after they’ve been baking for 50 to 55 minutes. I have always baked these for the full hour but ovens can vary. When bottoms of cookies are barely golden brown, pull them from the oven and let them cool as instructed.

Nutrition

Serving: 1 cookies · Calories: 127 kcal · Carbohydrates: 10 g · Protein: 1 g · Fat: 9 g · Saturated Fat: 4 g · Cholesterol: 17 mg · Sodium: 100 mg · Potassium: 27 mg · Fiber: 1 g · Sugar: 2 g · Vitamin A: 205 IU · Vitamin C: 1 mg · Calcium: 6 mg · Iron: 1 mg

Nutrition information is automatically calculated using generic ingredients, and is an estimate not a guarantee. For more accurate results, please refer to the labels on your ingredients at home.

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Pecan Sandies (Vintage Recipe) | Valerie's Kitchen (2024)

FAQs

Why do my pecan sandies fall apart? ›

If your mixture seems too dry (it falls apart after being pressed together) you can add in up to 1 T. water.

Who made the original pecan sandies? ›

The name 'sandies” was registered by the Keebler Company in 1955 for their line of flavored shortbread cookies, including the pecan sandy.

Why are they called pecan sandies? ›

Why are they called Pecan Sandies? They're called sandies because of their crumbly shortbread texture and of course because they are full of pecans.

Does Keebler make pecan sandies? ›

Packed with crunchy pecans, these rich and crispy shortbread cookies melt in your mouth. Only Keebler® could pack this much magic into a cookie. These Sandies Pecan cookies are the perfect treat when you need a “me moment.”

Why did my snowball cookies flatten in the oven? ›

Why do my snowball cookies go flat? These snowball cookies should not flatten. If they do it's likely the dough wasn't chilled long enough and the ingredients were too warm to begin with so they spread. It's also possible you accidentally measured the ingredients incorrectly!

How do you make peanut butter cookie dough less crumbly? ›

To avoid this, try using as little flour as possible while preparing to roll your dough. Dry – “Dry” or “Crumbly” dough is a product of over-mixing or using too much of any ingredient during the mixing process. This can be reversed by adding one to two tablespoons of liquid (water, milk or softened butter) to your mix.

What is the difference between sandies and shortbread? ›

The sandy is a type of sugar or shortbread cookie plus crunchy pecans. These cookies are named after their crumbly texture. They have a sandy or breadcrumb-like texture when the flour and butter are mixed together. Pecan Sandies are also a sandy color, which makes the name very fitting.

Why is it called Mexican wedding cookies? ›

It could be a coincidence, but no one knows for sure," Parra explains. Most assume the cookie's name is due to its occasional appearance at some Mexican weddings.

Are Mexican wedding cakes actually Mexican? ›

Also referred to as Mexican wedding cakes, these buttery cookies originated outside of Mexico. Their creation has been traced back to medieval Arab baking that predominantly featured ingredients like butter, sugar, spices and nuts.

Are Girl Scout cookies just Keebler? ›

In the 1990s, the National Council limited the bakeries providing cookies to just ABC Bakers (a division of Interbake Foods) and Little Brownie Bakers (a division of the Keebler Company).

What did Keebler used to be called? ›

Company history

By 1963, United Biscuit introduced the Kitchen Rich brand nationally while still utilizing the regional brand names. In 1966, United Biscuit decided to adopt a uniform brand name and chose Keebler as the national brand and the name of the company.

Who makes pecan sandie cookies? ›

The Keebler Company mass-produces and markets Sandies Classic (plain), Pecan, and Cashew shortbread cookies.

Why does my pecan pie fall apart? ›

Bake the pie too long and the filling will become rock hard after cooling. Don't bake the pie long enough and the filling will ooze all over the place and the pie will fall apart. There are three okay ways to kind-of tell when your pecan pie is done but only ONE foolproof way to tell when your pecan pie is done.

Why are my peanut butter cookies crumbling and falling apart? ›

Overmixing the dough

If you overmix the dough, the cookies will be dry and crumbly. The best way to fix this is to add more liquid to the dough. This can be done by adding milk, water, or even melted butter. You may also need to add more flour to the dough if it is too wet.

How do you keep pecan pie from falling down? ›

Cooling it too quickly. Let the pie cool gradually in a warm place in your kitchen, and never ever refrigerate your pie until it's completely cooled—the change is too drastic. My pecan pie puffs and then falls.

Why is my pastry falling apart? ›

Adding too much fat and overmixing or adding too little liquid can make the pastry crumbly. It is vital to weigh ingredients carefully and handle the dough gently.

References

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