why did my cookies spread? (2024)

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by debJump to recipe, comments

This is the most frequent cry of despair I get from the comment sections of cookie recipes on Smitten Kitchen and the truth is that there are many, many factors that can cause a cookie to spread. But the biggest one? Temperature. Dough that is too warm or soft will spread more than dough that is cooler, so if you’re working in a very warm kitchen, putting your dough in the fridge for 15 minutes or longer before using it will help prevent spread. Butter that is too warm or soft is also a major culprit. When a recipe calls for “softened” or “at room temperature” butter, you’re looking for butter that you can make an impression in by poking it with your finger, but that impression shouldn’t stay. (Source). A baking sheet that is still warm from the last batch will encourage cookies to spread before they even begin to bake.

There are factors beyond temperature too. A greased cookie sheet promotes spreading; one tip is to flour it after you grease it to hinder spread, or to use silicone paper or a Silpat mat instead. Because sugar liquefies as it is heated, a more sugary cookie (with less flour and/or fat in it) is more likely to spread than one with a lower proportion of sugar. When a recipe says to “cream” your butter and sugar together, just beat it long enough to combine the ingredients — about 30 seconds on an electric or stand mixer, says David Lebovitz — so you do not whip too much air into your cookies, causing too much expansion as the air bubbles steam in the oven. (With cakes, there’s no such limit on airiness.) Finally, at higher altitudes, cookies with baking soda in them tend to spread more.

Lastly, it is worth noting that butter, which melts at your body’s temperature and is nearly one-fifth water, spreads more than margarine, and both spread more than shortening. Now, all cookie recipes on Smitten Kitchen are all-butter (because I like butter’s melt-in-your-mouth feel and flavor above all else), so making sure that your butter, dough and baking sheets aren’t too warm is especially key.

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All CommentsI Made This!Questions

  1. Ariel

    Once, my cookies spread because I FORGOT to add flour. Yeah.

  2. Amanda

    Also, a dark cookie sheet will cause them to spread more than a lighter one. I have two half sheet pans, one stainless and the other that dark non-stick material…while making a batch of shortbread cookies (with parchment paper on both pans) the dark pan’s cookies spread out waaaay more than the light pan’s. Lesson learned!

  3. Great post at why did my cookies spread? | tips. I was checking continuously this blog and I’m impressed! Extremely useful info particularly the last part :) I care for such info much. I was seeking this particular information for a long time. Thank you and good luck.

  4. Aw, this was a really nice post. In thought I wish to put in writing like this moreover – taking time and precise effort to make a very good article… however what can I say… I procrastinate alot and by no means appear to get something done.

  5. fwfw

    mine spread aswell but I duno why I followed the ingreidiantss help!

  6. JMH_9

    I have been known to put my cookie sheets in the fridge before putting the dough on them. This is especially helpful between batches or in a small kitchen, sometimes they’re sitting too close to the preheated oven. Between this and my silpat mats no more spreading… so far anyway.

  7. Meg

    If you use parchment, why would the color of the baking sheet matter? I have experimented with shiny vs dark sheets as well. My experience is that cookies spread more on shiny. lighter sheets. I wonder if the thickness of the sheets matter?

  8. Tara

    As always, thank you.

  9. Donna

    I made my dough one day before baking and refrigerated it overnight. I used a Silpat. And still this batch (for some other reason) spread. Recipe was Maraschino Cherry and Dark Chocolate Chip Cookies (see http://www.closetcooking.com). Flavor was good, but they were almost like raw dough even though they were so thin. What did I do wrong?

  10. Sarah

    I recently made your crispy/chewy chocolate chip cookies which call for melted butter. I was worried about the cookies becoming paper thin because of this, but they were not. They did spread, but just the right amount. Could you comment on why melted butter is ok (at least in that recipe) even though “too-warm” butter can be detrimental in others?

  11. Araminta

    I second Sarah’s question above- why do your chewy c.c cookie recipe which calls for melted butter not spread as much? All this cookie science makes me scratch my head but I must know!!!

  12. Great tips! I’m at a high altitude and have lots of spreading issues. Any tips on combating the baking soda issue? Perhaps a substitute that would work better? Thanks!

  13. Sarah

    Yes, exactly Sarah. I want to know that too!

  14. Doris

    Araminta, by melting the butter the water on it evaporated, so the result was pure butter, probably that prevented the cookie from spreading too much

  15. Maria

    …and now I know why my oatmeal raisin cookies spread paper thin: I “may” have over-creamed the butter while I was on the phone. Sigh. They taste divine but are super thin and don’t hold together well (they break when you try to get one from a plate). Live and learn.

  16. Stacey

    Thanks for the tips, Deb! I’m wondering why some of your recipes, like the Salted Chocolate Chunk Cookies (otherwise known as PMS/PMT cookies in our house) call for an entire 5 minutes of creaming the butter and sugar, rather than the David Lebovitz 30 second recommendation listed here. When should I just combine by creaming, and when should I extreme-cream my butter and sugar?

  17. Heather

    I was going to ask about the long creaming recommendation in the chocolate chunk recipe also! After reading that tip, I’ve been letting it goo for a long time!

  18. Sue

    Sometimes I bake cookies in a muffin tin, one cookie each. No spreading and thicker cookies.

  19. Grace

    I’m having a typical Wednesday (which is to say, a “how is it not yet Friday” day) and after reading your exciting new recipe thought I’d give “Surprise Me” a try. Imagine my glee finding this page! I’ve applied more tips and tricks than I can count from your recipes across my cooking and baking in general–it may be the thing I love most about your books and blog, and that’s a long list–and so it was very fun to see this OG post. Thought it was about due that I say thank you (I so rarely comment, though lurk consistently across all platforms) for this and all the other tips!

  20. April Tackett

    We have what is like a sugar cookie it has honey and lemon extract. It’s a roll out dough we have made it for years. It calls for veg. Shortening….the cookies went flat and looked crinkled instead of puffed and smooth it also looked like there was let spots in the cooked cookie. We aren’t sure if the shortening was bad or if it’s the oven temperature… can you help

why did my cookies spread? (2024)

FAQs

Why did my cookies spread? ›

Excess Sugar and Fat

Why did my cookies spread so much? ›

“Baking cookies in a too-cool oven will cause the fat to melt before your cookies set up, leading to spreading,” Dawn says. Grab an oven thermometer the next time you're in the grocery store so you can be sure your oven is at the correct temperature.

How do you make cookies spread less? ›

Chill the cookie dough.

Chilling cookie dough helps prevent spreading. The colder the dough, the less the cookies will over-spread into greasy puddles. You'll have thicker, sturdier, and more solid cookies. Whenever I make cookies, I plan ahead and chill the cookie dough overnight.

What contributes to spread in cookies? ›

Fats like butter and margarine tend to melt during baking, causing the cookies to spread. Higher fat content will spread more, while lower fat content will yield less spread. Sugar content: The sugar content in your cookie dough also affects the spread.

Which of the following would cause a cookie to spread more? ›

Temperature. Dough that is too warm or soft will spread more than dough that is cooler, so if you're working in a very warm kitchen, putting your dough in the fridge for 15 minutes or longer before using it will help prevent spread.

How do I make my cookies flatter? ›

Milk – A splash of milk added to the dough also helps to create flatter cookies by adding more moisture to the dough, so it spreads faster in the oven. Baking soda – Make sure your baking soda is FRESH for this recipe. It's critical to the spread and browning of these cookies which gives them their crispy thin texture.

What happens if you chill cookie dough too long? ›

After 72 hours, the dough will begin to dry out and you risk it going bad, especially if chilling pre-portioned balls of dough instead of the entire mass of dough. If you want to store longer than 72 hours, see the freezing tips below.

How do you fix sugar cookies that spread too much? ›

Chilling your cookie dough is the single biggest piece of advice I give people to stop their sugar cookies spreading too much. By allowing your cookie dough to chill and rest in the fridge for between 24-72 hours allows the fat in your cookies, to solidify.

How do you make thick cookies that don't spread? ›

Don't Over-Beat the Butter and Sugar!

Overbeating can also warm up the butter, which further increases spread. So if you've ever had cookies bake up perfectly in the oven, then deflate as they cool, try beating your butter and sugar for only 2 minutes. Cookies don't need as much creaming time as cake.

What happens if you overmix cookie dough? ›

"Overmixing your dough will result in flatter, crispier cookies," Cowan said. If you overmix, you will end up aerating (adding air to) the dough, which causes the cookies to rise and then fall, leaving you with flat cookies.

What if I put too much butter in my cookies? ›

Too much butter makes cookies turn out just as you'd expect: very buttery. This batch of cookies was cakey in the middle, but also airy throughout, with crispy edges. They were yellow and slightly puffy in the middle, and brown and super thin around the perimeter.

Does baking soda make cookies spread? ›

Baking soda also serves another important purpose when it comes to cookies: It encourages spreading by raising the mixture's pH, which slows protein coagulation. This gives the dough more time to set before the eggs set, which results in a more evenly baked cookie.

What does it mean when cookies spread too much? ›

Excess Sugar and Fat

Measuring is key in baking. If your cookie contains excess sugar or fat, it will spread while baking.

Does brown sugar make cookies spread more? ›

In that role, white sugar aerates the dough when creamed with butter for thick and puffy cookies. Brown sugar, meanwhile, is dense and compacts easily, creating fewer air pockets during creaming—that means that there's less opportunity to entrap gas, creating cookies that rise less and spread more.

Why do cookies increase in size and volume during baking? ›

The rise: At about 212 degrees Fahrenheit, the water in the dough turns into steam. The cookie starts to rise as the vapors push through the dough. Eventually, the baking soda or powder starts to break down into carbon dioxide gas, which raise up the cookie farther.

How to fix cookie dough with too much flour? ›

One way is to add in some extra fat, such as more butter or even an extra egg yolk (which contains fat) — this will make the dough easy to work with again. Another way to fix the problem is to add in a bit of extra liquid, such as milk or water, which will help get the dough back to the consistency it needs to be.

Does cornstarch keep cookies from spreading? ›

1. Cookies. Cornstarch does kind of incredible things to cookies. I mean not only does it give them soft centers, prevents them from spreading, and makes them somewhat thick (in a good way), but it also contributes to the chewiness factor, which, in my opinion, is the most important cookie attribute.

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