These classic Snowball Cookies are little balls of buttery shortbread, melt-in-your-mouth goodness with a powdered sugar coating. They are quick to fix, delicious, and freeze well.
You may even have the ingredients to make them in your house now. They are called Russian Tea Cakes, Italian Wedding cookies, butter balls, and Mexican Wedding Cookies, but in our house, we call them Snowballs. They are the delectable cookies with a thousand names.
Ingredient Notes and Substitutions
- Butter: unsalted or salted. If using salted butter, eliminate the added salt. Use natural, honest-to-goodness butter so your cookies taste yummy. I use Land O Lakes butter for all my cookies.
- Powdered sugar: also known as confectioners’ sugar
- Vanilla extract: pure vanilla extract, please
- Nuts: pecans, English walnuts, black walnuts, almonds, pistachios, and cashews.
How to make Snowball Cookies
These delectable holiday cookies are so very easy to make. First, using an electric or stand mixer with the paddle attachment on medium speed, cream the butter and the powdered sugar until light and fluffy.
Then, turn the mixer to low speed and add the salt, vanilla, flour, and chopped pecans. Using a 1-tablespoon scoop, roll the cookies into balls and place them on a parchment-covered baking sheet with a bit of space between them. Bake until lightly browned.
Allow the cookies to cool just enough to handle them. Then, gently roll them in the powdered sugar. Place them on a wire rack to cool. When they are thoroughly cooled, roll in the powdered sugar again.
Preparation Tips
- Chop the pecans fairly fine. Remember, you can use different nuts.
- This a thick dough, so roll the cookies with your hands because the warmth of your hands will help shape the cookies.
- If you have time, do a test run with one or two cookies. This will help establish the baking time.
- Do not over-bake the cookies. These are a type of shortbread cookies with a crumbly melt-in-your-mouth texture.
- When measuring your flour, spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it off with a table knife to keep from adding too much flour.
- Store the cookies in an airtight container on the counter for up to 5 days.
Try These Recipe Variations
- Roll the dough around an unwrapped chocolate kiss
- Add 3/4 cup chopped Andes Peppermint Crunch Baking Chips to the cookie dough.
- Add 3/4 cup mini chocolate chips to the cookie dough
- Mix 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder at the same time as the butter and powdered sugar. Also, add 3/4 cup mini chocolate chips stirred in at the end to make Chocolate Snowball Cookies
- Replace the vanilla with lemon juice, add 1-2 tablespoons lemon zest, and use finely chopped sliced almonds instead of the pecans to make Almond Lemon Snowballs.
- Substitute almonds coarsely ground in a food processor for the pecans and add 1/2 teaspoon of almond extract.
Frequently Asked Questions
You can use English walnuts, black walnuts, almonds, pistachios, and even cashews. Just make sure the nuts are shelled, roasted, and finely chopped. Each nut gives the cookie a delicious, different, unique flavor.
Freeze the dough in a practice commonly known as flash freezing. Roll the dough and place it on parchment-covered baking sheets. Ensure the dough balls aren’t touching so they don’t freeze together.
Place the whole sheet in the freezer until frozen, and then transfer the balls to a freezer bag. Store that bag in a sturdy freezer container. When you are ready to bake, simply place the cookies on a parchment-covered baking sheet and let them thaw just a tad while the oven preheats. Frozen cookies may require an additional one to two minutes of baking time.
Pack the baked cookies in double Ziploc freezer bags, place them in a sturdy, glad-ware freezer container, and freeze for up to 3 months. Thaw the cookies in the fridge overnight. Once the cookies have thawed, reroll them in powdered sugar. Place them in airtight containers and store them at room temperature for up to 5 days.
More Cookie Recipes
Snowball Cookies Recipe
Ingredients
- 1 cup unsalted butter softened
- ½ cup powdered sugar confectioner’s sugar
- ¼ teaspoon salt
- 1 ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
- ¾ cup pecans or walnuts finely chopped
- 1 cup powdered sugar for dusting
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees
- In a stand mixer, using the paddle attachment on medium speed, cream the butter and powdered sugar. Turn the mixer to low and add the salt, vanilla, flour, and pecans. Roll the dough into one-inch balls using a 1-tablespoon scoop. Place on parchment-covered baking sheets a few inches apart. Bake for 8-10 minutes or until very lightly browned. Do not over-bake
- Remove them from the oven and allow them to cool just enough to handle them. Pour 1 cup powdered sugar into a medium bowl. Gently roll the cookies in the powdered sugar. Use a fork to scoop under each cookie and gently shake to remove excess powdered sugar. Place on cooling racks. Once completely cooled, roll in the powdered sugar again.
Video
Notes
- Use real honest-to-goodness butter so they taste yummy. I personally use Land O Lakes butter for all my cookies.
- Cream the butter and sugar until light and fluffy
- Chop the pecans fairly fine. Remember, you can use different nuts.
- This a thick dough, so roll the cookies with your hands because the warmth of your hands will help shape the cookies.
- Preheat the oven and load the baking sheet in the middle of the oven.
- Use parchment paper or silicone baking mats.
- If you have time, do a test run with one or two cookies. It really helps to establish baking time.
- Do not over-bake the cookies. These are a type of shortbread cookies with a crumbly melt-in-your-mouth texture.
- When measuring your flour, spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it off with a table knife to keep from adding too much flour.
- Store the cookies in an airtight container on the counter for up to 5 days.
Nutrition
Are you on the hunt for more delicious recipes? Follow Small Town Woman on Facebook, Pinterest, and Instagram.
https://www.smalltownwoman.com/wp-content/uploads/2019/05/Beth-1.pdf
Jen
Pinning these for the holiday season. My neighbor always brings these over and we absolutley love them. Thank you for the recipe.
Krissy Allori
These are my favorite cookies to make and eat at Christmas!
lauren kelly
I love anything butter pecan so I was super excited to make these! Thank you for such a delicious recipe!
Trang
Totally a “crumbly melt in your mouth” cookie!
katherine
Great post!
I have a question i tried making snowball cookies in the past and I had an issue with the cookies just melting in the cookie sheet. Hopefull you are able to help me out with my troubleshooting!
Beth Pierce
Your butter is probably too soft when you mix them. I always run a test run with one or two cookies to start and if they spread too fast put the dough in the fridge for about 45 minutes. Then try again with another test run. I know it is a bit of hassle but mixing up the dough takes time and money so you want to try to get them right.
Elizabeth
I use rum flavoring instead of vanilla…self rising flour and salted butter….always turn out fabulous.
Beth Pierce
Thanks for the heads up! I love rum!
Chris
Would it be OK to use almond flour?
Beth Pierce
I have never experimented with almond flour. I did find this interesting article that may help. Nature’s Eats Almond Flour – Flour Conversion
Diane
When I make these, I drain a jar of maraschino cherries and roll the dough around it and then bake them. Awesome!
Beth Pierce
Thanks for the heads up!
Susie
I add mini chocolate chips. They are a family favorite!
Beth Pierce
Delicious little cookies. Family favorite here too!!
June Frank
Wonderful receipes
Beth Pierce
Thanks June!!
Jackie
The store bought wedding cookies in the pink box are my husband’s favorite. They include teeny tiny pieces of some form of chocolate chip. Do you have any suggestions on the amount that I need to add? I’ll grind them fine in my food processor. Will it mess up the recipe or cooking time if I add something to the recipe? Or should I split the total amount between the ground pecans and chocolate chips? Thanks love!
Beth Pierce
I have heard of people adding chocolate chips to these but I have never tried it. I think that I would add 1 cup of semi-sweet mini chocolate chips and not change the recipe or cooking time in any other way. Of course that is just a hunch on my part. I think I will try it in the next few weeks and let you know how it turns out!!
Erma Beckford
My Mother-in-law used to make these with ground filberts and they were delicious!
Beth Pierce
They are really good but I am not sure what ground filberts are.
Karenina Boothe
Filberts are a type of nut.
Sharon D Austin
Do we need to sift the flour? Also, do we need to make each batch separately when it is double, or can it all be made together in one batch
Beth Pierce
No you don’t have to sift the flour although it may make them even more delicious (some cooks swear by sifting flour) and yes you can double the batch.
Shelly
Do u have to use parchment paper?
Beth Pierce
No you do not have to!
alicia
im confused how much milk do you use. cause my batter looks like powder.
Beth Pierce
Did you use a full cup of butter which is two sticks? I will try to stay by my computer to see what your respond with.
alicia
nevermind
Diana
I made the almond joy cookies you posted, they were yummy.
I tried the butter pecan snowball cookies tonight, followed your recipe exactly and I think they taste like dough, what do you think went wrong? They look beautiful just taste like dough and pecans to me
Beth Pierce
Good morning. Did you chop your pecans real fine? You may not have done anything wrong…snowball cookies are just not liked by everyone. Not everyone has the same taste.
Helen
Hi I just made these. I’m only serving them tomorrow though. Do I put the in the fridge overnight or leave them out?