Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (2024)

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These mini meltaway cookies are soft, buttery and light with lemon and cinnamon flavors. These are coated with powdered sugar yet not overly sweet. Easy to make with simple ingredients.

Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (1)

This meltaway cookie recipe is like the mini version of our most loved melting moment cookies with a lemon twist.

Jump to:
  • Why We Like This Recipe
  • About The Ingredients
  • Alternative Add-Ins
  • How To Make
  • Expert Tips
  • FAQs
  • More Treats You Might Like
  • 📖 Recipe

Why We Like This Recipe

  • These meltaway cookies are easy to make with little effort. You can even make them at the last minute.
  • They are made with simple ingredients you already have in your pantry.
  • They are egg-free. A great option for friends who have an eggless diet.
  • Their mini size is great. They make around 70 mini cookies. So you can share or freeze some.
  • They are soft and melt in your mouth.
  • The lemon flavor gives a refreshing feeling.
  • There is no baking powder in these meltaways cookies, so they don’t rise when baking. You can place as many cookies on a baking sheet as you like.
  • They keep well for up to 2 weeks.
  • They can be frozen before being baked.
Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (2)

These meltaway cookies already look cute with their itsy bitsy size on special occasions, but you can make them look even fancier with some colorful sprinkles. And if you use Christmas colors, they are perfect for cookie exchange or make perfect edible gifts! Pack your Christmas meltaway cookies in jars or fancy looking mini boxes and give them to whoever you like.

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About The Ingredients

Flour: We use all purpose flour but a combination of all purpose and whole wheat flour works fine too.

Cornstarch: Also known as corn flour in the UK, corn starch is a key ingredient in this meltaways cookies recipe. The cookies are wonderfully soft thanks to cornstarch.

Powdered sugar: We need it both in the cookie dough and for coating. The amount in the dough is not much because we coat the meltaways with powdered sugar after they are baked. Other types of cookies like granulated sugar or brown sugar won’t give the same result. So use powdered sugar, also known as icing sugar.

Unsalted Butter: We use 1 cup butter for these mini melting butter cookies. Make sure it is softened at room temperature before combining it with the other ingredients. If you try to use it cold and hard, it won’t blend well and you can’t form a dough.

Fresh lemon zest: These are lemon melt away cookies, but you can leave the zest out if you want to. We highly recommend that you use it though because the flavor is even better with it.

Cinnamon: We just use ½ teaspoon of cinnamon. You can increase the amount or leave it out.

Alternative Add-Ins

Lemon juice: If you want even more lemony flavor in your lemon meltaways, add 1 teaspoon of lemon juice in addition to lemon zest.

Nuts: You can add finely crumbled hazelnuts, almonds, walnuts or pecans. They all give a nice nutty flavor to your cookies. If you want that nutty flavor to stand out more, skip lemon zest. Just use this recipe as a base and create your own version.

Spices: You can create other versions of these meltaway butter cookies using spices like ground ginger and pumpkin pie spice.

Vanilla extract or almond extract: Either of these would be a good addition too.

How To Make

The recipe for these melt in your mouth cookies with cornstarch is straightforward. Just follow the steps below.

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  1. In a large bowl, cream butter, lemon zest, cinnamon and powdered sugar. You can use a hand mixer or spatula for this. If you want, make the dough in a stand mixer.
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  1. Now you can add the dry ingredients. First, add in cornstarch. Using a spatula, stir well.
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  1. Combine flour with this mixture well until you get a soft dough.
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  1. Using a teaspoon, scoop dough and make tiny balls. You can use a small cookie scoop too.
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  1. Place them on a parchment paper lined cookie sheet. Bake in a preheated oven for 15 minutes or until their bottoms are slightly golden. Let them cool on the baking sheet. You don’t need to transfer them on a wire rack.
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  1. When they are cooled, put some powdered sugar in a small bowl and roll the baked cookies into it.
  1. Alternatively, you can sprinkle colored sugar or sprinkles over the baked cookies. Read the tips about sprinkles below to learn more about this.
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Expert Tips

  • Make sure butter is softened. This is very important.
  • You really don’t need to chill the dough, but if somehow you find it difficult to roll the dough into balls, chill it for 15-20 minutes.
  • You don’t need to leave a lot of space between each dough ball on the baking sheet. As there is no baking powder in the dough, the cookies don’t rise when baking.
  • The measurements here make about 7 dozen mini cookies. If you want, you can make your meltaway cookies bigger than these.
  • Roll these meltaway shortbread cookies in powdered sugar after they are cooled.
  • The powdered sugar on them might be absorbed as they sit in the container, it is normal. You can sift more powdered sugar on them if you want.
  • To store: Keep these cookies in an airtight container or jars at room temperature for up to two weeks. If it is summer or the temperature is high in your place, put them in the refrigerator after one week.
  • To freeze: You can freeze half of the meltaways if you want. To do this, roll dough in balls, place on a plate or baking sheet. Freeze them for 30 minutes and remove. Put them in a freezer bag and then keep them in the freezer. When you are ready to bake, either let them sit on the counter for 1 hour and bake as stated in the recipe or put directly in the oven and bake for about 3 minutes longer.
  • To give a Christmas feeling on these meltaway cookies: We sometimes use colored sugar sprinkles. You can easily make your DIY colored sugar and simply sprinkle some on the cookies when you pack them in a box or jar.
  • How to make sprinkles to completely stick on your melt away cookies: Whisk together two egg whites and ¼ teaspoon water. Let the cookies cool down completely and brush their tops with this mixture and coat with sprinkles immediately.
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FAQs

How long do these meltaway cookies last?

They keep well in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 10 days. Keep it in the refrigerator for up to a month and in the freezer for 3 months. We don’t recommend freezing them after baking though. It is better to freeze them before baking.

Can I use icing on these cookies?

Yes you can. But you should use the bottom of a glass and gently flatten the cookie balls before baking. It will be easier to coat their top with icing then. And you won’t use powdered sugar to coat them for sure.

Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (12)

More Treats You Might Like

  • Melting Moments Cookies (Cornstarch Cookies)
  • Turkish Tahini Sesame Cookies
  • Elmali Kurabiye (Turkish Apple Cookies)
  • Lokum Recipe - Turkish Delight

As always: If you make this recipe, let us know what you think by rating it and leaving a comment below. And post a pic on Instagram too—tag @give_recipe so we can see!

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Print

📖 Recipe

Lemon Meltaway Cookies Recipe

Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (17)

Print Recipe

Simple ingredients like butter, powdered sugar, lemon zest, cornstarch and flour come together and make these melting in your mouth cookies.

  • Author:
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 15 minutes
  • Total Time: 30 minutes
  • Yield: 7 dozens 1x
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Baking
  • Cuisine: Turkish

Ingredients

Scale

  • 250g (1 cup and 2 tablespoons/ 2 sticks and ¼ stick ) unsalted butter, softened at room temperature
  • ½ cup powdered sugar
  • ½ teaspoon cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon lemon zest
  • ½ cup cornstarch
  • 2 cups all-purpose flour
  • ½ cup powdered sugar to coat the cookies

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350F (180C). Line a baking sheet with parchment.
  2. In a large bowl, mix butter, powdered sugar, lemon zest and cinnamon until creamy.
  3. Add in cornstarch and mix them well.
  4. Add in flour and mix with a spatula until everything is combined.
  5. Use a teaspoon to scoop dough and make tiny balls. Place them on the baking sheet.
  6. Bake for 12-15 minutes or until their bottom is slightly golden. Remove from the oven and let them cool in the baking sheet.
  7. Roll them into powdered sugar or sprinkles.

Notes

  1. Make sure butter is softened. This is very important.
  2. You can add in 1-2 teaspoon lemon juice if you want to feel the lemon flavor even more.
  3. You really don’t need to chill the dough, but if somehow you find it difficult to roll the dough into balls, chill it for 15-20 minutes.

  4. You don’t need to leave a lot of space between each dough ball on the baking sheet. As there is no baking powder in the dough, the cookies don’t rise when baking.

  5. The measurements here make about 7 dozen mini cookies. If you want, you can make your meltaway cookies bigger than these.

  6. Roll these meltaway shortbread cookies in powdered sugar after they are cooled.

  7. The powdered sugar on them might be absorbed as they sit in the container, it is normal. You can sift more powdered sugar on them if you want.

  8. To store: Keep these cookies in an airtight container or jars at room temperature for up to two weeks. If it is summer or the temperature is high in your place, put them in the refrigerator after one week.

  9. To freeze: You can freeze half of the meltaways if you want. To do this, roll dough in balls, place on a plate or baking sheet. Freeze them for 30 minutes and remove. Put them in a freezer bag and then keep them in the freezer. When you are ready to bake, either let them sit on the counter for 1 hour and bake as stated in the recipe or put directly in the oven and bake for about 3 minutes longer.

  10. To give a Christmas feeling on these meltaway cookies: Simply sprinkle some on the cookies when you pack them in a box or jar.

  11. If you want the sprinkles to completely stick on your melt away cookies perfectly, use the following method: Whisk together two egg whites and ¼ teaspoon water. Let the cookies cool down completely and brush their tops with this mixture and coat with sprinkles immediately.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1
  • Calories: 38
  • Sugar: 1.3 g
  • Sodium: 0.5 mg
  • Fat: 2.2 g
  • Carbohydrates: 4.3 g
  • Protein: 0.3 g
  • Cholesterol: 5.8 mg

Keywords: meltaway cookies, lemon meltaway cookies

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Reader Interactions

Comments

    Leave a Reply

  1. Arnold barnold says

    Your recipe doesn't tell how much to preheat the oven to.

    Reply

  2. Amanda says

    I love the concept—lemon shortbread flavour, yum! I was nervous when I saw the amount of flour since other melt away recipes I was looking at only called for 1.5 cups of flour for the same 1 cup of butter ratio. Turns out I was right to worry—super softened butter but was just a crumbly mess. Added olive oil and more lemon juice to try to salvage them but just ended up with dry cookies with no real butter flavour. May attempt again with a way less flour.

    Reply

    • Zerrin & Yusuf says

      Hi Amanda,
      Sorry to hear that it didn't work for you. This is a classic cookie recipe we often make and have never had any problems. They naturally come out crumbly due to the amount of cornstarch we use. Not sure why you ended up with dry cookies.

      Reply

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Lemon Meltaway Cookies With Cornstarch (No Chilling) - Give Recipe (2024)

FAQs

What does cornstarch do in cookies? ›

“The result is added tenderness with more structure.” You don't need much of the ingredient to notice significant changes in your favorite recipe. Add a teaspoon or two to your dry ingredient mix and it will drastically change the texture. It's also fun to experiment until you get the exact finish you desire.

Which cookies freeze well? ›

Drop cookies, like chocolate chip and oatmeal raisin, are the easiest to freeze. To do so, place portioned dough in a single layer on a parchment-lined baking sheet and freeze until firm, then you can transfer the dough to zipper-lock bags, says Schreiber.

Can you make Christmas cookies ahead of time and freeze them? ›

Baking cookies that freeze well is one of our favorite ways to get a head start on the holiday season. Freezing baked cookies now gives you a leg up on holiday prep and ensures Santa has something to snack on. Each of these lasts in the freezer up to three months.

Can you use cornstarch instead of baking powder for cookies? ›

Using Cornstarch and Baking Powder Interchangeably

Interestingly, cornstarch can be a component of homemade baking powder. If there's baking soda and cream of tartar in your pantry as well, you're in luck. You can actually create a substitute that's pretty close to what you'd buy off the shelf.

How much cornstarch do I use to thicken cookies? ›

Corn starch is the magic ingredient for your cookies for every cup of flour at in 2 tablespoons of cornstarch, and remove 2 tablespoons of the flour. iad0restarch .

Which is better, freezing cookie dough or baked cookies? ›

In most cases, I prefer to freeze cookie dough over freezing baked cookies. That way, you still get the nice homemade smell and softness of the cookies when they come out of the oven. But if you want to get the whole job done, you can certainly bake the cookies, then freeze them later.

Do cookies taste the same after freezing? ›

Cut outs, drop cookies and refrigerator cookies freeze well. Decorated, filled and cookies with a delicate texture such as meringues are more fragile. Although freezing won't change the flavor of decorated cookies, frosting may cause cookies to stick together.

Can I freeze lemon cookie dough? ›

You can freeze that dough, too. Prepare the cookie dough according to the recipe's instructions. Refrigerate the dough for about 30 minutes, and then wrap the cold dough tightly in plastic wrap and add a label with the name of the recipe and the date. Freeze for up to 3 months.

Can you freeze cookies in Ziploc bags? ›

After baking, allow cookies to cool completely. Place them in a single layer on a parchment-lined baking sheet to freeze them, then store them in a freezer-safe zip-top storage bag labeled with the name and date. Squeeze out extra air and place flat in the freezer. To save space, you can flat-stack freezer bags.

How do you keep homemade cookies fresh till Christmas? ›

The USDA website says that generally, cookies can be stored at room temperature for two to three weeks or refrigerated for two months. If you find yourself with more cookies than you can eat in that time frame, consider putting the baked cookies in a sealed container in the freezer.

How soon before Christmas can I make cookies? ›

You'll find that most of your favorite Christmas cookie recipes can be made anywhere from a month to six months before the 25th of December. (Consult this handy how-to guide to the matter.) Generally, most recipes will be best if baked and then frozen.

What happens if I don't have cornstarch for cookies? ›

Cornstarch Substitute for Baked Goods

You can use all-purpose flour in place of cornstarch in a baking recipe, but be warned: The texture won't be as soft and tender. Rice flour works especially well as a sub for cornstarch in cookie recipes and potato starch is a good replacement in cake recipes.

What is the secret to chewy cookies? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

What makes cookies chewy vs. crunchy? ›

The ingredients you use and how you shape your cookies both play an important role in whether your cookies turn out crispy or chewy. The type of flour and sugar you use, if your cookie dough contains eggs, and whether you use melted or softened butter all factor into the crispy-chewy equation, too.

How does cornstarch affect baked goods? ›

Use as a Thickening Agent

Here's how it works: when cornstarch is added to a recipe, the starch molecules work to absorb water and thicken the mixture. When heated, those molecules swell and consume even more of the liquid in the recipe.

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