Buttery Danish cookies or Spritz cookies made dairy-free, but with all the familiar flavour of the classic biscuits you get in a tin! These are great fun to make (especially if you have a cookie press, although it's not essential) and make wonderful homemade gifts.
I was so pleased with how beautiful and delicious these little vegan Danish butter cookies turned out, when I first created this recipe.
And I have been making them regularly ever since, especially at Christmas.
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The three main things I love about this recipe: the melt-in-your-mouth deliciousness, how fun they are to make and how beautiful they look (for the short while before they're all eaten).
This post includes a step-by-step recipe, tips and a short guide on how to create a festive gift tin to store them in.
Creating a Danish Butter Cookie gift tin
Aside from eating the cookies, and playing with the cookie press, this is one of the best parts.
I love displaying these beautiful cookies in a tin, regardless of whether I'm giving them away as gifts or keeping them for myself.
You'll just need the following:
- A batch of these Vegan Danish Butter Cookies (Recipe at the bottom of this post)
- An empty medium round tin with lid (an old cookie tin is perfect)
- Plain cupcakes cases
- Extra sugar for sprinkling
It will depend on the size of your tin, but I used 7 cupcake cases to place around the inside edges of the tin and 1 for the centre (8 total).
Fill each cupcake case with 3-4 cookies.
Sprinkle generously with white granulated sugar.
Now create a second layer on top of those cases and repeat.
Recipe FAQ
Not at all! You can simply roll the dough into small balls and press with your fingers or a fork. If you use this method, refrigerate the dough for about 20 minutes beforehand for the best result.
Or, use an icing bag + a star shaped nozzle to create wreath shapes (you can see I've used this method for some of the cookies pictured).
This can happen when the weather gets really cold OR if the mixture is overworked or too dry.
If you're using a piping bag, you can "massage" the bag to warm up and loosen the mixture.
The other solution is to return the mixture to the bowl, and without overworking the dough, mix in a small amount of dairy-free milk, until you have a softer consistency.
If all else fails, chill the dough and roll or cut out shapes instead!
Try chilling your tins beforehand, this usually solves the problem. I put the lined baking tins in the freezer for about 15 minutes before adding the cookies to bake.
Despite being dairy-free, these cookies will be just like how you remember the original.
In fact, many shop bought Danish Butter Cookies are made with vegetable oils, making them more shelf stable and are therefore vegan-friendly.
I recommend a good-tasting vegan butter alternative, such as Naturli block, Vitalite or Earth Balance Buttery. Found in most supermarkets.
If you can't get hold of a vegan butter and can only find margarine, one of my readers, Maria, has a great tip: Use butter flavouring. It is usually vegan-friendly.
📖 Recipe
Vegan Danish Butter Cookies
Vaniljekranse aka Danish Butter Cookies are THE essential Christmas cookie, in my opinion. This is a vegan recipe for those who miss this nostalgic taste...
Ingredients
- 200 g / 7 oz dairy-free buttery spread
- 130 g / 4.5 oz confectioner's sugar
- 310 g / 11 oz plain flour
- 1 tbsp corn starch mixed with 2 tbsp water
- 2 tsp vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
- 1 tbsp almond milk, if needed
- 2 tbsp white sugar, for decoration
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 180C / fan 160C / 350F. Line a baking sheet with greaseproof paper.
- Mix together the dairy-free butter and icing sugar to create a soft buttercream.
- Add the rest of the ingredients, minus the milk, and mix until just combined. If the mixture is too dry, add the 1 tbsp of milk or more until a soft but firm batter is formed.
- Create the cookie shapes either using a cookie press, piping bag or simply dropping a tsp of batter onto the sheet.
- Bake for 10-15 minutes, regularly checking to make sure they are baking evenly. Turn your baking sheet around to face the other way half way through, if necessary.
- Let cool for 10 minutes on a cooling rack then sprinkle with sugar. Enjoy!
Nutrition Information
Yield 60 Serving Size 1Amount Per Serving Calories 49Total Fat 2gSaturated Fat 1gTrans Fat 0gUnsaturated Fat 1gCholesterol 0mgSodium 22mgCarbohydrates 7gFiber 0gSugar 3gProtein 1g
Alessia says
Hi Aimee!
Thanks a lot for this recipe. I tried it for the first time this evening and the cookies lost their shape and spread too much when I put them in the oven.
What would you suggest please?
All the best x
Aimee says
Hi sorry to hear that! I would recommend chilling the pressed shapes for 30 minutes before cooking, so the buttery spread melts more slowly.
Raisa Hammoud says
Hi there,
I would like to try this recipe, but I have a question. Excuse my ignorance. Does this become a dough? Or is a bit liquid?
Cheers,
Raisa
Aimee says
It should become a very soft dough, not a liquid :)
Anne says
Hi- What a lovely recipe. I just purchased a cookie press and plan to try this recipe with it. So many great helpful hints here! Wondering how long these might keep and should I refrigerate them? I’d like to make them a week in advance for an event and am wondering if that’s ok. Thank you!
Aimee says
Making them a week in advance should be absolutely fine as long as they are stored properly. Keep them at room temperature in a secure tin/container lined with baking paper or cupcake cases (as you can see in the photos). A very generous extra sprinkling of sugar (white granulated or caster) in the tin will help keep them fresh too. But don't keep them in the fridge or the condensation will make them soft. Hope you enjoy :-)
Robyn says
I tried making a batch and have 2 questions. How do you get the sugar to stick to the cookies? Also, you mentioned greaseproof paper, is that parchment paper? I used a silicone mat and had trouble with the cookie press because the dough wouldn't come off the press easily.
Thanks!
Aimee says
Hi Robyn, parchment and greaseproof serve the same purpose but are just made with different materials. I've had the problem you described, with the cookies not sticking to the sheet before, but I found that if you chill your lined baking tray (or put it in the freezer for 15 minutes) this really does help the cookies stick to the sheet better.
Regarding the sugar sticking, it doesn't really "stick", i just drench it in sugar to keep it fresh in the tin, the majority of the sugar will fall off but a few granules will adhere to the cookies. You can also do this whilst they're still warm to ensure it sticks better.
Hope that helps!
Maria says
They are AMAZING! And just like the real thing, I baked them as a gift from my mum and put them in a box I bought in Europe as a gift, she adored them!! My family is not vegan btw :)
I was in Germany when I baked them, I used a margarine that is quite tasteless (ASLAN bio) and added half a bottle (the tiny ones) of butter aroma (Butter-Vanille by Dr.Oetker), they turned out perfect and this butter aroma is a game changer!!
Thank you sooo much for the recipe!! I looked everywhere for these vegan cookies but no one seemed to be selling them. All the best from Argentina!
Aimee says
I'm so pleased they were enjoyed! That is such a great idea for adding the butter flavouring. :-)