Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (2024)

Gorgeously gift-able marble iced sugar cookies are surprisingly easy to make, no special skills required ~ customize them to any occasion!

Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (1)

These pretty marble iced sugar cookies are easy to make, no fancy baking skills or fancy techniques required. On top of that, they can be coordinated to any event or holiday, just change out the colors.

I streamline the process of dipping delicious cardamom sugar cookies into a powdered sugar icing that’s been swirled with dabs of food coloring to create one of a kind cookies with little effort. It’s a homemade treat you’ll be proud to share with friends this holiday season ~ each marbled cookie is a unique masterpiece!

what’s in this post

  • what you’ll need for marble iced sugar cookies
    • the sugar cookies
    • the marbled icing
  • how to make a marbled icing
  • related: Marbleized Chocolate Bark
  • how to dip cookies into marbled icing
  • tips and tricks for marble iced sugar cookies
  • why we love these marble iced sugar cookies
  • more fun cookie projects
Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (2)

what you’ll need for marble iced sugar cookies

the sugar cookies

The cookie is a simple vanilla cardamom sugar cookie, cut into thick rounds.

  • butter
  • flour
  • white sugar
  • egg
  • salt
  • baking powder
  • vanilla
  • cardamom

the marbled icing

You could use royal icing but I prefer to make a basic powdered sugar glaze. It’s what makes these marble iced sugar cookies such an easy project.

  • powdered sugar
  • milk
  • water
  • liquid food coloring or gel food coloring
    • You want something that’s in liquid form, not a paste, so you can drip or drizzle it over your icing. I used Americolor which is a gel/paste food coloring and I actually thought it was a little too thick. (Good old grocery store food coloring will work fine.)
Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (3)

how to make a marbled icing

  1. Mix together powdered sugar with enough milk and water to create a thick but dip-able glaze. I like to flavor it with vanilla.
  2. Divide your icing between 2-3 wide shallow bowls (for more surface area.)
  3. Dab or drizzle food coloring across the surface in a haphazard manner.
  4. Take a toothpick or chopstick and gently swirl the colors together. Don’t over-swirl or your colors will blend together and become muddy.
Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (4)

how to dip cookies into marbled icing

  1. Dip each cooled cookie headfirst into the swirled glaze, then lift straight up, letting excess frosting drip down. Don’t sink the cookie deep into the frosting, you want to pick up the swirled colors on the surface.
  2. Give the cookie a twist to turn it upright, and then set on a rack to dry thoroughly.
  3. Each marble iced sugar cookie will be unique!
  4. When one bowl of icing gets ‘muddy’ and the colors have blended too much, move on to a fresh bowl.
  5. Let the icing dry completely before handling or storing.
Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (5)

tips and tricks for marble iced sugar cookies

Thicker cookies are easier to handle when dunking, so keep this in mind when rolling your dough and cutting your cookies. Aim for 1/3 inch.

Do a test dunk into your icing before adding color, just to make sure it’s the right consistency. It should coat the cookie nicely, and the excess should drip off easily. Add a bit more sugar if too thin, and a bit more water if too thick.

Rather than making one bowl of icing, divide it between 2 or 3 wide shallow bowls. Each bowl will get ‘muddy’ after several dips, so dividing it will give you prettier cookies.

Be sure to let your decorated sugar cookies dry thoroughly before stacking, storing, or freezing. This can take several hours.

You can use just one or two colors for a simpler color palette.

Add a light dusting of edible glitter or luster dust to your marble iced cookies while the glaze is wet.

Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (6)

why we love these marble iced sugar cookies

You get the satisfaction of producing a beautifully decorated cookie, without the fuss. I love that and I’ve got other cookie recipes that produce gorgeous results with minimal effort:

  • Embossed Gingerbread Cookies
  • Soft Glazed Gingerbread Cookies
  • Scottish Shortbread

These cookies are just plain fun.

They provide a pop of pretty color to your holiday cookie collection.

It’s an easy enough project to do with kids.

Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (7)

Marble Iced Sugar Cookies

Deliciously giftable Marble Iced Sugar Cookies are so easy to make ~ and each one is a unique masterpiece!

Print RecipePin RecipeRate Recipe

Prep Time:10 minutes minutes

Cook Time:14 minutes minutes

chilling:30 minutes minutes

Total Time:54 minutes minutes

Servings: 24

Equipment

  • baking sheets

  • parchment paper

Ingredients

dry ingredients

wet ingredients

  • 3/4 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 1 cup white sugar
  • 1 Tbsp vanilla paste or extract
  • 1 large egg, room temperature if possible

icing*

  • 2 cups powdered sugar
  • 6 Tbsp milk
  • 6 Tbsp water
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla, optional
  • various colors of liquid or gel food coloring

Instructions

  • Whisk the dry ingredients together in a bowl and set aside.

  • Cream the butter, sugar, and vanilla together, scraping down the bowl to get everything combined. Blend in the egg.

  • Fold the dry ingredients into the wet to form a soft pliable dough.

  • While the dough is soft, roll it out to 1/4-1/3 inch thick. You can do this on a large sheet of parchment paper, with another sheet on top of the dough to prevent sticking. I found the top sheet unecessary, as a little dusting of flour worked fine.

  • Slice the parchment paper and dough onto a baking sheet and refrigerate for 30 minutes.

  • Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.

  • Remove the cookie dough from the fridge and cut into rounds with a 2 1/2 inch cookie cutter. Place 2 inches apart on your cookie sheets and bake for 12-14 minutes. They will still be pale, but just starting to turn golden around the edges.

  • Cool the cookies on a rack until completely cooled before dipping.

marbled icing

  • Blend together the sugar, milk, water, and vanilla to make a smooth runny icing. You can do this in a food processor, or by hand. Divide the icing into 2 bowls and cover with plastic wrap. Let sit while the cookies cool, this will allow the bubbles to surface.

  • When the cookies are completely cooled, I suggest testing the consistency of your icing by dipping one cookie headfirst into the glaze, then flipping it over to set back on the rack. If the consistency seems fine** drop or drizzle a bit of each color across the surface of the white icing. Take a toothpick or chopstick and gently swirl the colors together. Be careful not to swirl too much, or the colors will blend and get muddy.

  • Dip each cookie headfirst into the marbled icing, lift straight up, and give it a twist to set it upright on the rack. As the colors get too muddy in your first bowl of icing, move on to the next.

  • Let the icing dry completely before serving or storing the cookies.

Notes

*This will make more icing than you will use, but that’s unavoidable when decorating with a marbled effect.

**To make your glaze thicker, whisk in a little more sugar. To thin it down, add a few drops of water.

The sugar cookie recipe is adapted from The New York Times.

NEW FEATURE! Click here to add your own private notes.

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Author: Sue Moran

Keyword: baking, Christmas, cookies, dessert, sugar cookies

Nutrition

Serving: 1 cookie · Calories: 155 kcal · Carbohydrates: 24 g · Protein: 2 g · Fat: 6 g · Saturated Fat: 4 g · Polyunsaturated Fat: 0.3 g · Monounsaturated Fat: 2 g · Trans Fat: 0.2 g · Cholesterol: 23 mg · Sodium: 54 mg · Potassium: 34 mg · Fiber: 0.4 g · Sugar: 13 g · Vitamin A: 195 IU · Vitamin C: 0.02 mg · Calcium: 14 mg · Iron: 1 mg

Nutritional information is provided as a courtesy and is an estimate only. This information comes from online calculators. Although The View from Great Island attempts to provide accurate nutritional information, these figures are only estimates.

Did You Make This?We love seeing what you’ve made! Tag us on social media at @theviewfromgreatisland for a chance to be featured.

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Marble Iced Sugar Cookies • Easy Recipe! (2024)

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