brown butter pumpkin snickerdoodles
1 Dec 2025
That sounded okay and I was sure I had all the ingredients I needed including the cream of tartar. I looked for the cream of tartar but couldn't find it, so instead I used baking powder. Once I'd made the cookie dough I found the cream of tartar lurking in the back of the cupboard.
Here's the recipe for you which makes 15 cookies. For all my recipes, I use a 250 ml cup and a 20 ml tablespoon. All eggs are 60 grams and my oven is a conventional oven not fan forced, so you may need to reduce your oven temperature by 20°C.
Brown butter pumpkin snickerdoodles
Ingredients
60g pumpkin puree
Ingredients
60g pumpkin puree
2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice or 1 tsp cinnamon/½ tsp ginger and ¼ tsp each of nutmeg and mixed spice
113g unsalted butter, cubed
55g brown sugar
70g caster sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 egg white
180g plain flour
1 tsp cream of tartar or baking powder
½ tsp bicarb soda
¼ tsp seasalt flakes
55g brown sugar
70g caster sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 egg white
180g plain flour
1 tsp cream of tartar or baking powder
½ tsp bicarb soda
¼ tsp seasalt flakes
Rolling
30g raw sugar
2 tsp ground cinnamon (optional)
30g raw sugar
2 tsp ground cinnamon (optional)
Method
Place the pumpkin puree in a small saucepen with the spices and cook for 1-2 minutes over medium heat. This helps to dry out some of the excess moisture from the puree and bloom the spices. Let the pumpkin cool while you brown the butter.
To brown the butter, place it in a saucepan over medium heat. The butter will begin to foam. Make sure you whisk constantly during this process. After a couple of minutes, the butter will begin to crackle and foam, and then brown on the bottom of the saucepan; continue to whisk and remove from heat as soon as the butter begins to brown and give off a nutty aroma.
Immediately transfer the butter to a bowl to prevent burning (make sure you scrape all of it out of the pan - every last drop!). Set aside to cool for 10 minutes. It is important that your butter cools off. Add the sugars to the cooled brown butter, and mix until well combined and creamy. Beat in the egg white, vanilla and pumpkin puree and mix until well combined.
Sift the flour, baking powder, bicarb soda and salt together into a bowl. Slowly add the dry ingredients to the brown butter mixture and mix until just combined. Place plastic wrap over the bowl and refrigerate for a minimum of 1-2 hours or until the mixture is firm.
Preheat the oven to 180⁰C, conventional and line 2 baking trays with baking paper. Weigh out 30g of cookie dough and roll into balls. If dough is too hard to roll into a ball, you may need to let it sit out at room temperature for 10-20 minutes while your oven preheats.
Meanwhile place the sugar and the 2 teaspoons cinnamon (if using) in a small bowl. Roll the dough balls in the cinnamon-sugar mixture, and then place on the baking tray, 2 inches apart.
Place the tray on the centre rack of the preheated 180⁰C conventional oven for 11-14 minutes or until cookies are just slightly golden brown around the edges. Repeat with the other tray. Cool the cookies on the baking tray for 5-10 minutes then transfer to a wire rack. Cool completely before storing in an airtight container.
So what did I think? The cookies are crunchy on the outside from the raw sugar and soft on the inside. They're gently flavoured with pumpkin and spice and delicious served with a nice cup of tea.
See you all next week with some more baking from my kitchen and just a reminder, that Christmas Week 2025 is just around the corner.
Bye for now,
Jillian




























































