The Best Sand Tarts Recipe
If you’ve been around for a little while, you know we’re typically team soft and chewy cookies here at Sugar Spun Run. However, I will make an exception from time to time, especially when nostalgia is involved. And for me, there’s no cookie quite as nostalgic as sand tarts! A Google search won’t produce too many results for this Pennsylvania Dutch classic, but if you stroll through an Amish market near the Mason Dixon line, you’ll be sure to find these cookies in just about every shape and color. Easily adapted for just about any holiday (although they’re most popular for Christmas and Easter), there are a few qualities about these cookies don’t change: an incredibly buttery flavor, perfectly crisp texture, and impressively thin appearance.
Three things to know about this recipe:
These are very thin cookies. You’ll think you can’t roll the dough any thinner, but you really need to try and get it less than ⅛ inch thick for the proper crisp texture. The chill time is long, but it’s necessary. It’s also important to divide the dough into a few parts so you can let the dough you’re not working with stay in the fridge–we want to keep it as cold as possible. Customize them as much as you’d like! Skip the nuts, cut them into fun shapes, use colored sugars, etc. As long as you don’t change the cookie base, you can customize the toppings and shape to your heart’s desire.
What You Need
This recipe is adapted from a sand tart recipe my grandmother gave me. It requires just 8 ingredients–so simple and so good!
Butter. We’ll start this recipe by creaming softened butter with granulated sugar. I like to use unsalted butter and add salt myself. If you only have salted butter on hand, follow the conversion in my salted vs. unsalted butter post. Eggs. My grandmother’s original recipe involved separating the egg whites and beating them to stiff peaks. We tried this, but with how dense the dough was, it almost seemed unnecessary. So, we tried again without separately beating the egg whites and were very pleased to find the cookies tasted identical, so we nixed the extra step! Yay for simplicity! Flour. We’re sticking with all-purpose flour for these sand tarts. Make sure you measure your flour properly, or you could end up with thicker cookies (and you already know they should be nice and thin!). Pecans. These are optional, but they do add a nice texture and flavor to the cookies. I typically decorate just some of my sand tarts with pecans, since I also love them with just the egg/cinnamon sugar on top. Cinnamon sugar. This is just a simple mixture of ground cinnamon and granulated sugar. If you have some cinnamon sugar already prepared, feel free to use that here instead of making more for this recipe.
SAM’S TIP: Cut your sand tarts into any shape you’d like! I remember my grandmother skipping the pecans and cutting hers into stars and santa clauses. Those were my favorites! Remember, this is just an overview of the ingredients I used and why. For the full recipe please scroll down to the bottom of the post!
How to Make Sand Tarts
Make the Dough
Add the Toppings
SAM’S TIP: Since sand tarts are so thin, they are prone to burning easily. Keep an eye on yours while they are in the oven, as every oven is different and your cookies might be done sooner than 9 minutes! Have you ever had sand tarts? I’d love to know what you think of my version ❤️ Enjoy! Let’s bake together! Subscribe to my newsletter to be notified of all the newest recipes and follow along on YouTube where I share hundreds of free recipe tutorials! 💜