Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (2024)

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If you are new to buttercream sugar cookie decorating, these Valentine sugar cookies are perfect for you to get introduced to the hobby. Not only are they so cute, the sparkly sanding sugar hides any imperfections that your piping skills may have as a beginner.

You only need a handful of decorating tools as well: some icing bags, decorating tips, sanding sugar, and gel food dye.

If you’re wanting a chocolate cookie with this design, make sure to check out my chocolate brownie cut out sugar cookie recipe.

Bake and decorate these Valentine sugar cookies for your loved ones this Valentine’s Day for a delicious and cute treat.

Let’s get started!

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  • Part 1: Gathering the Supplies for the Beginner-Friendly Valentine Sugar Cookies
  • Part 2: Baking the Cookies and Setting up the Icing Bags
  • Sparkly Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies with Buttercream Frosting
    • Equipment
    • Ingredients
      • Buttercream Frosting
      • Sugar Cookies
    • Instructions
      • Sugar Cookies
      • Buttercream Frosting
      • How to Decorate the Valentine Sugar Cookies
    • Notes
        • Make your buttercream icing according to the recipe and separate it into three bowls:
  • Part 3: Decorating the Valentine Sugar Cookies with Buttercream Frosting
    • How to Decorate the Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies
  • Save the Tutorial for These Valentine Sugar Cookies

Part 1: Gathering the Supplies for the Beginner-Friendly Valentine Sugar Cookies

Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (1)

To decorate these Valentine’s Day sugar cookies with buttercream frosting, you will want to gather:

Part 2: Baking the Cookies and Setting up the Icing Bags

Use the recipe card below for the sugar cookie and buttercream frosting recipes.

Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (2)

Sparkly Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies with Buttercream Frosting

Soft and sparkly, these Valentine sugar cookies are decorated with vanilla buttercream frosting and clear sanding sugar sprinkles.

Print Pin Rate

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Keyword: Buttercream Sugar Cookies, Valentine Sugar Cookies

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes minutes

Decorating Time: 1 hour hour

Total Time: 1 hour hour 40 minutes minutes

Servings: 18 cookies, depending on the size of the cookie cutter

Author: Leah Buehler

Equipment

  • Stand Mixer with Paddle Attachment

  • Rubber Spatula

  • Measuring cups and spoons

  • Medium Sized Mixing Bowl

  • Lined aluminum cookie sheet parchment paper or silicone lined baking sheet

  • Rolling Pin

  • Cookie cutters and tools see part 1 on this post for the specific tools needed

Ingredients

Buttercream Frosting

  • ½ cup room temperature unsalted butter 4 ounces
  • ½ cup room temperature salted butter 4 ounces
  • 4 cups powdered sugar
  • 1 tbsp. vanilla extract
  • 1-3 tbsp. whole milk

Sugar Cookies

  • 1 cup cold salted butter cubed
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 3 cups all purpose flour measured with the scoop & level method
  • 2 tsp. baking powder
  • 1 egg
  • 1.5 tsp. vanilla extract

Instructions

  • Remove all of the butter from the refrigerator. You will make the sugar cookies first but the butter for the frosting needs to come to room temperature before mixing.

Sugar Cookies

  • Preheat the oven to 350℉ and prepare an aluminum cookie sheet by placing either parchment paper or a silicone baking mat on it.

  • In a medium sized mixing bowl, combine the flour and baking powder and mix together. Set this aside.

  • Cube a cup of salted butter and then, in a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, combine the cubed butter with the granulated sugar. Mix until creamed together well.

  • To the stand mixer, add in the egg and vanilla extract and mix until combined.

  • Slowly add in the dry ingredients in the mixing bowl to the stand mixer.

  • Roll the dough out to 3/8" thick and use the cookie cutters to cut out the cookies. Place the cookies onto the prepared baking sheet and bake for 7-11 minutes or until the tops of the cookies no longer look wet. When baking the cookies, only bake 6-8 cookies at a time to leave proper space between each cookie to cook without spreading. Overcrowding the cookie sheet will cause spread.

Buttercream Frosting

  • In a stand mixer with the paddle attachment, add the room temperature salted and unsalted butter and mix on high until light and fluffy.

  • Mix in the powdered sugar little by little. Add in the vanilla extract and milk about halfway through adding the sugar to help the frosting come together. Start with one tablespoon of milk and work up to three if needed, depending on the consistency you want. I like to aim for a peanut butter consistency or thinner.

  • Follow the directions in Part 2 for the specific way you will divide the buttercream and set up the icing bags.

How to Decorate the Valentine Sugar Cookies

  • Please refer to Part 3 of this blog post for all of the cookie decorating tutorials.

Notes

These buttercream sugar cookies are room stable for a few days on the counter. Otherwise, store in the freezer in an airtight container until ready to use, or for up to three months. You can also freeze the undecorated cookies and buttercream frosting three months in advance to decorating.

Make your buttercream icing according to the recipe and separate it into three bowls:
      • One bowl will only contain about 1/2 cup – dye this bowl gold. I mix brown and yellow until I achieve a gold shade. There are many variations of gold so don’t get too caught up on making it perfect.
      • The other two bowls will be equal in amount, dye one dark pink and one light pink.

If using couplers and one Wilton #4 tip, add couplers to each icing bag and then add the frosting. You don’t need to add the tip yet. If you have three #4 tips, simply add a tip into each icing bag and then add the frosting. Pour sanding sugar into a bowl or onto a plate.

Part 3: Decorating the Valentine Sugar Cookies with Buttercream Frosting

Check out the video tutorial showing the overall process for these cute and easy Valentine sugar cookies then follow the step-by-step photo series tutorial below.

How to Decorate the Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies

  1. Using the gold buttercream with tip #4, outline the letter cookie(s). You can outline a word at a time but don’t outline too many of the letters, as the frosting will start to dry and the sanding sugar won’t stick as easily. Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (3)
  2. Using one of the pink shades of buttercream with the tip #4, fill in the rest of the cookie letter. Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (4)
  3. Hold the cookie in your hand and flip it upside down into the bowl of sanding sugar. Press the cookie into the sanding sugar lightly until the cookie is covered. If the frosting got messed up, use your finger or a knife to manipulate the frosting back into place. Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (5) Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (6) Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (7)
  4. Repeat steps 1-3 for all of the cookies, doing half of the cookies in light pink and half in dark pink. Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (8) Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (9)

That’s it! Don’t they look absolutely amazing without much effort at all? Seriously, you can whip these Valentine sugar cookies out so fast, perfect for those procrastinators (like me).

You can leave these cookies out on the counter overnight to dry. They won’t dry completely like royal icing sugar cookies, but the outer layer will form a crust to help protect the design.

Just lightly lay a piece of parchment paper over the cookies to prevent any dust from flying onto them.

If you are bringing these cookies to a party, make sure to read my post on how to package and transport buttercream sugar cookies.

I’d love to know in the comments below, what is your favorite Valentine sugar cookie design? Is there a design you’d love for me to cover?

Don’t forget to check out my other Valentine sugar cookie tutorials!

Save the Tutorial for These Valentine Sugar Cookies

Use the image below to pin this super easy tutorial for Valentine sugar cookies to your Valentine’s Day board on Pinterest. Alternatively, use any of the social share icons on the top of the page to share it to your favorite social media site.

Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (10)

Easy and Cute Pink Valentine Sugar Cookies | Buttercream Parties (2024)

FAQs

How to easily decorate sugar cookies? ›

Start by outlining the cookie with piping-consistency icing in any color you choose. Then, use flooding-consistency icing to fill the outlined area, starting by flooding around the edges and working your way towards the center. If the flooding is inconsistent in thickness, redistribute the wet icing with a toothpick.

How long to cool sugar cookies before icing? ›

Allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before decorating. I like to decorate cookies directly on baking sheets so I can stick the entire baking sheet in the refrigerator to help set the icing. So place the cooled cookies back on baking sheets.

How old is the sugar cookie? ›

History. Sugar cookies have a plain flavor and have been made for centuries. The popularity and availability of sugar cookies rose when sugar became widely available. The sugar cookie is believed to have originated in the mid-1700s in Nazareth, Pennsylvania.

How to decorate cookies quickly? ›

Use Squeeze Bottles to Decorate Cookies with Icing

I find that squeeze bottles work just as well for decorating and are easier for us non-pro bakers to work with. Plus, they're easy to clean! My favorites are little eight-ounce squeeze bottles that you can find at Michael's and other craft stores.

How to attach icing to sugar cookies? ›

Decorate your sugar cookies by first outlining the border, then filling in the middle with flood icing which should settle into itself. Use a toothpick or scribe tool to fill in any gaps by spreading the icing around, then tap the cookie on the counter a few times to help the icing settle into a smooth, even layer.

Do you put sprinkles on sugar cookies before or after baking? ›

You can also try adding sprinkles to your cookies before baking, but depending on the recipe, they may melt in the oven. Try it out with one cookie before committing to an entire batch.

What happens if you don't chill sugar cookies? ›

Chilling the dough is a key step in making sugar cookies, especially when you're making cut-outs. Even if you're tight on time, make sure to get the dough in the fridge, or even the freezer, even if it's only for a little while. Skip this step, and the dough will be sticky, and much harder to work with.

What is a fun fact about sugar cookies? ›

The modern sugar cookie was originally called the Nazareth Sugar Cookie, after German Protestants who settled in Nazareth, Pennsylvania, and improved the recipe. When forming the dough, they made the cookies resemble the state's keystone emblem.

Is cookie male or female? ›

This adorable gender-neutral name has Latin, English, Dutch, and modern roots, all revolving around cooking and baking. The traditional Latin and English meaning of Cookie is "cook," perfect if you want to raise a little future chef.

What were sugar cookies originally called? ›

The First “Real” Sugar Cookie

Created by Dutch settlers in New York, and referred to as a koekje, this was the first cookie to use an alkaline leavener known as “pearl ash”, and was the real catalyst in the creation of today's modern cookie. But the koekje still had far to go.

How do you display sugar cookies at a party? ›

You can never go wrong with layering your cookies on a simple plate or board! Most of the time, especially when I just bake up one batch of cookies, I will display the cookies on a serving plate, raised stand, or a domed serving plate. One of the new trends floating around on social media is a cookie board!

How far in advance can you make decorated sugar cookies? ›

If you want to make your cookies in advance… totally doable! 1 week before event: I start the process UP TO 1 week before the event and don't do any freezing in this time period (either of the icing or cookies).

How to decorate sugar cookies without icing? ›

But sometimes I just want to jazz them up a bit without hours of decorating. And that's where almond bark or melting chocolate saves the day! You can also use the fun-colored candy melts too. These products make it SO easy to simply melt and then drizzle or dip for beauty and flavor!

What do people use to decorate sugar cookies? ›

One of our all-time favorite ways to decorate sugar cookies is by flooding them with royal icing. Want to try the technique for yourself? Start by baking up a batch of Food Network Magazine's basic sugar cookies and making around 2 1/4 cups worth of basic royal icing.

How to decorate sugar cookies without a piping bag? ›

The Basic Dip

Hold a sugar cookie by the sides, then dip the top of the cookie in the royal icing. Lift the cookie from the icing and gently shake away the excess. That's it! (You could use a spatula or knife to spread the icing out, but it's really not necessary.)

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