There is a moment when you are browning butter on the stovetop — right when it shifts from just melted to that deep golden color and the smell of toasted hazelnuts and caramel fills your kitchen — where you realize something special is happening. That moment is exactly why these cinnamon brown butter cookies exist and exactly why they taste the way they do.
I stumbled onto brown butter cookies almost by accident. I was making a batch of regular chocolate chip cookies one evening and got distracted while melting the butter. By the time I noticed it had gone golden and nutty I thought I had ruined it. I used it anyway.
The cookies that came out of the oven that night were so much better than anything I had made before that I spent the next two weeks figuring out how to build an entire recipe around that one happy accident. These cinnamon brown butter cookies are the result of all that experimenting and they have not left my recipe rotation since.
The cinnamon swirl on top is not just for looks — though it does make them look absolutely stunning on a cookie tray. It creates a slightly crisp, sugary crust over the soft chewy interior that adds texture and a hit of warm spice in every bite.
These cookies are the definition of a crowd pleaser and once you understand the brown butter technique you will start putting it in everything. Fair warning.
Place the butter in a light-colored saucepan or skillet over medium heat — light colored is important so you can see the color change clearly. Melt the butter completely, stirring occasionally. Continue cooking, stirring frequently, as the butter foams and then the foam subsides. Keep watching — within about 3–5 minutes you will see golden brown bits forming on the bottom of the pan and the butter will turn a deep amber color with a nutty, toasty aroma. The moment it reaches a deep golden brown color remove it immediately from the heat and pour it into a large mixing bowl. Do not walk away during this step — the difference between perfectly browned butter and burnt butter is about 30 seconds.
Pour the brown sugar and granulated sugar directly into the hot browned butter in the bowl and whisk vigorously until combined. The mixture will look grainy at first — that is completely normal. Let the mixture cool for about 10 minutes until it is warm but not hot. You do not want to scramble the eggs when you add them in the next step.
Add the two whole eggs and the extra egg yolk to the cooled brown butter and sugar mixture. Add the vanilla extract. Whisk everything together until the mixture is smooth, glossy and slightly thickened — about 60–90 seconds of vigorous whisking. This step is important for developing the right texture in the finished cookie.
In a separate bowl whisk together the flour, baking soda, salt and ground cinnamon. Add the dry ingredients to the wet mixture and fold together with a rubber spatula until just combined and no flour streaks remain. Do not overmix — stop as soon as the flour is incorporated. The dough will be soft and slightly sticky at this point.
Cover the bowl with plastic wrap and refrigerate the dough for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. Chilling is not optional here — it solidifies the fat, prevents excessive spreading in the oven, and deepens the flavor significantly. The longer you chill the dough the better the cookies will taste. If you chill overnight the cookies develop an almost toffee-like depth that is really something special.
While the dough is chilling mix together the granulated sugar, ground cinnamon and melted butter in a small bowl until it forms a slightly paste-like mixture. Set aside. This mixture is what creates that beautiful swirl pattern and caramelized cinnamon crust on top of each cookie.
Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C) and line two baking sheets with parchment paper. Using a cookie scoop or tablespoon, scoop the chilled dough into balls about 1.5 inches in diameter and place them 2 inches apart on the prepared baking sheets. Take a small spoonful of the cinnamon sugar butter mixture and place it on top of each dough ball. Use the back of the spoon or your finger to gently swirl it into a spiral pattern across the top of each cookie. The swirl does not need to be perfect — slightly rustic looks even better in the finished cookie.
Bake for 12–14 minutes until the edges are set and the tops look just barely done — they will look slightly underdone in the center and that is exactly right. The cinnamon swirl on top should look caramelized and slightly crisp. Do not overbake these cookies. They firm up significantly as they cool and overbaked brown butter cookies lose that essential chewiness that makes them so good. Let them cool on the baking sheet for 8–10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack.
Store the cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. Place a slice of bread in the container to keep them soft — the bread trick works just as well here as it does with any other chewy cookie. Keep them away from direct sunlight or heat which can cause them to dry out faster.
These cookies keep well in the refrigerator for up to 10 days in an airtight container. The cold firms them up considerably so let them sit at room temperature for 10–15 minutes before eating or warm them in the microwave for 8–10 seconds to bring back that fresh-baked softness.
Freeze baked cookies in a single layer on a baking sheet until solid then transfer to a freezer-safe bag or container for up to 3 months. Thaw at room temperature for about 20 minutes before eating. You can also warm them in a 300°F oven for 5 minutes to revive that fresh-baked texture.
The raw cookie dough freezes beautifully. Scoop the dough into balls and freeze on a parchment-lined baking sheet until solid then transfer to a freezer bag. Bake straight from frozen at 350°F adding 2–3 extra minutes to the baking time. Add the cinnamon swirl topping just before baking, not before freezing.
These cinnamon brown butter cookies are genuinely one of the recipes I am most proud of developing. They started as a happy accident and turned into something I make over and over again for family, for friends, for holidays, and honestly just for a regular Tuesday when I want something that feels special without requiring a special occasion.
The brown butter technique sounds intimidating but once you have done it once you will wonder why you were ever nervous about it. It takes about five minutes and the flavor payoff is completely out of proportion to the effort involved.
That is exactly the kind of cooking I love and exactly what Recipes by Kip is all about — simple techniques, quality ingredients, and results that make people genuinely happy.
Make a batch this weekend and let me know what you think. Drop a comment below or tag me on Pinterest — I always love seeing your cookies. Happy baking. :)
— Kip
These decadent cinnamon brown butter cookies are the kind of cookie that makes people stop mid-conversation to ask what you put in them. The secret is browned butter — regular butter taken just a few minutes further on the stovetop until it turns deep golden and develops this incredible nutty, toffee-like aroma that completely transforms the flavor of an otherwise simple cookie. Pair that with a swirl of warm cinnamon sugar running through each one and you have a cookie that is rich, chewy, deeply fragrant and honestly one of the best things to ever come out of my oven. They look stunning, they taste even better, and the whole process is more straightforward than you would ever guess from the results. If you only make one new cookie recipe this year, make it this one.