These yummy lemon cookies have delicious chewy middles, crisp edges, and a sweet citrus flavor. I love them with tea for an afternoon treat!
These lemon cookies are my new favorite treat! They have that bakery-perfect chewy middle with a lightly crisp edge and a lovely balance of light and bright citrus flavor. I’ll be making them on repeat throughout the holiday season, but honestly, these lemon cookies are so delicious that I would happily take one any day of the year.
This lemon cookie recipe comes from my friend Melissa Coleman’s book The Minimalist Kitchen. You may know of her blog, The Faux Martha. If you don’t, go check it out – you’ll absolutely love her. She has wonderfully approachable mealtime recipes, highly do-able organizational tips (check out her pretty pantry), and, man, can that girl bake.
Lemon Cookies Ingredients
This lemon cookie recipe is an excellent example of Melissa’s baking prowess. It’s SO delicious! Here’s what you need to make it:
- All-purpose flour makes up the base of the dough. Spoon and level it to avoid packing too much into your measuring cup!
- Cornmeal and poppyseeds give these cookies substance and contribute to their delectable crisp/chewy texture.
- Baking soda helps them rise.
- Sea salt highlights the lemon flavor.
- Sugar sweetens them up.
- Butter and olive oil combine to add richness and accent the citrus essence.
- Fresh lemon juice and orange and lemon zest make them bright and citrusy. Skip the orange zest and use all lemon if you prefer!
- And an egg puffs them up and perfects their moist, chewy middles.
That’s it! Let’s bake.
Find the complete recipe with measurements below.
How to Make Lemon Cookies
This lemon cookie recipe is simple to make—you don’t even have to chill the cookie dough! Here’s how it goes:
First, combine the dry ingredients. Whisk together the flour, cornmeal, poppy seeds, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl.
Next, mix the wet ingredients. Cream the butter, sugar, and citrus zest in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment. Add the oil, egg, and lemon juice and mix until pale and well combined, stopping to scrape down the sides of the bowl as needed.
Then, combine the wet and dry. Add the flour mixture to the creamed ingredients, and mix on low speed until just combined.
Finally, scoop and bake the cookies! Use a 1/4-cup cookie scoop to scoop the dough onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, leaving an inch or so between each scoop. Sprinkle the tops with sugar, then bake at 350°F for 12 minutes.
Let cool on the pan for 1 minute before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely. Enjoy!
These photos make these lemon cookies look kind of small, but made with a 1/4-cup cookie scoop, they’re a perfect 1-cookie afternoon indulgence with a cup of coffee or tea.
Recipe Tips
- Underbaking is the secret to soft lemon cookies. The cookies might seem underdone when you check them at the 12 minute mark, but take them out of the oven anyway! As they cool, they’ll set up with perfect crisp edges and soft, chewy middles. If you bake them longer, the middles will have a cakier texture.
- A lemon glaze makes the citrus flavor pop. For an extra-lemony treat, drizzle these cookies with my quick lemon glaze. It’s easy to make with just 2 ingredients: powdered sugar and fresh lemon juice!
- These cookies freeze perfectly. Stash them in an airtight container in the freezer for an easy dessert down the road!
More Favorite Cookie Recipes
If you love these lemon cookies, try one of these favorite cookie recipes next:
- Perfect Oatmeal Cookies
- Easy Sugar Cookies
- Lemon Shortbread Cookies
- No Bake Cookies
- Chewy Molasses Cookies
- Thumbprint Cookies
- Best Peanut Butter Cookies
- Or any of these 17 Easy Cookie Recipes!
Lemon Cookies
Ingredients
- 2¼ cups all-purpose flour, spooned and leveled
- ¼ cup cornmeal
- 2 tablespoons poppy seeds
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ¼ teaspoon sea salt
- ½ cup unsalted butter, at room temperature
- 1 cup granulated sugar, plus more for sprinkling
- 1½ teaspoons lemon zest
- 1½ teaspoons orange zest
- ¼ cup extra-virgin olive oil
- 1 large egg
- 2 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cornmeal, poppy seeds, baking soda, and salt.
- In a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream together the butter, sugar, and zests on medium speed until well combined. Add the oil, egg, and lemon juice. Continue mixing until pale and evenly combined, about 1 minute, scraping down the sides as needed.
- Add the dry ingredients to the creamed ingredients, mixing on low speed until just combined. The dough will be somewhat dense.
- Using a 1/4-cup sized cookie scoop, scoop the dough onto the prepared baking sheet (note: these cookies will spread, so leave some room in between each one), and sprinkle the tops with sugar. Bake for 12 minutes. The cookies will seem like they need a minute longer, but take them out anyways. Let cool on the pan for 1 minute before transferring to a cooling rack to cool completely.
Notes
Hi! I made these last night and everyone loved them! I’d like to try them for a friend who is gluten-free. Do you think they’d work with a GG all purpose flour like Bob’s or Cup-4-Cup? Thank you ou!
Hi Carla, I’m so glad you enjoyed them. I haven’t tried them with GF flour so I’m not sure. Let me know if you give it a go!
I made these last night and my family liked them; however, next time I will definitely use more lemon zest than recommended as you don’t get much of the lemon taste, and I will leave them in the oven an extra 2 minutes.
Thank you for the recipe and Merry Christmas.
Hi there,
I purchased 3 of your books in hope your lemon and pumpkin recipes from this site would be in one of them (pumpkin muffins, lemon cookies etc) but sadly I couldn’t find any similar recipes in any of the books, aw.
Are the recipes on your site not the ones in your books?
Hi Ellen, that’s right! The cookbook recipes are unique to the books, with the exception of a very few we’ve posted on the blog. I’m sorry for the disappointment, but I hope you enjoy the books!
Fantastic cookies! I made them for my husband and he said they’re the best lemon cookies he’s ever had. It’s the poppyseeds. They take it to a whole new level. Thanks for sharing!
Hi Hettie, I’m so glad the cookies were a hit!
Have never been inspired to leave a comment on a recipe site. However! These are the perfect lemon cookies! Added a bit more zest. And. Just because! I swapped out the poppy seeds for minced preserved lemons. Amazing combo of sweet and salty.
Hi Claire, I’m so glad you loved them!
These look delicious I will have to try them out.
Very tasty, very easy to make, which is just what I need, being brand new to baking. Only criticism I have is that I wish I had used regular salt instead of sea salt. Thank you for a great recipe!
I’ve never left a comment on a recipe before but these were really great! I used 1/2 cup whole wheat flour, reduced the sugar a bit, added 1.5 tsp extra zest and the juice of 1.5 lemons per other comments around flavor and they were perfect. Thank you for this recipe – I never would have thought to use cornmeal in a cookie and it was great!
I’m so glad you loved them!
Hi Jeanine,
I would love to try this recipe. Is there anything I could substitute fir the cornmeal? My son is allergic to corn.
Hi Cheryl, I haven’t tried so I’m not sure.
Hmm, that’s a tough one. I think semolina would have a similar texture (I realize it might not be at most stores). Additional flour might work, but I’m not sure how much.
Just baked these cookies and they taste great! I put in a little more lemon juice and zest as I like the kick, but I was very puzzled why the cookie didn’t flatten out at all in the oven (I used an ice cream scoop to portion them out) – they looked like scones that tasted like cookies. For the second batch, I flattened out the dough with a spatula, looks much better.
Hi June, did you change anything about the recipe? It sounds like maybe there was too much flour – the amount that gets packed into a measuring cup can vary. Here’s our method: https://www.loveandlemons.com/how-to-measure-flour/
I used the metric grams conversion instead of cup. But the next time I make it, I’ll try cup measurement! Thanks for the reply!