With their delicate almond flavor, crumbly shortbread texture, and sweet powdered sugar coating, almond crescent cookies are a traditional favorite around the holidays, but can (and should!) be enjoyed year round. This is a 1-bowl cookie dough, and the chill time is relatively quick!
If these snowy moon-shaped cookies look familiar to you, it’s because they are such a classic style of cookie, you have no doubt encountered them on more than one occasion!
Buttery, nutty, and coated in confectioners’ sugar, almond crescent cookies are a staple in Italian baking. Made with a few simple ingredients, they’re elegant in their simplicity. While there are countless ways to make them, this recipe reflects how I tested and prepared them. It may not be the most traditional approach, but they check all the crescent cookie boxes!
And we all love them.
Perfect with a steamy mug of coffee, tea, or hot chocolate, these are a classic “tea cookie.”
This is an egg-free baking recipe.
I strongly recommend grinding up almonds yourself, so you get a coarse and gritty texture..) This way you will really be able to taste the almond. In a pinch, you can use store-bought coarse almond meal, but do not use fine almond flour. Your cookie dough won’t come together very well and the cookies, following the recipe below, will taste dry.
If you don’t have a food processor, chop sliced almonds as finely as possible with a sharp knife.
The cookie dough comes together in just 1 bowl. It will be super thick, to the point where you don’t think it will come together! Turn your mixer up and watch the buttery goodness form before your eyes.
The dough will come together, I promise:
Use a Tablespoon measuring spoon to portion out the cookie dough, then use your fingers to shape the cookies into crescent shapes. They don’t have to be perfect (and they won’t be!), so just do your best here.
Chill the shaped crescent cookies in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes and up to 1 day, to help set their shape, and then bake.
Let the cookies cool completely, then roll each crescent cookie generously in confectioners’ sugar. If you roll them while they’re still warm, the powdered sugar will just melt into the cookies, so make sure they are completely cool before coating them.
With their delicate almond flavor, crumbly shortbread texture, and sweet powdered sugar coating, almond crescent cookies are a traditional favorite around the holidays, but can (and should!) be enjoyed year round. These are a wonderful make-ahead option, as the shaped cookie dough can be refrigerated for up to 1 day.