
I make chocolate football cookies when I want a themed dessert without hauling out every decorating tool I own. The dough is a simple cocoa cookie dough, and the football shape comes from rolling, flattening, and nudging the edges by hand.
They are not meant to be identical. I actually like them better when the shapes look handmade, because the white laces pull the whole tray together. The only part I am strict about is cooling before decorating.
The recipe uses basic pantry ingredients, which is exactly what I want before a watch party. I can bake them in the afternoon, pipe the lines once they are cool, and set them out without worrying about frosting towers.
Why I keep coming back to this
- No rolling pin or cookie cutter is required for the football shape.
- The cocoa dough is sturdy enough to decorate but still tender when baked.
- The ingredient list is short and pantry-friendly.
- White icing or melted white chocolate both work for the laces.
- They are easy for kids to help shape, as long as I handle the hot pan.
- The cookies travel better than frosted cupcakes on a crowded snack table.
What you need (and what each one is doing)
- cocoa powder, 4 tablespoons.This is where the chocolate flavor starts, so I whisk it well to break up every dusty lump.
- egg, 1.Eggs give structure. I let them lose the fridge chill so they blend without tightening the batter.
- all-purpose flour, 1 cup.I spoon and level it because a packed cup makes baked chocolate desserts dry and heavy.
- softened butter, 6 tablespoons.Butter carries the flavor; I use it softened for frosting and cold when the dough needs flakes.
- baking powder, 1/2 teaspoon.This gives lift. I check the date on the container before a special bake.
- white sugar, 8 tablespoons.It sweetens, of course, but it also helps the crumb stay tender and the edges bake nicely.
- salt, 1/4 teaspoon.A small amount keeps the chocolate from tasting flat. I add the pinch even in sweet recipes.
- vanilla extract, 1/4 teaspoon.Vanilla rounds off the sharper cocoa notes. I notice when I leave it out.
- white icing or melted white chocolate, (for decorating).I chop or measure it before I start so it melts evenly and does not leave stubborn pieces.
How I make it
Step 1 — Mix the dry bowl
I preheat to 350°F (180°C), line a baking sheet with parchment, and sift the flour, cocoa, baking powder, and salt. Cocoa can hide little lumps, and those lumps show in a small cookie.
Step 2 — Cream and combine
I beat the softened butter with the sugar until it looks lighter, then mix in the egg and vanilla. The dry ingredients go in slowly. Near the end I use a spatula or clean hands to bring the dough together without overworking it.
Step 3 — Shape the footballs
I roll small balls about 1 inch wide, place them on the sheet, and flatten them gently into ovals. A small spatula helps press shallow lines into the top, but I do not cut too deeply because the cookies spread a bit.
Step 4 — Bake and decorate
I bake 12-15 minutes, until the edges feel set, then cool the cookies 5 minutes on the sheet before moving them to a rack. Once completely cool, I pipe white laces and seams with icing or melted white chocolate.
Tips from my kitchen
- Keep the cookies similar in size.Even sizing keeps the bake time predictable.
- Do not overbake.The edges should be firm, but the centers will set more as they cool.
- Cool before decorating.Warm cookies melt white chocolate into blurry lines.
- Use parchment.It keeps the bottoms from getting too dark.
Variations I have actually tried
- White chocolate laces:I melt white chocolate chips with a tiny bit of oil for smoother piping.
- Royal icing lines:I use royal icing when I need the decoration to dry firm.
- Peppermint cocoa:I add a drop of peppermint extract for a winter watch party.
- Mini footballs:I make smaller dough balls and check them earlier.
- Sandwich cookies:I spread a little vanilla buttercream between two cooled cookies.
Storing and making ahead
I store the decorated cookies in a single layer until the icing sets, then stack them with parchment between layers. They keep at room temperature for 3-4 days. If I use melted white chocolate, I keep the container in a cool spot so the lines stay firm.
What I serve with it
I serve these with salty snacks because the cocoa cookie is sweet and simple. They look good on a platter with popcorn, pretzels, and a bowl of berries.
When I have a little extra time, I set everything out in order and read the recipe once before I turn on the oven. That sounds fussy, but it keeps me from finding the missing spatula while chocolate is cooling or frosting is softening. With chocolate football cookies, the small pauses matter: room-temperature ingredients blend cleaner, cooled cakes take frosting better, and cut cookies or pies hold their shape when they are not rushed.
I also pay attention to how the mixture looks, not just what the clock says. A batter can look thicker on a dry day, frosting can soften in a warm kitchen, and chocolate can need one more quiet minute before it turns smooth. I use the times as guardrails, then let my eyes make the final call.
If I am baking for company, I do the least glamorous jobs first: lining pans, clearing a cooling rack, choosing the container for leftovers, and setting out a clean knife. Those little chores make chocolate football cookies feel calm instead of chaotic once the chocolate is on my hands.
The other habit that helps me is tasting the components separately when it is safe to do so. Frosting can take another pinch of salt, ganache may need a longer rest, and a spiced dough should smell lively before it bakes. I would rather correct the bowl than explain a flat dessert later.
I do not chase picture-perfect results with this recipe. I look for food that cuts cleanly, tastes balanced, and makes people reach for a second small piece. A slightly uneven swirl, a rustic crimp, or a homemade-looking cookie edge does not bother me at all.
Cleanup is easier if I keep a damp towel nearby and wash chocolate bowls before they dry hard. That sounds like a tiny note, but it is the difference between a pleasant baking afternoon and a sink full of stubborn cocoa streaks.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need a football cookie cutter?
No. I shape the dough into ovals by hand and use the decoration to make the football look clear.
Can I use melted white chocolate for the lines?
Yes. I let the cookies cool completely first, then pipe the chocolate from a small bag.
Why is my dough crumbly?
It may need a little more mixing by hand at the end. I press it together gently rather than adding liquid right away.
Can I make the dough ahead?
Yes. I chill it covered for a day, then let it soften slightly before shaping.
How do I keep the shapes from spreading?
I keep the dough balls small and avoid over-soft butter. If the kitchen is warm, I chill shaped cookies 10 minutes before baking.
If you make these for a game, I want to know whether your crowd reached for cookies or salty snacks first.

Chocolate Football Cookies
Description
These chocolate football cookies are simple cocoa cookies that I shape by hand and decorate with white lines after cooling. They are fun for a game-day tray without needing a rolling pin.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350°F (180°C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Sift flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt in a medium bowl.
- Cream softened butter and white sugar until light and fluffy. Mix in the egg and vanilla.
- Gradually add dry ingredients to the wet mixture until a dough forms, using your hands near the end if needed.
- Roll dough into small balls about 1 inch in diameter. Place on the baking sheet and flatten slightly into football-like ovals.
- Use a small spatula to make four shallow lines across each cookie.
- Bake 12-15 minutes, until edges are slightly firm. Cool on the sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a rack.
- Pipe football designs with white icing or melted white chocolate once cookies are completely cool.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 18
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 66kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 4g7%
- Saturated Fat 3g15%
- Trans Fat 0.2g
- Cholesterol 20mg7%
- Sodium 46mg2%
- Potassium 30mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 6g2%
- Dietary Fiber 1g4%
- Protein 1g2%
- Calcium 13 mg
- Iron 0.5 mg
* Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily value may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Note
Shape by hand. The laces do most of the visual work.
Cool fully. Decorations stay sharper on cool cookies.
Do not cut deep lines. Shallow marks bake better.
Use white chocolate or icing. Both work; icing dries firmer.
Frequently Asked Questions
No. I shape the dough into ovals by hand and use the decoration to make the football look clear.
Yes. I let the cookies cool completely first, then pipe the chocolate from a small bag.
It may need a little more mixing by hand at the end. I press it together gently rather than adding liquid right away.
Yes. I chill it covered for a day, then let it soften slightly before shaping.
I keep the dough balls small and avoid over-soft butter. If the kitchen is warm, I chill shaped cookies 10 minutes before baking.