
Strawberry biscuit cookies are what I bake when I want a cookie that tastes more like a tiny shortcake than a standard sugar cookie. They are buttery, tender, and a little craggy, with real strawberries tucked into a dough that behaves more like biscuit dough than cookie dough. I like them because they are not trying to be neat. The best ones have a few strawberry pieces showing on top and a thin drizzle of icing running into the ridges.
Fresh strawberries can be difficult in baked goods because they bring so much water. I learned that the messy way: soft dough, spreading cookies, and pink streaks that looked pretty but baked up gummy. Now I blot the berries, freeze them while I make the dough, and keep the mixing gentle. Cold fruit is the difference between a cookie with strawberry pockets and a dough that turns slimy.
The recipe makes 30 cookies and bakes at 375°F (191°C). The dough needs at least 45 minutes in the refrigerator, which is not a step I skip. Chilling gives the butter time to firm back up and helps the scooped cookies hold their biscuit-like shape.
Why I come back to this dough
- It uses real strawberries instead of artificial flavoring.
- Cold butter creates flaky, tender centers.
- A small amount of milk brings the dough together without making it cakey.
- Chilling gives me better height and less spread.
- Coarse sugar adds crunch on top if I want it.
- The icing can stay vanilla or take a spoonful of strawberry jam.
What I use and why
The strawberries are the star, but I treat them carefully. I chop fresh berries small, blot them with a towel, and freeze them while I mix everything else. If I use frozen strawberries, I keep them frozen and do not thaw or blot them. The colder and drier the fruit, the easier it is to fold into the dough.
All-purpose flour, granulated sugar, baking powder, and salt make the dry base. Baking powder gives lift, while cold unsalted butter creates the biscuit texture. I cut the butter into the dry ingredients until coarse crumbs form. Some bits are larger than others, and that is fine because those bits help the cookies bake tender.
Milk, a cold egg, and vanilla pull the dough together. The icing is confectioners’ sugar, milk or heavy cream, vanilla, and optional strawberry jam. Heavy cream makes a thicker drizzle; milk makes it lighter and a little sharper.
How I make the cookies
Step 1 — Chill the strawberries
I like the cookies best the day they are iced, when the edges still have a little biscuit crumble and the centers are soft. After refrigeration, I give them a few minutes on the counter before serving.
If I am using fresh strawberries, I chop them into small bite-size pieces, blot away surface moisture, and freeze them while I work on the dough. I do not need to thaw frozen strawberries. Wet berries are the fastest way to make this dough sticky in a bad way.
Step 2 — Cut in the butter
I whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt in a large bowl. Then I add cold cubed butter and cut it in with a pastry cutter until the bowl looks like coarse crumbs. I can use a food processor, but I prefer doing this by hand because it is harder to overwork the dough.
Step 3 — Bring the dough together
In a small bowl, I whisk the milk, cold egg, and vanilla. I pour that over the flour and butter mixture, then fold with a spatula until just about combined. The dough is thick, sticky, and tacky. I stop before it looks smooth because smooth usually means tough here.
Step 4 — Fold, chill, scoop, and bake
I carefully fold in the cold strawberries. Some pieces refuse to stay in the dough, and I press those into the tops after scooping. I cover the dough and chill it for at least 45 minutes and up to 1 day. Then I preheat to 375°F (191°C), line two baking sheets, scoop heaping 1.5 tablespoon portions, space them 3 inches apart, add coarse sugar if I want crunch, and bake for 15-16 minutes.
Icing the cooled cookies
After baking, I let the cookies sit on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before moving them to a rack. I wait until they are completely cool before icing. Warm cookies melt the drizzle into a thin glaze, which is not what I want here.
For the icing, I whisk confectioners’ sugar with 2 tablespoons of milk or heavy cream and vanilla. If it is too thick to drizzle, I add the remaining tablespoon. When I want a soft strawberry note, I whisk in the heaping tablespoon of jam. The jam can make the icing a little speckled, and I like that homemade look.
Tips from my kitchen
- I blot fresh berries well and freeze them before folding them in.
- I keep the butter cold and cut it in by hand when I have time.
- I stop folding before the dough looks polished; biscuit cookie dough should be rough.
- I chill the dough at least 45 minutes even when I am impatient.
- I ice only cooled cookies so the drizzle stays visible.
Variations I have actually tried
- For extra crunch, I always add coarse sugar before baking.
- For a creamier icing, I use heavy cream instead of milk.
- For a stronger strawberry finish, I add the optional jam to the icing, not to the dough.
- For lemon brightness, I add a little lemon zest to the dry ingredients.
- For smaller cookies, I scoop slightly less dough and begin checking around 13 minutes.
- For a less sweet cookie, I skip the icing and keep only the coarse sugar topping.
Storing and freezing
These cookies stay fresh covered at room temperature for up to 1 day or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week. Because they contain real strawberries, I prefer the refrigerator after the first day. The texture firms when cold, so I let them sit out for a few minutes before serving.
Uniced cookies freeze well. I freeze them in a single layer until firm, then pack them into a container. I thaw at room temperature and drizzle fresh icing after thawing. I do not love freezing iced cookies because the drizzle can turn spotty.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use frozen strawberries?
Yes. I keep them frozen and fold them in quickly. Thawing makes them too wet for this dough.
Why did my cookies spread?
The dough may have been warm, the berries may have been too wet, or the butter was overworked. I chill the dough and keep the fruit cold.
Can I skip the icing?
Yes. The cookies still taste good with only coarse sugar on top. I skip the icing when I want them less sweet.
Can I make the dough ahead?
Yes. I chill it up to 1 day. If it gets very firm, I let it sit briefly before scooping so I do not crush the berries.
Do I need a food processor?
No. I prefer a pastry cutter because it gives me more control and helps prevent overworking the dough.
If you bake these, tell me whether you went with vanilla icing or the strawberry jam version — I change my mind every time.

Strawberry biscuit cookies
Description
I make these strawberry biscuit cookies with cold butter, real strawberries, and a simple vanilla or strawberry-jam icing. The dough chills before baking so the cookies stay tender, flaky, and full of berry pockets.
Ingredients You’ll Need
Instructions
- If using fresh strawberries, chop them into small bite-size pieces and gently blot with a towel to remove moisture. Freeze the fresh chopped strawberries while preparing the other dough ingredients. If using frozen strawberries, do not thaw or blot them.
- Whisk the flour, sugar, baking powder, and salt together in a large bowl. Add the cubed butter and cut it into the dry ingredients with a pastry cutter until coarse crumbs form. If using a food processor, pulse several times, then pour the mixture into a large bowl.
- Whisk the milk, egg, and dough vanilla together in a small bowl. Pour over the flour and butter mixture, then fold with a large spoon or silicone spatula until just about combined. The dough will be thick, sticky, and tacky. Avoid overworking it.
- Carefully work in the cold strawberries without overmixing. Press any loose strawberries into the dough balls when shaping.
- Cover the cookie dough and chill in the refrigerator for at least 45 minutes and up to 1 day.
- Preheat the oven to 375°F (191°C). Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats.
- Portion the dough into balls about 1.5 tablespoons each and arrange them 3 inches apart on the prepared baking sheets. Press any loose strawberries into the tops and sprinkle with coarse sugar if desired.
- Bake for 15-16 minutes, or until the edges are lightly browned.
- Cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely before icing.
- Whisk the confectioners' sugar, 2 tablespoons milk or heavy cream, and icing vanilla together. Add the remaining tablespoon of milk or cream if needed to thin. Whisk in strawberry jam if desired, then drizzle over cooled cookies.
- Store cookies covered at room temperature for up to 1 day or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.
Nutrition Facts
Servings 30
- Amount Per Serving
- Calories 74kcal
- % Daily Value *
- Total Fat 3g5%
- Saturated Fat 2g10%
- Trans Fat 0.1g
- Cholesterol 8mg3%
- Sodium 68mg3%
- Potassium 19mg1%
- Total Carbohydrate 10g4%
- Sugars 4g
- Protein 1g2%
- Calcium 25 mg
- Iron 0.4 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
Keep berries cold. Warm, wet strawberries make the dough slimy.
Do not overwork. I stop folding while the dough still looks rough.
Chill the dough. The 45 minute rest helps control spreading.
Ice after cooling. Warm cookies absorb the drizzle.
Frequently Asked Questions
Yes. I fold them in while still frozen so they do not leak too much juice into the dough.
Yes. The dough can chill up to 1 day. I let it soften slightly if it is too firm to scoop.
The dough was probably overworked. I fold gently and stop before it looks smooth.
Yes. It adds crunch, but the cookies still bake well without it.
They keep covered at room temperature for up to 1 day or in the refrigerator for up to 1 week.