The Best Bakery Style Tiramisu Cookies Recipe Ever
These tiramisu cookies turn your cookie box into a coffee break, with crisp espresso bases, mascarpone topping, and a light cocoa finish.

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Every December, my kitchen turns into a small workshop of sugar and crumbs. Cooling racks crowd every surface, bowls stack in the sink, and Leo and Lin circle like tiny satellites, waiting for anything covered in sprinkles.
One Christmas, I stood over a sea of cookie boxes and realized almost everything in them was for the kids: sugar cookies with bright icing, chocolate chip cookies with extra chips, candies tucked into every corner.
When I looked up, I noticed the adults instead. F sipping his coffee black. My father-in-law pouring himself another small cup after dinner. Friends hovering near the moka pot as if it were another dessert course. Everyone loved coffee, yet the boxes in front of them were very sweet, very child-forward, nothing like what they would reach for in a café.
At the same time, I was deep in a tiramisu phase. Years of making it for New Year’s in Eastern European-style gatherings, for friends who avoided alcohol, for others who wanted something stronger. I tested tiramisu in pans, glasses, and individual cups. I kept adjusting the coffee until I knew exactly how much bitterness the mascarpone cream could carry before someone quietly pushed their plate away.

Eventually, tiramisu became a cookie that fit into Christmas boxes yet still tasted like proper tiramisu beside black coffee. I treated it like a sturdy ladyfinger, firm for mascarpone, and tested instant coffees from Israeli espresso jars to Colombian-style blends that carry friends’ coffee farm stories.
By then, tiramisu had taken over my notebooks. There were tiramisu protein bars for busy weeks, a no-bake strawberry tiramisu for hot days, and on the cookie side, gluten-free walnut chocolate cookies and Christmas date cookies for different needs at the table. These tiramisu cookies became the grown-up cousin. The kids still race for sprinkles. And now the adults find the pale cookies with mascarpone swirls and cocoa dusting, and quietly move them next to their own cups.
Ingredients

- Butter – Butter gives these cookies their cafe-style texture, crisp at the edges with a tender center that can hold the mascarpone without crumbling. I stick to unsalted so I can control the salt in the dough. If you need a dairy-free version for someone at the table, a good quality plant-based baking block works better than margarine and keeps the structure closer to the original.
- Strong Instant Coffee – This is the heart of the cookie. I use strong instant coffee or a finely ground espresso powder. It needs to be bold so the flavor survives baking and still tastes like coffee next to a real mug. Decaf instant coffee works if you are serving this late at night or to friends who avoid caffeine, though the flavor will be a little softer.
- Mascarpone Cheese – Mascarpone is what makes these taste like tiramisu, not only coffee cookies. If mascarpone is hard to find, you can combine full-fat cream cheese with a bit of extra whipped cream, though the flavor will tilt slightly richer and less traditional.
See the recipe card for full list and exact quantities.
How to Make This Tiramisu Cookie Recipe

These tiramisu cookies come together in two parts: a sturdy coffee cookie base and a light mascarpone frosting. Each step has a few small details that make the difference between “fine” and something people quietly reach for next to their coffee. Here’s how to make this recipe:
Prepare the pans and oven
Heat your oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment. The parchment keeps the cookies from sticking and also helps them bake evenly, so the bottoms turn golden instead of too dark in spots.
Cream the butter and sugar

When you drag a spoon through, you should see clear ridges. If it still looks dense and grainy, keep mixing. This step sets you up for cookies that are crisp at the edges instead of heavy.
Add egg and vanilla

There should be no streaks of egg. If you see glossy yellow patches, keep whisking until everything looks even. At this stage, the mixture should feel creamy and slightly thick.
Mix the dry ingredients with the coffee


You want the specks of coffee spread evenly through the flour, so every cookie carries the same level of flavor.
Bring the dough together

The dough will feel firm and hold its shape when you squeeze a bit between your fingers. If it feels sticky and spreads too much in the bowl, chill it for 15 to 20 minutes before shaping. Overmixing can make the cookies dry, so stop as soon as everything comes together.
Shape the cookies

Press them down lightly with your fingers so they are slightly flattened. You are aiming for discs that can spread a bit in the oven and still have enough surface for the mascarpone.
Bake and cool

The cookies will feel soft but firm up as they cool. Cool on the tray briefly, then on a rack until fully cool. For a crunchier cookie that holds up longer under the frosting, bake toward the higher end of the time range, or add a minute. If you notice dark brown edges, the oven may run hot, so shorten the time for the next tray.
Make the mascarpone frosting


This should take less than a minute. The goal is to loosen the cheese, not whip air into it. If you keep going past the smooth point, mascarpone can turn grainy and loose, and it becomes harder to pipe neat swirls. If that happens, you can still use it, but the lines will look softer.
Whip the cream to soft peaks

When you lift the whisk, the cream should stand up in gentle peaks that droop slightly at the tip. If it flows like liquid, keep going. If it starts to look stiff and chunky, you have gone too far, and the texture will feel heavy under the mascarpone.
Fold the two together

Stop when the mixture looks smooth and mousse-like, with some structure and not runny. Chill for at least 1 hour, until it feels cool and holds a shallow indentation, firm enough to pipe clean ridges.
Frost the cooled cookies

Pipe or spread a swirl on top of each cookie, leaving a small border at the edge so the frosting does not slide over. If the frosting starts to slump, it needs more chilling time.
Finish with cocoa

Aim for a thin, even coat; a very thick layer can taste too bitter and hide the mascarpone. At this point, the cookies should look like little tiramisu portions: coffee-scented bases, soft crowns of mascarpone, and a cocoa veil on top, ready to sit next to a mug of strong coffee.
Storage

For the best texture, store cookies and mascarpone separately when possible. Keep cooled, unfrosted coffee cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days, or refrigerate if your kitchen is very warm. They also freeze well! Freeze in a single layer, then transfer to a container or bag for up to 2 months and thaw at room temperature.
Mascarpone frosting belongs in the fridge in a covered container for up to 24 hours, whip briefly before piping. Once frosted, refrigerate cookies in a single layer for up to 2 days. They will gradually soften, closer to classic tiramisu.
Top Tips
Bake for how you plan to serve – for tiramisu cookies that will be frosted and eaten the same day, I pull them as soon as the edges turn light golden so the centers stay a bit more tender under the mascarpone. For Christmas boxes or cookie trays that sit overnight, I extend the bake time by about a minute so they start a little firmer and soften slowly in the fridge.
Keep everything for the mascarpone frosting cold – I chill the bowl, whisk, mascarpone, and cream before starting. Cold tools keep the frosting thick and stable, especially if the kitchen is warm or the kids are opening the oven a lot. If the frosting ever looks loose, I pop the bowl back into the fridge for 20 to 30 minutes instead of beating more, which can break it.
Recipe
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Tiramisu Cookies
Holiday Tiramisu Cookies with coffee cookies, mascarpone swirls, and cocoa, built for coffee lovers
Prevent your screen from going to sleep
Ingredients
For the cookies
- 1 cup 2 sticks unsalted butter, softened
- 1 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 2 cups all-purpose flour spoon and level
- 1 tablespoon strong instant coffee
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon salt
For the mascarpone frosting
- 16 oz mascarpone cheese chilled
- ½ cup powdered sugar sifted
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
- ¼ cup heavy cream cold
- Unsweetened cocoa powder for dusting
Instructions
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Heat your oven to 350°F (175°C). Line two baking sheets with parchment paper so the cookies release cleanly and the bottoms bake without catching.
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In a large mixing bowl, beat the softened butter and granulated sugar for 2–3 minutes. The mixture should look a bit lighter in color and feel fluffy on the spoon. This gives you cookies with crisp edges rather than dense, flat discs.
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Beat in the egg and vanilla extract until the mixture looks smooth and even. There should be no streaks of egg. At this point, the batter should feel creamy and slightly thick, not runny.
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In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, instant coffee, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Break up any clumps of coffee so the flavor spreads evenly through the dough and you do not end up with bitter spots.
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Add the dry ingredients to the butter mixture gradually, mixing on low speed or with a spatula until no dry flour remains. The dough should feel firm and hold its shape when you press it between your fingers. If it feels very soft or sticky, chill it for 15–20 minutes before shaping.
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Scoop about 2 tablespoons of dough per cookie. Roll each portion into a ball between your palms to smooth any cracks, then place on the prepared baking sheets, leaving room between them. Gently flatten each ball with your fingers so you get even discs that will spread slightly in the oven.
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Bake for 10–12 minutes, watching the edges. They should turn light golden while the centers look set and no longer shiny. The cookies will feel soft when hot but firm up as they cool. Let them rest on the tray for a couple of minutes, then transfer to a wire rack until fully cool.
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In a clean bowl, beat the chilled mascarpone with powdered sugar and vanilla until smooth and creamy. This should take less than a minute. Stop as soon as it looks even so the mascarpone stays thick and does not turn watery.
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In another bowl, whip the cold heavy cream until soft peaks form. When you lift the whisk, the peaks should stand up and gently fold over at the tip.
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Gently fold the whipped cream into the mascarpone mixture in a few additions, using slow, sweeping motions. The frosting should look smooth and mousse-like, not runny. Chill until slightly firm, at least 1 hour, so it pipes neatly on the cookies.
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Make sure the cookies are completely cool. Fill a piping bag with the chilled frosting or use a small spatula. Spread or pipe a swirl on top of each cookie, leaving a small border at the edge so the topping does not slide off.
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Right before serving, lightly dust the tops with unsweetened cocoa powder using a small sieve. Aim for a thin, even layer so you taste both cocoa and mascarpone in each bite.
Nutrition
Calories: 183kcalCarbohydrates: 21gProtein: 3gFat: 11gSaturated Fat: 6gPolyunsaturated Fat: 0.1gMonounsaturated Fat: 0.3gTrans Fat: 0.001gCholesterol: 31mgSodium: 112mgPotassium: 18mgFiber: 0.3gSugar: 9gVitamin A: 339IUVitamin C: 0.02mgCalcium: 44mgIron: 1mg
Electric mixer or stand mixer
Piping bag and tip (or small offset spatula)
Fine mesh sieve for cocoa



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