5 from 1 vote

Easy Chocolate Crinkle Cookies (Naturally Dairy-Free!)

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Make this easy chocolate crinkle cookies recipe using basic pantry staples whenever you're craving a fudgy dessert.
Prep time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 12 minutes
Total Time: 4 hours 30 minutes
Makes: 12
Dessert
American
Freezable

Sometimes you want something chocolatey and fudgy but you don’t want a full tray of brownies sitting on the counter calling your name all week. This small-batch chocolate crinkle cookie recipe makes exactly 12, uses nothing but cheap pantry staples, and happens to be completely dairy-free, with no specialist ingredients. If you want another chocolate recipe, this sweet potato brownie is a personal fave.

Six chocolate crinkle cookies topped with powdered sugar are cooling on a metal wire rack against a light pink background.

Recipe Summary: Chocolate Crinkle Cookies

  • ✅ Recipe Name: Easy Chocolate Crinkle Cookies (Naturally Dairy-Free!)
  • 🕦 Ready in: 30 minutes (+ 4 hours chilling)
  • 🤝 Serves: 12
  • 🍴 Calories: 132kcal
  • 🧑‍🍳 Main ingredients: cocoa powder, caster sugar, sunflower oil, icing sugar
  • ✨ Summary: Make this easy chocolate crinkle cookies recipe using basic pantry staples whenever you’re craving a fudgy dessert.

 

Why you’ll love this recipe

  • Brownie-like texture: These have a dense, fudgy centre with a crackly sweet exterior that makes them hard to stop at one. You could try these Simple & Easy Brownies for a similar vibe.
  • Small batch: Twelve cookies is the sweet spot – enough to share or work through across a few days, without a mountain of leftover dough and no waste.
  • Naturally dairy-free: Sunflower oil instead of butter means these are completely suitable for anyone avoiding dairy, and I promise you’d NEVER  know it from the taste.

Do you have leftover cocoa powder or chocolate? Try making my Quick Chocolate Cream Cheese Frosting, Chocolate Protein Muffins, or Tiramisu Overnight Oats.

Ingredients for Chocolate Crinkle Cookies

Top-down view of baking ingredients for Funfetti Cookies on a light green surface, labeled: sunflower oil, caster sugar, plain flour, vanilla extract, medium eggs, baking powder, cocoa powder, and icing sugar.
  • Sunflower oil: This is what keeps this chocolate crinkle cookie recipe soft and fudgy & makes them naturally dairy-free without needing any specialist butter alternatives. It has a neutral enough flavour that the cocoa takes over completely.
  • Cocoa powder: Good quality unsweetened cocoa powder is worth using here because it’s doing all the flavour work. 
  • Icing sugar: Rolling the dough balls generously in icing sugar is what creates that stark white and dark contrast as the cookies crack open in the oven. It also adds just enough sweetness to balance out the bitterness of the cocoa. Use it to make this Easy Nutella Puff Pastry as well!

See the recipe card for full information on all ingredients and quantities.

Variations/ Adaptations

A few ways to take this chocolate crinkles cookies recipe in a different direction:

  • Peppermint crinkles: Swap the vanilla for half a teaspoon of peppermint extract for a festive version that works really well at Christmas. For another festive recipe, you should check out The Best Cranberry Sauce.
  • Double chocolate: Fold a handful of mini chocolate chips into the dough before chilling for gooey pockets through the middle. I use them in my Chocolate Chip Microwave Cookies too.
  • Espresso: Add a teaspoon of instant espresso powder to the dry ingredients to deepen the chocolate flavour without making it taste like coffee. It just makes the cocoa richer & a bit more complex.

How to make the best Chocolate Crinkle Cookies

 

A stainless steel mixing bowl filled with glossy chocolate cake batter, sitting on a pink textured surface.

Step 1: Mix the cocoa, sugar, oil, vanilla, eggs, flour, and baking powder together until a soft dough forms, then cover and chill in the fridge for at least 4 hours.

Six chocolate cookie dough balls dusted with powdered sugar are arranged on a parchment-lined baking sheet, ready to be baked. The background is a light teal color.

Step 2: Preheat the oven to 160°C fan, roll the chilled dough into small balls, coat them heavily in sifted icing sugar, space them apart on a lined baking tray, and bake for 10-12 minutes.

If you’ve got a batch ready to serve at a gathering, my American Shortcake Biscuits, Easy Lemon Muffins, and Chewy Banana Bread Cookies go well alongside for a complete dessert spread.

Tips for the best result

  • The dough needs at least 4 hours in the fridge before you roll it – it’s very soft straight after mixing and will spread flat in the oven if it hasn’t had time to firm up. This is the one step you really can’t skip when making easy chocolate crinkle cookies.
  • Roll the balls in a thin layer of caster sugar before the icing sugar goes on. It acts as a barrier so the white coating stays crisp & bright during the bake rather than absorbing into the dough.
  • Freeze the unbaked dough balls before rolling in sugar and they’ll keep for up to 3 months, which makes them a brilliant thing to have ready for last-minute occasions.
  • Pull them from the oven when the edges are set and the tops have cracked, even if the centres look a little underdone. They firm up as they cool.
Six chocolate crinkle cookies with powdered sugar on top cool on a wire rack, set against a pink background.

How to Get the Perfect Crinkle on Chocolate Cookies

Two things give you that dramatic cracked exterior on chocolate crinkle cookies: cold dough and generous sugar coating. The dough in this recipe is intentionally soft, almost like a thick brownie batter, and it needs a minimum of four hours in the fridge to hydrate the flour and firm up properly. When cold dough hits a hot oven, the outside sets fast while the inside keeps expanding, and that tension is what forces the surface to pull apart into those deep cracks.

The icing sugar coating matters just as much for the final look. Because this is a high-moisture dough, a thin layer of sugar will absorb into the cookie as it bakes and leave you with a yellowed, faded top rather than that clean snowy white finish. Don’t shake off the excess! The more generously coated the crinkle cookie recipes come out, the better the contrast looks against the dark chocolate underneath.

Serving Suggestions

Once these small batch chocolate crinkle cookies are baked, there are so many ways to enjoy them! Their fudgy texture makes them an incredibly versatile sweet treat in the afternoon crumbled over a bowl of vanilla bean ice cream, or even for breakfast with a tall glass of cold milk or a hot cup of coffee.

If you want to put on a sweet treat spread, you could also make my creamy baked rice pudding, banana bread cookies & my American shortcakes biscuits for those who love a more classic dessert.

Leftover Storage and Reheat Instructions

These recipes for chocolate crinkle cookies keep really well, though they tend to disappear fast.

Refrigerator: Store the baked cookies in an airtight tin at room temperature for up to 4 days rather than the fridge, which dries them out.

Freezer: Freeze the baked cookies for up to 3 months, or freeze the unbaked dough balls before the icing sugar stage and roll them fresh just before baking.

Reheat: Five to eight seconds in the microwave brings the centre back to that soft, gooey texture if you want them warm.

Chocolate Crinkle Cookies FAQs

Why are my chocolate crinkle cookies flat instead of thick? 

It always comes down to skipping the chill time. The dough is very soft and needs at least 4 hours in the fridge to firm up enough to hold its shape in the oven.

Why did the icing sugar melt on my chocolate crinkle cookies? 

The dough is quite moist, which means a thin coating of icing sugar can absorb during the bake. Roll the dough balls in a light layer of caster sugar first, then coat heavily in icing sugar, and you’ll get that bright white finish on these chocolate powdered sugar cookies.

Can I freeze chocolate crinkle cookie dough to bake later? 

Yes, freeze the dough in balls and roll them in the icing sugar just before they go in the oven rather than before freezing. That way the coating stays fresh and doesn’t absorb moisture in the freezer.

How do I know when chocolate crinkle cookies are done baking? 

Take them out after 10 to 12 minutes when the edges are set and the tops have cracked, even if the centres still look slightly soft. They carry on firming up as they cool on the tray.

If you are looking for more dairy-free recipes, consider making my Oven Baked Salmon Steaks (Ready In Under 20 Minutes), Crispy Soy Chicken Wings (No Frying Needed!), and Crispy Baked Bacon Pudding (No Steaming Required!).

If you tried this Chocolate Crinkle Cookies recipe, it would mean so much to me if you could leave a review & a star rating to let me know how you found it! I love hearing about your experiences – it motivates me to keep creating more and more recipes for you guys 💛 Let’s get cooking! – Mimi x

Fudgy Chocolate Crinkle Cookies

Print
5 from 1 vote
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 12 minutes
4 hours
Total Time: 4 hours 30 minutes
Dessert
American
Freezable
Servings: 12
Make this easy chocolate crinkle cookies recipe using basic pantry staples whenever you're craving a fudgy dessert.

Ingredients

  • 40 g cocoa powder
  • 135 g caster sugar
  • 40 ml sunflower oil
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 2 medium eggs
  • 100 g plain flour
  • ½ tsp baking powder
  • 25 g icing sugar

Method

  • Place the cocoa in a mixing bowl, add the sugar, oil and vanilla and beat together with a wooden spoon or electric hand whisk. Beat in the eggs, one at a time. Stir in the flour and baking powder and whisk until just combined. The mixture will be very soft, cover with cling film and leave to firm up in the fridge for at least 4 hours, or up to 2 days.
  • Preheat the oven to 160°C fan, Gas 4 and line two baking sheets with baking parchment.
  • Sift the icing sugar onto a plate. Roll the cookie dough into small golf-ball-sized rounds, then roll in the icing sugar until coated.
  • Place on the prepared baking trays, spaced well apart. Bake for 10–12 minutes and leave to cool for a few minutes on the baking sheets before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.

Notes

  • The dough needs at least 4 hours in the fridge before you roll it – it’s very soft straight after mixing and will spread flat in the oven if it hasn’t had time to firm up.
  • Roll the balls in a thin layer of caster sugar before the icing sugar goes on. It acts as a barrier so the white coating stays crisp & bright during the bake rather than absorbing into the dough.
  • Freeze the unbaked dough balls before rolling in sugar and they’ll keep for up to 3 months.
  • Pull them from the oven when the edges are set and the tops have cracked, even if the centres look a little underdone. They firm up as they cool.

Nutrition

Servings: 12 servings
Fat: 5g
Fiber: 2g
Sugar: 13g
Calories: 132kcal
Carbohydrates: 20g
Protein: 3g
5 from 1 vote

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Comments

  1. Samantha | 3 weeks ago

    Perfect after school snack – so yummy.5 stars

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