By Texas Homesteader ~
Vanilla wafers. You know the ones, those small golden cookies that everyone uses when they make banana pudding.
This vanilla wafer cookie recipe is simple and the cookies bake up fast. They’re lightly crisp and slightly chewy, and very buttery!
(Note: Some links in this post will take you to other related articles for further information. But links preceded with * are affiliate links. If you click and buy something I could receive a tiny commission.)
Vanilla wafers are delicious, but other than when eating banana pudding I’d never really given them much thought.
But I wondered… how hard could they really be to bake up fresh instead of buying a box at the store?
As it turns out, not hard at all!
Rethinking Buying Vanilla Wafers
On top of keeping our Homestead on a pretty tight budget, I’m an eco-girl. I try to reduce trash coming into our home whenever possible. PREcycling, bebe!
I want vanilla wafer cookies that would are easy and delicious enough to add to this website. (which I admit, I fully use as my own online cookbook, y’all!)
You can see all our favorite desserts by clicking on the button below:
But for now, back to those cookies.
A NON-Finicky Vanilla Wafer Recipe
Some vanilla wafer recipes seem a little, I dunno, fussy? Separated egg whites? Powdered sugar? Piping bags?
Oh no, that’s not the way I roll, y’all. I want something that tastes delicious but is still EASY in the kitchen. You too? Read on, dear friends.
This is a basic vanilla wafer cookie recipe with simple ingredients.
Simple Vanilla Wafer Cookie Ingredients
The ingredients for these vanilla wafer cookies are straightforward:
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Softened butter,
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All purpose flour,
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Granulated sugar,
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One egg,
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Baking powder,
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Vanilla extract.
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How To Make Vanilla Wafer Cookie Batter
Making these homemade vanilla wafer cookies is easy:
Cream softened butter and sugar
Add vanilla extract and 1 egg, blending again.
In a separate bowl mix flour, baking powder and salt.
Lightly fold the two mixtures together.
I folded it all together just until it was blended. In mere minutes it was time to make cookies!
Homemade Vanilla Wafer Cookie Characteristics
These vanilla wafers baked up differently than the high-dome & harder traditional vanilla wafers.
These homemade vanilla wafers were:
Lightly crisp
Buttery
Larger
Sweet chewy texture
RancherMan was fond of the texture difference between these and the harder traditional vanilla wafers.
And the larger cookie worked in my favor for my banana pudding dessert, as well as having some standard-sized cookies for snacking later.
I’m always pleased with these vanilla wafer cookies. They’re simple, fast to bake and delicious. That’s why they’re included here in what I lovingly refer to as my
Texas Homesteader ‘online cookbook’.
Can You Use A Cookie Scoop For Vanilla Wafer Cookies?
You can use a measuring spoon to measure the cookie dough. But a *Cookie Scoop is the easiest way to measure.
I used the smallest cookie scoop I had, I believe it measured about a tablespoon of batter for each cookie. The resulting cookies were larger than the vanilla wafers I’d always purchased in the store – about 2” across.
You want to try to get them about 2” apart from each other because they will spread as they bake. It took me two baking sheets to hold all the cookies.
I suppose you could use a teaspoon to measure out an even smaller amount of cookie dough for each cookie instead of my tablespoon-sized scoop if desired.
How Many Vanilla Wafer Cookies In The Recipe?
Using my approximately tablespoon-sized scoop, this recipe made 36 cookies.
I’ll use some for my banana pudding and some will be crushed to sprinkle on top – just for looks. The rest will go for cookie treats for RancherMan & myself.
Using Larger Vanilla Wafer Cookies
As it turned out these larger cookies fit perfectly on the bottom of my wide-mouth half-pint jelly canning jar which I was using as dessert serving bowls.
When I served my Homemade Banana Pudding I put a cookie on bottom, layered on sliced bananas, then added pudding to the top. I repeated that layer and then tilted a homemade vanilla wafer cookie on the edge.
Mama always says “presentation is half the meal”. And you know mama’s always right!
Did you make these Vanilla Wafer Cookies? Please rate the recipe in your comment below!
Simple Vanilla Wafer Cookies
Ingredients
Ingredients:
- 1/2 cup Butter, softened (1 stick, or 4 oz)
- 1 cup Granulated sugar
- 1 egg
- 1 Tblsp Vanilla extract
- 1 ⅓ Cups All-purpose flour
- ¾ tsp Baking powder
- ¼ tsp Salt
Instructions
Instructions:
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Preheat oven to 350 degrees F (175 degrees C).
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In a large bowl, cream together the 1/2 cup room-temperature butter and 1 cup sugar until light and fluffy; add 1 egg and 1 tablespoon vanilla extract, mixing thoroughly.
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In a separate bowl, combine 1 ⅓ cups flour, ¾ teaspoon baking powder, and ¼ teaspoon salt. Then fold the flour mixture into the butter mixture, just until blended
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Use a small cookie scoop or drop cookies approximately 1 tablespoon at a time about 2 inches apart onto ungreased baking sheets. (I needed two baking sheets for this recipe!)
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Bake in the preheated oven until edges of cookies are golden brown, 13 to 15 minutes. Cool cookies on wire racks.
Recipe Notes
NOTE: Using my 1 Tablespoon cookie scoop netted 36 approximately 2" cookies from this recipe. You can use a smaller 1 teaspoon cookie scoop to get more numerous yet smaller vanilla wafer cookies.
~TxH~
Other Easy Desserts
Cakes, Pies, Cobblers
- Depression-Era CRAZY CAKE – No Butter, Eggs or Milk
- Homemade Peach Cobbler
- Easy Instant Pot Cheesecake
- Mason-Jar Cheesecakes
- Homemade 3-Ingredient Graham Cracker Crust
- Apple Crumble QUICK With Pie Filling
- Strawberry Shortcake Dessert
- No-Bake Lemon Icebox Pie
- Fresh Pear Cake
- Easy Cookies-n-Cream Ice Cream Cake
Muffins, Breads
- Chunky Apple Cinnamon Muffins Or Bread Loaf
- Cantaloupe Bread w/Pecan Praline Glaze
- Easy Blueberry Muffins
- Fast Dessert: Spiced Rum Fried Apples
- Pumpkin Bread (with Cake-Mix Shortcut)
- Healthier Banana Bread Recipe
- Rich, Chocolaty Homemade Brownies
- Healthier Sweet Potato Chocolate Brownies
Cookies
- Cake-Mix Cookies – Only 3 Ingredients!
- 3-Ingredient Peanut Butter Cookies
- Double Chocolate Banana Chunk Cookies
- Light & Airy Cotton Candy Meringue Cookies
Puddings
- Homemade Chocolate Pudding Recipe
- Banana Pudding – A Hug From The South
- (make your own homemade Vanilla Wafers too!)
- Making Instant Chocolate Pudding Mix
- Delicious Banana Pudding Made With Squash Puree!
Ice Cream & Other Desserts
- Easy Homemade Peach Ice Cream
- Healthier ‘Ice Cream’ Using Bananas & Fruit
- Cherry-Pie Tortilla Rolls
- Triple Chocolate Truffles
Dessert Toppings
- No-Cook Chocolate Frosting
- Stir-n-Pour Drizzle Chocolate
- Quick Homemade Whipped Cream
- Easy Honey Glaze
- Homemade Whipped Cream (Sweetened With Honey)
- Cherry Pie Filling From Frozen Cherries
- Peach Pie Filling From Canned Peaches
See All Recipe Posts
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Sounds wonderful. Question: We just got back from Texas, and I bought some Mexican vanilla. Do you ever use it? I am a little leery about the ingredients but it says on the bottle: “…no cumarin”. Spelled phonetically, I guess.
PS…thought of you when we were driving through NE Texas.
I do use Mexican vanilla and prefer it, Judith. When I was making a batch of vanilla extract a couple of years ago I discovered there was actually a Mexican vanilla bean, although it was more expensive than its Madagascar counterpart and more difficult to find so I never bought it. Mexican vanilla tastes distinctly different to me and if I have my way it’s the only vanilla I use, although I’ve found some Mexican vanilla can be more flavorful than others. The brand I look for is Danncy, it has a red rooster on the label and spells it ‘vainilla’. I’ve never heard of ‘cumarin’ so I looked it up. The definition I found was: “A fragrant crystalline compound, C9H6O2, present in tonka beans and produced synthetically for use as a fragrance. Coumarin has been banned as a food additive in the United States because it can be toxic in large amounts”. My current bottle of Mexican vanilla doesn’t mention cumarin in the ingredients, but I suppose if your bottle specifically says it doesn’t have a subject banned as a food additive it’s a good thing. ~TxH~
I hate all of these advertisments! Takes forever to scroll down.
Aline, I very much appreciate your feedback. We’re trying to find a balance for our ad agency’s placements so your feedback is important. Are you on a mobile or desktop device? Although ads are vital to allowing this site to remain online, we’ll look at tweaking things to get things in better balance. ~TxH~