Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (2024)

The very BEST Homemade Rolo Cookies recipe! No cake mix here, my friends. I have nothing against cake mix but we can make a better cookie than that, can’t we? Yes. Yes we can. Tons of cocoa and butter make an ultra fudgy cookie with a surprise caramel center! No one can resist these!

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (1)

The other day Truman was having fun making a paper airplane zoom around the room. At one point it landed on the floor next to where I was sitting, and he said, “Mom, can you get that for me?”

I was confused. “What, like, you want me to pick it up for you?” He was standing 2 feet away. “Yeah.”

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (2)

And that’s when I exploded. “NO I CAN’T PICK IT UP FOR YOU, DO YOU NOT EVEN REMEMBER THAT I’M 9 MONTHS PREGNANT, ANYTHING THAT FALLS ON THE GROUND IS DEAD TO ME!!”

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (3)

Hi, welcome to my house these days, where I will yell at you for asking me to do small favors. Poor kid’s going to be traumatized. I actually have big fears about what my kid’s early childhood memories will be. Truman’s only 6, is his first memory going to be about his mom losing it over a paper airplane?? Noo! I’m a nice mom most of the time! Just not when I’m pregnant!

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (4)

2 weeks to go you guys, and then I will stop complaining about this nonstop. Also PS the baby countdown is the same as the Christmas countdown, so you’ve got 2 weeks left to get your shopping done! Hop to it!!

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (5)

But until then, I’m baking ALLLL the cookies. I just make a huge double batch of everything and freeze the rest for later. You’ve never seen baking like a 9 month pregnant nesting food blogger. We’ve already made Butter Pecan Cookies, Gingersnaps, Spritz (hopefully updating that post soon), Cardamoms, Chocolate Chunk Gingerbread Cookies, and these AMAZING Rolo cookies.

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (6)

How to Make Rolo Cookies

You’ve had rolo cookies before, right? Or some version of them. They are a classic! Usually you see them made with cake mix cookies (one cake mix, 1/3 cup oil, 2 eggs, as found in these Homemade Oreo Cookies.)

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (7)

(Sift your cocoa if it’s clumpy)

But the basic idea is a chocolate cookie wrapped around a rolo, rolled in sugar and baked. Today’s homemade version is 10x better than the cake mix version in my humble opinion, and only takes a few more minutes to put together. You don’t even have to chill the dough! Can we get a hallelujah!!

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (8)

Wrapping one rolo in chocolate cookie dough is good.

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (9)

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (10)

But wrapping TWO rolos in chocolate cookie dough is even BETTER. Yes please. Come on now, you didn’t visit my blog because you suddenly wanted to embrace moderation, did you? Accept it.

If you do two rolos (you should) try to use the same amount of dough as you would for one rolo. The goal is to get a higher ratio of caramel to cookie, not to have a giant cookie. When I used two rolos, I made the dough balls a little more oval shape than round, as shown in the above photo on the left. One rolo sitting on top of the other (wrapped in dough).

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (11)

You can see the dough all over my fingers in the process shots above. It’s quite sticky. You are going to think these cookies will be a disaster and bake as flat as pancakes if you don’t chill them for at least a little while. That’s what I thought. But I’m glad I tried it without chilling, just to make sure! These cookies puffed up and cracked like a dream, no chilling at all. Hooray! You can go from zero to cookies in about 30 minutes with this recipe!

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (12)

See how nice and puffy they are? This is immediately out of the oven. I sprinkled with extra sugar after baking. See note above about my lack of moderation issues.

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (13)

(How many cookies do you have to take bites out of or break in half to get all the caramely photos for this blog post? About one thousand.)

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (14)

These would be such a fun cookie to add to your Christmas plates this year! No one can resist rolo cookies!

More Christmas cookies you are going to love!

  • The Best Bakery Style Double Chocolate Chip Cookies << today’s recipe is a simplified version of this one. So classic!
  • Mexican Hot Chocolate Cookies (Chocolate Snickerdoodles) << cinnamon and chocolate forever!
  • The Softest Sugar Cookies of Your Life << for real, no lies here my friends. The. Softest.
  • The Softest Chocolate Sugar Cookies << the chocolate version. So good!
  • Chocolate Crinkle Cookies << these are so ultra fudgy!
  • Homemade Oreos with Cream Cheese Frosting << you could make these cookies and stuff a rolo in them instead of using today’s recipe. Easy peasy!
  • Buried Cherry Cookies << I have made these every year for the past 12 years at least.
  • White Chocolate Cranberry Cookies << these have coconut and oatmeal and everything you need!
  • Christmas Monster Cookies from Dinner at the Zoo
  • Christmas Pretzel Hugs from Dinner Then Dessert
  • Turtle Thumbprint Cookies from I Am Baker

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Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (15)

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe

4.86 from 14 votes

Prep: 10 minutes mins

Cook: 10 minutes mins

Total: 20 minutes mins

Servings: 34 cookies

Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (16)

The very BEST Homemade Rolo Cookies! No cake mix here, my friends. I have nothing against cake mix but we can make a better cookie than that, can't we? Yes. Yes we can. Tons of cocoa and butter make an ultra fudgy cookie with a surprise caramel center! No one can resist these!

Ingredients

  • 1 cup butter, (2 sticks)
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1 cup brown sugar, packed
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla
  • 2 cups flour, spooned and leveled
  • 1 cup cocoa, sifted
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 3/4 teaspoon kosher salt
  • 35-70 rolos*
  • granulated sugar, for rolling

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.

  • Line a few baking sheets with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.

  • In a large bowl or stand mixer, beat 1 cup butter until light and fluffy, 2 minutes or so, scraping the edges. If you have a mixer that is powerful enough, start with cold butter, otherwise you will have to let it soften a bit.

  • Add 1/2 cup granulated sugar and 1 cup brown sugar and beat 1 more minute, scraping bottom and sides.

  • Add 2 eggs and 1 tablespoon vanilla and beat well, scraping the edges and bottom of the bowl.

  • Add 2 cups flour (spooned and leveled!), but do not mix it yet. Add 1 cup cocoa powder (if your cocoa looks clumpy, sift it into the bowl through a strainer. You don't want chunks of cocoa in your cookies.) Don't stir yet.

  • Add 1 teaspoon baking soda and 3/4 teaspoon salt. Stir the dry ingredients together a bit with a small spoon so you don't end up with any lumps of salt or soda in your cookies. Then beat the dry ingredients into the dough, but only until just incorporated.

  • When the dough is just starting to come together and there are still streaks of flour, take a second to scrape the sides and bottom of the bowl. Finish mixing it all together but don't go overboard; over-beaten cookies turn out tough. We want nice tender cookies.

  • Unwrap one thousand Rolos. Just kidding, but it might feel like a thousand. Enlist help if you can! This recipe makes about 35 cookies give or take, so you either need 35 Rolos or 70, depending on how excessive of a person you are. Obviously I added 2 Rolos for every cookie. I promise they still taste great with only one. It's totally up to you!

  • Use a spoon to scoop about 1 and 1/2 tablespoons of dough into a ball. It should be about the size of a large walnut. Don't be alarmed that the dough is pretty sticky, I promise it bakes up great. Press either 1 or 2 Rolos into the center of the dough and then wrap the dough around it so that it is completely covered. Make sure no rolo is peeking out.

  • Add about 1/2 cup or more of granulated sugar to a bowl or plate. Roll each cookie dough ball in sugar, making sure it gets well coated.

  • Place each ball on the prepared baking sheet. I did 12 cookies per sheet, but make sure you have at least 1-2 inches in between each cookie.

  • Bake at 350 for 9-10 minutes. Do not over bake! When they are done, the edges will have cracked. The cookies should not be shiny in the middle. The edges should be firm.

  • Let cool on the pan for 5 minutes before removing to a cooling rack to cool. Be aware that the center of these cookies are approximately the temperature of molten lava for the first couple minutes.

  • Eat warm with a tall glass of milk! These are great warmed up in the microwave for 10 seconds or so on day two.

Notes

*How many Rolos you need depends on whether you want to stuff one rolo or two in each cookie. There are about 50 rolos in one 10.6 ounce package.

Make ahead instructions:

Freezer: You can freeze this dough to bake later. After step 11 (when you've stuffed the cookie and rolled it in sugar) you can store these in a ziplock for up to 2 months. You can bake straight from frozen, just bake a couple minutes longer. Alternatively, you can freeze the dough for 2 months before shaping it. Let thaw before shaping, then bake as directed.

Refrigerator: This dough will keep in the refrigerator for 2-3 days. You can either refrigerate the dough in a covered bowl all together, or shape the dough with the Rolos and then chill. Make sure they are well covered! Bake as directed.

Nutrition

Serving: 1g | Calories: 236kcal | Carbohydrates: 34g | Protein: 3g | Fat: 11g | Saturated Fat: 7g | Polyunsaturated Fat: 1g | Monounsaturated Fat: 2g | Trans Fat: 1g | Cholesterol: 28mg | Sodium: 179mg | Potassium: 102mg | Fiber: 1g | Sugar: 26g | Vitamin A: 209IU | Vitamin C: 1mg | Calcium: 44mg | Iron: 1mg

Course: Dessert

Cuisine: American

Calories: 236

Keyword: Cookies, homemade, rolo

Did you make this? I'd love to see it!Mention @thefoodcharlatan or tag #thefoodcharlatan!

Categorized as Chocolate!, Christmas Recipes, Cookies, Dessert

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Homemade Rolo Cookies Recipe from The Food Charlatan (2024)

FAQs

How thin to roll sugar cookie dough? ›

Roll out dough to 1/4 to 1/2 inch thickness. Cut into shapes with any cookie cutter. Place cookies 1 inch apart on ungreased baking sheets.

What is molded cookies? ›

Molded cookies are made from a much stiffer dough that can be handled much like clay. Molded cookies are usually rolled into balls or other simple shapes. Peanut Butter cookies are one of the most common molded cookies as most recipes roll the dough into a ball and then press in a crisscross pattern with fork.

How do you roll cookie dough into balls? ›

Roll the dough into balls between your palms, and get them really round before you put them on the sheet. Roll the dough into a log, then roll it around a bit to make sure it's really round. Chill it well, roll it a bit more to round it out more, chill it again, and then slice them.

What is the best thickness to roll sugar cookies? ›

With a lightly floured rolling pin, roll the dough out to about 1/4-inch thickness. Use more flour if the dough seems too sticky. The rolled-out dough can be any shape, as long as it is evenly 1/4-inch thick.

How long to refrigerate cookie dough before rolling out? ›

As a general rule of thumb, you should refrigerate cookie dough for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. More than that, and you won't see a noticeable difference in the final product. Once the dough has chilled, let it warm up at room temperature until it's just pliable (about 5 to 10 minutes).

What thickens cookie dough? ›

Soft – Dough that's “soft” or “runny” can be thickened by adding one or two tablespoons of flour to your mix. This will help keep your batch from “Spreading” and coming out of the oven looking like flat, not-so-cookie-like puddles.

Is it better to flatten cookie dough before baking? ›

Flattening the cookie dough provides more surface area that comes into contact with the ice bath, shortening the time it takes to chill. Then submerge the dough in the ice water and let it chill. After 20 minutes the dough will be completely chilled and ready for baking.

How long does sugar cookie dough need to chill? ›

→ Follow this tip: Chill sugar cookie dough in the refrigerator for at least 30 minutes, or in the freezer for 15 minutes. The dough will be so much easier to work with! It will roll out nicely, and if you're making cut-outs, chilled dough will help you get clean, sharp edges.

What are the white spots on baked cookies? ›

Here are some possible causes:
  1. Flour: If the white spots are small and powdery, they may be caused by unincorporated flour on the surface of the baked goods. ...
  2. Sugar: If the white spots are larger and crystallized, they may be caused by sugar that has not fully dissolved during baking.
Feb 14, 2023

Why do bakers poke holes in cookies? ›

The holes trick

There's also a new technique going around when preventing craters in a second layer of icing: poke holes in the base flood (under the area you'll cover with a second layer of icing). You can even do this when the first layer flood has completely dried!

How do you make cookies craggy? ›

If you like extra craggy cookies, Baking Illustrated offers a neat tip for increasing that cragginess: tear the balls of dough apart with your fingertips and smoosh 'em back together with the jagged torn part facing outwards.

Should I thaw frozen cookie dough balls before baking? ›

Frozen cookie dough balls do not need to be thawed out before baking unless you've been given specific instructions that say to do so. For many cookie doughs, for example, shortbread-style or slice-and-bake cookies, baking immediately from frozen will give you the best results.

Should you freeze cookie dough in balls? ›

Prepare the dough – If the dough is firm enough, roll it into balls. If the dough is too soft, portion it onto a wax paper lined baking sheet and freeze for about 30 minutes. Wrap it up – Wrap each dough ball in plastic, transfer to a freezer ziploc, and freeze for up to 6 months.

Are sugar cookies supposed to be thin? ›

Roll it too thick, and you run the risk of the cookies not baking evenly or cooking all the way through. → Follow this tip: For super soft, tender sugar cookies, roll the dough to 1/4-inch thick. The dough will be easy to work with, without breaking or tearing, and it will bake up nicely.

Is sugar cookie dough supposed to be thick? ›

The quarter-inch thickness ensures a sugar cookie that's soft enough for a wonderfully satisfying bite, but firm enough to be handled during the decorating process.

What is the best thickness for cookie dough? ›

Select the thickness you want (1/4-inch for cookies, but maybe a bit thinner—like 3/16—for pie, and even thinner still for fondant or, godspeed, pasta) and position your dough in between a pair.

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