Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake

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This easy Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake is made with a classic 9×13 chocolate chip cookie! Decorated in buttercream with a snowy Christmas tree it’s the perfect addition to your cookie exchange or celebration!

Overhead view of a Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake on a black cooling rack
A square slice of Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake

We had a great Thanksgiving this past week and I hope you did too! We saw lots of family and friends and enjoyed spending our first Thanksgiving with the boys. They preferred ham to turkey and enjoyed a few tastes of Green Bean Casserole and Cheesy Hash Brown Casserole. 🙂

The boys also hit some fun new milestones this weekend – just a week shy of turning 10 months. They both have their bottom two middle teeth, but this weekend Ashton’s top left middle tooth also broke through. And Brooks sat up on his own from a laying position several times and pulled up on his own to a standing position a few times. Craziness! We’ve started some baby proofing, but I think it’s about to get a lot more serious around here.

We also got our Christmas tree and decorated it! I was so pregnant this time last year and we’d just moved so we never got a tree. It’s so nice to have one this year. The boys haven’t been totally sure about it but are warming up to it and reaching out to touch it now. Ashton is a little more curious about it than Brooks, and I’m really enjoying introducing them to my favorite holiday!

A square slice of Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake with a bite removed
Overhead view of a Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake on a black cooling rack

Speaking of Christmas trees, I’ve been excited to share this Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake with you! Cookies are a favorite treat for the holidays and cookie cakes are one of my favorite ways to enjoy a cookie – especially a frosted one! 🙂

This chocolate chip cookie cake is made from scratch and is a bit of a more cakey cookie. It’s still got a nice chewiness to it, but it puffs up a little when baking so it makes a nice “cake” for frosting. I LOVE the texture and could not stop eating it!

How to make a Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake for Christmas

To make this chocolate chip cookie cake, you’ll start by creaming your butter and sugar together. This cookie uses a mix of brown sugar and regular granulated sugar to get a nice, deeper flavor. Cream them together until you notice it visibly lighten in color and get nice and fluffy.

Add three eggs to the butter and sugar mixture and some vanilla extract, then you’ll add your dry ingredients. This cookie uses a combination of baking soda and baking powder to get just the right amount of rise and the perfect cookie cake texture.

The final step is to add your chocolate chips. I’m a fan of semi-sweet, but feel free to use whatever kind you prefer. You could even mix in some festive Christmas candy, like M&Ms.

Bake your cookie and let it cool. To remove such a big cookie from the pan, I like to use a cooling rack and a cardboard cake rectangle (you could also use two cooling racks). I place one cooling rack against the top of the cake pan, then flip it all over. Immediately and quickly place the cardboard cake rectangle on top of the cookie cake (which is the bottom) and flip the whole thing over using the cooling rack to help keep the cookie cake in place. Remove the cooling rack from the top of the cake and you should have a fully intact cookie. You could also refrigerate the cookie ahead of time so that it’s firmer during the removal from the pan.

A square slice of Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake being removed from the whole cake
Two square slices of Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake stacked

Once your cookie is ready, it’s time to decorate! You’ll want to divide up your frosting and color it accordingly. I used blue for the background so that it’s like the “sky”. The blue frosting is spread in a thin layer over the top of the cookie, then some white sprinkles are made for “snow”.

The rest of the frosting is broken into a little bit of brown and yellow and the rest for green. Naturally the brown is used for the tree trunk, the yellow for the star on top and the green for the branches of the tree.

The Christmas tree is decorated with “ornaments” and I used a few different sprinkles I had on hand. You can definitely use sprinkles, or again use some kind of festive candy.

The final Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake is so fun and the perfect dessert for Christmas! With the large 9×13 size, it’ll serve plenty too. Bring on all the Christmas treats!

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Overhead view of a Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake on a black cooling rack
Recipe

Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake

  • Author: Lindsay
  • Prep Time: 1 hour 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 30 minutes
  • Total Time: 1 hour 45 minutes
  • Yield: 15-18 slices
  • Category: Dessert
  • Method: Oven
  • Cuisine: American

Description

This Christmas Tree Chocolate Chip Cookie Cake is made with a classic 9×13 chocolate chip cookie! It’s decorated in buttercream with a snowy Christmas tree!


Ingredients

Cookie Cake

  • 3 cups (390g) all purpose flour
  • 1 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp baking powder
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 3/4 cup unsalted butter, room temperature
  • 3/4 cup (168g) packed light brown sugar
  • 1/4 cup (52g) sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 2 1/4 cups (380g) semi sweet chocolate chips

Vanilla Buttercream

  • 3/4 cup (168g) salted butter, room temperature
  • 3/4 cup (142g) shortening
  • 6 cups (690g) powdered sugar
  • 1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 34 tbsp water or milk
  • Green gel icing color
  • Golden yellow gel icing color
  • Brown gel icing color
  • Blue gel icing color
  • Sprinkles or candies

Instructions

1. Preheat oven to 350°F (176°C). Grease the sides of a 9×13 inch cake pan and place parchment paper in the bottom.
2. In a medium sized bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, baking powder and salt.
3. In a large mixer bowl, cream the butter and sugars together until light and fluffy, about 3-4 minutes.
4. Add the eggs one at a time, mixing just until combined before adding the next.
5. Add the vanilla extract and mix until well combined.
6. Add the dry ingredients in two batches, mixing until combined. Dough will be thick and sticky.
7. Stir in the chocolate chips.
8. Press the dough evenly into the cake pan. I use my offset spatula to spread it around in the pan, since it’s sticky.
9. Bake for 15-20 minutes or until the top of the cookie is lightly golden.
10. Remove from oven and allow to cool completely in the cake pan, then transfer to serving plate. I find it helps to refrigerate the cake only after it has cooled to firm it up before removing from the pan. It helps it stay together while you remove it from the pan. To remove this from such a large pan, I use a cooling rack and a cardboard cake rectangle (two cooling racks would also work). I place the cooling rack against the top of the cake pan, then flip it over. Immediately and quickly place the cardboard cake rectangle on top of the cookie cake (which is the bottom) and flip the whole thing over using the cooling rack. Remove the cooling rack from the top of the cake.
9. To make the frosting, beat the shortening and butter until smooth.
10. Slowly add half of the powdered sugar. Mix until combined and smooth.
11. Add the vanilla extract and 3 tablespoons of water or milk and mix until smooth.
12. Add the rest of the powdered sugar and mix until smooth. Add more water to get the right frosting consistency.
13. Divide the frosting into 4 bowls – a little less than half in one bowl for green, about 1/4 cup in another bowl for brown and a little less than 1/4 cup in another bowl for yellow. The remaining frosting will all be blue.
14. After you’ve colored your frostings, spread a layer of blue frosting over the top of the cake and smooth it out as nice as you can.
15. To make the trunk of the tree, pipe 5 small lines at the “base” of what will be the tree. I used piping tip Wilton 32.
16. Pipe the green frosting into the shape of a Christmas tree. I used Ateco tip 844. Think of piping a shell border, but with long tails and make the shells side by side. Start with one row of 9 across, then 8, then 7 and so on until the top row is 4 shells across. If you’ve like to practice before adding this to the top of the cake, you can pipe it onto parchment paper and then reuse the frosting to pipe it onto the cake. You could also pipe the tree onto the parchment paper, freeze it and then peel off the parchment paper and transfer the buttercream tree onto the cookie.
17. Top the tree with a yellow star. I used Wilton tip 21. Again, you could pipe the star right onto the cookie, or onto parchment paper and freeze it.
18. Decorate the tree with the sprinkles or candies of your choice. I used sprinkles, but Christmas colored M&Ms would also make a nice option. You can also add sprinkles to the blue frosting to make “snow”, if you’d like.
19. Store in an airtight container until ready to serve.

Nutrition

  • Serving Size: 1 Slice
  • Calories: 614
  • Sugar: 59.7 g
  • Sodium: 247.3 mg
  • Fat: 32.9 g
  • Carbohydrates: 78.4 g
  • Protein: 5.4 g
  • Cholesterol: 71.7 mg

Categories

Enjoy!

Lindsay
About Lindsay

I'm a wife and a mom to twin boys and a baby girl! And I've got a serious sweets addiction! Bring on the treats!

Scripture I’m Loving

“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls.” Matthew 11:28-29