Easy Russian Tea Cakes Recipe
These little round cookies are tiny, buttery, and dusted in a blizzard of powdered sugar — the classic Russian tea cakes (aka Mexican wedding cookies, snowball cookies). They’re short, nutty, and almost melt in your mouth; perfect for dunking in tea or hiding in your coat pocket when no one’s looking. Simple ingredients, cozy results, and somehow they make everything feel like a holiday.
My husband calls them “dangerous” because he eats six the moment I turn my back. We made them the first winter we moved into this house — I tried to be festive, and he tried to sample them all before I finished photographing one. Now they’re my emergency gift cookie (yes, wrapped in a napkin once), a go-to for every party, and the thing my little kiddo asks for when the afternoon needs cheering. Once I forgot them in the oven and we still ate them because life is short and powdered sugar covers many sins.
Why You’ll Love This Easy Russian Tea Cakes Recipe
– Tiny, elegant cookies that look like you fussed — but honestly, they’re forgiving.
– Made with pantry staples but taste like you spent hours in the kitchen.
– Great for gifting, freezing, or hiding from family members with fast hands.
– No tricky techniques; if you can pulse a food processor or cream butter, you’re golden.

Kitchen Talk
I’m gonna be honest: I’ve tried making these three ways — by hand, in the mixer, and in the food processor. Processor is fastest but you lose a tiny bit of airy texture; hand-mixed is lovely if you have time. I once forgot to chill the dough and the cookies flattened into sad little saucers, so chilling is non-negotiable for me now. Also, coat them twice: once warm for that first sticky layer, and once cooled for the snowy look that makes guests gasp like you’re Martha. My dog once walked across a bag of powdered sugar and looked like a ghost; it was the cutest disaster.
These Easy Russian Tea Cakes are a total holiday winner – super simple to whip up with just a handful of ingredients, and they come out buttery, tender, and packed with that perfect nutty crunch.[1][2] I love how they melt in your mouth after the double roll in powdered sugar, just like the classic snowballs my family adores.[3][4] Honest truth: they're addictive, so hide a few for yourself before they're all gone!
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour and sift the powdered sugar for a silkier coating; a clumpy bag will give you extra work.
– Fats & Oils: Real butter makes the most classic flavor — salted will work, but switch to unsalted and adjust salt in the dough for better control.
– Nuts & Seeds: Fresh, roasted nuts (pecans or walnuts are lovely) give better flavor than pre-chopped supermarket bags; buy whole and chop for the best texture.
– Sweeteners: Powdered sugar is essential for the outside coating; granulated for the dough is fine, but don’t try swapping liquid sweeteners here.
– Flavor Boosts: Grab a small bottle of good vanilla and a lemon or orange for zest — citrus zest wakes these cookies up in the best way.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Mix the dough the day before and let it chill tightly wrapped; it firms up and is easier to roll into perfect balls.
– Portion dough balls onto a tray and freeze solid, then transfer to a bag — bake straight from frozen, add a minute or two to the bake time.
– Keep cooled cookies in an airtight container between layers of parchment if you’re preparing for parties; they travel well and stay snowy if you re-sift a little powdered sugar before serving.

Time-Saving Tricks
– Use a food processor to cut the butter in and pulse the dough quickly; saves a ton of mix-and-scrape time.
– Measure dry ingredients into a bowl while the butter softens — assembly goes fast when everything’s ready.
– Freeze pre-rolled balls on a sheet, then toss into a bag; bake fresh whenever you want without the mixing step.
– Don’t rush the chill: a firm dough means rounder, prettier cookies, which saves time re-rolling fallen flat cookies.
Common Mistakes
– Overbaking: I once left a tray in 2 minutes too long and they lost that melt-in-your-mouth feel — if edges are golden, you’ve gone too far.
– Skipping the double dusting: Coat only once while hot and they will look dull; second coating after cooling gives that snowball magic.
– Using pre-chopped old nuts: stale nuts ruin the flavor; I learned this the hard way and learned to smell-test pecans before use.
– Not chilling the dough: warm dough spreads into sad flat cookies — wrap, chill, then bake.
What to Serve It With
– Hot black tea or milky chai for dipping.
– Coffee (yes, even an afternoon espresso) — the butter and nut take bitter coffee well.
– A simple fruit plate or citrus salad to cut the sweetness.
– For holiday parties, platter them with dark chocolate squares and spiced nuts.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use a small cookie scoop for uniform sizes — they bake more evenly and look pro.
– Salt is your friend; if you use unsalted butter, add a pinch of fine salt to the dough.
– Don’t skip the second powdered sugar dusting; it’s the difference between good and gorgeous.
– If dough is crumbly, it probably needs more butter or a tablespoon of cold milk — add cautiously.
Storage Tips
Store cooled cookies in an airtight container at room temperature and they’ll stay tender for about a week. For longer life, freeze in a single layer until solid then stack with parchment between layers in a freezer box for up to 3 months. Eating them cold for breakfast? No shame. They’re perfectly fine straight from the fridge, and honestly sometimes I prefer the firmer texture with coffee.

Variations and Substitutions
– Swap pecans for walnuts or almonds — each nut changes the flavor profile; almonds give a cleaner, sweeter bite.
– Brown the butter for a nutty, caramel note if you want to luxuriate a little more.
– For gluten-free, try a 1:1 gluten-free flour blend but expect tiny texture differences; chill time helps.
– Vegan option: stick with a solid vegan butter block (not liquid oils) and expect a slightly softer crumb.
– Skip citrus if you hate it, but a teaspoon of zest is a secret adult upgrade I almost always do.
Frequently Asked Questions

Easy Russian Tea Cakes Recipe
Ingredients
Main Ingredients
- 1 cup unsalted butter, softened room temperature
- 0.5 cup powdered sugar
- 1.25 tsp vanilla extract
- 2.33 cup all-purpose flour scoop and level
- 0.8 cup pecans, finely chopped or use walnuts
- 0.3 tsp fine sea salt
- 1 cup powdered sugar for rolling
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Heat oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with parchment.
- Cream butter and 1/2 cup powdered sugar in a bowl until light and fluffy.
- Mix in vanilla and salt until combined.
- Add flour in two additions, mixing just until a soft dough forms.
- Fold in the chopped pecans evenly.
- Chill the dough for about 10 minutes to make it easier to shape.
- Scoop tablespoon portions and roll into smooth 1-inch balls. Arrange 2 inches apart on the sheets.
- Bake 12 minutes, or until set and barely golden on the bottoms.
- Cool 5 minutes, then roll warm cookies in powdered sugar. Cool fully and roll a second time.
Notes
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