Learn how to make classic chocolate pinwheel cookies with this straightforward, step-by-step recipe. One batch of vanilla dough is split in two—half remains vanilla and half becomes chocolate—so you get perfectly contrasting spirals. This is a slice-and-bake recipe, so you can form logs, chill or freeze them, and slice to bake later. The result: crisp, attractive pinwheels every time.

Chocolate-and-vanilla pinwheels and checkerboard cookies are perennial favorites and always disappear quickly from a cookie platter. Below you’ll find clear guidance and photos for shaping and rolling layered doughs to create the signature spiral pinwheel.
Ingredients to Make Pinwheel Cookies
Pinwheel cookies pair two contrasting doughs — here, vanilla and chocolate. The basic ingredients you’ll need:

- Butter — unsalted is preferred so you can control the salt level. If you use salted butter, reduce added salt.
- Granulated sugar — keeps the dough flavor and color bright; avoid brown sugar for this recipe.
- Large eggs — use large eggs for proper texture; very small eggs make dough dry, very large eggs can make cookies cakey.
- All-purpose flour — provides structure. Measure accurately to avoid overly spreading cookies.
- Salt — balances sweetness. Adjust if using salted butter or a finer/coarser salt.
- Vanilla — pure vanilla extract gives the best flavor; adjust if you use a more concentrated imitation flavor.
- Cocoa powder — use Dutch-processed cocoa for a deeper, darker chocolate color and flavor. Natural cocoa will work but results will differ.
See the recipe card below for exact quantities.
Substitutions and Variations
With a simple ingredient list, substitutions are limited but flexible:
- Cocoa powder: Dutch-processed is recommended for color and depth; natural or black cocoa will change flavor and appearance.
- Extracts: Swap vanilla for almond or peppermint extract for a different profile (use less, they’re potent).
- Color: Use gel food coloring if you want festive-colored vanilla layers. Avoid liquid food colorings that thin the dough.
Some recipes use melted chocolate instead of cocoa powder; if you try that, use a very high-percentage unsweetened chocolate so you don’t add excess sugar that will mute the cookie flavor.
How They Are Made

Step 1: Whisk the dry ingredients (flour and salt) together in a bowl.
Step 2: Cream butter and sugar until light and fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, then vanilla, scraping the bowl as needed.

Step 3: Add the whisked dry ingredients to the mixer and mix on low until just combined to form a slightly sticky vanilla dough. Divide the dough in half and wrap one half for later.

Step 4: Add cocoa powder to the remaining half and mix until uniform. Shape both doughs into disks, wrap tightly, and chill in the fridge.
Important: The dough is soft when warm. Chill until cold and firm before rolling. If it softens, chill again or pop the dough in the freezer for 15 minutes to firm it up.

Step 5: Roll half of a chocolate piece to a 6×7-inch rectangle and half of a vanilla piece to a 6×6-inch square (use wax or parchment paper). Stack the vanilla over the chocolate, leaving a small border, then roll tightly into a log. Trim the ends.
Step 6: When ready to bake, slice the chilled log into thin rounds on a cutting board.

Step 7: Place cookie slices on a parchment-lined sheet pan spaced about 1 inch apart. Bake until set and dry — the exact time will depend on slice thickness and your oven.
Tricks For Perfectly Round Slice-and-Bake Cookies
Slice-and-bake logs can deform under slicing pressure. Follow these tips for round cookies:
- Before chilling, make sure the logs are smooth and round by rolling them back and forth to tighten seams.
- While chilling, check and re-roll logs so they stay round; the weight of the dough can flatten one side during early chilling.
- Chill rolls inside empty cardboard tubes (toilet paper or paper towel rolls) to help preserve a round shape.
- Rotate the log as you slice to distribute the knife pressure evenly and avoid flat sides.

Tips For Sticking Two Layers of Cookie Dough Together
Follow these steps to ensure the layers adhere and the spiral stays intact:
- Roll between wax or parchment paper and use minimal flour so the layers can bond.
- If you used flour on the surface, brush or shake off excess flour from both layers before stacking.
- After stacking, press the sheets together with a baking sheet or rolling pin to fuse the layers.
- If needed, a light brush of egg white or even water on the surface will help the layers act as glue.

Once you’re comfortable making the paired doughs, use the same technique to create checkerboard, zebra, or marbled cookies by changing how you layer and fold the doughs.
Other Slice-and-Bake Cookies To Make
Chocolate and vanilla pinwheels look impressive on a holiday tray and are easier to make than they appear, though they do require patience and chilling time. Practice will speed things up and improve results.
If you try this pinwheel cookie recipe, please leave a star rating and a comment to share how it went — feedback is always appreciated.
📖 Recipe

Chocolate Pinwheel Cookies
Equipment
- Stand mixer or hand mixer
- Sheet pan
- Bench scraper
- Rolling pin
Ingredients
- 375 g bleached all-purpose flour
- 2.5 mL fine kosher salt
- 230 g unsalted butter, room temperature
- 200 g granulated sugar
- 2 large eggs
- 10 mL pure vanilla extract
- 23 g Dutch-processed cocoa powder (sifted)
Instructions
- Whisk the flour and salt together in a bowl and set aside.
- In a mixer fitted with the paddle, beat butter and sugar until fluffy. Add eggs one at a time, beating between additions, then mix in vanilla.
- Add the flour mixture on low and stir until just combined.
- Remove about half the dough (roughly 450 g). To the dough remaining in the bowl, add the sifted cocoa and mix until uniform.
- Pat each dough into a disk, wrap in plastic, and chill at least 1 hour (overnight is best).
- Divide each disk into four pieces; keep extras chilled while you work.
- Roll one chocolate piece to a 6×7-inch rectangle between wax paper. Roll one vanilla piece to a 6×6-inch square between wax paper.
- Freeze both rolled sheets for 10 minutes to firm up.
- Remove the top paper, place the vanilla sheet over the chocolate leaving a small border, press together to adhere, and roll tightly into a log. Seal and smooth by rolling back and forth. Trim ends.
- Repeat to make four logs, wrap in plastic, and chill overnight.
- Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C). Line sheet pans with parchment.
- Unwrap a log, trim ends, and slice to 1/8–1/4 inch (3–6 mm). Arrange 1 inch apart on lined pans and bake one sheet at a time until set and dry (about 13 minutes, depending on thickness).
Notes
- Use Dutch-processed cocoa for best color and flavor; sift to remove lumps.
- Chill thoroughly at every stage; warm dough will distort the spiral.
- Roll between parchment or wax paper rather than using extra flour, which can prevent the layers from sticking.
- Slicing thicker yields fewer cookies and longer bake time; thinner slices yield more cookies and shorter bake time.
- For peppermint or almond pinwheels, add 1/2 tsp (2.5 mL) of extract to the dough.
- Use gel food color if you want to dye the vanilla dough.
- If using darker bakeware, reduce oven temp to 325°F (165°C) to avoid excessive browning.
Nutrition
Approximate per cookie: 50 kcal, 6 g carbs, 1 g protein, 3 g fat. Nutrition is an estimate.

Adapted from the book Great Cookies.