

Time-saving freeze & bake tips.
There, did I catch your attention?
This time of year – with summer in the rear-view mirror and the holidays not QUITE upon us – is a great time to think about baking for Thanksgiving and Christmas, and how to plan the smoothest, most stress-free season ever.
To me, that means doing a series of quick cost/benefit analyses, and then making a timeline – at least mental, if not on an Excel spreadsheet (which I'd never do, since Excel and I are sworn enemies).
Is it worth parking in this tow zone for the 3 minutes it takes to pick up my dry cleaning, vs. the $25 ticket I might get? Do I risk washing this red dress (the one my daughter HAS to have for school tomorrow) with a load of whites?
Is it worth time now to prep and freeze a bunch of unbaked treats so that on December 13, when guests drop by unexpectedly, I can whip out a plate of fresh-baked cookies in under 30 minutes?
The answers are, respectively, yes (if you're feeling lucky); no (because you know your son would end up with pink gym socks); and YES, absolutely.
Here's the cost of prepping and shaping dough for cookies, scones, and biscuits ahead of time: a few hours on a Saturday afternoon.
And here's the benefit: "OMG, these cookies are soooooo good – and still warm from the oven! What are you, a magician?"
No, just someone who's learned The Secret To Stress-Free Holiday Baking: use the freezer. It's the baker's best friend.
Hot biscuits with a bowl of soup, the most impromptu yet satisfying of suppers?
Check.
Oven-fresh scones for the next-door neighbor who just spent 30 minutes up on a ladder with your husband, stringing Christmas lights along the eaves?
Check.
Oh, and how about your best girlfriend's "I'll drop by for a couple of minutes Saturday morning" that turns into brunch?
Double check.
I've convinced you, right? The benefit far, FAR outweighs the cost: make now, freeze, bake (and enjoy) later is the way to go.
Let's take a look at the process, and then I'll share some of my favorite freeze & bake tips.
Position the future cookies (or biscuits, or scones) on a large baking sheet lined with parchment. You're not going to bake them right now, so there's no need to leave space for expansion; crowd everything together as much as you like.
I'm lucky, I have a chest freezer; but this half-sheet pan fits in my regular freezer-top fridge, as well. You'll only have to leave the pan in the freezer for a couple of hours, so don't worry about any long-term juggling.
Freeze-and-bake cookies, ready to go. You may THINK you'll remember, but do label and date your bags of goodies; then stick them back in the freezer, hopefully at the back so they're not constantly exposed to changing temperatures.
Space frozen cookies on a baking sheet, as you would any cookies. Bake as directed. (Notice I'm baking three types of cookies here; more on that later.)
You may or may not have to add an extra minute or two to the baking time; cookies are so small and have so much surface area they often take the same amount of time to bake frozen as they do fresh.
Using this same method with biscuits and scones will require an increase in baking time; but probably no more than a few minutes, if that.
Speaking of biscuits and scones, let's see how the freeze-and-bake process works with those.
Our Never-Fail Biscuits include just two – count ’em, two – ingredients: self-rising flour, and heavy cream. And it's easy to take biscuit dough and turn it into cinnamon rolls – just roll up with a schmear of Baker's Cinnamon Filling (for a grand total of three ingredients).
Or make biscuits studded with sausage and cheese. Or just cheese. Or chocolate chips, for a sweet treat.
Start simple – go wild. Biscuits and scones are particularly easy to dress up for any occasion, whether sweet or savory.
You bake fresh biscuits, they're soft and wonderful for about 20 minutes, right? Then you get to deal with the leftovers.
When you've got a stash of treats in the freezer, it's easy to avoid those stale leftovers: bake just as many as you want, and leave the rest frozen for next time.
What's the chance of you having fresh-baked cinnamon rolls hot on the table within 20 minutes of a guest dropping by? Pretty darned good, if you've stashed some ready-to-bake biscuit-dough cinnamon rolls in the freezer.
Biscuits and breakfast are natural partners – split large biscuits for breakfast sandwiches, pile bite-sized sugary nuggets into a pull-apart loaf, or just serve warm, tender biscuits with butter and jam. I've yet to meet anyone who'd turn down hot biscuits at breakfast.
Instead of dividing that scone dough in half, divvy it into three or four pieces, to make more (smaller) scones. Use a teaspoon scoop for cookies, rather than a tablespoon scoop; a 1 1/2" biscuit cutter, instead of a 2 1/2".
The holidays mean non-stop grazing, with lots of variety; do yourself and your guests a favor by providing bite-sized (rather than multi-bite) treats.
1. Shape treats on parchment. Once frozen, use parchment to funnel treats into a plastic storage bag.
2. Ditch the cleanup. Pans stay clean; wipe crumbs from parchment and reuse.
3. Bake different cookies with different baking times all at once on separate strips of parchment (below). That way, if one type of cookie is done before the others, simply grab the corners of the parchment they're on, and haul them out.
The holidays are looming. Ready... set... freeze and bake!
And that means dinner rolls, as well. Discover the secret to high-rising, just-in-time dinner rolls.
January 22, 2022 at 6:24pm
Hi there! Would shortbread dough freeze well? I want to make logs I can slice later but I worry that the butter will freeze too hard. Any tips?
January 23, 2022 at 10:39am
In reply to Hi there! Would shortbread… by Vega (not verified)
Shortbread dough is an excellent candidate for the freezer, Vega! Simply wrap tightly with plastic wrap and place in a Ziploc bag. The night before you would like to bake the dough, simply place it in the fridge to thaw slowly overnight. Happy baking!
October 1, 2021 at 2:58pm
If you were to freeze cinnamon rolls before baking. Do you let them rise before freezing?
October 1, 2021 at 4:15pm
In reply to If you were to freeze… by Jeff Aiazzi (not verified)
Hi Jeff, check out this blog post and our Now or Later Cinnamon Bun recipe for some tips on how best to freeze cinnamon rolls to be enjoyed later.
February 14, 2020 at 7:18pm
Hi there! Any reason why cookie dough balls may not freeze fully solid? After freezing the balls for about an hour, they were firm enough to put in a ziplock for longer storage. Today (24 hrs later), I took a few out to bake. Strangely, they were not completely solid. I was able to quickly mold them/roll them back into a ball shape. I often freeze cookie dough balls, but I’ve never had this issue. My freezer temp and other food in the freezer seem fine. This cookie dough was oil-based, not butter-based. Could that be the issue? I’ve frozen other oil-based doughs, but I don’t ever remember a big difference. Any ideas? Thanks! Erin
February 15, 2020 at 4:29pm
In reply to Hi there! Any reason why… by Erin (not verified)
Hey Erin! The oil may have been it, and the higher the sugar the softer it will remain. If there were any alcohol in the dough that would also keep it soft.
December 7, 2019 at 7:51am
Would it be possible to freeze uncooked brownie batter in a foil take-away pan, to pull out and bake when needed? I’m thinking of something similar that is sold in the refrigerated section of the grocery store. My daughter and college roommate would love the smell and taste of warm brownies, and I would love to be able to provide a pan or two for study breaks!!
December 7, 2019 at 4:12pm
In reply to Would it be possible to… by Renee (not verified)
Hi Renee! You're certainly welcome to give it a try but we don't know how well the brownies will bake up. We imagine that the batter would have to defrost so it baked through evenly but we worry that it will separate in the process. We think it might be better to bake the brownies and freeze them, then your daughter can take a few out of the freezer and rewarm them. Best of luck and happy experimenting!
November 30, 2019 at 11:49am
I always write the baking temperature and baking time on the bag.
August 9, 2022 at 9:48am
In reply to I always write the baking… by Margaret (not verified)
I do too! Then I don't have to look it up when I'm ready to bake.
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