Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (2024)

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Soft and fluffy red velvet cookies with Hershey’s Hugs and Kisses on top. These pillowy cookies will steal your heart!

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (1)

I think one of the most misunderstood ingredients in the baking world is cake mix. No matter what it does, how good it is, how moist and deliciously fluffy it makes our treats, people insist on giving it a bad rap (by the way, I just looked up badrap vs. badrep, and it’s totally okay to say bad rap… according to the urban dictionary).

Any time I use a cake mix in a recipe, I always love how it turns out. Always soft, always fluffy, always a great tasting product. Really, always. It consistently makes good dessert.

Now, I’m not saying from-scratch recipes aren’t worth their weight ingold. I love cakes from scratch! Even though I’ve never met a homemade chocolate cake equal to this doctored up cake mix, I adore homemade funfetti, red velvet, and coconut! I’m just saying, I don’t think cake mix gets a fair shake these days.

Maybe I’ll devote an entire post to this one day, but for today… just for fun, I did some research on one of the “scary” ingredients in a cake mix.

Polyglycerol Esters Of Fatty Acids.

That’s the second ingredient in Duncan Hines’ yellow cake mix. Does it freak you out?

My guess is that it seems scary, because we don’t understand two of the words. And the other two words are “fatty” and “acids,” neither of which we want to be eating in general. Right?I’m no scientist, and this explanation will probably be far too simple. But here’s the breakdown that I managed to come up with using Google as my guide…

Glycerol is a sweetener/thickener very common in baking ingredients. It’s not toxic. And it can be synthetic or made from plants and/or animals.Poly just means there are multiple glycerols.

Esters is a fancy word forcompound. So… multiple glycerols compounded together. Which we would expect since there are multiples, right?

Fatty acids are just that…fat. Like it or not, yummy cake has to have fat in it. End of story.

NORMAL fat has a combination of glycerol and fatty acids. But in baking products, additional glycerol is added (remember,polyglycerol).So….Polyglycerol (sweetener/thickener) Esters (combined with) Fatty Acids (fat).

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (2)

I know it’s pretty removed from coming straight outta the ground, but really. Is itthat scary?

Annnnnnnnnnyway.

Raise your hand if you want me to stop ranting about cake mix science and tell you all about these Red Velvet Cookies that do, in fact, begin with a mix. ✋

Okay, me too.

So. Everyone stop thinking about Polyglycerol Esters of Fatty Acids.

Did you stop?

Perfect.

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (3)

Because these cookies are too good for us to still be obsessing overthat.

These red velvet cookiessosoft and thick and even a little bit fudgy in the middle. The flavor is spot on, thanks to the cake mix, and the chewy texture is heaven on a plate. Or in your hand. Or whatever.

It’s a simple one-bowl recipe, and it’s basically fool proof. If you want out of this world red velvet cookies,make this recipe. You seriously cannot mess it up.

Once you’ve got the dough mixed together, it’s time to scoop! That’s right, no chill time required. Although,please note that this is a somewhat wetdough. You could chill it if you wanted to firm it up a bit, but it’s not necessary for these cookies to bake up thick like you see pictured here.

If you want to keep your hands as neat as possible during the rolling, scoop the dough and plop it directly in the sugar. Use your fingers to roll it in the sugar before placing it on the cookie sheet. Messy hands averted!

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (4)

While they are fresh and warm out of the oven, press a Hershey Kiss or Hug into the tops! You can add a fun little white chocolate drizzle too if you want.

I always get impatient and eat these warm and melty. But if you wait for the Kiss to cool and harden, I love the texture contrast of having the hard chocolate on top of the soft cookie.

XOXO!

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (5)

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Cookies

Yield: 18 cookies

Soft and fluffy red velvet cookies with Hershey's Hugs and Kisses on top. These pillowy cookies will steal your heart!

Ingredients

  • 18.25 ounce box red velvetcake mix (JUST the dry mix)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/2 cup canola or vegetable oil
  • 1/4 cup flour
  • sugar for coating dough
  • 18 Hershey Kisses and/or Hugs

Instructions

Preheat oven to 350ºF.

Mix all ingredients together until dough forms.

Scoop dough by heaping tablespoons into a small bowl of sugar and roll into balls. Place on ungreased cookie sheet, and bake for 10 minutes.

Press a Hershey Kiss or Hug into each of the cookies fresh out of the oven.

Let cool on baking sheet for 10 minutes before removing to a wire rack.

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (6)

I love cake mix cookies! I think there is just so much fun to be had with all the different flavors and mix-ins you can put together. Be sure to check out my favorite cake mix cookie recipe, which was the base for these Red Velvet Blossoms!

I’ve used it to make these Funfetti cookies:

And these chocolate covered strawberry cookies:

And my all-time favorite Brownie Mix Cookies:

  • Costco Raspberry Crumble Cookies Recipe: Easy Copycat How-To Guide

  • Baileys Apple Pie Irish Cream Liqueur: A Copycat Recipe

  • Amish Fried Pie Recipe: Classic Fry Pie Techniques

Red Velvet Hugs & Kisses Blossom Cookies Recipe (2024)

FAQs

Why are my red velvet cookies not red? ›

If you skip the food coloring, the cookies will be light brown. For the pictured cookies, I use 3/4 teaspoon gel food coloring. You can control how vibrant the red color is, so use more or less depending on the color you'd like.

Why does red velvet cookie have a cake arm? ›

As a young Cookie, he grew to see Cake Monsters as more than mere creatures, but lost his right arm. He eventually met Dark Enchantress Cookie, who gave him the arm of a Cake Monster to be one with his true brethren, then recruited him as one of her servants, promising a world where Cookies and Cakes can be equal.

Why are my red velvet cookies brown? ›

The red gel food coloring combined with the cocoa powder gives these cookies that signature red velvet color and flavor. But you can omit the food coloring and still enjoy a delicious chocolate cookie. Can I top these with cream cheese frosting? Great idea!

Why does red velvet taste different if its chocolate? ›

Chocolate cake is flavored with cocoa powder, chocolate chips, or melted chocolate. On the other hand, though red velvet cake has cocoa powder that gives it a slightly chocolatey flavor, the buttermilk and vinegar add a tart edge making it different between the two.

Who is red velvet cookie sister? ›

Red Vanilla Cake Cookie (Korean: 레드바닐라케이크 쿠키, redu banilla keikeu kuki) is one of the antagonist's sister, Red Velvet Cookie, She is a Protagonist In Cookie Run: Kingdom and an Epic Cookie released in The Red Velvet Castle Gates update, She is of class and her position is prioritized to the front.

What is red velvet cake nickname? ›

The Colorful History of Red Velvet Cake

This earned the cake the nickname “Red Devil” (a name that combined the devil's food flavor and red color), in the 1920s, according to Stella. As time went on, bakers began to see this red color as an asset and sought to augment it with a drop or two of food coloring.

Why are my cookies so light colored? ›

These cookies are undercooked. Usually the person inquiring defends that with, "the recipe said 8 minutes and I used a timer." This is when experience comes into play. Light colored cookies with dark speckles typically indicates that the cookies are underbaked.

How does red velvet cake become red? ›

The “red” in red velvet cake is multifaceted — historically, the red tint in the cake came from either the chemical reaction between unprocessed cocoa and vinegar (according to Southern Living) or the use of beet sugar.

What makes the red color in red velvet cake? ›

A chemical reaction between the cocoa and acid give the cake it's red color. Natural cocoa has a lot of acidities and works well with the baking soda and buttermilk. Along with a delicious chocolate flavor, the cocoa makes the cake nice and soft.

What gives the red color to red velvet cake? ›

How Did Red Velvet Cake End Up Red? Cocoa powder contains an antioxidant called anthocyanin, which is pH-sensitive, meaning it reacts to acids and bases. When raw cocoa powder reacts with acidic ingredients such as buttermilk and vinegar, it turns dark red.

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