Reviews you can trust.
See why.The Best Cookie Presses
Could we find a cookie press that consistently produced beautiful cookies?
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See Everything We TestedWhat You Need To Know
Cookie presses are handheld gadgets that portion soft cookie doughs into a variety of shapes, from hearts and flowers to snowmen and turkeys. These cookies are typically called “spritz” cookies, from the German word spritzen, meaning “to squirt.” While you can use a pastry bag to pipe and shape dough, presses offer a variety of shapes and make it easier to create identical cookies.
Each press has a tube that holds the dough, with a perforated shaping disk at one end and a handle at the other. After loading the dough, you place the cookie press base on a baking or cookie sheet, squeeze the handle, and out pops a picture-perfect, oven-ready dough design—if the press works well.
The OXO Good Grips Cookie Press with Disk Storage Case won our last testing, but over time it turned out to be unreliable. (We stock the test kitchen with our winning products, so we can monitor performance over months and years and update our reviews accordingly). In the case of our winning cookie press, we noticed that the ratcheting mechanism eventually jammed and the handle could snap off. We demoted it and named a new winner—which was later discontinued—so we decided to retest these gadgets, excluding our previous winner because of its performance issues. We rounded up four presses priced from $25.99 to $42.00 and started spritzing.
After pressing more than 1,400 cookies, we found that three qualities mattered most in a cookie press: consistency of shaping, durability, and—most important—the appearance of the cookies. Most performed well in two of those areas, but the real challenge was finding a press that did well in all three.
The cookies’ visual appeal was paramount. The presses came with anywhere from 12 to 20 shaping disks in different forms, from hearts and Christmas trees to camels and butterflies. Most of the presses gave us nice crisp designs, but we demoted one that fell short; its hearts looked more like lily pads, and its flowers were sometimes asymmetrical. The best presses created attractive, well-defined cookies in a variety of shapes.
Consistency of portioning and shaping was also crucial. We wanted a press that could easily punch out row after row of identical cookies without jamming. We found in past testings that cold dough can be hard for presses to push out and that warm dough can be too soft and clingy, which can gum up the machines and make for misshapen cookies.
To determine how finicky the presses were with doughs of different temperatures, we tested each with both 65- and 75-degree dough, representing the low and high ends of the range of average room temperature. Two models had infrequent, minor consistency issues—an occa...
Everything We Tested
Recommended
- Durability: 3 stars out of 3.
- Consistency: 2.5 stars out of 3.
- Ease of Use: 2.5 stars out of 3.
- Visual Appeal: 3 stars out of 3.
This cookie press produced well-defined cookies with ease, and it produced mostly uniform designs even when the dough was warmed to 75 degrees. A toggle that lets you switch from smaller to larger cookies sometimes got in the way; we accidentally knocked it from time to time, making our cookies suddenly change size. This machine’s many moving parts do require a small learning curve, but the payoff—visually appealing cookies with minimal fuss—and the press’s excellent durability are worth it.
Recommended with reservations
- Durability: 3 stars out of 3.
- Consistency: 3 stars out of 3.
- Ease of Use: 2.5 stars out of 3.
- Visual Appeal: 1.5 stars out of 3.
We liked using this press, and it gave us dozens of cookies without fuss. However, when we compared all the cookie presses’ heart-shaped cookies, this press came in last—the misshapen hearts looked more like lily pads, and they weren’t uniform in appearance. This press also had exposed, jagged teeth on the plunger rod, making it slightly harder to clean.
Not Recommended
- Durability: 3 stars out of 3.
- Consistency: 1 stars out of 3.
- Ease of Use: 2 stars out of 3.
- Visual Appeal: 3 stars out of 3.
This cookie press gave us the best-looking shapes in the lineup—gorgeous hearts and beautifully detailed flower shapes. However, when it came time to test all 12 disks that came with this product, we found some serious flaws. It often struggled to get dough out; we had a lot of false starts. This press also couldn’t consistently produce intact designs, so we often got partially formed shapes. The press didn’t handle softer 75-degree dough well, and it was heavier than we preferred—operating it felt like work. Overall, this press was so inconsistent that we found it too frustrating to use—pretty cookies or not.
- Durability: 1 stars out of 3.
- Consistency: 1.5 stars out of 3.
- Ease of Use: 3 stars out of 3.
- Visual Appeal: 2.5 stars out of 3.
We were initially impressed with this model because it performed well in early tests, squeezing out nice-looking, uniform cookies with ease—though we did notice that the flower-shaped cookies looked frail and broke easily. However, the bigger issue was that while testing each of the disks, we had trouble pushing dough out because the handle stopped working well. It became difficult to fully retract, requiring a lot more strength than it did when we first used it. Because it wasn’t durable enough to withstand our testing, this press fell to the bottom of our list.
Reviews you can trust
The mission of America’s Test Kitchen Reviews is to find the best equipment and ingredients for the home cook through rigorous, hands-on testing.