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This circus animal sugar cookie recipe is made with Mother’s Original frosted circus animal cookies, sprinkles, and mini marshmallows (like the kind in your favorite breakfast cereal)! They’re sweet and chewy, bursting with classic “birthday cake” vanilla flavor, with pockets of crunchy cookie within a cookie goodness!

Three cookies topped with pink and white circus animal cookies sit on a plate beside a glass of milk. More cookies cool on a rack, surrounded by sprinkles and circus animal cookies scattered across a blue surface.

When I went to baking and pastry school, cookie class was my favorite. It was 8 hours long, but I didn’t care. It was the best day of the week because I learned everything there is to know about cookies. That class helped me to be able to create my own cookie concoctions like this recipe, which uses a cookie stuffed into another cookie. That’s right. Cookies INSIDE other cookies. EMBRACE THE MADNESS (it’s delicious).

Serve them up for a birthday party, tuck them in a lunchbox, or enjoy them as a mid-week treat, because you really do deserve it!!! They pair perfectly with other treats like classic rice krispies for a throwback style dessert spread. You can also get super festive for springtime holidays like Easter with homemade peeps soda pop, and spike it with peeps vodka, for grownups. Sugar rush? Yeah. 🍭 Worth it? Also yeah! Life is short, have a treat!

👀 the secret sauce…

✨ the flavor: This cookie is all about The Feels, because it’s bursting with a flavor that evokes carefree childhood days a la funfetti birthday cake! It also hits on The Wow, Mom! for the adorably stunning presentation, and The Intrigue because it’s absolutely stuffed with flavors!

🎯 the method: Combine the base cookie ingredients, add your mix-ins, then chill the dough to let the flavors meld and help the dough stabilize. Bake the cookies and top with yet ANOTHER cookie!!!

🏆 the win: You get real stuffed cookies with circus animal cookie chunks baked into the dough, so every bite has that cookie-within-a-cookie payoff (not just a cute lil topper).

what are The Flavor Factors?

The Flavor Factor Framework is my lil set of “flavor guideposts” for cooking with confidence! Less following recipes to a tee, more trusting your instincts, getting creative in the kitchen, and becoming a more intuitive cook! 👩🏻‍🍳

📚the backstory of developing this cookie recipe

(aka everyone’s favorite part of food blogs!)

I first saw these cookies trending on TikTok from *gasp* Kim Kardashian’s chef, Chef Khristianne Uy, aka Chef K (fitting for the Kardashian Krew 😂). While there was no recipe posted in Kimmy K’s stories, I knew I had to put my spin on these cookies and I got to work.

I posted a teaser video of them in 2022 when I first made them, but they weren’t quite where I wanted them to be, flavor and texture-wise. Since I’m insane thorough, I wanted to be sure to really get the recipe perfected before sharing it.

Well, FOUR YEARS LATER (okay, maybe I’m a bit TOO thorough…) I am finally getting around to posting them, thanks to a few fellow TikTok commenters asking for the recipe. Sorry, 2024 Tanya, for taking so long that you’re apparently no longer on TikTok 🙈, and shoutout to Jenn for giving me another nudge in April 2026 to share the recipe, too!!! 💕

These cookies have a lot of butter, which gives them the signature “school cafeteria cookie” melt-in-your-mouth texture. They’re golden and crispy on the edges, and soft and chewy (bordering on gooey) in the middle. Unlike most of my other recipes here using high quality vanilla extract, these use store bought clear imitation vanilla because…well…it gives the best “fake vanilla” flavor, which amplifies the taste of the circus animal cookies for maximum 90’s kid nostalgia. This is a trick I learned from Christina Tosi of MilkBar. There’s a time and place for everything, folks! You can grab a bottle online and have it shipped right to your door (affiliate link)!

🛒 ingredients needed

Overhead view of baking ingredients in bowls: AP flour, white and brown sugar, circus animal cookies, baking powder, baking soda, salt, sprinkles, eggs, unsalted butter, mini marshmallows, vanilla extract, and corn syrup.

cookie base ingredients

  • all purpose flour – AP flour has the perfect protein content for baked goods like cookies, allowing them to have dense chewy structure without being too cakey or bready (super technical baking terms).
  • unsalted butter – the gold standard in baking, unsalted butter means you are in total control of salt content of your cookies.
  • granulated sugar + light brown sugar – the combo of sugars helps provide flavor and chewiness to your cookie, while also giving them structure.
  • corn syrup – this helps your cookies stay soft and chewy past day one! If you skip this, your cookies will become super crunchy each day they are stored after baking.
  • eggs – large eggs help provide moisture, chew, and structure in your cookies!
  • clear vanilla extract – this helps to play up the vanilla flavor of the frosted animal cookies. I like to use the clear vanilla extract instead of fancy schmancy extract here because it mimics the bold and…well…fake vanilla flavor of childhood treats I know and love!
  • baking soda & baking powder – these chemical leaveners help your cookies to expand and poof as they bake, then collapse into chewy perfection!
  • salt – I used to leave salt out of my cookies, until I went to pastry school and learned about the science of how salt helps you taste other flavors better! So please, don’t skip the salt!

mix-in ingredients

  • Mother’s frosted circus animal cookies – these cookies are what inspired the recipe! They are colorful, fun, and packed with lunchbox classic vanilla-forward nostalgia. They are a little waxy on their own, but when mixed into these cookies, they add such a fun element of crunchy, cozy flavor!
  • rainbow sprinkles – an absolute necessity for fun and whimsy!!! I prefer the jimmie style sprinkles to the nonpareils, which I find to be too crunchy.
  • mini dehydrated marshmallows – these marshmallows are the same as the ones in your favorite breakfast cereal or those packs of instant hot cocoa. They are great in these cookies because they add crunch and texture without becoming too gooey. You can find them in the grocery store by the regular puffy marshmallows or online!

See the recipe card for the exact quantities.

🏆 tips for your best-ever-bake

  1. Take your ingredients out of the fridge. Room temperature ingredients like butter and eggs incorporate better than cold ingredients, so take the time to remove the chill from your cold ingredients.
  2. Chill the dough. I’m gonna tell you to do this like eight more times, so mentally prepare yourself NOW. 😂
  3. Watch the bake time. You want the edges of your cookies to be light golden brown before taking them out of the oven, then allow them to finish cooking on the baking sheet for a few minutes. This helps them to be crispy at the edges and chewy in the middle.

🍳 how to make circus animal stuffed cookies

A person with lavender-painted nails pours brown and white sugar from a glass bowl into a stand mixer with butter, preparing ingredients for circus animal cookies. Other baking items and eggs are visible in the background.

1: Cream the butter, sugars, and corn syrup until light and fluffy.

A close-up of cookie dough being mixed in a metal bowl with a spatula. Some dry flour is visible on the right edge, ready to be incorporated along with colorful circus animal cookies for extra fun.

2: Mix in the eggs and vanilla just until combined, scraping down the bowl.

A person with purple-painted nails uses a whisk to mix flour in a glass bowl. Surrounding bowls contain mini marshmallows, colorful sprinkles, and circus animal cookies for a fun and playful baking session.

3: Whisk the dry ingredients together (flour, baking powder, baking soda, salt).

A close-up of flour being added to a mixing bowl of yellow cookie dough, with circus animal cookies ready nearby and the ingredients partially blended.

4: Add the dry mix to the wet mix and mix just until no flour streaks remain (don’t overmix).

A mixing bowl filled with cookie dough containing colorful sprinkles, circus animal cookies, and small white marshmallows. A hand is stirring the mixture with a white spatula.

5: Fold in the crushed circus animal cookies, dehydrated mini marshmallows, and sprinkles.

A person scoops circus animal cookie dough with a cookie scoop over a mixing bowl, while a baking tray with evenly spaced dough balls sits on a parchment-lined baking sheet in the background.

6: Rest the dough 15–20 minutes, then line a sheet pan with parchment and scoop 2 TBSP portions of dough onto the pan.

A hand holds a baking sheet lined with parchment paper, topped with eight evenly spaced scoops of circus animal cookie dough. Cooling racks and another baking sheet are partially visible in the background.

7: Space chilled dough balls 2–2.5 inches apart on a parchment-lined sheet pan.

A hand adds a circus animal cookies on top of a round cookie, creating circus animal cookies on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. Seven other sprinkle-topped cookies surround it, and the tray rests on a cooling rack.

8: Bake 10–12 minutes until lightly golden, cool 2 minutes on the pan. Gently press a circus animal cookie onto the top of each cookie, then move to a rack to finish cooling.

💡tips & tricks for getting it right

ℹ️ troubleshooting tips

  • don’t want to wait – want cookies NOW without waiting for them to chill? Bake a few cookies to enjoy right away. BE WARNED: they WILL have a different flavor and they WILL spread thinner than if you let them chill. But then you will have a very useful, practical, and tasty real-world science experiment answer for why chilling your dough is important. 👩🏻‍🔬 Check them after about 7-8 minutes, and keep an eye on them because they will bake faster, too.
  • not enough flavor – did you chill your dough? When I tested these cookies, the batch I baked right away had hardly any vanilla taste at all. They were almost bland. The next day, they had a FACE FULL OF VANILLA.
  • spread too much – okay seriously…did you chill your dough??? I knoooow, it’s tough to wait for the dough to chill and it’s annoying too…but there’s really a REAL reason to chill the dough. It helps the flavors to deepen and meld together, and it helps to ensure your cookies don’t spread too much when baking.
A hand holds a baking tray with two cookies, resembling circus animal cookies. The top is labeled “unchilled dough (overbaked @ 8 mins)” and the bottom “chilled dough (underbaked @ 8 mins).”.
  • cover while chilling – be sure to cover your cookies with plastic wrap while chilling in the fridge (or while freezing). This helps stop any funky fridge flavors from getting into your dough. Garlic noodle sugar cookies don’t have the same appeal. 🥲
Scoops of unbaked cookie dough with colorful sprinkles and bits of circus animal cookies are arranged in rows on a parchment-lined baking sheet, partially covered with plastic wrap.
  • over-mixed or under-mixed – mixing the dough the correct amount is the key to perfect cookies! Scrape the bowl down between steps, being sure to also scrape the bottom of the bowl, so you can ensure that everything is incorporated.
Side-by-side images feature a metal bowl with creamed butter and sugar on the left and a smoother, lighter mixture on the right after circus animal cookies have been mixed in.

When creaming your butter and sugars, the color of the mix will lighten a bit and the texture will be light and fluffy, without lots of grains of sugar present.

Side-by-side images show dough evolving from rough to creamy in a mixing bowl; the transformation is similar to blending circus animal cookies into the mix. Each image is labeled with numbers in the top corners.

When mixing in the eggs and vanilla, take care to mix the eggs in one at a time until they are fully incorporated, then add the vanilla. Scrape down the bowl between adding eggs to make sure they are mixed in evenly.

Side-by-side images show a thick, creamy dough being mixed in a metal bowl with a spatula. Both images display the dough from slightly different angles, highlighting its texture—perfect for making circus animal cookies.

When adding the dry ingredients, I like to do this in 2-3 batches, and mix just until you can’t see strong white streaks anymore. Be sure to also scrape down the bowl (including the bottom!) between batches so the dry ingredients are evenly incorporated.

baking with animal cookies on top vs. putting them on after

When I’m making these for me, I prefer to bake the cookies ON the cookie. While it does result in a bit of browning, I find that the flavor is better and less sweet.

Baking them helps the flavor incorporate more fully into the entire cookie, and helps it become one “super cookie.” It mellows the sweetness a bit, but it also mutes the color of the cookies, so keep this in mind if you want BOLD colored cookies with a stronger sweeter cookie flavor.

A hand holds a baking tray with two cookies on parchment. One cookie has a circus animal cookie baked inside; the other has the circus animal cookie pressed on top after baking. Labels identify the differences.

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🍽️ how to serve your stuffed cookies

  • nostalgic treat for later- One of my all time favorite cookie tips is freezing dough for later! Scoop and prep your cookies to chill, but pop them in the freezer instead of the fridge. Check the instructions below for more details on freezing your dough, then baking from frozen,
  • holidays + parties – these are the perfect cookies to make for a holiday, party, or gathering when you wanna make an impressive and festive cookie! The colors go well with any spring or summer celebration, from Easter to picnics + summer BBQs! They also work in place of birthday cakes as the perfect birthday party cookie, and serve as a completely acceptable cupcake replacement too. 😌

❄️ how to freeze + bake from frozen

After scooping your cookies, pop them in the freezer, making sure to cover them with plastic wrap. This allows you to have pre-portioned and ready-to-bake cookies whenever the mood strikes!

Make sure to seal them in a zip top bag as soon as they are frozen (8-12 hours, or overnight). This helps keep their flavors contained, and keeps any rogue freezer flavors from getting into the dough. Store in the freezer for up to 3 months (I’ve pushed it to 6, but the flavor does start to degrade).

When baking from frozen, I also like to put a circus animal cookie on top and bake it that way, so I don’t need to worry about storing them separately from the dough. Bake cookies straight from frozen for 12 – 15 minutes in a 350ºF oven.

♻️ customize your circus animal cookies

  • salted butter – go ahead. Use the salted butter if it’s all you have, I won’t tell. You don’t even have to adjust the salt content if you don’t want to, but I would drop it by 1/2 if I were you. 😜
  • double the batch – I have tested this recipe by making a double batch, and it works perfectly, but be sure your mixer can handle all that dough!
  • regular vanilla extract – if you don’t have clear vanilla extract, you can use regular vanilla extract in place.
  • infused sugar – use homemade vanilla sugar or another infused flavored sugar in place of granulated sugar for an extra boost of flavor!

🧰 special equipment needed & storage tips

  • 2 TBSP cookie scoop (size 30 Zeroll-style)a cookie scoop gives you evenly sized cookies so they bake at the same rate, and it makes portioning a whole tray of dough way less annoying (affiliate link).
  • half-sheet pan + parchment paper – You’ll chill the scooped dough on the pan, and parchment keeps everything from sticking and makes cleanup a one-step situation.
  • rubber spatula – for folding in the mix-ins without crushing the cookie chunks into dust, and for scraping the bowl so you don’t end up with “flour surprise” at the bottom.

🫙 how to store finished cookies

Store your cooled cookies in an airtight storage container at room temperature for up to 5 days, or follow the freezing instructions in the post for storing frozen cookie dough.

💬 q+a

Nope! Regular marshmallows will totally change the texture of this recipe, so stick with the super tiny mini ones like the ones in cereal or hot cocoa!

Yes. Please. Yes.

If you make this recipe, please leave a review in the comments and a star rating!
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I read every single comment, and each rating is helpful to other readers, too! 🥹

I also love connecting on social media, so snap a pic and hashtag it #myrecipeforfun and tag me on YouTube, TikTok, Threads, or pin this recipe on Pinterest!

Close-up of cookies topped with circus animal cookies, featuring pink and white frosted animal crackers and colorful sprinkles, stacked on top of each other.

Stuffed Circus Animal Sugar Cookies (Fun Birthday Cookies!)

Lindsey Neumayer
This circus animal sugar cookie recipe is made with Mother's Original frosted circus animal cookies, sprinkles, and mini marshmallows (like the kind in your favorite breakfast cereal)! They're sweet and chewy with pockets of crunchy cookie within a cookie goodness! Serve them up for a birthday party or enjoy them as a mid-week treat, because you really do deserve it!
No ratings yet
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 40 minutes
Chill Time 12 hours
Total Time 13 hours
Course Dessert, Snack, Treat
Cuisine American
Servings 30 cookies
Calories 178 kcal

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Equipment

Ingredients
  

  • 226 g unsalted butter 2 sticks, softened at room temp
  • 200 g granulated sugar 1 cup
  • 160 g light brown sugar 3/4 cup, packed
  • 30 g corn syrup 1-1/2 TBSP
  • 101 g eggs 2 large eggs, room temp
  • 9 g vanilla extract 1-1/2 tsp
  • 7 g baking powder 1-1/2 tsp
  • 10 g baking soda 1-1/2 tsp
  • 6 g salt 1-1/2 tsp Diamond Crystal kosher salt
  • 300 g all-purpose flour about 2-1/2 cups
  • 150 g Mother’s frosted circus animal cookies broken up, about 1-1/2 cups
  • 30 g mini marshmallows mini-freeze-dried (dehydrated) marshmallows, about 1/2 cup
  • 26 g rainbow sprinkles about 2 tbsp

Instructions
 

  • Cream butter, corn syrup, + sugars. Cream butter, corn syrup and sugars together until light and fluffy.
    226 g unsalted butter, 200 g granulated sugar, 160 g light brown sugar, 30 g corn syrup
  • Add eggs + vanilla. Add in eggs and vanilla, and mix just until incorporated.
    101 g eggs, 9 g vanilla extract
  • Combine wet + dry ingredients. In a separate bowl, combine the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt using a whisk or sifter. Slowly add the dry ingredients into the butter + egg mixture until all ingredients have been incorporated, being careful not to over mix.
    7 g baking powder, 10 g baking soda, 6 g salt, 300 g all-purpose flour
  • Add mix-ins. Crumble in the crushed circus animal cookies, mini marshmallows, and sprinkles. Mix lightly using a wooden spoon or spatula until the ingredients are incorporated.
    150 g Mother’s frosted circus animal cookies, 30 g mini marshmallows, 26 g rainbow sprinkles
  • Rest dough. Allow the dough to rest for 15-20 minutes while you prep your baking sheet to hold the scooped cookie dough balls. They will sit on the baking sheet in the fridge as they chill overnight.
  • Prep pan + scoop dough. Line a pan with parchment paper. Scoop your dough using a 2 TBSP cookie scoop and begin placing the cookie dough balls on the pan. Fill the entire pan, as you will be resting the dough and don’t need to worry about spacing yet. 30 cookies will fit comfortably on a half-sheet pan or a jellyroll pan.
  • Cover + chill. Cover the pan with plastic wrap and place in the fridge to chill for 8-12 hours, or overnight.
  • Preheat oven. Heat the oven to 350ºF. Keep the cookies in the fridge as you bake batches, so they stay as cold as possible between batches.
  • Place cookies on pan. Space the cookies 2-2.5 inches apart on a cookie sheet lined with parchment paper. 8 cookies fit well on a half-sheet pan, staggering the cookies in lines of 2, then 1, as pictured in the instructions of the blog post.
  • Bake in batches. Bake for 10 – 12 minutes, or just until the edges and tops of the cookies start to brown lightly.
  • Cool. Allow the cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 2 minutes. This helps them to finish baking! After 2 minutes, move them to a cooling rack.
  • Store. Store your finished cookies in an airtight storage container for up to 5 days.

Notes

❄️ how to freeze + bake from frozen

After scooping your cookies, pop them in the freezer, making sure to cover them with plastic wrap. This allows you to have pre-portioned and ready-to-bake cookies whenever the mood strikes!
Make sure to seal them in a zip top bag as soon as they are frozen (8-12 hours, or overnight). This helps keep their flavors contained, and keeps any rogue freezer flavors from getting into the dough. Store in the freezer for up to 3 months (I’ve pushed it to 6, but the flavor does start to degrade).
When baking from frozen, I also like to put a circus animal cookie on top and bake it that way, so I don’t need to worry about storing them separately from the dough. Bake cookies straight from frozen for 12 – 15 minutes in a 350ºF oven.

ℹ️ troubleshooting tips

  • don’t want to wait – want cookies NOW without waiting for them to chill? Bake a few cookies to enjoy right away. BE WARNED: they WILL have a different flavor and they WILL spread thinner than if you let them chill. But then you will have a very useful, practical, and tasty real-world science experiment answer for why chilling your dough is important. 👩🏻‍🔬 Check them after about 7-8 minutes, and keep an eye on them because they will bake faster, too.
  • not enough flavor – did you chill your dough? When I tested these cookies, the batch I baked right away had hardly any vanilla taste at all. They were almost bland. The next day, they had a FACE FULL OF VANILLA.
  • spread too much – okay seriously…did you chill your dough??? I knoooow, it’s tough to wait for the dough to chill and it’s annoying too…but there’s really a REAL reason to chill the dough. It helps the flavors to deepen and meld together, and it helps to ensure your cookies don’t spread too much when baking.
  • over-mixed or under-mixed – mixing the dough the correct amount is the key to perfect cookies! Scrape the bowl down between steps, being sure to also scrape the bottom of the bowl, so you can ensure that everything is incorporated.
  • cover while chilling – be sure to cover your cookies with plastic wrap while chilling in the fridge (or while freezing). This helps stop any funky fridge flavors from getting into your dough. Garlic noodle sugar cookies don’t have the same appeal. 🥲

Nutrition

Calories: 178kcalCarbohydrates: 25gProtein: 2gFat: 8gSaturated Fat: 4gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 2gTrans Fat: 0.2gCholesterol: 29mgSodium: 220mgPotassium: 29mgFiber: 0.3gSugar: 15gVitamin A: 211IUCalcium: 24mgIron: 1mg
Did you make this?! 👀Let everyone know how it was! 💕
Keyword: birthday party, cookie, party food, stuffed cookie, sweet, The Feels, The Intrigue, The Wow, Mom!

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