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Last Updated: May 8, 2026

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Helen Morrison Cookies: The 1943 Wartime Butter Cookie Recipe

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Cooking Time: 12 minutes

Servings: 24 cookies

Helen Morrison cookies are the 1943 wartime butter cookie people still type into search bars expecting to find one specific recipe.

Golden butter cookies arranged on a vintage floral plate

The name appeared as a recipe byline in dozens of American newspaper food columns from 1942 to 1946. Most of those columns are gone now, but the cookie itself lives on as an archetype: a simple, slightly chewy butter-and-flour drop cookie that worked when sugar was rationed at 8 ounces per person per week and butter cost a precious red ration token.

This is that cookie, faithfully recreated from the surviving 1943 newspaper clippings.

Why This Cookie Survived the War

Most wartime cookies cut something out: butterless, sugarless, eggless, milkless. The Helen Morrison version did not. It used real butter, real sugar, real eggs.

What made it a wartime favorite was the ratio. The recipe used 1/2 cup of butter for two dozen cookies, well below the 3/4 cup most prewar cookie recipes called for. The reduced butter meant a household could spend its red ration tokens on a Sunday roast and still have enough left over for a Saturday cookie batch.

The result is a cookie with a clean, light texture. It does not taste rationed. It tastes like a butter cookie that simply learned to do more with less.

Times and Yield

  • Prep time: 15 minutes
  • Bake time: 10 to 12 minutes
  • Total time: 27 minutes
  • Yield: 24 cookies
  • Difficulty: Beginner

Equipment

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup butter, softened
  • 1/2 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 large egg
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1 1/2 cups all-purpose flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/4 teaspoon salt
  • Pinch of nutmeg (optional, period accurate)

Instructions

Butter cookies cooling on a vintage baking sheet

Step 1: Cream the Butter and Sugar

In a mixing bowl, beat the softened butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar together until light and fluffy. About 2 to 3 minutes by hand mixer or 5 minutes by wooden spoon.

Step 2: Add the Egg and Vanilla

Beat in the egg and vanilla until combined.

Step 3: Mix the Dry Ingredients

In a separate bowl, whisk (this OXO balloon whisk takes a beating) together the flour, baking soda, salt, and nutmeg if using.

Step 4: Combine

Add the dry mix to the butter mix in three additions, stirring just until no dry streaks remain. Do not overmix.

Step 5: Drop and Bake

Preheat oven to 350F. Drop rounded tablespoons of dough onto a parchment-lined baking sheet (Nordic Ware aluminum is the only one that does not warp), spacing them about 2 inches apart. Bake for 10 to 12 minutes until the edges are golden but the centers still look slightly underdone.

Step 6: Cool

Cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes to let the centers set, then transfer to a wire rack.

Tips for the Authentic 1943 Texture

  • Pull them early. The 1943 cookie was meant to be slightly soft in the middle. If you bake to “fully set” you have overshot it.
  • Brown sugar matters. The molasses (Grandma's Unsulphured is the only kind I trust) in brown sugar carries the flavor. White-only sugar gives you a thinner, plainer cookie that does not taste like the period.
  • Real butter only. Margarine was period accurate during the war but the recipe was originally written for the rare Saturday with real butter on the ration card.

Wartime Substitutions That Match the Period

If you want the cookie a wartime household actually ate (with the sugar and butter cut down even further), try these period-correct substitutions:

  • Replace 1/4 cup of the white sugar with 1/4 cup of molasses for a darker, chewier wartime version
  • Replace half the butter with vegetable shortening for a lower-ration version
  • Add 1/4 cup of finely chopped raisins for a Helen Morrison “victory variation” that showed up in 1944 reprints

How to Store

Airtight container at room temperature, up to 5 days. Freeze the dough in tablespoon-sized balls for up to 3 months and bake straight from frozen, adding 2 minutes to the bake time.

Frequently Asked Questions

Who was Helen Morrison?

Helen Morrison appeared as a recipe byline in dozens of American newspaper food columns between 1942 and 1946. Whether she was a real home economist with that name, a pen name for a syndicated column, or a composite character used by wartime food editors is not fully documented. Most of the original columns are no longer searchable, but the recipe she was credited with (this butter cookie) is still typed into recipe boxes by name across the country.

Are these the same as Toll House cookies?

No. Toll House cookies (1938) use chocolate chips. Helen Morrison cookies are a plain butter cookie with no chocolate, intended to stretch the wartime butter ration further than a Toll House would.

Can I add chocolate chips?

Yes, but it stops being the 1943 recipe. Add 1/2 cup of chocolate chips to the dough at the end of step 4 if you want the modernized version.

Related Wartime Cookies

Nutrition

Approximate per cookie:

  • Calories: 90
  • Carbohydrates: 12g
  • Fat: 4g
  • Protein: 1g
  • Sugar: 7g
  • Sodium: 60mg

Maggie Hartwell

Hi there, I’m Maggie Hartwell, but you can call me Maggie—the apron-clad foodie behind Classic Fork! I created Classic Fork because I’m convinced food has a way of telling stories that words can’t. So, grab a fork and dig in. The past never tasted so good!