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The process of making Resurrection cookies is a wonderful way to share the Easter story. They are a light and sweet meringue cookie filled with nuts or chocolate.

Why You’ll Love This Recipe!
It is the perfect way to share the Easter store with a hands on activity that is delicious too. Each step of the recipe corresponds to part of the Easter story and there is a scripture to go along with it. Make it a family activity on the Saturday night before Easter and then enjoy your cookies the next day.
What are Resurrection Cookies?
The process of making Resurrection cookies is a wonderful way to share the Easter story. Each step and ingredient of the recipe represents a part of the story and the final product. The cookie, is a representation of the empty tomb that was found on Easter morning and the meringues cook so that the middle of the cookie is hallow.
I found the recipe over at The Idea Room and you can visit Amy to get a printout of the scriptures and directions.
Empty Tomb Cookie Ingredients:
The ingredients are simple:
- pecans
- egg whites
- white vinegar
- sugar
- pinch of salt
Use half nuts and half chocolate chips if you prefer or all chocolate chips. Preheat oven to 300 degrees before you start.
How to Make resurrection Cookies
The night before:
Preheat oven to 300 degrees F.
1: Place pecans in a plastic baggie and seal and beat the nuts with a wooden spoon to break them into small pieces. This represents when Jesus was arrested and beaten by Roman soldiers (Read John 19:1-3)
2: Smell the vinegar. Talk about how Jesus was forced to drink it when he was thirsty on the cross and add the vinegar to the bowl. (John 19:28-30)
3: Add egg whites to bowl. Eggs represent life and that by giving His life, Jesus gave us eternal life. (Read John 10:10-11)
4: Give everyone a little salt in their hand and encourage them to taste it. The salt represents the salty tears that were shed by Jesus’ followers and the bitterness of our sin. Place a pinch of salt is added to the bowl. (Read Luke 23:27)
5: Add the sugar. Sugar is added to show that the sweetest part of the story is that Jesus died because He loves us. (Read Psalms 34:8 and John 3:16)
6: Beat the egg whites to form peaks, about 10-12 minutes. The white color represents the purity in God’s eyes of those whose sins have been cleansed by Christ. (Read Isaiah 1:18 and John 3:1-3)
7: Fold in the nuts or mini chocolate chips and drop by teaspoons onto parchment paper covered cookie sheet. Each mound represents the rocky tomb where Jesus’ body was placed. (Read Matthew 27:57-60)
8: Place cookie sheet in preheated oven and turn the oven OFF. Use masking tape to seal the oven just as the tomb was sealed. (Read Matthew 27:65-66)
9. Go to bed! Just as you may feel sad to leave the cookies in the oven overnight, Jesus’ followers were sad when the tomb was sealed and they had to leave his body there. (Read John 16:20,22)
Easter Morning
10. On Easter morning open the oven and give everyone a cookie. Take a bite and discover that the cookies are hollow just as on the first Easter morning Jesus’ followers discovered the empty tomb. (Read Matthew 28:1-9)
It is a simple and fun way to share the Easter story with your family and it is yummy too!
I am grateful for the Easter story and that I know that my Savior lives and that He died so that I may, each day, have the opportunity to begin again. I am grateful for the opportunity to repent of my sins and to be better and to do better.
Download the pdf here – Resurrection Cookies or Easter Story Cookies
Tips From Leigh Anne
- Whip your egg whites in a metal or glass bowl, not a plastic one.
- Be sure your mixing bowl is very clean.
- Don’t get even a smidge of egg yolk in your egg whites. They will not whip correctly if there is any egg yolk in them.
- Beat your meringue mixture just until it is able to hold a peak, don’t over beat.
Other fun Easter ideas and recipes:
Be sure and follow me over on You Tube for weekly cooking demos.
Resurrection Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 cup pecans or mini chocolate chips
- 1 tsp vinegar
- pinch of salt
- 1 cup sugar
- 3 egg whites
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 300 degrees F.
- Place pecans in plastic bag and crush with the back of a wooden spoon
- Add vinegar, egg whites, salt and sugar into mixer.
- Beat until egg whites are stiff, about 5-10 minutes.
- Fold in nuts and or chocolate chips
- Cover cookie sheet with parchment paper or a brown grocery bag
- Place meringue by spoonful onto baking sheet
- Place into hot oven and turn oven OFF. Keep the door shut and allow to sit overnight
Tips & Notes:
- Whip your egg whites in a metal or glass bowl, not a plastic one.
- Be sure your mixing bowl is very clean.
- Don’t get even a smidge of egg yolk in your egg whites. They will not whip correctly if there is any egg yolk in them.
- Beat your meringue mixture just until it is able to hold a peak, don’t over beat.
JOSEPH S STAMMER says
mine taste great but dont come out looking right
Kathy says
Are they suppose to be a little gooey in the middle? They a firm and crunchy on the outside but the inside is a little gooey. I was afraid to eat since it is raw eggs.
Leigh Anne Wilkes says
Yes, they are a meringue cookie and are suppose to be chewy on the inside and crunchy on the outside. They are safe to eat.
Kathy Kinney says
I wanted to do this with the kids so bad but I’m kinda glad their dad had one interested in a game and the other just wanted to sleep already. The peaks never formed! Even grabbed my kitchen aid mixer cause my arm got so tired! I slopped them spoonful by spoonful onto the parchment paper anyway and slid in the oven crossing fingers hoping they might raise while knowing full well there’s nothing in the mix that would do that.
Rescued about half the batter and transformed them into pancakes for breakfast instead. oh well. Just turned the oven light on to peek and still slop on a tray. Only thing I could think was that I subbed half the sugar with coconut palm sugar as I ran out of the white stuff, I just don’t keep the regular stuff stocked usually, so that’s probably what killed it. Gotta have a fail every once in a while, so that your successes taste that much more awesome, I guess!
Leigh Anne Wilkes says
My guess is the coconut palm sugar is the problem. Love your attitude – so true that the fails makes the successes even sweeter!
Larissa says
We tried these with our son and they were flat when we spooned them out into the tray. We looked it up: meringue cannot be mixed in plastic bowls – only glass or metal – because oils stick to the plastic coating and affect the “batter.” We attempted to correct this after our son went to bed – we used powdered sugar for granulated sugar, changed our bowl to metal, and added ¼ tsp cream of tartar to the dry ingredients! We definitely got the stiff (and beautifully glossy) peaks and gently folded in crushed almonds. They’re in the oven now, and they aren’t flat!
Miriam says
I don’t see amounts for anything, except “a pinch of salt”. I need to know amounts, please.
Leigh Anne Wilkes says
The ingredients and amounts are all in the recipe card in the post.