Bake the classic Snowball Cookies Recipe for melt-in-your-mouth, nutty powdered cookies in just 35 minutes.
Preheat your oven to 300°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper so the cookies bake gently and remain pale and tender. I like a low oven so the little rounds stay soft and never get that deep brown edge — this is about preserving delicate texture. Arrange the lined sheet near your work station so it's ready when the dough is portioned.
Using softened butter, cream it together with 1/4 cup powdered sugar until the mixture is pale, airy, and almost ribbon-like. The goal here is a light, fluffy mass that has trapped pockets of air — this is what makes the cookies delicate, not dense. Once it looks pale and whipped, stir in the 2 teaspoons of vanilla and 1 tablespoon water to bring the mixture together; the tiny splash of water helps it become slightly looser and easier to incorporate without over-wetting the dough. The bowl should show a satiny, whipped surface with faint sugar crystals beginning to dissolve.

Stirring gently is the name of the game. The vanilla perfumes the creamed butter and the tablespoon of water smooths it out so the dry flour will combine cleanly. You should see the glossy butter mixture soften and look cohesive — no separated fats — which primes it perfectly for the flour.
Gradually add the 2 cups of flour and mix just until a dough forms; stop as soon as it holds together. Overworking will make these cookies tough, so aim for a dough that looks unified but still tender, slightly crumbly when pressed but cohesive in your hands. At this stage fold in 1 cup of finely chopped pecans (or walnuts) so the dough becomes speckled with warm nut flecks — every bite should promise a little crunch inside the melt-in-your-mouth shortbread.

Gently fold the chopped nuts through the dough, making sure they're evenly distributed so each cookie gets a bit of crunch. The dough will feel buttery and soft, pinpricked with little brown nut pieces that contrast against the pale beige dough.
Portion the dough into small balls, about one tablespoon each, using a small cookie scoop or a rounded tablespoon. Roll them lightly in your hands to smooth the tops and set them evenly spaced on the prepared parchment-lined sheet so they bake evenly. Having a few spare nuts and a small scoop nearby keeps the scene tidy and efficient while you shape the whole batch.

Bake the cookies at 300°F for 20 minutes — they should look set but not browned, remaining pale and delicate. Let them rest on the sheet for about five minutes post-oven so they firm up just enough to be handled without falling apart.
After the brief cool, roll the warm cookies in powdered sugar for the first dusting; once they are completely cool, roll again for a thicker, snow-dusted finish. Arrange them for serving so the powdered sugar dusting and the little nut flecks show clearly — they should look like tiny snowy domes, rustic and inviting.
