How Silicone Baking Mats Are Ruining Your Cookies

When cookie recipes call for baking on a parchment-lined pan, switching to silicone may produce some unexpected results.

By
Stella Parks
Stella Parks
Editor Emeritus
Stella Parks is a CIA-trained baking nerd and pastry wizard, dubbed one of America's Best New Pastry Chefs by Food & Wine. She was the pastry editor at Serious Eats from 2016 to 2019.
Learn about Serious Eats' Editorial Process
Updated September 19, 2023

When I'm writing a recipe for cookies, I always make a point of expressly calling for a parchment-lined baking sheet. Details like this may be easy to gloss over, but they can make a big difference in how a cookie turns out. Whenever a reader writes in asking me to troubleshoot cookies that spread too much, browned too much, and turned out greasier than those pictured in the recipe, my first question is almost always "Were they baked on silicone?"

Homemade lofthouse cookies on a baking sheet.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

More often than not, the answer is yes.

Thin, Greasy, and Dark? Blame Silicone

Excess spread can be caused by other issues (particularly under-creaming the butter and sugar), greasiness can relate to problems with butter and flour style, and over-browning can relate to wonky baking soda measurements or dark baking sheets. But when these three complaints show up together, the culprit is almost always silicone.

Check it out.

Overhead shot of thin and crispy Tate's-style chocolate chip cookies on a parchment-lined baking sheet.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Above, we have my thin and crisp Tate's-style chocolate chip cookies, baked on parchment. Below, cookies from the same batch of dough, baked in the same oven, on the same rack, for the same length of time, but on a silicone baking mat.

Dark brown cookies on a baking sheet lined with a silicone mat, showing excess spread and rippling of cookies baked on silicone.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

The difference in browning and spread is extreme. While some folks may think the second tray has an allure of its own, that mystique will disappear with a single bite: The cookies baked on silicone are dense and greasy, with a dull crunch, and a hint of bitterness from excessive browning.

The Consequences of Excessive Spreading

Silicone affects how heat is conducted to the dough, and its nonstick surface allows for more spread. Because the dough spreads faster, it bakes faster and puffs less, resulting in browner, denser cookies lacking the delicate crunch and honeycomb crumb of a cookie that rose in the oven as intended.

Because silicone isn't as breathable as parchment, cookies left to cool on the baking sheet can also sweat along their bottoms, which does no favors for their texture, whether said cookie is meant to be crunchy or soft.

In cookies that are designed to spread, accelerating that process can exaggerate the effects of silicone; in those that are meant to stay thick and fluffy, the results may be more subtle.

Overhead shot of unfrosted Lofthouse-style cookies baked on a parchment-lined baking sheet.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

Take my DIY Lofthouse cookies, for example. Baked on parchment, they turn out like little muffin tops, tender, pale, and soft through and through—the specific attributes we're looking for in a soft and cakey sugar cookie like this.

Baked on silicone, however, they spread more and thin out around the edges, turning crisp.

Overhead shot of unfrosted Lofthouse-style cookies, with excessive browning around the edges, baked on a silicone-lined baking sheet.

Serious Eats / Vicky Wasik

This characteristic may appeal to some bakers, but it's not how the cookies are meant to turn out, and anyone craving a soft and tender sugar cookie would be sorely disappointed to encounter an epic crunch.

For me, there are no occasions when baking on silicone is preferable to using parchment. For those who don't trust my judgment, know that Alton Brown himself feels the same way, going so far as to say he vastly prefers parchment.

And, if you're concerned about minimizing waste in the kitchen, your piece of parchment is more than a one-hit wonder. A quick wipe with a cloth will get rid of any grease or debris, meaning that a single sheet can be reused almost as many times as you care to keep it around. Plus, many brands of unbleached parchment paper are compostable as well (including Reynolds and If You Care) or else biodegradable (such as PaperChef).

Read More

October 2019

More Serious Eats Recipes