
This year’s complimentary completer cookie is the Santa Mickey Sugar cookie, complete with white chocolate Santa hat and 8 ounce bottle of milk. And here’s where it’s good to note that guests who participate in the Holiday Cookie Stroll do not have to purchase one of every cookie, they simply need to purchase five cookies total in order to complete the stroll and receive their completer cookie. Needless to say, I would not repurchase this cookie. Please know that I hardly ever throw half of a dessert/treat/sugary-anything away.

I do appreciate that the cookie was rolled in both sprinkles and sugar balls, but they did little to help the cookie’s case. Unfortunately, the peppermint taste was not as strong as I’d hoped it would be. This cookie, while visually pleasing, was dry and lifeless.

Unfortunately, everything that the Chocolate Crinkle cookie was, the Peppermint Pinwheel cookie was not. My next stop was at Yukon Holiday Kitchen near the Canada pavilion for the Peppermint Pinwheel cookie. This cookie takes the blue ribbon in my book. This cookie is perfect for sharing, or, as it was in my case, perfect for eating half of and taking the other half home to be savored at a later time. The exterior of the cookie is coated in confectioners’ sugar, and, in every bite, there is the slight crunch of granulated sugar. The inside was fudgy and chewy and decadent. Its outer shell is as you would want a Crinkle cookie’s exterior to be: crunchy. This cookie offers a deep and rich cocoa flavor throughout. It is a large and weighty cookie that, from first bite, was worth every penny of the $2.50 paid for it. I would repurchase this cookie again and again.

The Chocolate Crinkle cookie is, quite simply, perfection. My next stop was located in between the Mexico pavilion and Showcase Plaza at Feast of the Three Kings. Public service announcement: after enjoying this cookie, please take a moment to check yourself in a nearby mirror. Confectioners’ sugar tends to travel.įriends, in my opinion, the next cookie takes the cake, or, in this case, the cookie. For me, the Linzer cookie falls into the middle of the pack, behind the Black and White, and behind our next cookie. If this type of cookie is your jam (pun intended), I imagine you would be likely to repurchase it.

I enjoyed the Linzer cookie, and I appreciated the level of detail that had been put into its construction. With the exception of the Black and White cookie, all cookies on the Holiday Cookie Stroll are new this year. Festival passports can be picked up at any of the Festival of the Holidays food location, as well as at many of the merchandise locations. The Holiday Cookie Stroll details, cookie names and locations, and stamp page are located on the last page of the festival passport.
JOINME COOKIES FREE
The Holiday Cookie Stroll cookies cost $2.50 each, and, once a guest has purchased five cookies (you don’t have to purchase one of each, just five cookies total) and collected the coordinating stamps in his or her festival passport, they may show their completed festival passport for a free completer cookie. Five different cookies are offered at five of the holiday kitchen locations sprinkled around the World Showcase. It seems only fitting that today would be the day for me to tell you about my experience completing the Holiday Cookie Stroll at the Epcot International Festival of the Holidays.įor those who may not know, the Holiday Cookie Stroll is an activity that Epcot guests may participate in at an added expense during the Festival of the Holidays. Today is one of the greatest of all national holidays: National Cookie Day.
