The clock strikes midnight and a tall glass of milk sits next to a plate of cookies.
Santa Claus quietly tiptoes in and drops gifts under the twinkling Christmas tree. He takes a bite of a cookie and a swig of milk and heâs off.
Itâs no secret that Santa loves cookies. Lucky for us, there are plenty of places in Tucson to get them scratch-made.
Here are a handful of those spots.
Shane Ray makes chocolate bonbons at Snack Monster, a local dessert shop in the food court at Tucson Mall, 4500 N. Oracle Road. Ray, the owner, and his employees make cookies, caramel apples, cakes, and other sweet treats from scratch. They also make seasonal delights, such as orange-cranberry shortbread.
SNACK MONSTER, 4500 N. Oracle Road, 989-1733
The treats at Snack Monster are not only made from scratch â theyâre entirely custom.
âWhat weâre really great at is listening to the community and giving them what they want,â owner Shane Ray says. âWe like being able to bring these dreams to reality.
âWeâre totally artists and our medium happens to be food and desserts and little items,â he says.
From sugar cookies shaped as saguaros, to seasonal dark chocolate cookies with bits of candy cane, Snack Monster serves a variety of cookies. Ray and his team make two to three different types of cookies each day.
Seasonal cookies include gingerbread glazed with maple and orange-cranberry shortbread. Year-round, Snack Monster has made chocolate chip, M&M, peanut butter, and butterscotch cookies, in addition to macarons.
One of Rayâs favorites is the snickerdoodle, which is filled with caramel.
Snack Monster opened four years ago near the food court at Tucson Mall. The bakery also makes cake pops, rice cereal treats, candy apples and more to satisfy your sweet tooth.
Snack Monsterâs goodies can also be found at local businesses including Funtasticks, Hacienda Del Sol and Coffee Times. It also does catering.
If youâre hoping to order cookies from Snack Monster before Christmas, order by Dec. 23. Snack Monster will deliver up to Dec. 24.
Dairy-free gingerbread cookies sit on a tray waiting to be baked at Dedicated. A Gluten Free Bakery and Coffee Shop. Everything at Dedicated, from the cookies to the salads to the sandwiches, is gluten free, says owner Rebecca Wicker.
DEDICATED. A GLUTEN FREE BAKERY AND COFFEE SHOP, 4500 E. Speedway Blvd., 209-2872
Rebecca Wicker opened Dedicated. A Gluten Free Bakery and Coffee Shop in 2014.
Years before that, doctors thought her husband, Gordon Wicker, had lupus. As it turned out, he had a severe wheat allergy.
âWe tried all the (gluten-free) stuff that was available in stores at the time and it wasnât very good,â Wicker says.
So, Wicker â an accountant at the time â started playing around with different flour blends. When she found a blend she liked, someone told her to open a bakery.
âI missed serving the community and I thought this was a way to take my business management experience and make something really great and really needed in the community,â she says.
Dedicated serves sandwiches and salads, in addition to heaps of sweets at the bakery and through catering. Everything is gluten-free and many treats are vegan.
Cookie flavors include chocolate chip, snickerdoodle, gingersnap, and sugar cookies flavored as matcha, lemon turmeric, lavender, and maple.
Wickerâs favorite is the vegan peanut butter cookie.
âThe peanut butter cookie is what I was making when I discovered our flour blend that we use for everything, so thereâs that sentimental piece,â she says.
The bakery is currently offering holiday cookie boxes, which come with a variety of cookies and are available while supplies last. Regular cookies can be ordered until Dec. 23.
Kate Morris, baker at Time Market, scoops out chocolate chip cookie dough at Time Market, 444 E. University Blvd. Rotating cookie flavors at Time Market include oatmeal raisin, flourless chocolate, double chocolate and ginger molasses.
TIME MARKET, 444 E. University Blvd., 622-0761/RINCON MARKET, 2513 E. Sixth St., 327-6653/THE B LINE, 621 N. Fourth Ave., 882-7575
A few years ago, a chocolate shipment arrived at Time Market â but it was melted.
âI had to figure out how to use it because I couldnât sell it on a shelf,â head chef Curtis Wright says.
So, Wright and head baker Katie Morris threw the chocolate into a cookie, which later became the Time Market Salted Chocolate Chip cookie.
Now, the cookie sells out nearly every day. Time Market also sells the dough.
Beyond the chocolate chip cookie, Time Market offers rotating cookie flavors made by Terri LaChance of Rincon Market and The B Line. The two restaurants, in addition to Time Market, are owned by Peter Wilke.
Kate Morris, baker at Time Market, tops off chocolate chip cookie dough scoops with sea salt at Time Market, 444 E. University Blvd., Tucson, Ariz. on December 13th, 2019.
Rotating flavors at Time Market include oatmeal raisin, flourless chocolate, double chocolate, ginger molasses and Mexican wedding cookies. At The B Line, you can find gluten-free options, chocolate pecan and âThe B Line Flat,â which is a salted chocolate chip cookie.
And at Rincon, diners can stumble across flavors such as Tahini chocolate chip, ginger molasses, almond coconut, peanut butter, double chocolate walnut, cornmeal lime, and orange rosemary shortbread.
âTheyâre all good,â LaChance says. âI would say if I could only have one cookie, I would say the ginger molasses.â
For the holidays, Rincon Market is offering a holiday assortment of cookies for $24.
The last day to order the holiday assortment is Dec. 22, with pickup from noon to 4 p.m. on Dec. 24. If youâre hoping to order Time Marketâs chocolate chip cookies before Christmas, order by Dec. 23.
Aaron Meehan, pastry captain at Beyond Bread, places a tray of pre-cooked chocolate chip cookies into the oven on December 16, 2019. Cookies and pastries are baked in the mornings.
BEYOND BREAD, 421 W. Ina Road, 461-1111; 3026 N. Campbell Ave., 322-9965; 6260 E. Speedway, 747-7477
Come for the sandwich, stay for the cookies.
âEverything is scratch-made â every part of it,â Beyond Breadâs president Shelby Collier says. âAnd theyâre making (cookies) all the time.â
The cookies at Beyond Bread are larger than your average cookie â but they also make 14-inch cookies if youâre itching for something even larger.
Varieties include chocolate chip, oatmeal, milk chocolate chunk, wheat-free death by chocolate, Russian tea cake, gingersnap, sugar cookies and peanut butter â which is Collierâs favorite. More flavors are available through catering and depending on the season.
Large chocolate chip cookies at Beyond Bread are a customer favorite.
One of the seasonal cookies, which is now available, is the puddle cookie. Bakers roll nuts into chocolate cookie dough, then flatten and fill it with ganache.
Beyond Bread has been using the same recipes for most of its cookie staples for the last 15 to 20 years.
But Collier says recipes are always being perfected. âIt never stops,â he says.
If youâre hoping to order cookies from Beyond Bread before Christmas, orders are taken on a first-come, first-served basis.
A fresh batch of chocolate chip cookies, made by Zoi Fontaine, baker at Snack Monster, cool off on a cooling rack at the local dessert shop in the food court at Tucson Mall, 4500 N. Oracle Road, Tucson, Ariz. on Dec. 9, 2019. Owner Shane Ray and his employees make cookies, caramel apples, cakes, bonbons and other sweet treats made from scratch.
Rebecca Wicker, owner of Dedicated. A Gluten Free Bakery and Coffee Shop, 4500 E. Speedway Blvd., rolls out dough to make dairy-free gingerbread cookies on Dec. 11, 2019.



