Small-Batch Baking: 18 Desserts for One or Two (No Leftovers)

Small-batch baking scales desserts down to just one or two servings, so there are no leftovers to tempt you. Think six cookies instead of two dozen, a single brownie in a ramekin, or a cupcake recipe that makes four. It’s perfect for small households, late-night cravings, and using up half a bag of chocolate chips. Here are 18 small-batch desserts plus the trick to halving any recipe.
The Quick Version
- Small batch = 1–2 servings. No half-eaten trays, no waste.
- The egg trick: to halve a recipe, beat one egg and use ~2 tbsp.
- Use smaller pans (ramekin, mug, mini tin) so the batter depth stays right.
- Easiest start below: small-batch sugar cookies that make just 8.
Why bake in small batches?
Two reasons: waste and willpower. A full batch of cookies means a half-used bag of flour, leftover buttercream, and 22 cookies you didn’t need. Small-batch recipes are sized for one or two people, so you get the fun of baking and a fresh treat without a counter full of dessert going stale. They’re also faster — less to mix, less to bake.
Small-batch cookies
- Small-batch chocolate chip cookies — makes about 6. Get the recipe.
- Small-batch sugar cookies — the full recipe is below; makes 8.
- Single cookie for one — a skillet or ramekin cookie, spoon straight in.
Single-serve cakes and brownies
- Single-serve brownie — one fudgy brownie in a mug or ramekin. Get the recipe.
- Mug cakes — vanilla, chocolate and more in 90 seconds. See the recipes.
- Small-batch cupcakes — makes just 6. Get the recipe.
No-bake small batches
When it’s hot, scale down a no-bake instead. A couple of no-bake cheesecake cups or a mini bowl of mousse make a perfect dessert for two — see all our no-bake summer desserts.
Foolproof recipe: Small-Batch Sugar Cookies (Makes 8)
- Heat oven to 350°F (175°C); line a small sheet with parchment.
- Stir 4 tbsp softened butter with ¼ cup sugar until creamy; mix in 1 egg yolk and ½ tsp vanilla.
- Stir in ½ cup + 2 tbsp flour, ¼ tsp baking powder and a pinch of salt into a soft dough.
- Roll into 8 balls, roll in sugar, flatten slightly, and bake 8–10 minutes until edges just set. Cool on the sheet.
Foolproof tip: using just the egg yolk (not a whole egg) is what keeps a small batch from needing odd half-egg measurements — and makes the cookies extra tender.
How to halve any recipe
To shrink a full recipe, halve every ingredient and step down a pan size. The only tricky part is eggs: beat one whole egg and measure out 2 tablespoons for “half an egg.” For the full method and a conversion chart, see how to halve a recipe.
Frequently asked questions
What is small-batch baking?
Scaling a recipe down to one or two servings, or a handful of cookies, instead of a full pan. It uses a single egg yolk or smaller pans to avoid leftovers and waste.
How do you bake for one or two people?
Use small-batch recipes or halve a standard one. Mug cakes, ramekin brownies and 6-cookie batches are built for it. The tricky part is the egg — beat one and use about 2 tablespoons for half.
Can you just halve a normal baking recipe?
Usually yes — halve every ingredient and use a smaller pan so the depth stays similar. Beat one egg and measure half, and start checking a few minutes early.
Small-Batch Sugar Cookies (Makes 8)
Ingredients
Instructions
- Heat oven to 350F (175C) and line a small sheet with parchment. Stir the softened butter and sugar together until creamy.
- Mix in the egg yolk and vanilla.
- Stir in the flour, baking powder and salt until a soft dough forms.
- Roll into 8 balls, roll in extra sugar, and flatten slightly. Bake 8-10 minutes until just set at the edges. Cool on the sheet.
Keep going
Browse all small-batch recipes, or if you’re new to baking, start with our easy baking recipes for beginners. Everything’s tested to work the first time.