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There is no doubt in my mind that Chocolate Chip Cookies are the ultimate classic baked good and comfort food. There is just nothing that compares to a warm gooey cookie right out of the oven. And a few years ago I set out on a mission to develop the most perfect chocolate chip cookie recipe ever. But this led to the question: What is my idea of the perfect chocolate chip cookie? Well, I am all about contrasts. So in my mind it needs lots of contrasts of textures and flavors. And I created that for myself. A thick, chewy on the inside crunchy on the outside cookie that has hints of caramel and salt with dark chocolate chips and toasted pecans.
I had the brilliant idea for customizable cookies according other people’s idea of a perfect chocolate chip cookie. Thin and crispy with milk chocolate? Cakey and puffy with peanut butter, cinnamon and dark chocolate? Whatever your little heart desired. I became obsessed with the science of the cookie.
The other day somehow this topic came up with a co-worker of mine. She told me she had been trying to make really thin, chewy cookies for some time now with little success. Open the flood gates! My mind started racing trying to remember all of the things I researched about the science of baking and I immediately started using my formula to create this recipe.
For any other geeks out there that are as interested in the science of baking as I am, I introduce to you “Baker Bettie’s Rules for Customizable Chocolate Chip Cookies!”
We will start with the standard Nestle Tollhouse Cookie Recipe:
- 2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp salt
- 1 cup butter, softened
- 3/4 cup granulated sugar
- 3/4 cup packed brown sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla
- 2 large eggs
- 2 cups Nestle Toll House Chocolate Chips
You know the drill: Combine dry ingredients. Cream butter and sugar. Add the other wet ingredients. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and the chips. Bake in a 375 degree oven for 9-11 minutes.
Flour: If you want a chewier cookie change out the all-purpose flour for bread flour. Bread flour has more protein and therefore will create more gluten. If you want a taller cookie with a lot of texture cut back the flour to 2 cups and add 1 cup of oatmeal flour. You can find this in the grocery store or create your own by grinding old fashioned oats in a blender to a fine crumb.
Baking Soda/Powder: There is no baking powder in the original recipe but if you want taller and cakey cookies add 1 tsp. Keep the 1 tsp baking soda. to learn more details about baking soda and baking powder and how to sub or eliminate them, check out this post.
Salt: Salt is one of the ingredients that only affects the flavor. You can reduce or increase this amount according to your own preference for the salty/sweet combo. But don’t eliminate it completely! I usually increase it to 1 1/4 tsp and use kosher salt for a more coarse flake.
Butter: There are several things you do with the butter. If you are wanting a nice chew to the cookie and have decided to opt for the bread flour, melt the butter. The water from the melted butter will mix with the flour to create more gluten. (I learned this from Alton Brown) If you like a more complex caramel flavor to your cookie, brown the butter. If you want a taller, cakey cookie, use shortening instead of butter. You can use butter flavored shortening if you want to keep the butter taste, but some people prefer the flavor or regular shortening. Shortening will also make a very soft cookie.
Sugar: The ratios of the white sugar to brown sugar are important to produce the kind of cookie you want. Higher white sugar to brown sugar ratios will produce a more crisp and crunchy cookie while higher brown sugar to white sugar ratios will produce a more soft and chewy cookie. Dark brown sugar will up the chewiness even more. Play around with it to produce the texture you want!
Vanilla: Vanilla only affects the flavor. Increase the amount up to 1 tbsp if you really like the flavor, or eliminate all together if you want a more buttery flavor. You can also use mexican vanilla for a more unique flavor. It almost has hints of cinnamon.
Eggs: Eggs puff baked goods so eliminate an egg if you want a flat cookie and keep both eggs if you want a taller cookie. Egg whites dry out baked goods so if you like a really crunchy cookie add another egg white. Alternatively, if you prefer a moist chewy cookie eliminate one egg white or one egg altogether. You can even add a little bit of milk to add more moisture in place of the egg.
Add Ins: This is where you get to let your creativity go. When I offered my customized chocolate chip cookies for my business you had these options: milk chocolate chips, dark chocolate chips, bittersweet chips, butterscotch chips, white chocolate chips, peanut butter, cinnamon, oatmeal, cocoa powder (to make the whole cookie chocolate), cayenne, toasted pecans, toasted walnuts, raisins, orange zest, dried cranberries, and toasted coconut.
Other Tips: Higher cooking temps (375) will keep a cookie taller while a lower temp (325 or 350) will allow the cookies spread out more. Chilled dough will also produce a taller cookie. If you like really soft cookies, spray them with a bit of water before baking.
Things I Never Change: Always bake your cookies in small batches to produce even browning. (I cook 6 at a time) Always bake on foil or parchment paper so you can immediately slide the cookies off the baking sheet when they come out of the oven. This way the hot pan won’t continue to cook the cookies. Remove from the oven just when the edges are brown and not when the entire cookie looks cooked through. They will be over cooked. If at all possible, always rest the dough for at least an hour or overnight before baking. This will give you a more evenly cooked cookie. And ALWAYS use a scoop!
So using the rules stated above, I came up with a recipe for a thin and chewy cookie. They were perfect.
What is your perfect chocolate chip cookie like?
- 2¼ cups bread flour
- 1 tsp baking soda
- 1¼ tsp kosher salt
- 2 sticks unsalted butter, melted
- ¼ cup granulated sugar
- 1½ cup dark brown sugar
- 1 egg
- 2 tbsp milk
- 1 tbsp vanilla
- 2 cups chocolate chips
- Combine the bread flour, baking soda, and salt in a medium bowl.
- Melt the butter slowly and Add to the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment.
- Beat the butter, granulated sugar, and dark brown sugar until combined.
- Add the egg, milk and the vanilla and beat on medium slow speed until incorporated.
- With the mixer on low speed, gradually add the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients until all incorporated.
- Scrape down the bowl as needed.
- Add in the chocolate chips and mix until incorporated.
- Allow to rest for 1 hour.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.
- Line baking sheets with foil or parchment paper.
- Using a large scoop, drop 6 dough balls onto each cookie sheet.
- Bake for 11-14 minutes, just until the edges are lightly browned.
- Slide the cookies on the foil or parchment off the cookies sheet as soon as they come out of the oven.
- The cookies will be just slightly crunchy on the edges when cooled. If you want a completely chewy cookie and can resist eating them right away, store in an airtight container overnight and the cookies will be very chewy and soft in the morning.









{ 89 comments… read them below or add one }
LOVE this post. I am totally fascinated by the science of baking but always so afraid to change things. I keep thinking Alton Brown is going to pop out of my cabinet and tell me I’m doing it wrong.
I love my cookies moist enough that the chocolate oozes when you pull them apart. Mmmmm this is making me hungry… must be good and go make kale now…
Pure genius. I have learned more here (and without eating a bite!) than I could possibly have figured out in years of experimenting. Since you asked, my favorite is a hybrid: Oatmeal with chocolate and butterscotch chips. (In case you were wondering what to send for my birthday.) Thin and crispy, please.
2 1/4 cups flour
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1 cup butter, softened
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup brown sugar
1 egg
1 egg white
1 tsp vanilla
2 cups old fashioned oats
1 cup chocolate chips
1 cup butterscotch chips
350 oven.
You are GOOOOD. I will put this together right after I get home from the gym this afternoon. Counterproductive, I know. Thanks Bettie!
You’ll have to tell me how it turns out. Although, I do wonder if the oatmeal will give it a bit of a chew. The outside should be crispy though.
Perhaps in america they are, here, in Britain, there are so many things I think people would rather make – though everyone does love a good chocolate chip cookie! These do sound great. I have a wonderful recipe on my blog:
• 200g unsalted butter, I used stork
• 85g light muscovado sugar
• 85g golden caster sugar
• 1 egg
• 225g self-raising flour
• 100g plain chocolate, chunked using a knife
• A few drops of vanilla extract/essence
Nice, soft and chewy
This is one of the coolest posts I’ve seen, ever. You have inspired me to do some of my own testing! I’ve always been afraid to change things when baking because I didn’t understand what everything did. My problem with my ideal chocolate chip cookie is that my husband likes chewy cookies and I like crisp cookies. I’m hoping that maybe I can come up with something we both like! I’m bookmarking this, thanks!
Reblogged this on Kitchen Slattern and commented:
This is Cookie 101, 201 and 303 the seminar all in one post. Everything you ever needed to know about the chocolate chip cookie but were too afraid, or as in my case too dumb, to ask. Have ‘em any way you want and don’t forget to scroll all the way down for Bettie’s recipe for the Slattern’s Kitchen Sink. Bettie RULES.
Bettie, as you can see I was so awestruck by this post I reblogged it on my own site. I have christened your oatmeal cookie recipe the Slattern’s Kitchen Sink. Hope you don’t mind.
This is amazing!
I learned so much from this post.I’ll bookmark it for the next time I’m making cookies. Thanks for sharing!
I think you captured my perfect cookie very well. I’m negotiable on the pecans, but texture-wise, dead on.
I had a dispute with someone the other day over whether gingersnaps were cookies. My main argument was that gingersnaps are hard and turn soft when they go stale, while a cookie is soft and goes hard when it stales. They countered that cookies can be hard, but I responded that that was anomalous, and if they liked their cookies that hard we were never going to see eye-to-eye.
Haha good argument!
Wow! That was like attending a baking class on cookies and very enlightening! Thanks so much for the lesson, Bettie, it’s marvelous!
This was such a helpful post! I like my chocolate chips lumpy and bumpy and chewy, now I know how to get it.
Thank you so so much for such an informative post- it’s so good to have all the info on one post and i can’t wait to tweak my own recipes to get the desired results! The pictures look wonderful too.
Really lovely blog, so glad i came across it, am off to scour your recipes for inspiration, thank you.
Eloise
These look delicious! Love the pictures too
I have to say, I have always likes cookies, is there anyone out there who doesn’t??? i’d be curious to find out! LOL I happened to stumble upon your post. For the first time I intend to try and cook some cookies myself! I LOVE your photos, great shots. Thanks for posting and keep doing it! Feel free to check out my site if you have time http://www.thefussyone.com, although I review restaurants as apposed to cooking myself
Have a great day! And thanks for the cookie inspiration…i’m excited!
I’m doing it tonight. I am making my perfect choco chip cookie using your adjustments. I will give it to my leasing office to thank them for my new hardwood floors. And also keep some to eat for myself.
WISH ME LUCK!
Good luck! Let me know how they turn out!
Fantastic information!! Now I want to bake!
I am so HAPPY I came across your blog! My family LOVES my chocolate chip cookies so I have been a bit “trapped” by not being able to play around with the recipe. Thank you so much for the cookie lesson! I love to look at cupcakes (they really are pretty), but I love to EAT cookies! I hope you do not mind if I re-blog this on my blog? Thanks again, you have made a “Follower” out of me!
Reblogged this on perubahan10.
We always make cookies with shortening. Otherwise we basically just use the toll house cookie recipe. I think I add a bit more brown sugar because it gives it a bit more of the caramelized taste, but other than that, that’s all we needed to start a business off of. Everybody absolutely loves them. Depending on the day they are sometimes thicker, sometimes thinner. They come out different every time, which I actually quite like!
Thank you for sharing the art of the cookie! I love a thin, chewy, milk chocolate chip & coconut cookie. The next time I whip up a batch, I’m going to try the browned butter trick and will use bread flour. & the reason we opt for cookies over cupcakes: the girls simply lick their cupcakes clean of frosting and waste the cake. However, no crumb of cookie goes to waste!
THANK YOU so much for this! I’ve been trying to create my perfect chocolate chip cookie for quite a while now without real success! I’m so glad I found this recipe, because I love thin, chewy chocolate chip cookies! I will definitely try them really soon – would you mind if I blog about them then? I’d be sure to credit!
Thankyou thankyou thankyou Ive been looking for these explanations for ever.Now I found you through being freshly pressed you have a new follower!!!! Congrats on being fp’d
i just like everything you post!
Wonderful information here. I am fascinated by food science in any form
Very interesting post! Your cookies look delicious. I am a fan of the more thick and chewy cookies. Mine always have more brown sugar than white. You just cannot beat a good chocolate chip cookie!
You are a genius in chocolate chip cookies – I bow down to you my friend
Cheers
Choc Chip Uru
Upcoming: Traditional Lemon Meringue Tart
The Nestle Tollhouse recipe used to be my go-to, but now I have a thick & chewy recipe STUFFED with chocolate that I absolutely love. All of your cookies look good. You’ve got great tips and your photos are gorgeous!
I am sold!!
Wonderful, informative post that has me salivating.
Cara – I am on round three!
I think I need to bake them slightly less time than I’ve been doing them because of the high altitude (a little over 6,000 feet).
Bake them just until the edges look slightly browned. The centers will look under cooked but they will be perfect. If you want them to be really chewy store them in an airtight container overnight. It will make a huge difference!
~Kristin
Oops~ Kristin!! They are perfect. 12 minutes baked. Recipe followed precisely. Perfect thin and chewy chocolate chip cookies!! Thank you.
SO glad they worked out for you! I always get nervous when people try my recipes. Like I’m going to sued if it doesn’t work right or something. Ha!
Loved your detailed post so much, Bettie. I added a tip from “The New Deli”, on my blog, here… http://foodieblog.pccuisine.com/2012/03/easiest-cookies.html
Happy baking!
Wow! One word.. I’ve been making cookies for a long time, and haven’t been able to get the thin and chewy cookie, a bit crunchy on the edges.. I followed this recipe to a tee, and Vwolla! The perfect cookie… I love the way you break down the science of it, as well . Thnx alot!
@baker bettie
When you say ‘rest the dough’ do you mean in the refrigerator or out?
Hi baker bettie…..i have searched high n low for a crisp cakey cookie but failed….can you please help me create the perfect recipe…..PLEASEEEE thanks love your blog
What if I want my cookie to be slightly tall, a bit crunchy on the outside, soft on the inside, but, (here’s the challenge) gluten free? Any advice?
One of my favourite things to bake. Who can resist a chocolate chip cookie?
What do you mean by “allow to rest” like in room temperature or in the fridge?
In the refrigerator. If you are going to bake them right away then they can rest at room temperature for 30 minutes but longer than that in the refrigerator. To answer your other question, yes! In fact I recommend letting it rest in the refrigerator over night and up to 3 days. You cookies will bake more evenly and have a more developed flavor.
Can this dough be refrigerated?? Like, when I don’t to bake them all, can i leave the dough in the fridge? Overnight maybe?
The only time I wouldn’t recommend leaving them in the refrigerator is if you add oatmeal or oatmeal flour into your batter. It can tend to dry the dough out in the fridge. But otherwise I would recommend it!
How would I make a tall cookie with a chewy center?
2 sticks unsalted butter, softened
1 1/2 cup dark brown sugar
2 eggs (helps cookie rise)
1 tbsp vanilla
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder (rises the cookie)
1 1/4 tsp kosher salt
2 cups bread flour (makes cookie chewier)
2 cups oatmeal flour (helps cookie stand taller)
2 cups chocolate chips
Beat the butter and sugar until very fluffy, about 5 minutes (This helps the cookie stand taller) Beat in vanilla, eggs, baking soda, baking powder, and kosher salt until combined. Mix in bread flour and oatmeal flour. Mix in chocolate chips (will most likely need to use clean hands, the dough will be very thick. Bake large cookies, like 1/4 of a cup each and roll them into balls before baking, do not press down. This will keep them thicker. Chill the dough (after it is rolled into balls) in the fridge for at least 30 mins or in the freezer for 5 mins before baking (keeps them from spreading out). Bake at 375 just until the edges are set. They will look under baked in the center but after they cool they will be done, tall and chewy.
(I have never made this exact recipe, but I have played around with enough ratios that this should work great. Hope this helps!)
В настоящее время в гимназии Elsa-Braendstroem в Вестфалии введена 44-часовая учебная неделя.
Школьники зачастую возвращаются после уроков поздно вечером. Из-за этого, по словам педагогов, у них совсем не остается времени на отдых.
Руководство гимназии решило освободить учеников от домашнего задания. Теперь у ребят будет больше свободного времени.
Такое решение связано с удлинением учебного дня. К этому привела реформа образования, благодаря которой все школьное образование скоратилось на один год. Сотрудники гимназии считают, что даже 44-часовая учебная неделя, которая была до реформы образования, – это слишком. Зачастую дети остаются на уроках до 6 часов вечера.
Однако нововведение не повлияет на качество обучения. Запрет на домашние работы будет компенсироваться более интенсивной работой в классе. При этом, отстающим ученикам все-таки будут назначать дополнительные задания.
Hi Baker Bettie
First time visiting your sight. You had just what I was looking for. I thin chewy cookie! My husband complains about my fluffy ones
I made them with few changes. Only change was I only had all purpose flour in the house and wanted them now! Only other thing was I did not read the directions well and did not realize I needed to let the dough rest an hour. My three kids were promised one before bed so I baked three only, right after finishing dough. They turned out great any way! Success! Thanks.
Hi! I tried the recipe and it was a hit! Your tips were really helpful too
I was just wondering if we can substitute part of the melted butter with greek yogurt or oil for healthier choice? Does that affect the texture or taste of the cookies?
I have always needed to know the “why” for making things, especially when it comes to baking. Understanding why ingredients or techniques are used just inspires me. I do much better knowing, it’s one of the reasons Alton Brown is my favorite TV Chef. Thank you so much for this info. December will be cookie month for me, so I will probably experiment with several chocolate chip options, and I will use your information/advice to make other types of cookies as well. I do have one question though, (well, two if you want to be specific). I live in New Mexico where we are at a high elevation and dry climate. Do either of these effect the cookies to any important degree? Thanks so much in advance, and thanks for the info!
I have to admit this is one area of baking that I have not done a lot of research about. I found this article that gives some good tips http://www.quakeroats.com/cooking-and-recipes/content/baking-101/welcome-to-baking-101/high-altitude-baking.aspx I think it probably has a lot to do with trial and error. Baking is so finicky. I have moved 4 times in the past few years and each time I have to readjust to my oven. It can definitely be very frustrating!
Hello, thanks you very much for this post, I was just wanted to know, the recipe given for the thin and chew ccc, how many cookies does it make, thankx
This recipe, pictures, and cookies all look amazing! My boyfriend is very fond of thin and chewy cookies and I will have to try this recipe out one day just for him! We love warm chocolate cookies that are soft and chewy from the oven! I am excited to try this recipe out with him! I will post my results up on my website at http://www.lifeofmichelleho.com! Again, thank you for sharing!
Thank you so much for sharing!!!! I’ve always been curious how different ratios of each ingredient would affect the cookies. So happy to have found your post!
I love your blog i have one question how can we brown the butter ?? =)
Browned butter is made from heating butter over medium high heat in a sauce pan. Stir it constantly until the liquid becomes an amber color.
I tried altering the tollhouse recipe as you suggested. I used 1c. dark brown sugar and 1/2 c. light brown sugar and 2 egg yolks minus the whites. Also I had to switch the butter for margarine. I melted the margarine with the sugar together. Then I poured the liquid into the mixer and let it run for a minute to cool it down before I put in the eggs. After I let the dough sit for an hour (I kind of had to since the dough was somewhat liquidy at this point). After sitting for an hour the dough seemed more like clay-dough. I scooped them into ~ 1 tbs balls and flattened them. A good thing too, because they barely spread.
The cookies came out with a really heavy flavor slightly crispy around the edges but so airy. I’m not sure if it’s because the liquid margarine aerated when I was trying to cool it off in the mixer or because if I’m using melted margarine then I should be using high-gluten flour. Maybe if using margarine it shouldn’t be melted? Even though the dough was liquidy before I let it sit, after the hour it started it seemed like it was drying up and there were some slight dry patches. Everything was perfect but I was expecting more substance to them. Can you point me to where I went wrong?
Side note: The cookies do look gorgeous though. I don’t think I’ve ever had such a good looking c.c. cookie.
Ok a couple of questions so I can help trouble shoot. What kind of cookie are you going for? What is the desired end result?
Did you change out the butter to margarine because that is all you had? or because of some dietary reason? Margarine will definitely change the texture of the cookie. It acts more like shortening in that it doesn’t allow the cookie to spread as much due to the lack of milk fats in it. I would use real butter if possible.
I’m not quite sure what you mean by the cookies having a very “heavy flavor.” Do you mean the texture is very dense? It is possible that you had too much flour in the cookie. When you measure flour make sure you fluff it up and lightly spoon it into the measuring cups. I’m guessing that beating the margarine didn’t have much to do with it. Also if you are going to melt the butter, don’t melt it with the sugar. This will create a syrup and you don’t want the sugar to melt too. You only want the butter to melt. Does that make sense?
I hope this helps. If you can tell me what kind of cookie you are aiming for I can give you a recipe that should work for the texture.
Well I’m aiming for a moist chewy cookie. That’s why I took away the egg whites and white sugar. I feel like the flavor was perfect but that maybe because it was too dry, it came across airy. Maybe because I let the dough sit on the counter for the hour instead of in the refrigerator? The dough was almost liquidy when I first made it but like I said before, it was starting to get dry patches and had an almost clay-dough feel to it at the end.
I did change out the butter for dietary reasons. (We keep Kosher and I wanted to be able to eat them whenever. If there’s milk in them I wouldn’t be able to eat them within 6 hours of eating meat or poultry.)
If the margarine kept the cookies from spreading, then that’s great. The thickness (height) of the cookie was perfect. I had to flatten them before putting them in the oven and they didn’t really spread more than that. What I meant by having a “heavy flavor” was that the flavor was very, very rich (maybe from all the brown sugar) instead of light even though the cookie itself had a light and airy consistency.
I melted the sugar because I thought it would make it be more like molasses and maybe make it more moist. It did come out syrupy and even though I don’t understand why that’s a problem, it clearly was for me.
I didn’t fluff the flour or spoon it in, I scooped it and slid my finger across the top. So maybe there was too much flour in it, drying it out. Also, I baked them for 10 minutes on 350. Basically, this was the best cookie I’ve ever made flavor-wise, I’d just like tho change the light, airy consistency to a more moist and dense one.
Also, I have a Bosch and it doesn’t come with a paddle. Maybe I’m doomed to always have airy cookies?
Ok, I think I am understanding better now. The reason you don’t want to melt the sugar too is because if you melt it when it cools and re-crystalizes it becomes more brittle and and will alter the texture of the baked good. If you want to melt the margarine, do it by itself and let it cool slightly before adding it to the sugar. But honestly I don’t even think you need to melt it to get the desired results. Here is what I would do…
2 1/4 cups bread flour (all-purpose is fine too but bread will make it chewier. Fluff up the flour with a spoon and lightly spoon it into the measuring cups)
1 cup oatmeal flour (you can find this in the store or grind up oats in your blender or food processor. This will definitely up the chew and density issue. Also adds great flavor!)
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp salt
1 cup margarine, softened
1 1/2 cup packed brown sugar (dark will give it a richer flavor. You can use either dark or light)
1 tsp vanilla
1 egg (use at least 1 whole egg because the protein helps with binding the ingredients)
2 cups Chocolate Chips
Hope this helps!
I melted the margarine because you mention that the liquid from the melted butter makes more gluten when you mix it with the flour and that would make it more chewy.
Thanks a lot for the modified recipe!
Do you have a recommendation for a brand of scoop to use? I bought one that appears to be rather cheaply made. Every time I squeeze the handle to release the contents, the bar that runs along the inside of the scoop to separate the contents from the scoop “slips” and gets out of position so it no longer does its job. It’s very frustrating and I end up abandoning it in favor of a couple of spoons.
Hi Janet,
I use Oneida trigger scoops. I have them in several different sizes and they are heavy duty and I have never had one break on me!
What if i want to add banana to the basic cookies recipie, i want them to be chewy
what do i have to change?
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Hello Bakerbettie,
I followed a very similar recipe – initially cookies were heavenly. Edges were a tad crisp and centres were a bit chewy. Perfection!!
However they turned harder as they sat on the cookie rack for 2 hrs and the next day they were very very crisp. I am requesting your help because I need to bake a large batch for an event soon.
I appreciate how you provided problem solving.
Awaiting your reply.
Thanks
Ok, to help me troubleshoot it would help to see what recipe you used. Can you tell me the recipe so I can see if it is a problem with the actual recipe itself and not the technique?
Did you store the cookies in an airtight container after they cooled? One of the things I suggest is to store them in an airtight container because this will trap the moisture in and will keep the cookies soft. It will even soften the edges that may have been initially crisp.
It is also possible that you cooked them too long. That is a common problem with cookies. You want the edges to be lightly browned. The middle won’t look quite done but that’s ok!
Dear Bakerbettie:
the one I used is http://savorysweetlife.com/2009/10/alices-chocolate-chip-cookie-recipe/
Any “tweaking” you suggest will be appreciated. This is for my son’s Eagle ceremony and he wants several goodies but this is his fave.
I did not get to the cookie jar, it crisped out as it cooled on the rack but may be I will bake it a minute or so less like you suggested.
Thank you.
Here are my suggestions: Make sure your brown sugar is very fresh and moist. Use dark brown sugar if you can, it will give it more moisture and chew. I’m not sure where you live, but if you live in a very dry climate 2 3/4 cup flour is probably too much. Try 2 1/2 cups. MAke sure you cream the butter and sugar very well, until light and fluffy. But don’t beat the rest of the ingredients too much. Only mix until incorporated past the butter and sugar part. And definitely cook for a shorter period of time. 12-14 is pretty long for cookies. And even if they are more crisp than you like when cooled, put them in an airtight container over night. Something that snaps completely shut. It will soften them.
I also suggest trying my recipe instead. If the one you tried didn’t give you your desired results, give it a shot. They are pretty darn delicious. And definitely chewy!
Dear Bakerbettie,
I tried it again like you said and it was pretty awesome!!
Actually I baked it for 10 minutes only, and my cookies were larger than what was said in recipe, and I didnt change anything about the recipe itself(heaven knows I have a lot of light brown sugar to go through). I tried chilling part of the dough and preferred the unchilled version
Your suggestions are such that i can apply to any cookie recipe, and yes, mine are boxed tight w/ a small bread piece
You are the best, the kindest, thanks for being my inspiration and guide!!
I tried your thin and chest recipe and it was de-lish but Mike came out fluffy. I don't think its your recipe cause ive tried tons of thin, chest recipes and they all come out puffy for me. Any advice?
How do you measure your flour? Do you fluff it up then lightly spoon it into your measuring cups? My guess is that there is too much flour in your dough. It is really easy to accidentally pack the flour into the measuring cups and too much flour woudl definitely give you fluffier cookies.
Love this cookie science! Just tried it and I love it thank you for sharing!
These are in the oven!!!
By far the best cookies I've ever made….or eaten for that matter. And I didn't even have chocolate chips!!! Can only imagine how good they would be with chocolate!
I have been wanting my tollhouse cookies to be thinner & more crispy, but I was doing the wrong things. I just took my 1st batch of these from the oven & they are PERFECT – thank you
Awesome Mary! So glad this helped you out!
I just made the above recipe and they did not turn out this way at all.. I wanted a very thin chewy cookie and they were blown up and so far look nothing like I imagined. You have to use your hand and flatten them on the pan before putting them in if you want them to be thin..
Have you ever checked your oven temperature with an oven thermometer? My guess is that your oven is cooking at a higher temperature than it is set at making the cookie set before the butter melts and spreads out.
My other thought is that there is too much flour in your dough. How do you measure your flour and where do you live? The climate could affect it and also you want to fluff up your flour then lightly spoon it into your cups and level them off. Too much flour would definitely make them "blown up." You really don't need to flatten these with your hands so I'm guessing something is going wrong. Let me know if this helps! Thanks for trying my recipe!
However, the cookie science is very interesting and has great, good to know tips that I never knew, thanks!
Hey There. I found your blog using msn. This is a very well written article.
I’ll make sure to bookmark it and come back to read more of your useful info. Thanks for the post. I’ll definitely
return.
My favorite cookie is the really tall and ooey gooey butter cookies or any cookie that is oooey gooey and really tall like 1 1/2 to 2 inches or taller
Would love to know how to get the like that. So moist and yummy!
The best way to get really tall cookies is to bake them at a higher temperature, such as 375 degrees F and to shape them into large golf ball size before baking. Bake them just until the edges are set. The cookie will set before the butter has enough time to melt and spread, resulting in a tall cookie.
Yes, I understand that is why you did it, and it does. But the biggest things that will up the chew are the bread flour, brown sugar, and the oatmeal flour. The water from the melted butter will help a little, so either way. Sometimes I’m just too lazy to wait for it to cool because you really do need it to before you mix it with the sugar.
Hope you enjoy!
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