CHOCOLATE CHIP COOKIES RECIPE 🍪
(Yields: about 12 standard size cookies or 6–7 big ones)
Ingredients
Wet:
½ cup light brown sugar
½ cup white sugar
1 stick (½ cup) unsalted butter, room temperature
1 egg
½ tsp vanilla extract
Dry:
1 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
1 tsp baking soda
¼ tsp salt
Chocolate:
10 oz semi sweet chocolate chips
Instructions:
1. Preheat oven to 350°F.
2. Cream the Wet Ingredients (by hand!): In a large bowl, mash the softened butter into both sugars using a wooden spoon or stiff spatula. Press it against the side of the bowl until smooth, creamy, and pale in color: about 2–3 minutes. Your butter needs to be genuinely room temp for this to work.
3. Add the egg and stir until fully incorporated. Then stir in the vanilla.
4. Add the Dry Ingredients: Add the flour, baking soda, and salt. Stir using big folding strokes from the bottom up. Stop when it’s just combined — a bit of loose flour is great. Be careful to not overmix.
5. Chocolate Time: Fold in the chocolate chips to finish mixing any remaining flour.
6. Chill the Dough: Refrigerate for 30 minutes. This helps them hold their shape and keeps the centers gooey.
7. Bake: Scoop and space your dough on a lined baking sheet.
Regular cookies: 10-12 minutes.
Big bakery-style cookies: 15–17 minutes.
8. Cool 2–3 minutes out of the oven (if you can wait). Then try one while the chocolate is still molten. Enjoy!
Achieving that perfect gooey chocolate chip cookie isn't just about the ingredients; it's also about the technique! My recipe, which I've used for years, really emphasizes a few key steps that make all the difference. Many people wonder why their cookies come out flat or aren't as chewy as they'd like, and often, it boils down to how you handle the butter and the mixing process. First, let's talk about the butter. The recipe calls for unsalted butter at room temperature, and I can't stress enough how important this is. If your butter is too cold, it won't cream properly with the sugars, leading to a denser, less airy cookie. If it's melted, your cookies will spread too much. That's why I always mash and cream the butter and both sugars (light brown and white) by hand. This method, pressing it against the side of the bowl until it's smooth and pale, incorporates just the right amount of air without overworking the mixture. Using a stand mixer can sometimes incorporate too much air or warm the dough too quickly, affecting the final texture of your cookies and making them puffier than desired or even flat if you're not careful. This hand-mixing technique is my secret to those perfectly soft, bakery-style cookies that hold their shape. Remember, it's about building structure and texture from the start. Another crucial step is not overmixing the dry ingredients. Once you add the flour, baking soda, and salt, gentle folding strokes are key. Stop as soon as the flour is mostly incorporated – a little bit of loose flour is actually a good sign! Overmixing develops the gluten in the flour too much, resulting in tough, dry cookies instead of the desirable soft and gooey kind. After folding in the semi-sweet chocolate chips, the dough gets a mandatory chill in the fridge. This 30-minute chill time is a game-changer! It allows the butter to firm up again, preventing excessive spreading during baking, and it helps the flavors meld. More importantly, it contributes significantly to that gooey center we all crave. When it comes to baking, keep an eye on the time. For regular cookies, 10-12 minutes is usually perfect, while larger, bakery-style cookies might need 15-17 minutes. You want the edges to be set and lightly golden, but the centers should still look slightly underdone. This is how you guarantee a truly molten, gooey chocolate core. Pulling them out of the oven at this stage and letting them cool on the baking sheet for a few minutes allows them to finish cooking gently from the residual heat, setting up without becoming dry. Trust me, waiting those extra 2-3 minutes before diving in is worth it for that ultimate warm, chocolatey goodness. This tried and true recipe, focusing on careful ingredient handling and precise timing, consistently delivers delicious, perfectly gooey chocolate chip cookies every time.


























































































You need to slow down and explain the recipe better