The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (2024)


The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie
variations included- lemon, toffee, M&M, macadamia, & more!
The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (1)

I have been on the search for the Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie for years. My friend, Daniella, makes perfect cookies and taught me how. Below are step by step instructions to make your own perfect cookies, as well as pictures of things that can go wrong.

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The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (2)

Assemble the ingredients to make sure you have everything. It's very frustrating to be halfway into a recipe and realize you're missing something. It can also ruin your cookies if some of the mixtures sit at room temperature too long while you get the missing items.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (3)

In a small bowl gently mix the flour, salt, and baking soda until the ingredients are evenly distributed. Set aside.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (4)

Using the wire whisk attachment of a stand mixer, cream the butter and shortening on high until light and fluffy, 1-3 minutes.

2 3/4 c (14.5 oz) all-purpose flour
1 t baking soda
1 t salt
1/2 c (4 oz) unsalted butter at room temperature
1/2 c (4 oz) Crisco (plain or butter flavored, I prefer plain)
Mixing the flour allows the final dough to have an even distribution of ingredients without over-mixing it.

Beating the butter and shortening gives the dough a better rise in the oven, making the cookies lighter. Butter is good for taste and shortening is good to make the cookie softer.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (5)

Add both sugars and beat on high 1-2 minutes. Add eggs and vanilla. Beat until fully incorporated.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (6)

Switch to the paddle attachment. Add the chocolate chips and mix gently.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (7)

Add the flour mixture and mix until just incorporated. Do not overmix!

1 c (6.5 oz) light brown sugar
1 c minus 2 T (6.5 oz) white sugar
2 large eggs
1 1/2 t vanilla
1 1/2 c (10 oz) semi-sweet chocolate chips (Hershey's brand is best)

Variations- replace chocolate chips with:
Lemon White Chocolate-

1 T citric acid, 1 T lemon extract, 1 1/2 c white chocolate chips
White Chocolate Macadamia Nut-
3/4 c white chocolate chips, 3/4 c chopped macadamia nuts
White Chocolate Craisin-
3/4 c white chocolate chips, 3/4 c craisins
M&M-
1 c mini M&Ms or 1 1/2 c regular M&Ms
Milk Chocolate Toffee-
1 1/2 c milk chocolate toffee bitsAdding the chocolate chips before adding the flour evenly distributes them without over-mixing the final dough. Do not over-mix or it will discolor the dough.

The flour to be just incorporated, is the point when you no longer see white spots of flour. Do not overmix! Over-mixing will ruin the cookies. They will bake flatter and look greasy. See the problem section for a picture of a very over-mixed cookie.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (8)

Touch test the dough. It should feel slightly sticky, but not much should stick to your finger. If it is very sticky add flour 2T (.5 oz) at a time.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (9)

Using your hands, roll the dough into balls 1.5 inches tall (1.5 oz). (For bigger cookies see instructions below). Place on an ungreased cookie sheet 3 inches apart.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (10)

Cover and refrigerate 30 minutes or until firm. You can hold the dough up to two days in the refrigerator or up to six months in the freezer.

When shaping the cookies, you will know if you have the fat/flour ratio right.
too little flour- it will stick to your hands, forms a messy looking ball
just right- won't stick to your hands, but just barely, forms a smooth ball
too much flour- dough has to be forced into a ball, crumbly dough, rough looking ball

The same problems occur when over-handling the dough as over-mixing it. They will bake flat and look greasy. Handle the dough as little as possible while still shaping them properly.

To freeze, place the dough balls on a plate side by side, cover and freeze at least an hour. You can then bag them and they won't be stuck together when you take them out.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (11)

15-20 minutes before baking, position the oven rack to the second highest setting. Preheat the oven to 375.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (12)

Remove the dough from the refrigerator and bake 8-10 minutes. They are ready to come out of the oven when they are domed and puffy, show a few signs of browning and look a bit underdone.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (13)

Leave the cookies on the cookie sheet for 2 minutes.

It takes most ovens much longer to preheat than when it beeps to tell you it's ready. An oven thermometer is very helpful. When my oven beeps, it’s usually 50-100 degrees too low. It will ruin the cookies to bake them at the incorrect temperature. My oven is also calibrated incorrectly. I have to turn it to 385 degrees for it to actually be 375 degrees.

Determining when they are done:
underdone- the are tall, shiny in the middle, pale in color, fall apart when transfered, fall through on the cooling rack
perfect- domed, puffy, show a few signs of browning, look a bit underdone but are not shiny on the top, hold together during transfer
overdone- flat, many brown spots, may break when transfering, hard and crispy when cooled

If they cook faster than 8 minutes the oven is too hot or the cookies are too small. If they take longer than 10 minutes the oven is too cool or the cookies are too big.

It is important to wait 2 minutes before transferring them. They continue to bake from the heat of the sheet without being over-baked in the oven. Also, they will hold together better and be less likely to fall in the middle if you wait.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (14)

Remove them to a cooling rack to cool evenly.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (15)

Wait ten minutes, then serve your Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie!

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (16)

Lemon cookies are great served with creamy vanilla ice cream and berry syrup!

Bigger Cookies

It was interesting to make the cookies bigger. They exterior was cracked like in problem cookie #9 below, but they had a perfect interior. The texture and consistency are just about the same as the smaller ones, but they look quite different.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (17)

Roll a large piece of dough into a ball, then gently flatten the top and bottom into a thick disc shape about 1.5 inches tall. Each dough ball was 2.5 oz compared to 1.5 oz in the smaller cookies.
It is very important to flatten the top and bottom or it will not bake evenly. (See problem cookie #7.)

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (18)

Bake 6 cookies per sheet for 10 minutes. Remove from oven and let cool on sheet for 2 minutes.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (19)

Remove them to a cooling rack and cool completely.

Problems

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (20)

There are many variables in baking. Pictured are cookies with various problems using the same dough (with flour adjustments in numbers 3 &4).
1. This cookie is done just right. It is pictured to compare with the rest.
2. This dough was not refrigerated. It is still good but a little flatter than it should be.
3. This dough contained too much flour and did not spread much at all. It is interesting to note that the dough looked identical to the correct dough, but was much stiffer and drier.
4. This dough had too little flour. It spread too much and didn’t bake evenly.
5. This dough was over-mixed. It had a poor color, baked flat and had a strange consistency.
6. This dough was formed too small. It was overcooked at eight minutes. It is fine to make smaller cookies, just bake them for less time.
7. This dough was formed too large. The outsides were done while the middle was too high and underdone.
8. This dough was baked in an oven 25 degrees too hot. The outside was overdone and the inside was slightly underdone.
9. This dough was baked in an oven 25 degrees too cool. It fell flat and became too crisp without much of an inside.
10. This dough was frozen when baked. It took longer to bake and didn’t cook as evenly. To use frozen dough, set on cookie sheet at room temperature while oven is preheating, 15-20 minutes. It takes the frost off and bakes perfectly.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (21)

The Problem with Measuring Cups

In these cookies I measured the shortening in a measuring cup rather than by a scale or by the package (Crisco sticks). When I later weighed how much shortening my 1/2 c measuring cups holds it was 1 oz too much. I have another 1/2 cup that measures 1 oz too little. As you can see the cookies baked flat and they tasted bad.

This could've been avoided had I used the same measuring cup each time or the more accurate way would've been to use crisco sticks every time instead of measuring cups.

The most accurate method is to weigh your ingredients. You will get consistent results each time.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (22)

The Problem with Flour

A lot of flour can be packed into a measuring cup. One cup is typically considered to be 5 oz. I ran a little test to weigh the differences in scooping flour.
I used the same measuring cup and the same bucket of flour. I put the measuring cup in, scooped out the flour, then leveled it with a knife. Here are the results:

Scoop #1: 5.4 oz
Scoop #2: 4.6 oz
Scoop #3: 5.5 oz
Scoop #4: 4.7 oz

The differences are in how hard I scooped it. I used a heavy hand in #3, and scooped lightly in #2. There was almost a full ounce difference between the two. These differences can greatly effect how your cookies turn out.

Tips and Tricks

Make Ahead

Frozen Dough
I love to keep cookie dough on hand. These stay good up to 6 months in the freezer.
Freezing

-I like to roll the dough into individual balls and freeze them on a baking sheet. Then I transfer them to a zipper-lock bag to store them long term. If you put them in the bag before freezing them, they will stick together,

Baking
-Place the frozen dough on a baking sheet, then heat the oven. When the oven is ready, bake 9-11 minutes (an additional minute or two to the normal instructions).
-Baking it directly from the freezer makes the edges crisp and the middle under-done

Refrigerated Dough
Dough is good up to 3 days in the refrigerator.

Don't worry if they don't turn out. Write down exactly what you did and decide what you need to change the next time. Try it again soon so it is fresh in your memory.

Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies
Daniella

2 3/4 c (14.5 oz) all-purpose flour
1 t baking soda
1 t salt
1/2 c (4 oz) unsalted butter at room temperature
1/2 c (4 oz) Crisco (plain or butter flavored, I prefer plain)
1 c (6.5 oz) light brown sugar
1 c minus 2 T (6.5 oz) white sugar
2 large eggs
1 1/2 t vanilla
1 1/2 c (10 oz) semi-sweet chocolate chips (Hershey's brand is best)

Variations- replace chocolate chips with:
Lemon White Chocolate- 1 T citric acid, 1 T lemon extract, 1 1/2 c white chocolate chips
White Chocolate Macadamia Nut
- 3/4 c white chocolate chips, 3/4 c chopped macadamia nuts
White Chocolate Craisin- 3/4 c white chocolate chips, 3/4 c craisins
M&M- 1 c mini M&Ms or 1 1/2 c regular M&Ms
Milk Chocolate Toffee- 1 1/2 c milk chocolate toffee bits

1.

In a small bowl mix the flour, salt, and baking soda until the ingredients are (1)evenly distributed. Set aside.

2. Using a wire whisk attachment of a stand mixer, (2)cream the butter and shortening on high until light and fluffy 1-3 minutes.

3. Add both sugars and beat on high 1-2 minutes. Add eggs and vanilla. Beat until fully incorporated.

4. Switch to a paddle attachment. (3)Add the chocolate chips and mix gently.

5. Add the flour mixture and mix until (4)just incorporated.

6. Touch test the dough. It should feel slightly sticky, but not much should stick to your finger. If it is very sticky add flour 2T (.5 oz) at a time. If it is firm or dry, you have added too much flour and I don’t know a good way to reverse this.

7. Using your (6)hands, roll the dough into balls 1.5 inches tall (for bigger cookies see instructions above). Place on an ungreased cookie sheet 3 inches apart.

8. Cover and refrigerate 30 minutes or until firm. You can hold the dough up to two days in the refrigerator or up to six months in the (7)freezer.

9. (8)15-20 minutes before baking, position the oven rack to the second highest setting. Preheat the oven to 375.

10. Remove the dough from the refrigerator and bake (9)8-10 minutes. They are ready to come out of the oven when they are domed and puffy, show a few signs of browning and look a bit underdone.

11. Leave the cookies on the cookie sheet for (10)2 minutes. Remove them to a cooling rack so they will cool evenly. Wait ten minutes, then serve your Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie!

Notes
1. Mixing the flour allows the final dough to have an even distribution of ingredients without over-mixing it.

2. Beating the butter and shortening gives the dough a better rise in the oven, making the cookies lighter. Butter is good for taste and shortening is good to make the cookie softer.

3. Adding the chocolate chips before adding the flour evenly distributes them without over-mixing the final dough. Do not over-mix or it will discolor the dough.

4. Just incorporated is the point when you no longer see white spots of flour. Do not overmix! Over-mixing will ruin the cookies. They will bake flatter and look greasy. See the problem section for a picture of a very over-mixed cookie.

5.While shaping the dough, you will be able to tell if you have the fat/flour ratio right.
not enough flour- it will stick to your hands, forms a messy looking ball
just right- won't stick to your hands, but just barely, forms a smooth ball
too much flour- dough has to be forced into a ball, crumbly dough, rough looking ball

6. The same problems occur when over-handling the dough as over-mixing it. They will bake flat and look greasy. Handle the dough as little as possible while still shaping them properly.

7. To freeze, place the dough balls on a plate or baking sheet side by side, cover and freeze at least an hour. You can then bag them and they won’t be stuck together when you take them out.

8. It takes most ovens much longer to preheat than when the oven tells you it’s ready. I have an oven thermometer which is very helpful. When my oven beeps telling me it’s ready, it’s usually 50-100 degrees too low. It will ruin your cookies to bake them at the incorrect temperature. My oven is also calibrated incorrectly. I have to turn it to 385 degrees for it to actually be 375 degrees.

9. Determining when they are done:
underdone- the are tall, shiny in the middle, pale in color, fall apart when transfered from the cookie sheet, fall through on the cooling rack
perfect- domed, puffy, show a few signs of browning, look a bit underdone but are not shiny on the top, hold together during transfer
overdone- flat, many brown spots, may break when transfering, hard and crispy when cooled
If they cook faster than 8 minutes the oven is too hot or the cookies are too small. If they take longer than 10 minutes the oven is too cool or the cookies are too big.

10. It is important to wait this 2 minutes. They continue to bake from the heat of the sheet without being over-baked in the oven. Also, they will hold together better and be less likely to fall in the middle if you wait.

The Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to a perfect cookie? ›

The key is to always use top-quality ingredients as they'll result in a better cookie; it really is that simple.
  • Always use butter.
  • Choose the right sugar.
  • Choose the right flour.
  • Check your flour is in date.
  • Choose the right kind of chocolate.
  • Cream the butter and sugar.
  • Beat in the eggs.
  • Fold in the flour.

What makes chocolate chip cookies taste so good? ›

The caramelized butter, sugar, vanilla, chocolate, and subtle notes of salt offer a balanced flavor profile. The saltiness highlights and enhances the preexisting flavors. But what makes for the perfect chocolate chip cookie? You get what you pay for, and high-quality ingredients equate to a high-quality product.

What is the secret to chewy cookies? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

Why are my chocolate chip cookies crunchy and not chewy? ›

The ingredients you use and how you shape your cookies both play an important role in whether your cookies turn out crispy or chewy. The type of flour and sugar you use, if your cookie dough contains eggs, and whether you use melted or softened butter all factor into the crispy-chewy equation, too.

How long to chill cookie dough before baking? ›

As a general rule of thumb, you should refrigerate cookie dough for at least 30 minutes and up to 24 hours. More than that, and you won't see a noticeable difference in the final product. Once the dough has chilled, let it warm up at room temperature until it's just pliable (about 5 to 10 minutes).

How do you keep chocolate chip cookies soft and chewy? ›

Putting a slice of fresh white bread in the container with the cookies will help the cookies stay soft: fresh bread is moist, and that slice will give up its moisture for the greater good: keeping the cookies from drying out. We recommend white bread so that no flavor is transferred to the cookies.

Do people like crunchy or soft cookies better? ›

There are two schools of thought when it comes to cookies—soft or crispy. Some people like them soft and chewy, while others prefer them crispy and crunchy.

How do you keep chocolate chip cookies from being cakey? ›

Using too much flour will make your cookies too cakey, so try reducing the flour amount by two tablespoons. Avoid using cake flour instead; try a mix of all-purpose flour and bread flour for a more dense and chewy texture.

Is it OK to use melted butter instead of softened? ›

Softened butter and melted butter are not the same. Using melted butter will change the texture of whatever you're baking. If you only want the butter to soften for spreading, microwave it on the Defrost setting (30%) in 5-second increments until it's softened as desired.

What does adding cornstarch to cookies do? ›

As Levy Beranbaum writes in The Baking Bible, replacing a little bit of the flour in the dough with cornstarch results in “a more delicate cookie that is also easier to pipe or push through a cookie press.” Adding cornstarch helps tenderize tough gluten, contributing to a softer cookie dough with a finer crumb after ...

What does brown sugar do in cookies? ›

Brown sugar, meanwhile, is dense and compacts easily, creating fewer air pockets during creaming—that means that there's less opportunity to entrap gas, creating cookies that rise less and spread more. With less moisture escaping via steam, they also stay moist and chewy.

Why do my homemade chocolate chip cookies get hard? ›

Cookies become hard when the moisture in them evaporates. This can be caused by leaving them out in the air for too long, baking them for too long, or storing them improperly. The lack of moisture makes the cookies hard and dry, which makes them difficult to enjoy.

Why put corn syrup in cookies? ›

So, when you mix corn syrup into your cookie batter, all of that moisture will make and keep your baked cookies deliciously tender. The texture of cookies benefits from corn syrup as well. As you combine your ingredients to make your cookie batter, corn syrup will pull some of the surrounding air into your batter.

What is cookie secret? ›

Cookie Secret is the secret used to encrypt and sign session cookies. If you don't provide a cookie secret, Pomerium will generate one for you.

What makes a high quality cookie? ›

The Quality Ingredients

Ingredients like butter, eggs and sugar can either make sweet cookie perfection or something you wouldn't want to share with your friends and family. Always look for a cookie that's made with premium ingredients. If the cookie contains some organic ingredients even better.

How do you make the perfect cookie texture? ›

The ratio of brown sugar to white sugar determines the softness of your cookies. Using more white sugar makes your cookies thin, crisp, and more delicate. More brown sugar makes a softer, chewier cookie because it melts and caramelizes at a faster rate.

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