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Copyright, 2015
January 24, 2015
Rob
Cookies and brownies
6

Recipe: The best chocolate chunk cookies. Ever.

I don’t know for how long I had been looking for a decent recipe of real American cookies.

Not just some supermarket-style biscuits. I wanted the sweet, buttery and crunchy (yet soft) chocolate-chunk cookies that America is famous for!

Recipe-Chocolate-chunk-cookies-12

Unfortunately all the recipes online measure ingredients in cups (which is something a good pastry chef should despise!) 🙂 and I generally hate to do the conversion (because one cup of flour doesn’t weight as much as one cup of chocolate, for example; and we don’t have “sticks” of butter here).

“But ok”, I said, “after years and years of research, I can make an effort for cookies!“: and so I found an interesting recipe, converted it in grams and adjusted it to my taste.

Recipe-Chocolate-chunk-cookies-05

“Adjusting a recipe to my taste” in this case meant: overloading it with dark, milk and white chocolate chunks, adding vanilla seeds and orange, plus some dry fruits (I made my own mix of hazelnuts, walnuts and Brazilian nuts).

Recipe-Chocolate-chunk-cookies-Step04

The result was just A-M-A-Z-I-N-G! These are definitely the best cookies I’ve ever eaten, even better than the Pepperidge Farm ones! 😛

Recipe-Chocolate-chunk-cookies-Step09

The recipe is pretty simple but the baking process is delicate: cookies must not be dry so it is better to slightly under-bake them. I baked at 170°C until golden brown (keep an eye on the oven) and made experiments at 160°C up to 190°C.

Recipe-Chocolate-chunk-cookies-02

The bottom of a perfectly-baked cookie

Higher temperatures require less baking time and give softer products, while lower temperature of course need longer baking times and give crispier cookies. I achieved the best result at 170°C: the cookies were golden brown, crunchy outside but slightly soft on the inside… delicious!!!

If you love cookies, look no more: this is the ultimate recipe! Oh, and feel free to add whatever you like! Hint hint: shredded coconut, cinnamon, raisins…

 

Chocolate chunk cookies

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Ingredients

125gUnsalted butter (room temperature)
190gBrown sugar
1/2Vanilla bean
1/4Orange zest (optional)
1Egg
220gPastry flour
5gBaking powder
3gSalt
200gCoarsely chopped chocolate (try a mix of dark, milk and white chocolate!)
50-100gHazelnuts (or any other dry fruits - optional)

Directions

1
Cream the butter with the sugar, orange zest and vanilla seeds at medium speed for 10-15 minutes with the paddle attachment. Scrape the bowl frequently.
2
Incorporate the egg, then add the flour, baking soda, salt, the chopped dry fruits and the chopped chocolate with a spatula...
3
... until you obtain a thick dough
4
Flatten the dough, wrap it in plastic and refrigerate for at least a couple of hours
5
Scoop a ball of dough onto a parchment-lined pan (using a spoon or your hands will do as well)
6
Remember to leave enough space for the cookies to "expand" during baking
7
Bake at 170° for around 10 minutes or until the cookies are golden brown
8
Let the cookies cool down to room temperature on a wire rack, then store in an air-tight container

Note

  • The butter must be at room temperature to be properly creamed. It should be removed from the fridge at least a couple of hours before using it
  • The secret of great cookies is mostly in the baking process: bake at 180 or higher for very soft cookies or at 160-170 for crispier cookies. Keep constantly an eye on the oven, since higher temperature requires shorter baking times and vice versa.

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AmericanBiscuitsBrown sugarButterChocolateChocolate chunksCookiesCreamed butterEasyHazelnutsQuickSimple
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6 Comments General

6 Comments

  • vvvfi
    September 2, 2015 7:43 am

    Can I reduce the sugar to 150/160g? and replace some of the coarsely chopped chocolate (mixture of dark, milk and whole macadamia nut)?

    Cheers

    Reply
    • Rob
      September 2, 2015 10:04 am

      Hi!
      Of course you can but the consistency of the cookie will be slightly different in the end (not much though)… I guess it will be a bit less crunchy and less-cookie like but definitely still good.

      On the other side, for the chocolate there is no problem! You can put the mixture of chocolates of your dreams (but I would probably coarsely chop the macadamia otherwise it will look huge on the cookie) 🙂

      Reply
  • Ivie
    May 28, 2016 5:46 am

    Don’t have vanilla bean in my pantry, can I just add 1tsp vanilla essence instead?

    190g sugar… are these cookies sweet or just nice with the mixture of dark, white and milk chocolates? Thanks for the reccette! Will bake this soon with chopped macadamia nuts

    Reply
    • Rob
      May 31, 2016 11:05 pm

      Hello Ivie, for sure you can replace the bean with 1tsp of vanilla extract.
      The cookies might be a bit sweet, but all the sugar is needed to give them structure; moreover, I find they taste a lot better in the following days, not when just baked. If you are afraid they might be too sweet, you can start testing them with dark chocolate only. 🙂

      Reply
  • Majed
    October 26, 2018 6:02 pm

    Hi… just discovered your site by accident on you tube and l love it… Thank you for making everything so easy to follow , especially for a beginner. I’d like to make these cookies but could you clarify what you mean by pastry flour… as in the UK it’s a choice of plain, self raising, sponge cake flour, 00 flour – so which one please? Thanks & keep up the good work

    Reply
    • Rob
      December 1, 2018 1:20 pm

      Hi Majed, on my website I mainly use weak “pastry flour” for cakes, spongecakes, etc.. and strong/bread flour for yeast products (e.g. brioches). A weak flour ensures the final result is soft and spongy, a strong one helps you to develop a lot of gluten in products that are rich of fats (fat loosens the gluten strands).
      For cakes, I would therefore buy the most generic flour there is (i.e. “plain”, not self-raising and without any additives nor yeast nor baking powder).
      The strenght of a flour is indicated by a parameter called W which is not printed on supermarket packages unfortunately. A good approximation is to look at the quantity of proteins of the flour: 9-12% = weak flour; 13 and above = strong flour.

      Reply

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WELCOME

Hi, my name is Rob, I work in IT but I love baking and I also got a pastry diploma. I created this blog to keep track of my journey from complete beginner to world pastry champion (I'm not there yet).

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