How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (2024)

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By Betty Crocker Kitchens

Updated October 10, 2019

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (1)

Betty’s Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe is kitchen-tested to perfection and a scrumptious introduction to scratch baking.

There’s a reason nearly 1000 people have given Betty’s Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies top ratings. They’re slightly crispy on the outside, soft and chewy on the inside and loaded with chocolate chips and nuts. Warm from the oven, they’re about as irresistible as dessert can get, which is why we think this recipe is worth learning by heart. Get started with these step-by-step instructions from the Betty Crocker Test Kitchens. Then, learn how to customize this recipe to make it cakey, crispy or totally over the top.

How to Make Betty’s Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe

Chocolate chip cookies are “drop” cookies, which means exactly what you think: cookie dough is scooped and dropped onto a baking sheet. Drop cookies are typically made using the creaming method of mixing—butter and sugar are beaten together before egg and dry ingredients are added. Drop cookies are the most common type of cookie, which is why Betty’s Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies are the perfect cookie to begin baking from scratch. Ready?

What you’ll need:

  • Ingredients for Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (2)

1. Heat oven to 375°F. In small bowl, mix flour, baking soda and salt; set aside.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (3)

2. In large bowl, beat softened butter and sugars with electric mixer on medium speed, or mix with spoon about 1 minute or until fluffy, scraping side of bowl occasionally.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (4)

3. Beat in egg and vanilla until smooth. Stir in flour mixture just until blended (dough will be stiff). Stir in chocolate chips and nuts.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (5)

4. Onto ungreased cookie sheets, drop dough by rounded tablespoonfuls 2 inches apart.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (6)

5. Bake 8 to 10 minutes or until light brown (centers will be soft). Cool 2 minutes; remove from cookie sheet to cooling rack. Cool completely, about 30 minutes. Store covered in airtight container.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (7)

How to Make Crispy, Chewy or Cakey Cookies

Love your chocolate chip cookies extra crispy, chewy or cakey? The Betty Crocker Test Kitchens has tips on using the ingredients in the Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe, to make cookies turn out just the way you like.

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (8)

How to Make Crispy Cookies

If you like your cookie thinner and with maximum crunch, here’s how to make them crispy.

  • Instead of using ¾ cup granulated sugar and ¾ cup brown sugar, use 1 ½ cups granulated sugar, which contains less moisture and will help your cookies spread as they bake.
  • After taking them out of the oven, let cookies cool on cookie sheet for five minutes. This will allow cookies to keep baking, which will crisp them up further and help moisture evaporate.

How to Make Chewy Cookies

If you like your cookies slightly crispy on the outside and chewy on the inside—what many people consider the perfect texture for a chocolate chip cookie—simply follow the standard instructions for our Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies—they’re called “ultimate” for a reason.

How to Make Cakey Cookies

If you like your cookie airy and soft with a cake-like crumb, follow these instructions for making them cakey.

  • Add an extra egg to give your cookie additional moisture and structure.
  • Increase flour amount from 2 ¼ cups to 3 cups to help the cookies rise, instead of spread.
  • Add 2 tablespoons of milk with the egg to help soften the dough as it bakes and gives the cookie a cakey crumb.

How to Store Cookies

To keep cookies chewy and soft, like Ultimate Chocolate Chip Cookies, store at room temperature in resealable food-storage plastic bags or stacked in tightly covered containers. Another way to store cookies is by freezing—here are two methods.

How to Freeze Baked Cookies

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (9)

If you are freezing baked cookies, place completely cooled cookies in between layers of waxed paper in a covered freezer container or plastic freezer bag. Freeze. Thaw most cookies, covered, at room temperature for 1 to 2 hours. Baked cookies can be frozen up to 2 months.

How to Freeze Unbaked Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (10)

Freeze individual unbaked dough balls on cookie sheets. Once frozen, place in plastic freezer bags for up to 2 months. Take frozen cookie dough balls from freezer and place on cookie sheet. Let sit at room temperature for 15 minutes as you preheat the oven. Keep an eye while baking since bake time might need to be adjusted slightly. Check out more of Betty’s Tips on Freezing Cookies and Cookie Dough.

Now that you’ve mastered everyone’s favorite cookie, you can apply the skills you learned to making any cookie you want—and chances are Betty’s got every type of cookie recipe you’d ever want to bake!

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How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies (2024)

FAQs

What are the 9 steps for the secrets to making perfect cookies? ›

The Secrets for Making Perfect Gourmet Cookies at Home
  1. Ensure Some Ingredients Are at Room Temperature. ...
  2. Use Quality Ingredients. ...
  3. Measure With Grams. ...
  4. Measure Ingredients Out Beforehand. ...
  5. Double Check Your Butter's Texture. ...
  6. Don't Mix Things in the Wrong Order. ...
  7. Don't Overmix. ...
  8. Sift Dry Ingredients.

What is the secret ingredient to keep cookies soft? ›

Cornstarch Is The Secret To Soft And Chewy Cookies.

Is a cookie a heterogeneous or hom*ogeneous mixture? ›

Answer and Explanation:

A chocolate chip cookie is an example of a heterogeneous mixture because it is made up of different materials that can be easily distinguished.

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.

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.

Should I bake my chocolate chip cookies at 350 or 375? ›

A lower temperature will require more cooking time and will ultimately result in a thinner, crisper chocolate chip cookie. For those ooey, gooey chocolate chip cookies, 375 degrees Fahrenheit is your sweet spot.

What makes cookies chewy and not hard? ›

Use Melted Butter

If the goal is a chewy cookie, then you absolutely need to be using melted butter. The technique of creaming softened butter and sugar together is often used for making cakes. And for good reason! The process of creaming incorporates air into the butter which results in a more airy and cakey cookie.

How do bakeries keep their cookies soft? ›

Corn Syrup (Light)

Light corn syrup is sometimes used in specialist cakes and confectioneries to help keep baked products soft and doughy for longer.

How to get 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.

How to keep homemade chocolate chip cookies soft? ›

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.

Is a chocolate chip cookie a colloid or suspension? ›

Moreover, sometimes you'll get an area that has a lot of chocolate, and sometimes an area with almost no chocolate. The chocolate is not uniformly mixed with the dough. These all indicate that a chocolate chip cookie is a heterogeneous mixture.

Is a chocolate chip cookie a solution? ›

Answer and Explanation:

A chocolate chip cookie is a good example of a heterogeneous mixture. A mixture is a physical combination of two or more different pieces of matter. Chocolate chip cookies are made with sugar, chocolate chips, butter, eggs, milk four, baking soda and salt.

Is milk a mixture? ›

Milk is a mixture. Milk is a mixture of water, lipids, fats, proteins, and carbohydrates, as well as other substances. These substances are not bonded chemically and can be separated by physical means. If you leave milk on the counter, the fats in the milk begin to curdle and solidify and can be easily removed.

How do I upgrade my Betty Crocker cookie mix? ›

Easy Add-In: After creating the dough according to the sugar cookie mix instructions, Add 2 tablespoons of sour cream to create a tangier, cakier and all-around more flavorful cookie. Flavor Twist: For a punchier twist, swap the water in the sugar cookie mix instructions for rum, bourbon or coffee liqueur.

How do you doctor up chocolate chip cookie dough? ›

Here are our seven favorite ways to gild the chocolate-chip-cookie lily:
  1. Brown your butter. ...
  2. Whisk coffee grounds or espresso powder into the flour. ...
  3. Use hand-chopped chunks, not chips. ...
  4. Stir crunchy cereal into the dough. ...
  5. Fold in your favorite snack food. ...
  6. Sprinkle dough balls with flaky salt before baking.
Mar 6, 2015

What should I add to cookie mix? ›

Go Nuts (or Fruits!) With Mix-Ins
  1. White chocolate chips.
  2. Toffee bars (such as Heath, chopped)
  3. Candy-coated chocolate pieces (such as M&Ms)
  4. Coconut candy bar (such as Almond Joy, chopped)
  5. Trail mix.
  6. Dried cranberries.
  7. Dried apricots (chopped)
  8. Pistachios (chopped)
Aug 15, 2017

What does adding milk to cookie mix do? ›

The moisture contributed by the milk will also increase spread and hydrate more of the starches in the flour. These hydrated (gelatinized) starches support the structure of the air pocket wall, keeping the cookies from collapsing once cooled. By holding more water, they also help keep the cookies softer over time.

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