Ultimate Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
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The chocolate chip cookie that started it all.

Why These All Brown Sugar Chocolate Chip Cookies Belong in Your Recipe Box
I've been making these cookies since high school—back when I'd batch-bake dozens for the baseball team, armed with nothing but imitation vanilla, questionable butter, and way too much baking soda. They were… edible. Barely.
Fast forward 15+ years, countless recipe tweaks, and one memorable altitude-induced disaster in Denver (turns out elevation does matter), and I've finally landed on what I'm calling my ultimate version. These bakery-style beauties are thick, chewy, loaded with melty chocolate chunks, and made with one secret weapon that changes everything: all brown sugar.
No white sugar. Just 10 ounces of packed light brown sugar that creates cookies so chewy they stay soft for days, with deep caramel notes that make every bite worth the decade-plus of trial and error.
Why You'll Love This Chocolate Chip Cookies
Bakery-style thick and chewy texture. These cookies are substantial, with crispy golden edges and soft, pillowy centers that stay perfect for days thanks to brown sugar's moisture-holding superpowers.
All brown sugar formula. Using 100% brown sugar instead of splitting white and brown creates incredibly chewy cookies with complex molasses-forward flavor that regular chocolate chip cookies just don't have.
Melted butter method. Inspired by Alton Brown's approach, melting the butter creates denser, chewier cookies with concentrated flavor. The key is cooling it first—hot butter scrambles eggs (learned that one the hard way).
Ghirardelli chocolate chunks. This was my most recent game-changer. I used to be that person who didn't even like the chocolate in chocolate chip cookies. But switching from standard chips to hand-chopped Ghirardelli bars? Total convert. The chocolate stays melty even after cooling, creating gorgeous pools and streaks.
Freeze-ahead friendly. I tried this for the first time for Thanksgiving and drove 5 hours with pre-scooped frozen dough balls in a cooler with ice packs. They were a hit. Did they last 3 months in my freezer? No—but that's because we kept baking them. It's so nice having them pre-scooped for when you want a quick, fuss-free dessert.
Perfect for gifting. These are the cookies that get requested every time I visit friends and family. Now everyone can make them themselves instead of waiting until we're in the same city.
What Makes This Recipe Different
If you've been following food blogs for a while, you know chocolate chip cookies are everywhere. Everyone has "the best" version. So what makes mine worth your time?
Most recipes split between white and brown sugar. I use 100% brown sugar, which creates an incredibly chewy texture with complex molasses-forward flavor. Brown sugar attracts and holds onto moisture, which means these cookies stay soft and tender for days.
The melted butter approach comes straight from Alton Brown's playbook—it produces denser, chewier cookies with more concentrated flavor. Combined with bread flour's higher protein content (12-14%), you get that coveted bakery-style thickness that doesn't spread paper-thin.
If you've ever had Silos Baking Co.'s cookies at Magnolia Market in Waco (Joanna Gaines' bakery), you'll recognize the thick, chewy texture I was chasing. Their cookies are legendary for a reason—they're substantial, satisfying, and somehow stay perfectly chewy. While my recipe isn't a copycat, I definitely studied their approach to thickness and texture.
And here's my confession: for years, I'd make some dough without chocolate chips because I actually preferred those. The chocolate just wasn't doing it for me. But switching to hand-chopped Ghirardelli semi-sweet baking bars? Complete game-changer. The chocolate stays melty even after the cookies cool, and suddenly I'm a believer.
What you'll need for this recipe.
sherisse's Recipe Notes
- The Denver disaster taught me altitude matters. Years ago when my cookie recipe needed a facelift, I made these cookies while visiting family in Denver and they spread into one giant cookie-pancake. I had no idea elevation affected baking. The concept still applies: at high altitudes, reduce the baking soda slightly and add 2-3 tablespoon more flour.
- Fresh baking soda is non-negotiable. I've had too many flat, dense cookies from old baking soda. Test yours! If it doesn't fizz vigorously in hot water, toss it and buy fresh.
- Chilling is the most important step. Minimum 2 hours, but overnight is even better. When you chill cookie dough, the butter resolidifies (slows spreading), the flour fully hydrates (better texture), and the flavors meld. Skip this and your cookies will spread thin.
- Quick tip. You can also put pre-scooped cookie dough in the freezer for 2 hours and bake from there. They turn out so much better—even thicker than regular chilled dough.
- From frozen actually works better. I genuinely think these bake up thicker and chewier from frozen than from room temp. The dough stays colder longer in the oven, which prevents overspreading.
- Critical: DO NOT let the dough thaw before baking from frozen. They will spread more if you do. I like to prep them on the baking sheet and then when the oven is preheated, I take them straight from the freezer to the oven. No waiting, no thawing.
- Am I done tweaking this recipe? - Probably not, if I'm being honest. That's the curse of recipe development—you always wonder if there's one more adjustment that could make it even better. But after years of flat cookies, cakey cookies, overly sweet cookies, and that Denver incident… I'm finally at a place where I'm genuinely proud to share this.
- Luke's ice cream sandwich obsession. My husband has turned these cookies into an art form. His go-to: sandwich vanilla ice cream between two slightly warm cookies, drizzle with hot fudge. We've also done s'mores-style with toasted marshmallows. Dangerously good.
EQUIPMENT NEEDED
Serving Suggestions
These cookies are perfect warm from the oven with a cold glass of milk. But here are some other ways we love them:
- Ice cream sandwiches. Luke's favorite. Vanilla ice cream between two slightly warm cookies, drizzled with hot fudge.
- With coffee. The deep caramel notes from brown sugar pair beautifully with morning coffee.
- S'mores style. Toast a marshmallow and sandwich it between two cookies. Add a chocolate square if you're feeling extra.
- Cookie crumbles. Break them up and use as ice cream topping. Yes, cookies on ice cream. It's a thing.
- Gifting. Pack them in a tin or box with parchment between layers. They stay soft for 5 days at room temperature.
- Holiday cookie trays. These are always the first to disappear. Make a double batch.

Ultimate Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
Equipment
- Kitchen scale (recommended - measures grams and milliliters)
- Microwave-safe bowl or small saucepan
- Large mixing bowl
- Wooden spoon or sturdy spatula
- Cookie scoop (2-3 Tbsp/2 oz size)
- Baking sheets
- Parchment paper
- Wire cooling rack
Ingredients
- 16 tablespoon unsalted butter (Vital Farms, Kerrygold, or Trader Joe's recommended) 227g
- 10 oz light brown sugar, packed 280g
- 1 large egg
- 1 large egg yolk
- 2 tablespoon milk 30ml - whole milk or oat milk both work
- 20 g vanilla extract about 4 tsp
- 12 oz bread flour or all-purpose flour 340g
- 7-8 g salt about 1 tsp
- 7-8 g baking soda about 1 teaspoon - must be fresh
- 12 oz Ghirardelli Semi-Sweet Baking Chocolate, chopped into chunks OR Trader Joe's square chocolate chips OR Ghirardelli chocolate chips 340g - three 4oz bars, or 2 bars (8oz) if adding nuts
Instructions
- Melt the butter (16 Tbsp/227g) in a microwave-safe bowl or on the stovetop. Let cool to room temperature (important - hot butter will cook the eggs).
- In a large bowl, combine melted butter and brown sugar (10 oz/280g). Mix with a wooden spoon or spatula until well combined and smooth.
- Add egg, egg yolk, milk (2 Tbsp/30ml), and vanilla extract (20g). Mix until smooth and creamy, about 1 minute.
- Add flour (12 oz/340g), salt (7-8g), and baking soda (7-8g). Mix just until no dry streaks remain - don't overmix. The dough will be soft and slightly sticky.
- Fold in chocolate chunks (12 oz/340g) until evenly distributed throughout the dough.
- Refrigerate dough for 2-4 hours (or overnight) until firm enough to scoop. This step is crucial for texture and prevents overspreading.
- Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
- Scoop dough into 2-3 tablespoon portions (about 2 oz each) and place 2-3 inches apart on prepared sheets.
- Bake for 11-13 minutes until edges are golden brown but centers still look slightly underdone. They'll continue cooking on the pan.
- Let cool on baking sheet for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack.
- FOR FREEZE-AHEAD: After chilling dough, scoop into portions (2-3 tablespoon each) and place on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Flash freeze for 2-3 hours until dough balls are completely solid. Transfer to freezer bags or airtight container. Freeze for up to 3 months.
- TO BAKE FROM FROZEN: DO NOT THAW. Preheat oven to 375°F (190°C). Place frozen dough balls on parchment-lined sheet, 2-3 inches apart. Bake 14-16 minutes until edges are golden. Let cool on pan 5 minutes. Prep them on the baking sheet, then when oven is preheated, take them straight from freezer to oven.
- QUICK FREEZE METHOD: Put pre-scooped cookie dough in the freezer for 2 hours and bake from there. They turn out even thicker than regular chilled dough!
Notes
Nutrition
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