|

Brownie Cookies

There is something almost unfairly irresistible about a warm brownie cookie fresh from the baking sheet. The edges are lightly crackled and delicate, while the center stays rich, dense, and deeply fudgy like the middle of a perfect brownie. The melted chocolate pockets feel almost molten when you break one apart, and the aroma alone smells like a bakery at peak chocolate hour.

Brownie Cookies

These brownie cookies combine everything people love about brownies and classic cookies in one dramatic, ultra-chocolatey dessert. They have the shiny crinkly top of a brownie, the chewy edges of a cookie, and an intensely soft center that stays rich for days.

This is the kind of recipe people save immediately because the texture looks almost impossible. Thick glossy chocolate, crackled tops, gooey centers, and that rich homemade bakery look that feels comforting and luxurious at the same time.

And unlike many brownie cookie recipes that turn dry or cakey, these stay balanced. The structure is sturdy enough to hold their shape, but the inside remains soft, chewy, and deeply fudgy with every bite.

If you love desserts that feel dramatic without being complicated, these brownie cookies are about to become one of your most repeated recipes.

What Are Brownie Cookies?

Brownie cookies are chocolate cookies designed to recreate the texture and flavor of brownies in cookie form. They typically feature melted chocolate, cocoa powder, butter, eggs, and sugar whipped together to create glossy crackled tops and rich fudgy centers.

Unlike traditional chocolate cookies, brownie cookies rely on a delicate balance between melted chocolate structure and whipped egg aeration. This creates the signature shiny surface, chewy edges, and soft brownie-like middle that makes them unique.

The best brownie cookies taste intensely chocolatey while still feeling soft, chewy, and slightly gooey in the center.

Brownie Cookies Recipe Overview

DetailDescription
TextureFudgy center with chewy edges
FlavorDeep chocolate with brownie richness
DifficultyEasy to moderate
TimeAbout 30 minutes
Servings18 large cookies
MethodMix, scoop, bake
Best ForChocolate lovers, holidays, cozy baking, dessert trays

In short: These brownie cookies deliver everything people love about brownies — shiny tops, gooey chocolate centers, and rich chewy texture — in an easy handheld cookie form.

Why This Brownie Cookies Recipe Works So Well

The Secret to the Fudgy Texture

Brownie cookies sit in a very specific balance zone between brownies and cookies. Too much flour makes them cakey, while too much butter causes excessive spreading. The structure has to be balanced carefully to create fudgy centers with thin crackly tops.

Brownie Cookie Crackly Top

This recipe works because the moisture, fat, chocolate, sugar, and air are all working together at the right ratio.

The melted chocolate and butter create richness and softness, while cocoa powder intensifies the chocolate flavor without adding extra liquid. Eggs provide structure while also helping create the glossy brownie-style surface.

One of the biggest secrets is properly whipping the eggs and sugar. As the sugar begins dissolving into the eggs, it forms a shiny mixture that later helps create the delicate crackly crust during baking.

In the oven, the tops set first while steam continues expanding underneath. That pressure pushes upward through the thin glossy surface, creating the signature wrinkled brownie top.

Chocolate also contains cocoa butter, which firms slightly as the cookies cool. This is what transforms the centers from soft and molten straight out of the oven into dense, chewy brownie-like interiors.

Brownie cookies can overbake very quickly. Even an extra minute or two may shift the texture from fudgy to cakey because residual heat continues cooking the centers after baking.

That is why the cookies should still look slightly soft in the middle when removed from the oven.

One helpful observation: the cookies may seem almost underbaked at first, but the structure continues setting gently as the chocolate cools.

Why You’ll Love These Brownie Cookies

  • Deep rich chocolate flavor
  • Crackly shiny brownie tops
  • Soft chewy centers
  • Easy one-bowl style process
  • Bakery-style appearance
  • Perfect for holidays and dessert trays
  • Incredible warm with ice cream
  • Stay soft for several days
  • Freeze beautifully
  • Highly Pinterest-worthy texture and appearance
Brownie Cookies Pull Break

Save this recipe for rainy baking days, holiday cookie boxes, late-night chocolate cravings, or anytime you want a dessert that feels comforting and dramatic at the same time.

Ingredients

For the Brownie Cookies

  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter
  • 8 ounces semi-sweet chocolate, chopped
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup chocolate chips
Brownie Cookies

Ingredient Notes

Melted Chocolate

Real melted chocolate gives brownie cookies their dense fudgy structure. Using only cocoa powder often creates a drier cookie texture.

Semi-sweet chocolate keeps the flavor balanced without becoming overly bitter or sugary.

Brown Sugar

Brown sugar contains molasses, which helps retain moisture and creates chewiness. Even a small amount noticeably softens the texture.

Eggs

Eggs help create lift, structure, and the shiny crackled surface. Whipping them properly with sugar is one of the biggest factors behind bakery-style results.

Cocoa Powder

Cocoa powder intensifies the chocolate flavor without adding extra liquid. Dutch-process cocoa creates a darker smoother flavor, while natural cocoa gives a slightly sharper chocolate note.

Chocolate Chips

Chocolate chips create molten pockets throughout the cookies. Chopped chocolate also works well if you prefer larger melted chocolate pools.

One useful insight: combining melted chocolate with chocolate chips creates layered texture. The melted chocolate flavors the dough itself, while the chips provide contrast and gooey texture bursts.

Ingredient Substitutions & Easy Swaps

These brownie cookies are fairly flexible, but because the recipe relies heavily on chocolate structure and moisture balance, some substitutions work better than others.

Here are the best ingredient swaps for keeping the cookies fudgy, chewy, and rich without losing their signature brownie texture.

IngredientBest SubstituteWhat Changes
Semi-sweet chocolateDark chocolate or bittersweet chocolateCreates deeper, more intense chocolate flavor.
Brown sugarAll granulated sugarCookies become slightly less chewy.
ButterPlant-based butterStill works well, though texture may spread slightly more.
Chocolate chipsChopped chocolate chunksCreates larger molten chocolate pockets.
All-purpose flour1:1 gluten free baking flourTexture stays soft but slightly more delicate.
Vanilla extractEspresso powderDeepens chocolate flavor without tasting like coffee.
Cocoa powderDutch-process cocoa powderProduces darker, smoother chocolate flavor.

One important note: reducing sugar too aggressively changes more than sweetness. Sugar also helps create the shiny crackled brownie tops and chewy texture.

For the best bakery-style brownie cookies, it is usually better to keep the sugar balance close to the original recipe.

Kitchen Tools You’ll Need

  • Mixing bowls
  • Hand mixer or stand mixer
  • Whisk
  • Silicone spatula
  • Baking sheets
  • Parchment paper
  • Cookie scoop

A cookie scoop helps the cookies bake more evenly and creates that thick bakery-style appearance with consistent spreading.

How to Make Brownie Cookies Step by Step

1. Melt the Chocolate and Butter

Add butter and chopped chocolate to a heatproof bowl and melt gently until smooth.

Visual cue: The mixture should look glossy, silky, and completely smooth without oily separation.

Tip: Let the mixture cool slightly before adding eggs so they do not scramble.

2. Whip the Eggs and Sugars

Beat the eggs, granulated sugar, and brown sugar until lighter in color and slightly thickened.

Visual cue: The mixture should look glossy and flow slowly from the whisk.

This step matters more than most people realize. Under-mixed eggs usually lead to dull tops instead of shiny crackly brownie surfaces.

3. Add Vanilla and Melted Chocolate

Slowly mix the melted chocolate mixture into the egg mixture along with vanilla extract.

Visual cue: The batter should become thick, glossy, and deeply chocolatey.

If the batter looks slightly loose at this stage, that is normal.

4. Mix the Dry Ingredients

In another bowl, whisk together flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt.

Gradually fold the dry ingredients into the chocolate mixture.

Visual cue: The dough should look thick but still soft and glossy.

Tip: Overmixing at this stage can make the cookies tougher and less fudgy.

5. Fold in the Chocolate Chips

Gently fold chocolate chips into the dough.

Visual cue: The dough should hold its shape loosely while still looking soft.

A few uneven chocolate pockets actually improve the final texture and create more molten chocolate moments after baking.

6. Chill the Dough Briefly

Let the dough rest for about 15–20 minutes.

Visual cue: The dough should become slightly thicker and easier to scoop.

This short resting period helps reduce overspreading while still keeping the centers soft.

7. Scoop the Cookies

Scoop portions onto parchment-lined baking sheets, leaving space between them.

Visual cue: The dough mounds should look thick and rounded.

Slightly uneven scoops often create more natural bakery-style cookies.

Brownie Cookies Batter Scooping

8. Bake

Bake at 350°F until the tops are crackled and the edges are set.

Visual cue: The centers should still look slightly soft and underdone.

The cookies continue setting as they cool.

9. Cool Slightly Before Moving

Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for several minutes before transferring.

Visual cue: The edges should firm while the centers stay soft.

Warm brownie cookies are delicate at first but become perfectly chewy as they cool.

Brownie Cookies Freshly Baked

Visual Doneness Cues

  • Shiny crackled tops
  • Slightly puffed centers
  • Set edges
  • Soft center appearance
  • Glossy melted chocolate pockets
  • Light steam fading from the surface
  • Cookies flatten slightly while cooling

Brownie Cookie Behavior Guide

Brownie cookies behave differently from traditional cookies because the dough contains melted chocolate and a higher moisture balance. Understanding these small texture shifts helps create consistently fudgy bakery-style results.

StageWhat Is HappeningWhat You Should See
After MixingThe melted chocolate keeps the dough glossy and soft.Thick, shiny, scoopable chocolate dough.
During RestingThe flour hydrates and the chocolate begins firming slightly.Dough becomes thicker and easier to scoop.
First Minutes of BakingThe exterior sets while steam pushes upward underneath.Shiny crackly tops begin forming.
End of BakingThe edges finish setting while the centers remain soft.Set edges with slightly underdone centers.
CoolingThe chocolate structure firms and the texture stabilizes.Chewy edges and dense fudgy centers.
Next DayThe chocolate flavor deepens as moisture redistributes.Even richer flavor and softer chew.

One interesting detail: brownie cookies often taste even more chocolatey several hours later because the cocoa and melted chocolate settle more evenly throughout the cookie as they cool completely.

Brownie Cookie Texture Guide

StageWhat You Should See
BatterThick glossy chocolate mixture
Before BakingRounded scoops with soft structure
Mid-BakePuffing centers and cracking tops
Finished CookiesSet edges with soft centers
Fully CooledChewy edges and fudgy middle

Expert Tips for the Best Brownie Cookies

  • Use real baking chocolate instead of only cocoa powder.
  • Do not skip whipping the eggs and sugar properly.
  • Slightly underbake for fudgier centers.
  • Let the chocolate cool slightly before mixing.
  • Chill the dough briefly if your kitchen is warm.
  • Use parchment paper for even spreading.
  • Allow the cookies to cool on the tray before moving them.

One deeper insight: brownie cookies often taste even better a few hours later because the chocolate structure settles as the cookies cool completely.

Brownie Cookies Serving

Troubleshooting Brownie Cookies Like a Pro

ProblemWhat HappenedHow to Fix It
Cookies spread too muchThe dough was too warm or the butter/chocolate mixture was still hot.Let the dough rest 15–20 minutes before baking or chill slightly until thicker.
No crackly topsThe eggs and sugar were not whipped enough.Beat until glossy and lighter in color so the sugar fully begins dissolving.
Cookies turned cakeyToo much flour or overbaking created excess structure.Spoon and level flour carefully and remove cookies while centers still look soft.
Cookies feel greasyThe chocolate separated or too much fat was added.Melt chocolate gently over low heat and avoid overheating the butter.
Centers collapsed heavilyThe cookies were underbaked too much.The centers should look soft, but the edges must still be visibly set before removing.
Dry texture the next dayThe cookies baked too long or cooled uncovered.Store airtight as soon as fully cooled and slightly underbake next batch.
Chocolate chips sank oddlyThe batter was too loose and warm.Allow the dough to thicken slightly before folding in chocolate chips.
Cookies baked unevenlyDifferent scoop sizes or uneven oven heat.Use a cookie scoop and rotate the baking tray halfway through baking.
Thin flat cookiesInsufficient flour or overly warm kitchen conditions.Rest the dough longer and make sure flour measurements are accurate.
Dull chocolate flavorLow-quality chocolate or insufficient salt balance.Use good-quality semi-sweet chocolate and add a small pinch of flaky salt before serving.

Useful observation: Brownie cookies often look slightly imperfect while still hot. They may appear overly soft or slightly underdone at first, but the texture settles dramatically as the chocolate cools and the structure firms.

That cooling stage is where much of the final fudgy brownie texture actually develops.

Brownie Cookies vs Classic Chocolate Cookies

Brownie cookies and classic chocolate cookies may look similar at first, but they bake very differently. Brownie cookies are built around melted chocolate, whipped eggs, and a soft fudgy center, while classic chocolate cookies usually rely more on creamed butter, flour structure, and a traditional cookie crumb.

FeatureBrownie CookiesClassic Chocolate Cookies
TextureFudgy, chewy, dense, and soft in the centerMore cookie-like, tender, and slightly crumbly
Top SurfaceGlossy, crackly, and brownie-likeUsually matte, soft, or lightly crinkled
Chocolate FlavorDeep, intense, rich, and brownie-forwardChocolatey but usually more buttery and balanced
Main StructureMelted chocolate, eggs, sugar, and a small amount of flourButter, sugar, flour, cocoa, and leavening
Best Baking CueSet edges with slightly soft centersLightly set centers with firm edges
Best ForChocolate lovers, dessert trays, cookie boxes, ice cream pairingsEveryday baking, lunchbox treats, casual cookie cravings
Why People Love ThemThey feel like brownies and cookies in one rich biteThey are familiar, easy, and classic

If you want a cookie that tastes like the fudgiest corner piece of a brownie with a shiny crackled top, brownie cookies are the better choice. If you want a lighter, more traditional cookie texture, classic chocolate cookies are the softer everyday option.

How to Serve Brownie Cookies

Brownie cookies are at their absolute best when served slightly warm, while the centers are still soft and the melted chocolate pockets feel almost molten inside.

The crackly tops become delicate and lightly crisp, while the middle stays rich, chewy, and deeply fudgy like the center of a fresh bakery brownie. That contrast is what makes these cookies feel so dramatic and comforting at the same time.

For the ultimate cozy dessert moment, serve them with:

  • Cold milk
  • Fresh whipped cream
  • Vanilla ice cream
  • Hot coffee or espresso
  • Warm chocolate sauce drizzle
  • Fresh strawberries or raspberries
Brownie Cookies served with Ice Cream

If you are building a dessert board, stack the brownie cookies beside chocolate-covered strawberries, cheesecake bites, chocolate mousse cups, or vanilla ice cream for a rich bakery-style presentation that feels incredibly save-worthy.

These cookies also make beautiful holiday dessert tray additions because the shiny crackled tops and deep chocolate color create instant visual contrast beside lighter desserts.

Save this recipe for:

  • cozy movie nights
  • holiday cookie boxes
  • girls’ night dessert boards
  • late-night chocolate cravings
  • weekend baking days
  • cold weather comfort desserts

And if you really want the full bakery-style experience, warm one brownie cookie for a few seconds, place a scoop of vanilla ice cream on top, and let the chocolate slowly melt underneath.

That first spoonful tastes almost like warm brownie lava cake in cookie form.

Make Ahead & Freezing Guide for Brownie Cookies

One of the best things about brownie cookies is how well they fit into make-ahead baking. The dough holds beautifully in the refrigerator, the baked cookies stay soft for days, and frozen dough lets you bake fresh gooey brownie cookies whenever a chocolate craving hits.

In fact, many brownie cookies actually develop deeper chocolate flavor after resting for several hours because the chocolate fully settles into the dough structure as it cools.

How to Make the Dough Ahead

Prepare the dough completely, cover tightly, and refrigerate for up to 48 hours before baking.

The dough naturally thickens as it chills, which can create even fudgier cookies with slightly deeper flavor and more controlled spreading.

  • For softer centers: bake directly from lightly chilled dough.
  • For thicker bakery-style cookies: chill the dough overnight.
  • If the dough becomes too firm, let it sit at room temperature for 10–15 minutes before scooping.

One helpful observation: cold dough usually creates more dramatic crackled tops because the exterior sets slightly faster during baking.

Freezing Brownie Cookie Dough

Brownie cookie dough freezes extremely well.

  1. Scoop the dough onto a parchment-lined tray.
  2. Freeze until firm.
  3. Transfer frozen dough balls to a freezer-safe bag or airtight container.
  4. Freeze for up to 2 months.

When ready to bake, place frozen dough directly onto the baking sheet and add about 1–2 extra minutes to the baking time.

The centers often stay especially fudgy when baked from frozen.

How to Store Baked Brownie Cookies

Store fully cooled brownie cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 4 days.

  • Add a small piece of bread to the container to help retain softness.
  • Keep the cookies tightly sealed to prevent the fudgy centers from drying out.
  • Separate layers with parchment paper if stacking.

These cookies stay softer than many traditional cookies because of the melted chocolate and higher moisture balance.

Brownie Cookies Storage

Freezing Baked Brownie Cookies

Once fully cooled, place the cookies in a freezer-safe container or zip-top bag and freeze for up to 2 months.

For best texture, thaw at room temperature for about 20–30 minutes before serving.

If you want that fresh bakery-style gooey center again, microwave a cookie for about 8–10 seconds.

Best Ways to Reheat

  • Microwave: 8–10 seconds for soft gooey centers.
  • Oven: 300°F for about 3–4 minutes for fresh-baked texture.
  • Serve warm: especially good with vanilla ice cream or cold milk.

Save a batch of frozen dough now and future-you will be very happy on the next cozy chocolate craving night.

Easy Brownie Cookie Variations

One of the best things about brownie cookies is how adaptable they are. The rich chocolate base works beautifully with different textures, fillings, and flavor add-ins without losing the signature fudgy brownie-like center.

Here are some of the best brownie cookie variations with exact amounts so you can customize the recipe successfully without affecting the texture balance.

Double Chocolate Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 3/4 cup extra dark chocolate chunks

This creates larger molten chocolate pockets throughout the cookies and makes the centers even richer and fudgier after cooling.

Espresso Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1 to 2 teaspoons instant espresso powder

Whisk the espresso powder into the dry ingredients. It deepens the chocolate flavor without making the cookies taste like coffee.

Salted Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1 to 2 teaspoons flaky sea salt

Sprinkle the salt over the cookies immediately after baking while the tops are still warm and glossy.

Peanut Butter Brownie Cookies

Add either:

  • 3/4 cup peanut butter chips

or:

  • 1/3 cup creamy peanut butter swirled lightly into the dough

Avoid overmixing the peanut butter so the brownie texture stays balanced and fudgy.

Nutella Stuffed Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1/2 cup Nutella

Freeze small spoonfuls of Nutella for 20–30 minutes, then wrap the cookie dough around each portion before baking for molten centers.

Cookies and Cream Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 8 crushed chocolate sandwich cookies

Fold them gently into the batter at the very end to keep some texture intact.

Mint Chocolate Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1/4 teaspoon peppermint extract
  • 1/2 cup dark chocolate chunks

Use peppermint extract carefully because a small amount goes a long way.

S’mores Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 3/4 cup mini marshmallows
  • 1/2 cup crushed graham crackers

Press some marshmallows onto the tops during the last 2 minutes of baking for a more dramatic bakery-style appearance.

Caramel Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1/2 cup soft caramel pieces

Soft baking caramels work best because they stay chewy instead of hardening completely after cooling.

Holiday Brownie Cookies

Add:

  • 1/3 to 1/2 cup festive sprinkles, crushed candy canes, or seasonal chocolate candies

For best texture, avoid adding too many hard candies because they can affect how the cookies spread during baking.

Because the brownie cookie base is rich and stable, it handles most mix-ins extremely well while still keeping the classic shiny tops and soft fudgy centers intact.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why didn’t my brownie cookies crack on top?

Usually the eggs and sugar were not whipped long enough, or the batter sat too long before baking.

Why are my brownie cookies cakey?

Too much flour or overbaking can create a cakier texture.

Can I make brownie cookies ahead?

Yes. The dough chills very well and can be refrigerated for up to 2 days.

Should brownie cookies look underbaked?

Slightly, yes. The centers should still appear soft when removed from the oven.

Can I freeze brownie cookies?

Absolutely. Both the baked cookies and raw dough freeze well.

What chocolate works best?

Semi-sweet chocolate creates the most balanced flavor and texture.

Why are my cookies spreading too much?

Warm dough or insufficient flour measurement can cause excessive spreading.

More Cozy Chocolate Desserts You’ll Love

If you love rich chocolate desserts with gooey centers, glossy chocolate layers, and bakery-style texture, these brownie cookies are only the beginning. From ultra fudgy brownies to creamy pies, warm cobblers, and dramatic chocolate cakes, these cozy dessert recipes bring the same comforting homemade feeling with plenty of save-worthy chocolate moments.

Perfect for holiday dessert trays, cozy weekends, birthday baking, girls’ night dessert boards, or late-night chocolate cravings, these recipes pair beautifully with warm coffee, cold milk, or a scoop of vanilla ice cream.

Ultra Rich Chocolate Desserts

Cozy Brownies, Cookies & Bars

Chocolate Pies, Cheesecakes & Creamy Desserts

Save-Worthy Cozy Dessert Favorites

Save a few of these recipes now for holiday baking season, cozy winter weekends, birthday dessert tables, chocolate dessert boards, and those nights when only an ultra rich homemade chocolate dessert will do.

And if you are building the ultimate chocolate dessert spread, these brownie cookies pair especially well with vanilla ice cream, hot coffee, chocolate mousse, creamy cheesecake desserts, and warm molten chocolate cakes.

Brownie Cookies Recipe Summary

These brownie cookies combine the best parts of brownies and cookies into one rich chocolate dessert. They feature shiny crackled tops, chewy edges, fudgy centers, and deep chocolate flavor with gooey melted chocolate throughout.

The balanced structure, whipped egg technique, and careful baking time help create bakery-style brownie cookies that stay soft, chewy, and intensely chocolatey.

Perfect for holidays, dessert trays, cozy weekends, and serious chocolate cravings.

Final Thoughts

Some desserts disappear quickly because they taste good.

These brownie cookies disappear because people keep reaching for “just one more.”

They have that rare balance of comfort and drama — rich enough to feel special, easy enough to make anytime, and nostalgic in the best possible way. The crackled tops, gooey centers, and deep chocolate flavor make them feel like the kind of recipe people come back to year after year.

And once you break one open while it is still warm and the melted chocolate starts spilling through the center, it becomes very easy to understand why.

Before You Bake These Brownie Cookies…

If you love ultra fudgy desserts with glossy crackly tops and molten chocolate centers, this is the kind of recipe you will come back to constantly.

These brownie cookies are rich, chewy, deeply chocolatey, and surprisingly easy once you understand the texture cues. The biggest secret is removing them from the oven while the centers still look slightly soft — that is what keeps the inside gooey and brownie-like instead of dry.

Save this recipe now for holiday baking season, cozy weekends, chocolate dessert boards, cookie exchanges, or those late-night chocolate cravings that somehow only warm homemade brownies can fix.

And if you are serving them warm with vanilla ice cream, cold milk, or fresh whipped cream, do yourself a favor and make a double batch. 😉

Brownie Cookie Recipe

Brownie Cookies

Yield: 18 cookies
Prep Time: 20 minutes
Cook Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 30 minutes

These brownie cookies are rich, fudgy, chewy, and packed with deep chocolate flavor. They have shiny crackly brownie tops, soft gooey centers, crisp edges, and bakery-style texture that tastes incredible warm or cooled. Perfect for holiday trays, chocolate cravings, gifting, or cozy baking days.

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup unsalted butter
  • 8 ounces semi-sweet chocolate, chopped
  • 3/4 cup granulated sugar
  • 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 3/4 cup all-purpose flour
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt
  • 1 cup chocolate chips

Instructions

  1. Preheat the oven to 350°F. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
  2. In a heatproof bowl, melt the butter and chopped semi-sweet chocolate together until smooth. Let cool slightly.
  3. In a large mixing bowl, whisk together the granulated sugar, brown sugar, eggs, and vanilla extract until glossy and slightly thickened.
  4. Pour the melted chocolate mixture into the egg mixture and whisk until fully combined.
  5. Add the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder, and salt. Fold gently until no dry streaks remain.
  6. Fold in the chocolate chips.
  7. Let the batter rest for 5–10 minutes if it seems very loose. The batter should be thick but scoopable.
  8. Scoop portions of dough onto the prepared baking sheets, spacing them about 2 inches apart.
  9. Bake for 9–11 minutes or until the tops are shiny and crackly while the centers still look slightly soft.
  10. Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack.
  11. Serve warm for extra gooey centers or fully cooled for dense chewy brownie texture.

Notes

  • Do not overbake or the cookies may lose their fudgy texture.
  • The centers should still look slightly soft when removed from the oven.
  • Use high-quality chocolate for the richest flavor and shinier tops.
  • For thicker cookies, chill the batter for 15–20 minutes before baking.
  • Sprinkle flaky sea salt on top after baking for extra flavor contrast.
  • These cookies freeze beautifully for up to 2 months.

Nutrition Information:
Yield: 18 cookies Serving Size: 1 cookie
Amount Per Serving: Calories: 210Total Fat: 11gSaturated Fat: 6gCholesterol: 35mgSodium: 95mgCarbohydrates: 27gFiber: 2gSugar: 20gProtein: 3g

Nutrition information is provided as an estimate only and may vary based on specific ingredients, brands, and portion sizes used. This information should not be considered medical or nutritional advice.

Similar Posts

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.