Right Off the Box: What is the best chocolate chip cookie recipe? (2024)

For the month of November, I will be running a series on Tuesday titled “Right Off the Box”, which are recipes that I use for all of my holiday baking and making that comes right off the ingredients package. Because sometimes the best recipes are right under your nose.

Right Off the Box: What is the best chocolate chip cookie recipe? (1)

As many readers know, I love to make cookies.

Back when I was a single woman baking her way through a tough breakup, it was the Martha Stewart special holiday issue Cookies that got me through it.

What I have discovered that no matter how many recipes Hubs texts me from some fancy-pants culinary publication who claims that their chocolate chip cookie recipe is the best, I always ignore it.

I already have the best. Much like Monica from Friends, it was in my pantry the whole time. From, as Phoebe says, Neslé Toulouse.

Why cookies?

I think cookies are the perfect dessert. They are small, require no utensils, and keep for days without any refrigeration. You can keep them in a fancy jar on your counter or a ziplock bag in your pantry. I also choose cookies because there is absolutely nothing better than being surprised with a package of cookies – either left in your office or delivered by the USPS.

The King of Cookies

No matter what type of cookies I make and what fancy creative additions I work with – pretzels, potato chips, jams, jellies, molasses or other spices –in the end, the only type of cookie anyone wants is chocolate chip.

Before my friend L. can protest, yes the Snickerdoodles I make are delicious, but it is a seasonal cookie. Chocolate Chip cookies work in mid June as well as they do in mid December.

In my cookie-baking fever, I had wanted to make some for my Pop who famously had a sweet tooth. He liked cakes, cookies, pies, and anything made by Hostess or Little Debbie. My Maw baked for fun and for her side hustle. They were a match made in heaven.

My Pop and I had an interesting dynamic. We liked to surprise each other, in a very, “watch out, you little snot, because I’m going to do something nice for you when you least expect it!”

I crocheted him a scarf. He surprised me on my prom night with a rented a Mustang convertible from his friend at the Ford dealership. I baked him little hand pies in the shape of apples. He assembled a toolbox for my first home. We never had expectations or obligations; these gestures were always a surprise, and often to spite each other as much as it was to show we loved each other. He would never give me a straight answer to what kind of cookie was his favorite, so my Maw told me to just make him Chocolate Chip cookies.

The failure

My first attempt was from the Martha Stewart Cookie magazine. I followed the directions exactly as written. And when the cookies baked, they spread all over the pan, making them incredibly thin, but also greasy, like the ones that many of us ate in school when we were a kid. Also, I didn’t distribute the chocolate chips well enough, so many of the large cookies had no chips in them at all. My friend Yickett took them off my hands, saying he always preferred for his chocolate chip cookies to be without chips.

What is the best chocolate chip cookie recipe?

I was annoyed by the result. Much like Monica on Friends, I soon discovered that the perfect recipe is already on the package.

Nestle Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips always come with a recipe on the bag. The ratios are perfect. If you wanted to add a little something extra, like nuts or an additional flavoring, it works great for that.

I have made these cookies for potlucks, church events, and other get togethers to have people ask me the recipe. In the tradition of my Maw who never shared a recipe ever once in her life, I would just shrug and say, "I just followed the recipe on the package."

One of my friends, while eating the cookie, said, "That's a lie."

It wasn't a whole lie. I do follow the recipe on the package.

The technique

The butter should be creamed, which means soft but not melted. I never remember to set out the butter in the time necessary to soften it (usually room temp for 30 minutes). I do not have the patience. Instead I take the sticks from the fridge when I am ready to bake and pop them in the microwave for 10 seconds. Then I turn the sticks on the next side and heat for another 10 seconds. The perfect texture is butter that readily accepts a thumbprint. However, if I dump the butter from their wrappers into my mixer and see they are a little too melty, I don’t fret over it. It’s fine.

I also want to be clear – yes, it needs to be butter and not margarine or butter substitute. It doesn’t have to be organic, grass-fed, bougie AF butter, but it does need to be butter. I do not recommend scooping out enough Country Crock from the tub in your fridge or swapping it out for Crisco. I also don’t know how to transfer any of this into a plant-based no dairy recipe. There are other experts on that. I believe in butter. Long live butter.

I also blend the dry ingredients – flour, salt, baking soda – in a separate bowl and set to the side.

I cream the butter in a stand mixer with a paddle attachment. Next sugar. Then I add the wet ingredients – eggs and vanilla. Eggs need to go in one at a time. I also sometimes add either almond extract or orange zest. But many of my young friends have tree nut allergies, so I now make them without any add-ins or flourishes and the cookies are still great.

Hubs took offense when I told him I was sharing my secret add ins and that I don't use them any more. He claims he always tasted the orange in every batch. I don't always add it. Only at Christmas or when I have a bunch of oranges already at the house. He's also annoyed that I am sharing this secret because I once threatened to cut him if he ever shared my secret recipe with anyone. It's orange zest! The secret is out!

Once the wet has been blended, I scoop the flour mixture in one half cup at a time. I like to make sure all the flour is blended before I add more. What I have learned from baking is the flour is slowly absorbing the wet as that mixer spins.

When the dough is ready, I remove the bowl from the stand mixer and stir in the chocolate chips with a long flat silicone spatula. The one I use came with my mixer a million years ago, but these flat spatulas are available at kitchen supply stores. A flat spatula will scrape the bowl and also cut through the dough for easier blending. I only pour in half the chocolate chips then, once blended, the next half of the chips.

When I am feeling lazy, I just pour the chips into the mixer. The problem – and it will depend on how much you value aesthetics – is that when you mix chocolate chips, the mixer will know flakes of chocolate off the chips leaving your cookies dotted and flecked. If I am sending the cookies out into the world, I mix them by hand. If the cookies are for home use, I throw the chips in the mixer.

Once mixed, I scoop the dough and bake them on a sheet of parchment paper. I do not use Pam because I do not like to use aerosols if I can help it and I think sometimes Pam can taste a little fishy. I also do not like my silpat for cookies because I think the edges are not as crisp. With parchment paper, the cookies do not stick and they have a nice crispy edge.

I have a tiny cookie dough scoop that I got from a kitchen supply store. I love it. With the number of cookies I make, it’s a fast and easy way to get equal-sized cookies. But you can also simply scoop them with a spoon.

At one time, I would rotate my cookies halfway through the bake. Now, I just allow them to bake on their own. For my oven now, it takes 12 -13 minutes for a batch of two pans. In my old oven, no longer than 10 minutes. I have four baking sheets, so while one round is baking, I am setting up round two.

I cool them on a cooling rack, but at one point, all my cookies cooled on stacks of old magazines. They need a place to rest because cookies will continue to cook after they come out of the oven. I like to keep them far away from my oven for the cooling process.

Cookie baking season is approaching, and we always have chocolate chip at our celebrations, now for Hubs who have deemed them his favorite cookies. And when he is at the store picking up supplies and calling me to ask, “Do we have to get the name brand? Can’t we get generic?”

I always respond, “Of course not. The generic doesn’t have the recipe!”

Happy baking season, y’all!

Read Books. Wear Boots.

XOXO,

B.

Right Off the Box: What is the best chocolate chip cookie recipe? (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to a good 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.

How to make Betty Crocker box cookies better? ›

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.

What's the best chocolate for chocolate chip cookies? ›

Semisweet chocolate chips, which we have already briefly mentioned above, are one of the best options for chocolate chip cookies if you're after a more balanced sweetness. Thanks to their cocoa solid content of 35% to 65%, semisweet chocolate chips create a perfect contrast with sweet cookie dough.

What flour makes the best cookies? ›

All-Purpose Flour: The Versatile Choice

This balanced protein level makes it versatile enough to produce both soft and chewy cookies as well as slightly crisp ones. If you're looking for a safe bet or are new to cookie baking, all-purpose flour is your go-to option.

What makes a cookie the best? ›

The best cookies have layers of texture. A slightly crisp outer shell that holds up to some heat with an inner core that's soft and chewy. Premium cookies taste great at room temperature, straight out of the fridge or slightly heated. Creating cookies in small batches is key.

How to improve boxed chocolate chip cookie mix? ›

Add different flavors.

Dig around in your pantry or explore the baking aisle and pick out different flavor add-ins that can change up your cookie mix. You could use peppermint, lemon, or almond extract instead of vanilla, dump in plenty of rainbow sprinkles, or even mix in chopped nuts or dried fruit!

How to make box cookies taste homemade? ›

  1. Add spice to your dough. ...
  2. Punch up the flavor of your cookies by adding extracts. ...
  3. Before baking, roll the dough in a garnish of your choice. ...
  4. Stir nuts right into the dough for an added crunch. ...
  5. Add in your favorite savory snacks, like chips or pretzels. ...
  6. Top your cookies with flaked sea salt.
Aug 3, 2020

Why are my Betty Crocker cookies flat? ›

Mistake: When cookies turn out flat, the bad guy is often butter that is too soft or even melted. This makes cookies spread. The other culprit is too little flour—don't hold back and make sure you master measuring. Finally, cookies will also flatten if placed and baked on hot cookie sheets.

What is the secret to keeping 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.

What makes chocolate chip cookies taste so good? ›

In the center, it's softer. The chocolate gives us a melty, dense mouthfeel. The caramelized butter, sugar, vanilla, chocolate, and subtle notes of salt offer a balanced flavor profile. The saltiness highlights and enhances the preexisting flavors.

What are the top 3 brands of chocolate chip cookies? ›

Top 50 Scanned: Chocolate Chip Cookie beta
Popularity
#1Cookie, Chocolate Chip Lenny & Larry's210 Calories
#2Cookies, Original Chips Ahoy!160 Calories
#3Chocolate Chunk Cookies Fiber One120 Calories
#4Cookies, Chewy Chips Ahoy!140 Calories
46 more rows

What is the best sugar for cookies? ›

Granulated sugar

Using granulated white sugar will result in a flatter, crispier and lighter-colored cookie. Granulated sugar is hygroscopic, so it attracts and absorbs the liquid in the dough. This slows down the development of the gluten (flour), which makes the cookies crispier.

What flour do bakeries use for cookies? ›

Pastry Flour: An unbleached flour made from soft wheat, with protein levels somewhere between cake flour and all-purpose flour (8 to 9 percent). Pastry flour strikes the ideal balance between flakiness and tenderness, making it perfect for pies, tarts and many cookies.

What kind of flour is best for chocolate chip cookies? ›

Whenever you're wondering what type of flour to choose when baking chocolate chip cookies, the safest answer is always all-purpose flour. It will always provide you with the desired results, ensuring your cookies go out of the oven just as you imagined them.

What makes cookies chewy and not hard? ›

If you enjoy your cookies soft and chewy, chances are likely the recipe contains a common ingredient that serves a very specific purpose. No, it's not granulated sugar, nor the butter. It's not the egg, all-purpose flour, or even the vanilla extract. The simple, yet oh-so-necessary component is cornstarch.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duane Harber

Last Updated:

Views: 6418

Rating: 4 / 5 (51 voted)

Reviews: 90% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duane Harber

Birthday: 1999-10-17

Address: Apt. 404 9899 Magnolia Roads, Port Royceville, ID 78186

Phone: +186911129794335

Job: Human Hospitality Planner

Hobby: Listening to music, Orienteering, Knapping, Dance, Mountain biking, Fishing, Pottery

Introduction: My name is Duane Harber, I am a modern, clever, handsome, fair, agreeable, inexpensive, beautiful person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.