Tessa’s Recipe Rundown
Taste: Tons of sweet vanilla and butterscotch flavor with the right amount of chocolate chips.
Texture: Thick and chewy, with slightly crisp edges, and plenty of gooey chocolate chips.
Ease: Simple 30-minute recipe.
Why You’ll Love This Recipe: These are my go-to Chocolate Chip Cookies — I’ve made this recipe hundreds of times! I always have this dough in my freezer, ready to bake off whenever the craving strikes.
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My Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies are thick, chewy, and gooey. If there’s one thing I’m passionate about, it’s chocolate chip cookies.
You might think me a little unhinged, but I’ve tested this particular recipe over 20 times, with nearly every variation you could think of, to deliver you the superlative chocolate chip cookie!

All that hard work paid off because this is now one of the MOST popular recipes on my site, with over seven million visitors and 1,000 5-star reviews.
Reader Love
I’ve been baking for 50 years and this is the best chocolate chip cookie ever. I love it so much I always have dough balls in freezer ready to bake. Thank you so much for sharing!
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Reader Love
Everyone’s favorite cookie recipe! Everytime I make this recipe it’s guaranteed everyone will ask for it. Easy and great to keep in the freezer!
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Why is this the BEST Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe?
My recipe is simple enough to make on a weeknight, with no fancy ingredients. It’s been meticulously tested and the result is beautiful golden brown cookies, crisp at the edges and a little gooey at the center.
I’ve even made these cookies on The Today Show!

Sprinkle of Science
How to Make The Best Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
Important Ingredient Notes
Understanding how and why basic baking ingredients work can make you feel like a pro in the kitchen. I chose each ingredient only after careful testing so each one truly does matter.

All-Purpose Flour, Measured Correctly
I highly recommend using a digital kitchen scale to weigh your flour, or using the spoon-and-level method. It’s shockingly easy to accidentally add too much flour when measuring with cups, which can result in cookies that won’t spread, turn cakey, or go dry.
Baking Soda is the Key to Golden Brown Cookies

After intensive testing, I chose to use only baking soda for leavening in this recipe, which resulted in perfectly golden brown cookies with just enough spread to bake evenly.
Baking powder and baking soda are not interchangeable – as you can see in the experiment image above. Find out more in my Baking Soda vs. Baking Powder article here.
Don’t Skip the Salt!

One time, my husband, Joe, forgot the salt in this recipe. It took me .5 seconds after my first bite to realize something was very wrong! Cookies without salt are flat and bland.
I like to use fine sea salt because I prefer the taste to iodized table salt, and because its fine granule size distributes into the dough more evenly than kosher salt.
I’ll even sprinkle these cookies with flaky sea salt when they come out of the oven for a salty-sweet bite.
Butter at the Right Temperature (This is KEY!)
If there’s one mistake most cookie bakers make, it’s letting their butter get too warm at any point before the cookie dough hits the oven. When this happens, your cookies are much more likely to spread into sad flat puddles.

The ideal temperature is around 67°F, which means the butter will give slightly when gently pressed, but isn’t so warm it turns visibly greasy and totally soft.

I prefer to use unsalted butter in my baking because it’s typically fresher than salted butter (salt is a preservative) and it gives me full control of the salt content.
If all you have is salted, no worries. Simply cut the salt in half (½ teaspoon) in this recipe.
White Sugar
Also called granulated sugar, this encourages more spread so I only use a small amount.
Brown Sugar
Brown sugar contains molasses, which helps contribute that beloved butterscotch flavor associated with chocolate chip cookies. That molasses draws in more moisture, making for thicker, softer, and chewier cookies that stay good for longer.
Important: Don’t reduce the sugar in this recipe! Doing so will create dry, crumbly, hockey puck cookies that don’t spread. You can learn more about how sugar functions in baking here (hint: it does much more than sweeten).

The Eggs
Essential for binding together the cookie dough, eggs also add extra protein and fat for added richness and structure.
You may replace the eggs with 50 grams of plain, unflavored, unsweetened yogurt if needed.
Vanilla Extract
Again, don’t skip this ingredient! It imparts a sweet aroma that tells our brain something amazing is about to happen. Cookies without vanilla can fall flat.

Chocolate Chips
I prefer semisweet chocolate chips (Ghirardelli or Guittard are my favorite) because they have the perfect sweetness to balance out the other flavors of the cookies. If you prefer milk or bittersweet chocolate instead, feel free to use either.
If you prefer fewer chocolate chips, decrease the amount to 1 ½ cups, just note your cookies may turn out slightly thinner. If you prefer chocolate chunks, swap in the same amount!
Recommended Equipment
The Best Baking Pan for Cookies
Each of the cookies below is from the same batch of cookie dough, baked at the same temperature of 350°F, and baked for 12 minutes. The only difference? The type of baking pan used!

- T-Fal Air Pan: pale cookies that spread more
- Wilton Non-Stick: browned heavily with less spread
- Walmart Mainstays: pale cookies, pan warped and rusted
- Viking Ceramic Lined: cookies burnt on the bottom
- Nordicware Unlined Aluminum: my favorite Goldilocks pan, I own 10 of these!
- OXO Gold Nonstick: browned heavily with less spread
Key takeaway: If you’re using a nonstick pan, you’ll likely need to decrease the baking time, possibly even the baking temperature. Check out my Best (and WORST) Baking Pans article here for more details on the science of baking pans.
My Favorite Cookie Tool: A Scoop
Using a stainless steel spring-loaded cookie scoop when portioning cookie dough is one of the secrets to beautifully uniform, evenly shaped, evenly baked cookies, and quickly. My cookie scoop is one of my most frequently used kitchen gadgets. Learn more about cookie scoops and how to use them here!

The Key to Soft Cookies
If you want perfect cookies, here is an important note about technique.
Carry-Over Cooking: After ensuring you’ve measured your flour correctly, the trick to soft cookies is to take them out of the oven just before they look like they’re done baking. They should still appear slightly wet in the very center. The residual heat of the oven and pan will finish baking the cookies through to soft perfection once you allow them to cool completely.
Why You Should Chill Your Cookie Dough

Although not required for this recipe, I do highly recommend chilling the cookie dough for 24-72 hours before baking. Don’t worry, you can always bake off a few cookies immediately and chill the rest.
Chilling cookie dough improves your cookies in every way! It allows the moisture in the dough to be better absorbed by the flour, creating a thicker, chewier texture. It enhances the flavor and creates a richer, deeply butterscotch-y cookie. And it improves the golden brown exterior as the cookies bake, for crisp edges.
You can either scoop first and chill (make sure to wrap tightly in plastic), or chill the entire mass of dough, let it come to room temperature, then scoop.
Learn more about why chilling cookie dough matters here.
Cookie Storage Notes

How to Freeze Cookie Dough
I love the taste of cookies straight from the oven the best. I always keep cookie dough in my freezer so I can bake a few cookies off at a time in just minutes. If chilling your cookie dough to enhance the flavor and texture, do this FIRST. This magic only happens in the fridge, not the freezer.
- Portion your cookie dough into scoops. Place on a rimmed baking sheet.
- Place the sheet in your freezer for 1 hour, or until the dough balls are hardened.
- Remove to an airtight container and freezer for up to 2 months.
- Bake directly from the freezer at 325°F for 13 to 15 minutes.
Here are more tips for freezing cookie dough.
How to Keep Cookies Soft in Storage
Add a piece of bread or a flour tortilla to your container of cookies about a day or two after baking them, or whenever you find the texture starting to harden. The moisture from the bread or tortilla will migrate to your cookies, making them soft and chewy again.

Troubleshooting & FAQs
Why Are My Chocolate Chip Cookies Flat?
If your cookies spread into sad, flat cookie puddles, it probably means that your butter was too warm when creaming. Your butter should be at a COOL room temperature; about 67°F is perfect. Butter that’s too warm can’t cream properly and will cause your cookies to overspread.
Why Are My Cookies Puffy? Why Didn’t They Spread?
If your cookies didn’t spread and look like domes, taste bland, and feel dry and tough, it’s most likely that you accidentally added too much flour. I highly recommend using a digital kitchen scale to measure your ingredients, especially flour. It truly will improve your baking forever!
If you don’t have a scale, use the spoon and level method to measure your flour. Do NOT compact the flour into the measuring cup.
Also, check that your baking soda is fresh and still active. Baking soda helps promote spread and browning, for perfectly spread cookies with a golden brown edge.
Can I Double This Recipe?
Sure! Simply double all ingredients to make approximately 52 large cookies – no other modifications needed. Note: be sure to double-check every ingredient as you double it, so you don’t accidentally mis-measure something!
Can I Use a Hand Mixer for Cookies?
Yes, a hand mixer will work just as well as a stand mixer here.
Can I Add Nuts to This Recipe?
Sure! I recommend 1 cup of chocolate chips and 1 cup of nuts.
Can I Use Salted Butter?
Yes. Simply cut the salt in half (½ teaspoon) in the recipe.
How to Make Perfectly Round, Pretty Cookies?
As soon as the cookies come out of the oven, swirl a round cookie cutter (a little larger than the size of the cookies) around the edges. This pulls the edges of the cookies in for a perfectly round cookie – and, bonus, it also makes them even thicker!
You can also dot the tops of the cookie dough balls with a few extra chocolate chips before placing them in the oven, for extra pretty cookies.
Can I Make This Recipe Gluten-Free?
I’ve had good results using Bob’s Red Mill oat flour in place of the all-purpose flour at a 1:1 ratio. The resulting cookies will taste a little nuttier, and will soften more and become chewier as they sit. See my full oat flour experiment on Instagram here!
Can I Make These Egg-Free?
Yes, replace the eggs with 50 grams of plain, unflavored, unsweetened yogurt. See my full egg substitute experiment on Instagram here.
Can I Add Oatmeal to This Recipe?
No. Oatmeal zaps moisture, so recipes must be specifically engineered to include it. Luckily, I already have an Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe here!
Can I Make Smaller Sized Cookies?
Yes, just note that they won’t be as soft and chewy in the center. Use a medium 1.5-tablespoon-size cookie scoop and bake only for about 10-12 minutes instead. You will get about 50 cookies.
Can I Halve This Recipe?
Yes, simply halve all ingredients and use a hand mixer instead of a stand mixer to achieve a uniform dough.

Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Ingredients
- 3 cups (380 grams) all-purpose flour**
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 2 sticks (227 grams) unsalted butter, at cool room temperature (67°F)
- 1/2 cup (100 grams) granulated sugar
- 1 1/4 cups (247 grams) lightly packed light brown sugar
- 2 teaspoons vanilla
- 2 large eggs, at room temperature
- 2 cups (340 grams) semisweet chocolate chips
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350ºF. Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, combine the flour, baking soda, and salt.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat the butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar until creamy, about 2 minutes. Scrape down the sides and bottom of the mixing bowl. Add the vanilla and eggs and beat until combined, scraping the bowl down as needed. Gradually beat in the flour mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips.
- Divide the dough into 3-tablespoon sized balls using a large cookie scoop and drop onto prepared baking sheets.
- If time permits, place the dough scoops into an airtight container and refrigerate for at least 24 hours but no more than 72 hours. This allows the dough to “marinate” and makes the cookies thicker, chewier, and more flavorful. Bake from the fridge.
- Bake for 11-13 minutes, or until golden brown. Cool for 5 minutes before removing to wire racks to cool completely.
- Although I prefer cookies fresh from the oven, these can be stored in an airtight container for up to 3 days. See post for storage tips.
Recipe Notes
More Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipes:
- Browned Butter Toffee Chocolate Chip Cookies (ultra flavorful!)
- Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies (classic and double chocolate chip cookie dough in one cookie!)
- Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies (for serious PB lovers only!)
- Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Hot Cocoa Cookies
See ALL of my types of cookie recipes & cookie baking tips here!
































Turned out perfectly!
These taste great, but came out totally flat, therefore similar to other chocolate chip cookie recipes. I only chilled my dough for about 18 hours since I needed them sooner than the suggested 24-48 hour chill time. However, I measured my flour in grams using a scale as suggested, and bought brand new baking soda. Also used an “airbake” cookie sheet, which have always been great at preventing browned bottoms and helping maintain ideal temperatures… not sure what went wrong.
Hi Alyssa! I’m sorry to hear that these cookies were not as thick and delicious as they should be! One of the leading causes of over-spread cookies is under or over-creaming your butter and sugars, and how warm your butter was at this time. Both have a huge impact on a cookie’s outcome. Have a look at this article, where Tessa discusses both and the repercussions on the resulting baked goods. While I doubt it’s entirely the cause of your overspreading, the Airbake pan likely isn’t helping matters. While Airbake pans do prevent the bottoms of the cookies from over-browning, Tessa has found that they don’t conduct heat terribly well, which could cause some overspreading. Have a look at this article where Tessa performed a ton of experiments on cookie pans, with pictures and info. I also recommend checking out Tessa’s article here on How to Bake THICK cookies, full of helpful tips and information. I hope something here helps, Alyssa, and I hope you give these cookies another try sometime – they really are SO good! 🙂 Happy baking!
These are easy and delicious! I didn’t refer the dough just mixed it and rolled into golf balls size rounds! They didn’t spread like some cookies do! Which I liked! Will make again
I have tried this recipe twice and both times my butter and sugar mixture does not get very creamy the butter is more clumpy. When I add the eggs it more creamy but not smooth. Any tips?
Hi Ashlinne! Hmm, that’s super strange. What temperature is the butter when creaming? It sounds like your butter might be a little too cold. You also might not be creaming your butter and sugar quite long enough – learn more about that here. I encourage you to check out all Tessa’s tips and info in the pink tip box above this recipe. I hope you give this recipe another try – these cookies really are soooo good (especially after the dough has rested 24-72 hours in the fridge!).
Thankyou so much for all the explanation on the importance of ingredients. I do have a question and that is using cooking oil instead of butter. Have you tried and what’s your advice on using oil and how much? I’m planning on trying your recipe with canola oil so I’ll let you know how it goes
Hi Carm! I recommend checking out Tessa’s article here about Oil vs. Butter in baking. We haven’t tested this recipe with anything but real butter and we don’t recommend using oil instead, as the flavor and texture will completely change – but feel free to experiment as you wish! Let us know how it goes!
Can anyone tell me how many cookies this recipe makes using the 3TBS scoop?
Hi Amber! It actually says this right at the top of the recipe card. This recipe makes 26 cookies 🙂 let us know what you think of the recipe, once you’ve given these cookies a try! 🙂
Not impressed. I was hoping the the sugar ratios would be the key to a chewier cookie, compared to a cakier one, but that wasn’t the case. They didn’t taste bad, just not the texture i was looking for.
Hi Ashlee! This recipe should definitely yield a chewier cookie, and definitely not a cakey cookie. I’m just wondering – how do you measure your ingredients? By volume (using cups), or by weight (using a digital kitchen scale)? When measuring by volume, it’s so easy to mis-measure ingredients (particularly flour) and throw off the entire chemistry of a recipe, and end up with a dense or cakey cookie. Check out Tessa’s article here, where she talks about how to best measure ingredients to ensure accuracy every time. Refrigerating your dough for 24-72 hours will also help the texture immensely, as Tessa explains in the pink tip box above the recipe, and more in-depth in this article here! Alternatively, I recommend trying Tessa’s Ultimate Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies, which use some bread flours and ratios to ensure an ultra chewy, delicious cookie. I hope that helps! Happy baking 🙂
Hello
Love this recipe. Can I wrap them put in the freezer for an hour or two instead of 24 hours in fridge?
Also can I cut them in slices from the log?
Thank you.
Hi Soozee! You can try forming the dough into a log and slicing – we haven’t tried it ourselves, but it should work. Sliced cookies often don’t look as pretty, because of the way some of the chocolate chips get cut off, and the different way they will spread out in the oven – but if that’s the way you’d prefer to portion out the dough, by all means, give it a try! As for the fridge vs the freezer, it doesn’t work the same way unfortunately. To gain all the benefits in texture, flavor and even color, the dough needs to be refrigerated 24-72 hours. Freezing just can’t give those same benefits. Read more about this here! Happy baking 🙂
Hi Kiersten!
I wanted to make less cookies, is it okay to cut the ingredients in half and yield the same results (texture, taste, etc)? Also would anything change with the chewiness if I add less chocolate chips?
I’m super excited to make this and thought your recipe stood out to many others I’ve researched (:
Hi Julianne! Yes, you can absolutely cut this recipe in half – just be sure to double-check each ingredient as you add it, just to be sure you didn’t accidentally add the wrong amount (I know I’ve done that before haha!). Cutting the recipe in half won’t change the texture – but if time permits, we definitely recommend refrigerating these cookies 24-72 hours before baking, for maximum chewiness! Check out all of Tessa’s tips in the pink tip box above the recipe for more info 🙂 Let us know what you think once you’ve given these cookies a try – we think you’ll love them! 🙂
They came out SO GOOD!!! Helped my daughter make them for a 4H competition. Fingers crossed she takes them to school tomorrow.
These are the best! Wish I could share my picture of them! Won’t go back to any other recipe
tks for sharing.. instead of scoop the dough, i weigh it for 75g per ball.. baked freezed dough straight from freezer at 156 degree for 16min (preheat 20min+).however still found it bit under cook. able to advise what will be the good temp & duration to archive ideal cookie? TIA
Hi Doreen! Since we measure these out by size and not weight, I cannot tell you exactly how long they will bake for (and every oven is different, as well as most ovens not actually running at the temperature they say they are!) so I can only guide you to bake until golden brown. Tessa’s article here on baking cookies from frozen may help you too 🙂 You can always bake off one test cookie, see how that tastes, and adjust the timing from there, until you perfect the level of baking to your satisfaction! I hope that helps. Happy baking!