Tessa’s Recipe Rundown
TASTE: The perfect combination of butterscotch-forward cookie dough, rich cocoa dough, and big, gooey puddles of semisweet chocolate throughout.
TEXTURE: Thick, chewy, and oh-so gooey.
EASE: Slightly more complicated than a typical cookie dough, but combining and rolling the two doughs together is fun and almost therapeutic! Kids will love helping out.
PROS: The prettiest chocolate chip cookies ever.
CONS: None.
WOULD I MAKE THIS AGAIN? I’ve already made these cookies many times!
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I came up with this recipe in a dream. That’s how often I think about chocolate. I truly have put my culinary school degree to good use!

These cookies take a bit of extra time to assemble, but they’re pretty enough to serve at a party or to add to your Christmas cookie box.
If you’ve been around Handle the Heat, you know I have a big soft spot for really good chocolate chip cookies. In fact, I have over 30 chocolate chip cookie recipes on my site! From my popular Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies to the flavor-packed Brown Butter Toffee Chocolate Chip Cookies and my thick Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies, there’s something for every cookie lover.

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I even wrote a cookbook about cookies… with an entire chapter dedicated to chocolate chip cookies!
But there was one thing missing… a cookie that swirls two incredible doughs into one heavenly bite.
Until now.
These unique marbled cookies are super easy to make and come together in no time. Everyone will think you went to an expensive bakery. They’re perfect for when that cookie craving strikes!


Sprinkle of Science
How to Make Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies

How to Make Thick, Chewy Cookies (and Avoid Dry Cookies)
- Measure your flour correctly – To avoid dry, hard, cakey, or bland cookies, I highly recommend using a digital kitchen scale to measure your flour and cocoa powder. If you don’t have one, use the spoon and level method.
- Don’t reduce the sugar – Sugar actually does so much in baking beyond providing sweetness. Reducing the sugar here will also impact the texture, height, and shelf life of your cookies. Learn more about sugar in baking here.
- Don’t overbake – For perfectly soft cookies, pull them from the oven when they’re just set at the edges and look ever so slightly moist on top. Using a high-quality baking pan also helps – learn more about which baking pans I recommend (and don’t!) here.
- Chill your dough – Though not a requirement for this recipe, this will help create thicker, chewier cookies with an even better flavor. Learn more about why chilling cookie dough matters here.
The Chocolate
- This recipe was designed to use chocolate baking wafers or chocolate feves to create drool-worthy puddles of decadent chocolate throughout each cookie.
- As the chocolate is the star of the show here, I recommend splurging for high-quality chocolate, if possible.
- I recommend Valrhona Semisweet Chocolate Feves or Guittard Semisweet Baking Wafers. I find the latter online, or at Whole Foods or Sprouts.
- Alternatively, feel free to use large baking chips, chopped baking chocolate, or chocolate chips. Your cookies won’t be quite as loaded with chocolate puddles, but they’ll still taste amazing.
- Just use the same amount of chocolate by weight as listed in the recipe below.
Do I Have to Use Semisweet Chocolate?
I recommend sticking with semisweet chocolate for the best balance of sweetness, but you can use any type of chocolate you like. Just keep in mind that milk or white chocolate will make the cookies sweeter, while bittersweet chocolate will add a more intense chocolate flavor and make the cookies slightly less sweet.
What Type of Cocoa Powder for Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies?
- I recommend using unsweetened natural cocoa powder here.
- We tested this recipe using Ghirardelli Unsweetened Cocoa Powder. Its flavor is more bitter than Dutch-processed and perfectly complements the butterscotch flavors from the classic chocolate chip cookie dough.
- Dutch-processed cocoa powder works differently on a chemical level, so stick with natural cocoa here.
- Learn more about Natural Cocoa vs. Dutch Process Cocoa Powder here.
Do I Have to Use Espresso Powder?
No. Espresso powder just enhances the chocolate flavor in the cocoa dough. You can’t taste any coffee flavor, but feel free to skip it entirely if preferred.
How to Shape Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies?
1. Prepare the base dough and divide it in two before adding any dry ingredients.
2. Add the dry ingredients to each portion of dough, as instructed in the recipe below.

3. Use a 1 1/2-tablespoon medium cookie scoop to portion out both doughs.

4. Take one ball of cocoa dough and tear it in half. Place each half on either side of a ball of classic cookie dough.

5. Roll the dough into a smooth ball and top with a few extra chocolate wafers, chunks, or chips.
6. Repeat with the remaining dough balls.
7. Feel free to mix up the patterns by swapping the dough types–sandwiching cocoa dough with classic dough and vice versa! If you want more swirls, break the dough into four pieces instead of just two when combining dough balls.

Can I Halve This Recipe? Can I Double This Recipe?
Yes! Simply divide all the ingredients in half to yield approximately 10-11 cookies, or double all ingredients to yield approximately 42 cookies. No other modifications needed.
Tip for Picture-Perfect Cookies
As soon as you pull your cookies from the oven, take a large cookie cutter (slightly larger than the size of the baked cookies) and swirl it around the edges of each baked cookie. This pulls the edges of the cookies in for a perfectly round cookie – and, bonus, it also makes them even thicker!
How to Store Marble Cookies?
Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies will keep in an airtight container stored at room temperature for about 4 to 5 days. Be sure they are completely cooled before storing. Store with a tortilla to keep your cookies softer for even longer!
Can You Freeze Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies?
Yes! Follow the recipe to prepare and shape the dough. Cover it in plastic wrap and chill for 24-72 hours. After the chilling period, place the balls of dough on a parchment-lined rimmed baking sheet and freeze for about an hour, or until firm. Then, transfer the dough balls to a freezer bag or airtight container and store them in the freezer for up to two months.
To bake, thaw overnight in the fridge before baking as directed below. You can also bake directly from the freezer – learn how to bake cookies from frozen here.

More Cookie Recipes You’ll Love:

Marbled Chocolate Chip Cookies
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Ingredients
For the base:
- 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
For the chocolate chip dough:
- 1 1/2 cups (190 grams) all-purpose flour
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 3/4 cup (128 grams) semisweet chocolate wafers or feves*
For the cocoa dough:
- 1 1/4 cups plus 2 tablespoons (175 grams) all-purpose flour
- ¼ cup (21 grams) unsweetened natural cocoa powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
- ¼ teaspoon instant espresso powder, optional
- 3/4 cup (128 grams) semisweet chocolate wafers or feves*
- Flaky sea salt, for finishing, if desired
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 350ºF. Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
- In the bowl of an electric mixer, beat the butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar until creamy, about 3 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.
- In a separate bowl, whisk together the chocolate chip dough dry ingredients (all-purpose flour, baking soda, and salt). Add half of the creamed butter and sugar mixture (it should weigh about 330 grams). Stir with a rubber spatula into a cohesive dough. Mix in the chocolate wafers, reserving some for garnish.
- To the remaining butter and sugar mixture, add in the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, and salt. Beat on low speed to combine. Mix in the chocolate wafers, reserving some for garnish.
- Using a medium 1 1/2-tablespoon cookie scoop, scoop portions of both doughs. Tear one ball of classic dough in half and sandwich the cocoa dough ball, or vice versa. Roll between your palms. Place on the prepared baking sheet, dotting the top with additional chocolate wafers. Repeat with all dough balls.
- If time permits, wrap the shaped dough tightly in plastic wrap 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 for 11-13 minutes, or until golden brown at the edges. Sprinkle with flaky sea salt, if desired. Cool for 5 minutes before removing to wire racks to cool completely.
Recipe Notes

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Photos by Joanie Simon.
Amazing and so fun to make…not to mention beautiful! The dough was super sticky when I first made it, so I let it sit overnight in the fridge before forming them into balls and baking them, and they came out perfect!
These were so fun to make! I couldn’t find chocolate wafers at the store, so I just used chocolate chips. I also didn’t have espresso powder, but I used some coffee out of a Keurig cup that I ran through the grinder for a minute to make it extra fine. I did chill them for 24 hours beforehand and they came out great. Got nice and puffy. I’d love to try making them again with peanut butter dough in place of the plain chocolate chip dough. I think they would be really good!
These are fantastic! I am an avid cookie baker and always enjoy trying something new and getting tips for better results. Happened to have milk chocolate disks on hand so I used those for this batch but will try semi-sweet next. I am now a huge fan of refrigerating dough overnight as these marbled cookies came out high, soft and chewy in the center with chewy/crisp edges. I got a little extra with the size and baked them for 15 minutes, but they are perfect. Thank you for sharing!!
Your cookies look incredible, Shannon!
Thank you!! Great recipe and directions to follow – thanks for sharing with us!
Amazing recipe! Easy to follow and the results were great. I don’t always have the patience to chill my cookie dough, but I did and I am thankful. They turned out nice and big and fluffy. Plus the flavor was amazing!
Amazing recipe! Very fun to make with family. Would make this recipe again!
Here are mine. Not sure how to enter for the challenge. I try.
Beautiful, Cheryl! Be sure to enter using our challenge widget. Click the following link and simply press “submit photo” and follow the steps from there: https://handletheheat.com/challenge/
These were fun to prepare. I needed to refrigerate each separately because they were too sticky to really separate but then they worked great!!
These cookies are amazing! I am taking them to a family Christmas party so I decided to top with a few festive sprinkles.
Forgot to add my rating!
This is the second cookie recipe I’ve used in the last week and I’m here to stay! Can’t wait to try more, these were cute and delicious. I should have placed two wafers on top instead of one directly in the center for appearance purposes lol! But regardless they tasted delicious! Thank you for the awesome recipes!
We’re so happy to hear that, Jada, and thrilled to have you here! Your cookies look perfect, thanks for sharing! 🙂
I love these cookies! Combining double chocolate chip cookies and regular chocolate chip cookies is my dream. And they look delicious too.
So happy you loved them, Barbara! We completely agree. They’re a team favorite, too! 🙂
My two precocious grandlings woke me up early to tell me to get-up-get-up and go look at Tessa’s recipe – apparently this week’s Tessa Day cookie – “for *sure*, Grumpy. *Literally* for sure!” So, as I dutifully format the procedure in a way that will be easy for the girls (and me) to follow, and just to be sure, do I understand that the chocolate chip, or ‘classic’, dough is completed by hand, but the cocoa dough is completed in the KitchenAid bowl?
Thanks for the badly needed help!
That’s correct! First, you’ll mix the base dough in the mixer. In step 3, you’ll mix the chocolate chip cookie dough ingredients in a separate bowl using a spatula and add half of the base dough to it. The remaining half of the base dough in the mixer will be combined with the cocoa dough ingredients. I hope this clears things up! We’d love to hear what you and your grandkids think of the recipe when you try it 🙂