Are you in desperate need of a raise, lover, friend, or just some general praise? These brown butter chocolate chip cookies have the potential to get you all of those things. Ok. I can’t promise the raise, but ya never know!
Anybody can make a decent chocolate chip cookie right? The good news is that anybody can also make a better chocolate chip cookie because these little guys are better than the standard but still pretty straightforward to make.
The brown butter addition just takes these completely to another level than many chocolate chip cookie recipes and only adds a little bit onto your prep time.
The Brown Butter Secret
The flavor is really boosted in these cookies because of the brown butter coupled with the brown sugar and vanilla.
The brown butter process is a standard process for making brown butter. If you’ve never browned butter before, don’t stress about it. It’s really simple.
Start by adding your butter to a medium pot over medium-low heat and let it melt. Once it starts to foam, turn the heat down to low and whisk the butter. As the butter cooks, the water will evaporate from the butter leaving only the oil and the milk solids. Eventually, the milk solids will separate out and start to brown which gives it the distinct brown color and also the delicious nutty flavor.
It’ll take about 15 minutes for the butter to brown. Just whisk it every minute or so to make sure that it’s heating evenly. There’s no need to lord over it though.
You know your done when it smells very fragrant and nutty.
Want more brown butter ideas? Try these brown butter burgers or these brown butter zucchini muffins!
See those little brown specks at the bottom? Those are butter gold!
Let this cool for a minute and then add all your sugar to the brown butter. Stir it all together.
Crunch Time Tips
You can rapidly cool brown butter so you can use it immediately in this cookie recipe by pouring it into a metal bowl and placing that metal bowl in an ice bath. Stir the brown butter and it will eventually cool and harden.
How to make chewier chocolate chip cookies
Bread flour has a slightly higher amount of gluten in it which is why it’s great for breads. It gives you that really chewy texture that you can’t reproduce with all-purpose flour. In fact, most bakeries use even a higher-gluten flour than bread flour which is pretty hard to find in stores.
If you substitute the all-purpose flour in the recipe for bread flour, these brown butter chocolate chip cookies have a bit more chew to them than you’re probably used to. It makes for a fantastic texture.
What Chocolate works best for cookies
I’m not going to chocolate gate-keep here. I’ve used pretty much all-ranges of chocolate in chocolate chip cookies and I’m here to tell you that it’s all fine. Your cookie will be delicious.
Personally, I like a larger piece of chocolate rather than the small chocolate chips so I usually go with a Ghiradelli semi-sweet or bittersweet chocolate chip. You can also mix and match if you want.
But, don’t let the exact chocolate type prevent you from trying these cookies. The brown butter gives them a lot of flavor even if you use the smaller chocolate chips.
“These are the best homemade chocolate chip cookies I’ve ever had!”
– My 9-year-old neighbor, Sam.
Making the Cookie Dough
From here on out the process is the exact same as making any cookie dough. Add the butter/sugar mixture to a stand mixer or use a hand mixer (on medium) to cream the butter and sugar together. It should lighten up a bit and turn fluffy. My took about 4 minutes to get to the right point.
Then add your egg and egg yolk and continue to mix. Add the vanilla and half and half (or milk), and eventually, you’ll have a very smooth caramel-colored mixture.
NOTE: If you don’t cool your butter and sugar mixture before you make the dough, the dough will be more liquid (because the butter is melted). This is okay. Just know that it will set up completely as the dough chills in the fridge.
This is the stuff dream cookies are made of.
Turn the mixer to low and stir in the flour mixture in a few batches just until it’s combined.
Then add in all the chocolate chips and stir again until they are evenly distributed. Try not to over-mix the dough.
Chilling the dough is key
This dough needs to chill before you use it. Wrap it up in plastic wrap and store it in your fridge for an hour or two before baking. If you happen to live in a cold region, you can just stick it outside covered for a few hours!
You could keep it in your fridge for a week like this without a problem.
Baking the cookies
When you’re ready to bake, roll the dough into heaping Tablespoon-sized balls and add them to a cookie sheet with parchment paper.
Bake them at 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes. Cookies are always better if they are slightly underbaked so I recommend pulling them out closer to 10 minutes.
Let them cool for a few minutes (move them to a rack if you have one handy), and then dig in!
These brown butter chocolate chip cookies are best right out of the oven, but they were actually still very good a day later.
I didn’t have any left to try after that point. If they make it longer than 24 hours without being consumed, you probably did something wrong!
Substitutions and additions
Generally, with baking I don’t recommend making a ton of substitutions but there are a few ideas here that you can take or leave.
- Feel free to leave out the lemon in the recipe. It adds a little zing to the cookies but I’ve made it without and it’s equally good.
- Flaky Sea Salt – if you have a good flakey sea salt, a sprinkle on top of the cookies is a wonderful addition.
- Chili powder – Likewise, a little sprinkle of chili powder in the dough will give the cookies some complexity. Chocolate and chili are made for each other!
- Change up the chocolate. Try dark chocolate or even something like caramel chips.
Brown Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
Equipment
Ingredients
- 2 ¼ Cups all-purpose flour
- 1 Teaspoon baking soda
- 1 Teaspoon kosher salt
- 1 Cup unsalted butter, browned
- ½ Cup sugar
- 1 Cups dark brown sugar
- 1 Tablespoon Half and Half, or milk
- 1 Tablespoon lemon juice
- 1 ½ Teaspoons vanilla extract
- 1 large egg
- 1 large egg yolk
- 2 Cups chocolate chips
Instructions
- Mix flour, salt, and baking soda in a small bowl and set aside.
- In a medium pot, add butter over medium heat and cook until melted. Turn heat down to low.
- Cook, and whisk occasionally, until milk fats seperate out and slightly burn on the bottom of the pan. Little brown specks will appear and it will smell very nutty, about 15 minutes.
- Let brown butter cool for a few minutes then add sugars and stir to combine. Let cool for a few more minutes until warm.
- Add sugar/butter mixture to a stand mixer bowl or a bowl with a hand mixer and cream together on medium speed until slightly fluffy and combined, about 5 minutes.
- Add egg and yolk, vanilla, half and half, and lemon juice.
- Next add flour in a few batches and stir on low speed until well incorporated. Don’t overmix though.
- Stir in chocolate chips. Cover and store in the fridge for at least an hour, but you could store it for up to a week.
- When ready to bake, preheat oven to 350. Add large tablespoons of dough to a parchment sheet lined baking sheet. Roll dough into balls.
- Bake for 9-10 minutes. Preferably underbake these.
- Cool for a minute or two preferably on a wire rack and eat as soon as possible!
corinne
These look really good. I looked at your brown butter cookies, and they look good too. You should try this recipe someday, its similar but enough different to be worth trying at some point, and it's one of my favorites!
http://abreiden.wordpress.com/2008/05/11/brown_su…
Tania
yummy, yummy,yummy – my gran used to say: you get tummy ache from eating warm cookies. I suppose she just didn't want us to eat it all before she was finished baking ;-)
Lori @ RecipeGirl
Hey, Glad you liked these. They're on my website, w/ a printable recipe. Would appreciate a link :) http://www.recipegirl.com/2009/08/17/browned-butt…
Nick
Post updated Lori. Sorry about that. I forgot that the recipe was on your site also and not just in 55 Knives.
Olga @ MangoTomato
I wish I could reach into my computer and grab it! The chocolate chips are just oozing out!!! What a great idea to brown the butter first. I'd add some nuts though.
Jack Etsweiler
And taking your idea a step further, I'd put the (chopped) nuts into the brown butter toward the end so you get the goodness of that toasting as well.
Bill
Any tips for those of us still on the free agent market, and who haven’t had opportunity to register for our stand and/or hand mixers?
Nick
Yep yep. As Kitty said below, a good old wooden spoon can get the job done ;)
Kim Davis
When I bought 55 Knives awhile back, I immediately noticed this recipe and have been making them ever since. L.O.V.E. these cookies, my kids can't get enough of them!
Nick
Awesome Kim! Glad you like the cookies (courtesy of Lori) and 55 Knives!
kitty
I added browned butter to my cookies last weekend, but I didn’t have bread flour and so I just used the tollhouse recipe except I browned (and then resolidified) the butter. Even that made a real difference!
And Bill, people have been making cookies for a lot longer than every at-home baker has had a stand mixer. Use a wooden spoon.
Lisa
Wow, I’ve never heard of lemon juice and half n half in a cookie recipe before. These remind me a bit of the infamous Cooks’ Illustrated ones, with the egg + egg yolk and brown butter. Those are amazingly good too.
Karie
Could I sub milk instead of half and half?
Nick
Sure Karie. It's a small amount so I don't think it would affect it to sub milk.
girlichef
Oh, so sexy (sorry, brown butter just evokes that response in me)!!! My mouth is totally watering…that's my kinda cookie :)
Jason Sandeman
Wow, I like the cookies. Do you think I would be able to convince my pastry chef that we need these on the banquet menu? I am going to do a test today. Ahem, Ahem. LOL
Good work Nick.
@tdh3m
Mine flattened out.
Nick
Hmm… not sure why that wouuld happen… hopefully they were still good!
Alicia
Did you refrigerate the dough before baking?
Rose White
Oh. This is really a great tutorial. Well, actually I really do not know anything about cookies or baking but with this tutorial with all of these pictures I think I can be a one-time chef in my kitchen. lol. Thanks a lot for sharing. I will try this out and surprise my children with this little treat!
S'toon Girl
Nick you lovely man! You made my evening for me with this recipe… I made up a batch last night and happily gobbled down a few (okay, more then a few) with some tea on the deck with my hubby as the sun set; a perfect fall activity. I can't imagine these lasting more than another day, they're amazing! (And I should add that I had to sub lime juice for lemon since I was out and they still came out delish, a sign of a good recipe!).
Rebecca
I really want to make these, but I am from Australia and would like to know what 'half and half' is?
Nick
Hey Rebecca! It's an American thing I think that's half cream and half milk. It's such a small amount in this recipe that you could substitute either milk or cream with no problem I think ;)
olive
mine needed closer to 12 minutes to bake (9 minutes and they were still wet) but they turned out very nicely! A little too sweet for our taste, but the people at work loved it.
Jeanna
I substituted Splenda in for the 1/4 cup of sugar and mine turned out great! Also you could try to use brown sugar Splenda and see if that cuts down on the sweetness. Other things you could try are cutting down on the chocolate chips or total substitute them out for dried cranberries or peanuts or whatever you like!
Jeanna
* totally…oops typo :)
Hannah
Holy. Everyone that ate these asked if they had caramel in them. These are truly amazing, thanks for posting them!
Melanie Duck
I love the melted chocolate in the inside of the cookie! It looks like that it will burst some chocolates in your mouth. This is truly a mouth watering cookie. Thanks for the recipe.
Mel Spinet
Yummy! Those are truly tempting and indulging! I can't wait to eat cookies like those ones. I just hope that i bake it right! Thanks for the awesome recipe.
Trent
Interesting with the lemon juice as the acid will usually counteract the gluten formation…
Anyhoo, anything with browned butter is delic…will make tonight and test… Thanks for the recipe – great site btw, too.
Trent
Update: recipe made. Verdict: (the cookie dough was damn delish!). The cookie itself was pretty good. I personally don't prefer the bread flour. I think that it lends to a tougher cookie ("chewy"?). Taste? Phenomenal. Next time, no bread flour for me, but definitely sticking with brown butter!
;-)
lauriematherne
I used to have a choco chip recipe that had my hometown clamoring for more! Time to try these. I may bring them to a friend who is house sitting as a way to say thanks.
Lis
Baked the cookies following the recipe and they turn out to be really good! I tend to throw away the cookie dough and only eat the chocolate chips but this cookie douhg was so delicious!!! The dough had so much complexity, love it! On the other hand, I love thick ccc with round edges and this did not made it for me. I think the bread flour was too tough for me. So, I will modify my so far “favorite ccc recipe” to add lemon juice and 1/2&1/2. Hopefully it will be a hit! Thanks for sharing I would never thought of lemon juice and 1/2&1/2.
Jeanna
These are AWESOME!! I made them for my new neighbor and also a batch for us. My husband said they are better than his grandmas…now that’s a compliment! Thanks for all of the great recipes especially this one.
Summaiya
I tried this recipe and everyone started to ask me where did u get these from….no one was convinced that i made these cookies me and my family and friends we all loved it and everyone keeps requesting me to make these again and again ☺ thanks alot for sharing this recipe
sonha Bowen
7 years later and these are still a hit with friends and family. Soft and chewy and absolutely perfect. We have stopped making regular chocolate chip cookies and this has become a family recipe. Also, the secret weapon to make anyones day.