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    Home » Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe

    Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies

    by Mary Neumann · 72 Comments

    • Facebook

    For my new readers, you may not know this, I’m married to a real cookie monster. I bake him chocolate chip cookies for birthdays, anniversaries, holidays…any excuse for cookies, I’m baking them.

    Last summer while I was in Alaska visiting my sister, my husband made a batch of chocolate chip cookies on his own, following my step-by-step tutorial below. They turned out perfect!  He even claimed they were better than mine…which is great, now there is no reason he can’t make them himself.

    I shared my tips for perfect chocolate chip cookies over a year ago and thought it was time to share them again. I’ve been baking these cookies for almost 30 years…that’s a lot of cookies!

    Never flat, always soft and chewy…oh so good.

    Read rave reviews from people who tried this cookie recipe on Pinterest!


    The recipe I have used for almost 30 years is the Original Nestle Toll House recipe on the back of their Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips bag. When I make these chocolate chip cookies, I do a few things different – I add extra flour (1/4 cup more), and bake them at 350 degrees F. I mix everything by hand (you can use a mixer). I use ONE large bowl. I only use real butter softened at room temperature and always use fresh baking soda. Once you add the dry ingredients, it’s important NOT TO OVER MIX!

     

    Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies

    Toll House recipe slightly adapted
    Click here for the Original Nestle Toll House Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe

     

    Print Recipe
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    Ingredients
    • 1 cup Salted Butter/Softened at room temperature
    • 3/4 cup Light Brown Sugar – press brown sugar down when measuring
    • 3/4 cup Granulated Sugar
    • 2 Large Eggs
    • 1 teaspoon Pure Vanilla Extract
    • 2 1/2 cups of All-Purpose Flour (Do Not Sift)
    • 1 teaspoon Baking Soda (Make sure it’s fresh- old baking soda can cause flat cookies)
    • 1 teaspoon Salt
    • 12 oz package of Nestle Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips

    Directions 
    Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.

    In a large bowl, cream butter and sugars until they are smooth/creamy.

    Next, add eggs and vanilla.  Blend well, until smooth/creamy.

    Now add flour, then salt and baking soda on top – mix until all the dry ingredients are just blended-Do Not Over Mix! Last, add chocolate chips.  Fold the chocolate chips into the dough, until just blended. Do not over mix the chocolate chips with the dough.

    Place heaping round tablespoons of dough on an ungreased cookie sheet, approximately one inch apart.  I use The Pampered Chef’s Medium size scooper for the dough, it’s the perfect size and I never have to touch the dough ~ love that!

    Place cookies in the oven on the middle rack and bake for 9–11 minutes, depending on your oven. Bake until cookies turn a light golden brown. Remove, place cookies on rack to cool. The recipe makes about 3 1/2 dozen cookies. ENJOY! Store cooled cookies in an airtight container.

    M&Ms are a great replacement for the chocolate chips or added with them! Pecans & walnuts are a great addition too!

    Step-by-Step picture tutorial for the cookie dough:
    Thanks so much for Stopping by!
    Cheers!

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    Reader Interactions

    Comments

    1. Mel

      April 02, 2019 at 4:19 pm

      These look wonderful! Can’t wait to try them! But am curious, is the 350 degree oven put on convection or just baked straight up? Thank you! P.S. I’ve tried several of your other recipes and they are always great!

      Reply
    2. Wendy

      March 09, 2019 at 11:50 am

      Ca I use white chocolate chips instead of the normal semi sweet?

      Reply
      • Mary Neumann

        March 09, 2019 at 4:27 pm

        Sure!

        Reply
    3. Gloria Clark

      December 23, 2018 at 11:46 am

      The best chocolate chip cookies 🍪 I ever made. Thank you.

      Reply
    4. Linda

      November 28, 2018 at 2:13 pm

      Hi Mary I use everything you use and my cookies come out flat can you tell me why please or do you have a suggestion

      Reply
      • Mary Neumann

        November 28, 2018 at 2:42 pm

        Linda, head here, great tips:
        https://blog.kingarthurflour.com/2014/10/26/one-reason-cookies-spread/
        https://www.bostongirlbakes.com/8-reasons-your-cookies-spread-too-much/

        Reply
    5. Sherry Scull

      September 23, 2018 at 7:34 pm

      Thank you! Thank you!
      I am almost 70 yrs old and I have tried all my adult life to make a chocolate chip cookie.
      Because of you, my husband thinks I am the Best Cookie Maker ever!

      Reply
      • Mary Neumann

        September 23, 2018 at 7:50 pm

        Thank YOU, Sherry, for a comment that made my day! I am smiling ear to ear. 🙂
        Happy baking!!

        Reply
    6. Pamela Shank

      April 08, 2018 at 5:26 pm

      I totally agree that it is by far the best recipe. I always under bake them a little so that they finish cooking on the pan. I have never tried them without a mixer or by increasing the flour. Sounds like a great idea!

      Reply
    7. Rochelle

      April 04, 2018 at 2:59 am

      Wow, this is the same adaptation I made years ago, adding 1/4 cup flour to help absorb some of the fat. I usually then double the entire recipe (which means a total of 5 cups of flour) except that I use one bag of semisweet and one bag of butterscotch chips. They’re horribly addictive. :}

      I hadn’t considered changing the baking temperature before, so next time I’m going to try it with your adjustments because I just love a soft chewy chocolate chip cookie.

      Reply
    8. Chastte

      March 27, 2018 at 12:26 pm

      Thank you! I have the first batch in the oven now to send to work with my husband for a sweet treat for the graveyard crew. We live be cookies and trying new recipes, thank you for your take on a classic ❤️

      Reply
    9. Matthew

      March 18, 2018 at 5:59 pm

      I use the same recipe, but 1 cup light brown sugar and 1/2 white sugar and cook them 9-10 min, I melt the butter and add a cup extra flour and still use a mixer

      Reply
    10. Charles & Lynne Alexander

      June 13, 2017 at 1:58 am

      you say to use baking soda, can we use baking powder?

      Reply
    11. craig william hawthorn

      February 20, 2016 at 3:45 pm

      Yummy I always make a mess of cookies but this looks lush 🙂 will give it a try 🙂

      Reply
    12. Sara Brock

      January 28, 2016 at 3:08 am

      These are, hands down, the best cookies I have ever eaten. I make them all the time now. DELICIOUS!!! Thank you, thank you.

      Reply
    13. Anonymous

      January 26, 2016 at 1:35 pm

      I found that the flour you use is important, too. I only bake with Gold Medal or King Arthur Flour. My mom used Robin Hood flour. Some of the other flours seem to not stand up to cooking with butter, and cookies come out greasy and flat. The flours I mentioned seem to have more structure when used in baking, and I think it might be worth trying.

      Reply
    14. Tomcat

      January 23, 2016 at 1:37 am

      The three biggest no-nos are microwaving your butter to soften it. Microwaving butter changes it's chemical composition and will make your cookies flat. Another important thing never to do is over-mix your dough. Always run your mixer on a slow to medium speed. I use a stand mixer and throw everything in the bowl at once except for the chocolate chips. I scrape the bowl once or twice to make sure nothing is left on the bowl's edge. Once the dough is mixed, I put the chocolate chips on top and run the mixer until the chips are mixed throughout. And the biggest thing is do not touch your dough with your hands. The cookies come out greasier the more you touch them. If at all possible use a portioning scoop (like the professionals use). The walnuts should be added with the chocolate chips. Another hint is to pull your cookies out of the oven right about 10 minutes into baking. This is totally an eye-ball thing. If they come out dark brown, cool them immediately. I let my cookies finish cooking on the cookie sheet for about 5 minutes and then I cool them immediately on a cooling rack.

      Reply
    15. marysweetlittlebluebird

      November 13, 2015 at 2:00 am

      Anonymous, I often use Land O Lakes….but use store brand too.

      Reply
    16. Anonymous

      November 11, 2015 at 7:40 pm

      These are literally the only cookies my two sons will eat. I tried all different kinds of recipes for chocolate chip cookies and they hated them. What a waste. Then I found your recipe. Thank you so much you have no idea how much you saved me! My son's thank you also!

      Reply
    17. Anonymous

      August 11, 2015 at 3:29 am

      I think I will try to half shortening idea. I'll try anything at this point. I just tried the above instructions, followed them explicitly. Flat cookies once again. Is there some miracle oven you own?

      Reply
    18. Anonymous

      June 11, 2015 at 11:47 am

      My mom altered the Toll House recipe years ago also! We always get compliments on them. She increased the flour by 1/2 cup and uses half butter and half shortening. There…I've just given away our secret family chocolate chip cookie recipe 🙂 Loved your tutorial!!

      Reply
    19. Anonymous

      June 06, 2015 at 6:39 pm

      My long search for the perfect chocolate chip cookie recipe is over! These are DELICIOUS! Thank you!!

      Reply
    20. Melinda

      April 28, 2015 at 3:37 am

      Thanks for the recipe! I searched for a recipe that did not require chilling the dough and found this one on Pinterest. Made half the recipe the first time, made the full recipe four days later. Needless to say the cookies were a hit. This will now be my "go to" recipe for chocolate chip cookies. Thanks again!

      Reply
    21. Anonymous

      April 13, 2015 at 1:27 pm

      My cookies were nice and plump the first 2 times. The past 3 times they were flat. I used new baking soda, mixed all by hand, baked one tray at a time,( I noticed the air-bake pan made them flatter, so I used my old cookie sheets). The sheets were cooled in between. I had to refrigerated the dough a bit after the first batch came out flat.
      MY ONLY CHANGE–I made half of the recipe which should be no problem. The ingredients were easy to halve.
      I won't be using this again until I find out the cause.
      They taste great.

      Reply
    22. Anonymous

      March 24, 2015 at 8:44 am

      This recipe is very similar to mine, VERY similar, probably because we both started with the Tollhouse" recipe. 😀 While I am not huge fan of Chocolate Chip cookies, I have been baking them for over 30 yrs and it also took me awhile, to get them to come up out perfectly soft, thick, fluffy, and chewy. Seriously, should they be any other way?? CHEERS to all cookie makers!!!

      Reply
    23. Wren

      March 09, 2015 at 12:01 am

      I have used almost the same changes as you have for about 30 years, too. I get many requests for my recipe. I will occasionally reach out to improve even these cookies, but my cookie monster always says mine are the best. The MIX BY HAND for these cookies is a big deal. Always add more flour, or they're too flat. Only one bowl is needed, I never sift the flour. Cookies come out of the oven when just beginning to brown around the edges. I let them sit on the hot cookie sheet for 5 minutes as they continue to cook a bit.
      One tip: to give the flavor a little something extra, add one small box of Jello Instant Vanilla pudding (NOT sugar free). Just dump it in with the flour.
      I will bake an entire batch and after completely cool put them in an airtight container and keep them in the freezer. Each cookie you take out tastes fresh! My Grandma always froze them. We called the Cold Cookies. Still one of my favorites!

      Reply
    24. Crystal H

      March 07, 2015 at 5:45 pm

      These cookies were amazing!! Thank you so much! I have tried other recipes and can never make chocolate chip cookies well. My husband was so excited since he too is a cookie monster! The cookies came out very soft on the inside with a little crunch on the outside! As my hubby put it, perfect chocolate chip to cookie ratio!

      Reply
    25. The Savvy Blackbird

      March 07, 2015 at 12:28 am

      I always use dark brown sugar for all the sugar in the Toll House chocolate chip cookie recipe–or half light brown and half dark brown. My favourite brown sugar is the soft more sticky kind that usually comes in a clear plastic container. I don't like the kind that just looks like dark granulated sugar. The brown sugar makes them crispy and chewy. I add a bit more flour when I want my cookies more cake-like. When I want extra crispy cookies, I melt my butter.

      Alton Brown has some great suggestions for different textures for chocolate chip cookies. Good Eats is now on Netflix, so check him out.

      I got the idea for using all dark brown sugar from Alexis' Chocolate Chip Cookies–Martha Stewart's daughter's recipe that I found in a magazine years ago. My friends and family thought that Alexis' cookies were a bit too thin and crispy, so I adapted the Toll House recipe with the sugar.

      Reply
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    Hi, I’m Mary, the face behind the food blog Sweet Little Bluebird. I am a Michigan girl, born and raised in Flint, and currently living outside of Atlanta, Georgia. I am married to a great guy from Northern California, together we have two sweet girls.

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