I'm fairly certain that all food bloggers eventually get around to blogging about the world famous chocolate chip cookie recipe from the New York Times. This week seemed like a good week for me to throw in my two cents and tell you what I think about the recipe. And, since these cookies are going to work with hubby tomorrow, we'll be able to find out what the co-irkers think of them too. (They're brutally honest, I'm telling you!)This review is slightly tainted however, because upon reading the recipe and making my shopping list for the ingredients, I failed to notice that the dough must rest in the fridge for 24 hours before baking. Well, today was going to be my shopping day this week and since I now had to make the dough yesterday in order to bake the cookies today, it was either make do with the chocolate I had on hand, or go to Wal-Mart in my pajamas yesterday morning to buy the special chocolate called for.
In hindsight, which still remains 20-20 even though the rest of my vision has gone to hell in a hand basket, I could have gone to Wal-Mart in my pajamas because if your local Wal-Mart is anything like my local Wal-Mart, you see people in their pajamas all the time. And oddly, what concerns me more than the fact that they're wearing pajamas is the fact that the pajama tops and bottoms don't match. What's this world coming to? And more importantly, why do I even notice such things?OK, back to the tainted recipe. The original recipe calls for bittersweet chocolate. I had semi-sweet and I had unsweetened chocolate, so I met somewhere in the middle by grating the unsweetened chocolate and combining it with some chopped semi-sweet chocolate and some semi-sweet chocolate chips. That wiped me out of the total 1 1/4 pounds of chocolate I had in the house. Has necessity become the mother of intervention? I'll let you be the judge and decide if I need help.
Chocolate Chip Cookies (modified slightly from the New York Times)2 cups minus 2 tablespoons (8 1/2 ounces) cake flour
1 2/3 cups (8 1/2 ounces) bread flour
1 1/4 teaspoons baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 1/2 teaspoons coarse salt (I used kosher salt)
2 1/2 sticks (1 1/4 cups) unsalted butter
1 1/4 cups (10 ounces) light brown sugar
1 cup plus 2 tablespoons (8 ounces) granulated sugar
2 large eggs
2 teaspoons natural vanilla extract
8 ounces semi-sweet chocolate, chopped into chunks
4 ounces unsweetened chocolate, grated
8 ounces semi-sweet chocolate chips
sea salt
1. Sift flours, baking soda, baking powder and salt into a bowl. Set aside.
2. Using a mixer fitted with paddle attachment, cream butter and sugars together until very light, about 5 minutes. Add eggs, one at a time, mixing well after each addition. Stir in the vanilla. Reduce speed to low, add dry ingredients and mix until just combined, 5 to 10 seconds. Stir all chocolate into dough using a wooden spoon. Press plastic wrap against dough and refrigerate for 24 to 36 hours. Dough may be used in batches, and can be refrigerated for up to 72 hours.
3. When ready to bake, preheat oven to 350 degrees. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a nonstick baking mat. Set aside.
4. The original recipe recommends using 3 1/2 ounces of dough per cookie and baking six cookies per baking sheet, but I thought that made for an entirely too large cookie. So I dropped the dough by tablespoonfuls on to the prepared cookie sheet, then sprinkled lightly with sea salt and baked until golden brown, but still soft, 10-12 minutes. Transfer sheet to a wire rack for 3-4 minutes, then slip cookies onto another rack to cool a bit more. Repeat with remaining dough, or reserve dough, refrigerated, for baking remaining batches the next day.
The verdict? I think these were quite possibly the best chocolate chip cookies I've ever made. I also think that by grating the unsweetened chocolate, it made for a more consistent chocolate flavor throughout the entire cookie. This is definitely a recipe worth repeating.

52 comments:
I have yet to try this recipe. Yours look delicious.
mmm these are on my list of choc chip cookies to try! yours are so pretty!
You grated the chocolate...no wonder they look so good (and remind me of the Doubletree cookies). Lucky co-irkers!
I've made these before, along with the Thomas Keller chocolate chip cookies, and I ended up cobbling together a hybrid recipe that's pretty fine. In fact, you have me thinking about cookies, so I may have to whip up a batch tonight...
And the pajama thing confounds me in general, like when did people start wearing clothes that look like pajamas to work? Do they wear suits to bed? What's up with that?
I am pretty sure I've never been more jealous of anyone than I am of the co-irkers. These look absolutely sublime.
Those are beautiful!
I'd like to be one of your hubby's co-irkers! I haven't tried making these yet, but they're on my list. Yours look scrumptious!
Girl... these look like the best cookies I've ever seen. Those damn co-irkers better not say anything bad about this treat. I'll be really pissed if I have to drive clear to Indiana and slap some people silly.
Hi, Mags! I've been wanting to make these forever! These look amazing! Can't wait to make them!
I made these cookies last year and while they may not be my favorite chocolate chip cookie, they are definitely fabulous. I'm sure they're even better because of the grated chocolate.
Oh, I just came across your blog and love it!
The cookies look delicious!
Thank you for sharing!
Leticia
i love this cookie recipe. i love making it for a crowd and I feel the "resting" period is key. Yours look delicious!
These look fabulous. Who knew that tried and true recipe could be improved upon. Looks like a hit!
I agree, this is one great recipe! I think it's been a couple of years since I made it though. They look fabulous mags, such lucky co-irkers! ;)
Sheesh - no pressure there, Mags. Brutally honest, huh? Well, here goes:
I've made this recipe before and they were good - great, in fact, but yours...
They're show stoppers. Your melding of the chocolate? Pure genius. That hint of sea salt? Inspired. That crisp edge and soft center? Heaven. And let's not forget how they looked - Professional (yes with a capital P).
The only bad thing about them - there weren't enough to go around. There was much gnashing of teeth, wailing, and beating of breast from those unlucky co-irkers who were not fast enough to grab this amazing manna. To those sad few I say "You snooze, you lose."
And, Mags, these were the best chocolate chip cookies I have ever had. But if you think you can do better we will happily sample your next culinary creation. That's how devoted we are to food, err, I mean you.
Thank you so much our cunning, caring calodemon.
TGIF
I am in love with this recipe. I made it a few weeks ago for the very first time, and although I made a whole batch, all of them were devoured in less than three hours (my family helped quite a bit). Then I made them to sell as refreshments at a play I was in, and they were part of the spread at an art opening I had with some friends. Everyone loves them! And they seem pretty fool-proof, too. It's good for me, because my oven is quite tricky and so I am so glad when cookies bake right (not overdone or underdone like they usually turn out). These cookies are beautiful! The lighting is great in your photographs, too :)
Wow, you are kind of brave to use unsweetened chocolate. The cookies look fantastic.
NYT cookie recipe is my favorite ccc and my go-to (which I've adapted a bit, too). And I almost never chill the dough that long, sometimes not at all and they are still fabulous cookies.
Mismatched pajamas, or clothes that are inside out--whatever!
Have you sent any of those pictures to TS or FG? THOSE are what I'd want to see there.
Katrina: Yes, I submitted them to both places. Foodgawker accepted. Tastespotting still has them on hold for now. Thanks for commenting!
Delicious! Can't wait to give them a try...with your modifications of course! Yum.
jessyburke88@gmail.com
I really like the look of the grated chocolate in these - very pretty!
Yum! Those look lovely. I still haven't tried that recipe yet. What's wrong with me?
Also, for the record... I always get dressed to go to Wal-Mart... Don't want to risk my photo showing up on People of Wal-Mart. And I also notice when people's pajamas don't match. :)
Hi
What tool did you use to grate the chocolate.
Jackie: I used the grater on my food processor.
I usually use semisweet and bittersweet when I make these. I've also tried them with just AP flour and like the recipe better than when I use cake and bread flour. So many combinations. But the salt on top is a must! As is eating the raw cookie dough.
Mmmm, these looks so good! I definitely want to try these :)
thanks for nice recepts :))
I tried this recipe today and unfortunately, my cookies are nowhere near as pretty as yours!
The cookies themselves look chocolately, like a chocolate, chocolate chip cookie.
Do you have any idea why they look different?
Taylor: It could be the size of grater you used to grate the chocolate,making it more fine than what mine was? How did they taste?
that's probably it! the grater I used was really fine. they were good, just not as good as I hoped! I'll probably try them again!
These are the prettiest chocolate chip cookies I've ever seen!
These look great! What a pretty photo!
OMGOSHHHhhhh! I baked these tonight and they have replaced my previous first place recipe! YUM!
Hi! I'm a new follower! I found you on pinterest! I love your blog! If you want stop by and say Hi! www.mushkiloves.blogspot.com
Have a great night!
Kirsten
Your recipe was made by The Farm Girl and then voted on in our challenge the #1 recipe.... so come on over and take a look and feel free to grab the ULTIMATE RECIPE Button, if you wish!
http://momscrazycooking.blogspot.com/2011/09/ultimate-crazy-cooking-challenge-recipe.html
Sorry, I attached the wrong link!
http://momscrazycooking.blogspot.com/2011/10/ultimate-crazy-cooking-challenge-recipe.html
I've seen legions lament the wonder of this cookie so I tried them. Maybe it's my stupid altitude...no, not that I am personally so tall but that I live at 5280' - nothing seems to measure up to the accolades.
Then I made a chocolate chip cookie a few weeks ago with brown butter and a combination of molasses and sugar instead of store bought brown sugar and I think I've finally found my chocolate chip cookie nirvana. I dare say...anything is better with brown butter!
I do love the idea of grating the chocolate though...so thanks a bunch for that suggestion. Will do!
These cookies look scrumptious, but it will be a long while before I can make them :( I have no electric mixer and only use all-purpose flour. Just can't see buying cake flour and bread flour for a single recipe...
Congratulations on your adaptation!
kimB from Alaska
I stink at being domestic or baking or doing anything that requires lots of concentration, but I have to go to a cookie contest tomorrow and I figured I should try to do better than my last cookie endeavor. (I did Tollhouse premade cookie dough and put sprinkles on them and told people I made cake batter cookies. Haha.)
Anyway, I have this contest, and no one expects anything of me, so I figured I would make something amazing. I found this recipe, painstakingly followed the million instructions (from scratch is SO much harder than Tollhouse Easy Bake!), and even refrigerated it!
My addition to this recipe was bacon. Yes. Bacon. I made it crispy with maple syrup and brown sugar, and rolled the cookie balls in the diced pieces. I doubt I would ever win a Best in Show at a Cookie Contest, so maybe I will win Most Unusual!
Anyway, I just tried one and they are amazing. I feel so accomplished! And domestic! If I win, I will thank you in my speech.
No more Tollhouse for me! (Okay, that's a lie. I still love me some Tollhouse.)
Xoxo
Tier aka The Most Undomestic Diva Ever
Tierney: LOVE the addition of the bacon!
Update to my comment:
I WON the cookie contest, much to my surprise and the surprise of most people who know me.
Even if people didn't love the bacon, EVERYONE agreed it was probably the best chocolate chip cookie they ever tried!
I will say that the bacon is super polarizing--people will either LOVE it or HATE it. Men really loved it when I took the leftovers to work, and most of the ladies took some home for their husbands to try.
Hmmm....maybe this is the key to getting married.
Anyway, thanks so much for the inspiration! And my little award!
I just made these from my Christmas party last night, and out of 20 different cookies, these were the crown pleaser! SOO GOOD!
Hi!
I just made these for a class at school, and although they taste great, they are really flat! Does anybody have any suggestions as to what I did wrong so I can fix it next time?! Thanks!
Just made these. They have been "sitting" in the fridge until time to pull them out today. They are as hard as a rock so I really couldn't "spoon" them out. Instead I used a knife and cut them. Cooking currently so I will update in a few. The dough is scrumptious
Ok. The family thinks they are good....."Why are they salty?" Was the first question. Anyone want to tell me what the purpose of the sea salt on top is? It is "strange" as my husband and children put it.
Has anyone tried freezing this recipe in logs or Freezing the scoops for future use?
I just made these to take as a dessert tonight for a dinner party. OMG...they are delicious. Had to adapt the recipe to what I had, and only used 4 oz of grated bitter chocolate and 4 oz of chunks, and then 12 oz of choc chips. They are still amazing even with those changes! Love the salt/chocolate after taste. :)
Still laughing about co-irkers. :) And Walmart People. Love the idea of grated chocolate. I have made these and I do think they're better after they've been refrigerated. I LOVE America's Test Kitchen's Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookies when I don't have time to let the dough rest. :)
My sister in law made these over the weekend and they were so good!
Best cookie ever...period. cant stop eating them!
heres my q. I would love to try this recipe but i dont have cake flour and bread flour around since all i use is ap flour. can i use ap flour in this recipe to replace all other flour's mentioned?
Dunn: I'm sure you could use AP flour, but I'm not sure how much you would need to use, plus it would probably affect the texture a bit. Try it and let me know how it goes, ok?
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