Mom's Best Recipes
Recipe

Bakery-Style Chocolate Chip Cookies

Thick, chewy centers, crisp golden edges, and puddles of chocolate. These cookies taste like they came from a real bakery, but your kitchen gets all the credit.

Author By Matt Campbell
4.9
A stack of thick bakery-style chocolate chip cookies with melted chocolate chunks on a parchment-lined baking sheet

If your ideal chocolate chip cookie is the kind that makes you stop mid-bite, look at it, and go back in for another bite like you are double-checking the facts, this one is for you. We are talking thick and tall, with crisp edges that crackle a little, a soft center that stays chewy, and enough chocolate to qualify as a lifestyle choice.

The trick is not fancy ingredients or bakery secrets whispered under fluorescent lights. It is simple technique: browned butter for instant depth, a quick chill so the dough behaves, and a gentle bake that keeps the middle dreamy. Accessible ingredients, clear steps, and just enough chaos to keep it fun.

Cookie dough scoops studded with chocolate chunks on a parchment-lined tray ready to chill

Why It Works

  • Browned butter = big flavor fast. It adds that caramel, toasty note you usually only get from a bakery cookie case.
  • Extra yolk for chew. One additional egg yolk boosts richness and gives you that bendy, chewy center.
  • Chill time prevents cookie puddles. Even 30 to 60 minutes helps the flour hydrate and keeps the cookies thicker.
  • Chocolate chunks plus chips. Chips hold their shape, chunks melt into puddles. You get both textures in one bite.
  • Finish with flaky salt. Optional, but it makes the chocolate taste louder.

Pairs Well With

Storage Tips

Room temperature: Store cooled cookies in an airtight container for 3 to 4 days. Add a slice of sandwich bread to the container if you want them extra soft. The cookies will steal moisture from the bread without tasting bready.

Freeze baked cookies: Freeze in a sealed bag or container up to 2 months. Thaw at room temp, or warm in a 300°F (150°C) oven for 4 to 6 minutes to bring back the crisp edges.

Freeze cookie dough: Scoop into balls, freeze on a tray until firm, then bag. Bake from frozen, adding 2 to 3 minutes to the bake time (ovens vary). This is the “I deserve a fresh cookie on a random Tuesday” plan.

Common Questions

Why did my cookies spread too much?

The usual culprits are warm dough, butter that was too hot when mixed, or a baking sheet that was still warm from the previous batch. Let the browned butter cool until it is just warm, chill the dough, and always start with cool baking sheets.

Do I really have to chill the dough?

You will still get cookies without chilling, but they will be thinner. Chill for at least 30 minutes for thickness and better flavor. Overnight is even better if you are planning ahead.

Can I use all chocolate chips instead of chunks?

Yes. You will lose some of the dramatic melty puddles, but the cookies will still be great. If you have a bar of chocolate, rough-chop it and call it a win.

What flour works best?

All-purpose flour is the move here. Bread flour makes them chewier and a bit taller, so if you want that bakery vibe turned up, swap 1 cup of the flour for bread flour. If the dough looks dry after mixing, add 1 to 2 teaspoons of water or milk to bring it back together.

What kind of salt should I use?

This recipe is written for fine sea salt or table salt, and it is intentionally kept moderate so a flaky-salt finish stays optional, not a salt bomb. If you are using kosher salt (especially Diamond Crystal), use 1 teaspoon. If you are using Morton kosher, use 3/4 teaspoon.

How do I get perfectly round cookies?

Right when they come out of the oven, place a larger round glass or cookie cutter around each cookie and swirl gently to nudge the edges into a circle. It takes 10 seconds and looks ridiculously professional.

I started chasing “bakery-style” cookies because I got tired of making batches that tasted fine but looked like they gave up halfway through. One night I browned the butter on a whim, then chilled the dough because I was frustrated with previous attempts and needed a snack break while it got its life together. I pulled out a tray of thick, glossy, chocolate-heavy cookies with crisp edges and soft centers. I ate one standing over the sink like a gremlin, then immediately texted a friend: this is the one. Now it is my default cookie. The kind you make when you want the house to smell like comfort and you also want people to think you know what you are doing.