I recently got a sunny yellow background for photos and I’ve been playing around with it – something about yellow makes me absurdly happy. Which is funny because Mike has a yellow car, but I’ve been after him to paint it white. People are always waving us down while we’re in it; they think we’re a taxi even though our car looks nothing like a taxi. But that’s not the real reason I want him to paint it. It’s because bugs are absurdly attracted to what appears to them to be a giant yellow flower. I have fear of insects. I always say I’ll get over it and be a real grown up, but so far, no dice.
Yellow cars and bugs aside, here are some chocolate chip cookies. I, like everyone else on this planet, am obsessed with them. They’re one of the first things I ever made (and failed at) so I know how daunting it can be to make the perfect chocolate chip cookie. First off though, we have to agree on what the perfect chocolate chip cookie is. Is it thick and chewy? Thin and crispy? Does it have a warm brown sugar flavor or more of a vanilla scented white sugar? Butter or shortening? Chocolate chips, chocolate chunks, or straight up chopped up chocolate? There are so many, many chocolate cookie recipes out there that it’s hard to figure out which one you should go for.
At the heart of it, chocolate chip cookies are just: butter, sugar(s), eggs, vanilla, flour, baking soda, salt, and chocolate. It’s funny how those simple ingredients can come together in so many different ways. These cookies, found in the lovely Tara O’Brady’s book, Seven Spoons, are lush and thick with plenty of chew. They come together very easily and bonus: you don’t need to wait for your butter to come to room temperature – instead it’s melted before mixing with the sugar.
After the melted butter and sugars are mixed together, eggs are mixed in, one at a time. Vanilla is added and then you mix in the flour (which you would have previously whisked with the baking soda, powder, and salt). This is the point in which I think a lot of potential cookie mistakes happen. Instructions generally say to mix until just combined. Which is great if you’ve made a ton of batches of cookies in your life. But if you haven’t, it’s kind of hard to surmise what “just combined” means. Personally, I like to mix until most of the flour clumps are gone, but the dough is still dusty looking, a la the picture on the left. At that point, I add in the chocolate and mix some more until everything has just lost the dusty sheen. Over-mixing makes cookies tough and no one likes a tough cookie. I wish you only soft and chewy cookies…unless you like the crispy ones. In that case, I wish you crispy cookies…really, I just want cookie happiness for everyone!
Basic, Great Chocolate Chip Cookies via Seven Spoons by Tara O’Brady
makes about 28 cookies
- 1 cup unsalted butter, chopped
- 3 1/4 cups all purpose flour
- 1 1/4 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 1/2 teaspoons medium-grain kosher salt
- 1 1/2 cups packed light brown sugar
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
- 12 ounces semisweet or bittersweet chocolate, chopped
- flaky sea salt to finish
Preheat the oven to 360°F. Line 2 rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper.
Melt the butter in a heavy bottomed saucepan over the lowest heat possible, stirring occasionally.
In a bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. Set aside. Pour the melted butter into a large bowl and whisk in the sugars. Add the eggs, one at a time, whisking until just combined. Stir in the vanilla. Use a wooden spoon or silicone spatula to stir in the dry ingredients until barely blended. Stir in the chocolate.
Refrigerate for 5 minutes then roll into 3 tablespoon balls and arrange on the prepared pans, leaving 3 inches between each cookie. Sprinkle with sea salt and bake until the tops are cracked and lightly golden, 10-12 minutes, rotating the pan halfway through. Cool on the pan for 2 minutes, the move to a wire rack to cool completely.
What kind of choc. chips are those? They look sort of like couverture chips.
hi randy, you’re right, they are!
LOL people waving down MIke’s car … yay for going yellow!! You know how stuck I am in white. I’m inspired to try changing it up and stop being so lazy, haha… these cookies look amazing. I love how you experiment with style/backgrounds n stuff. xo
Hello,
Even though chocolate chip cookies are the most basic cookie recipes of all time, I somehow can never get it to be the PERFECT version for myself. I tried adjusting other people’s recipes but it never felt like it was my true chocolate chip cookie. After reading this post I thought I should give this one a try as well, mostly because of the cute yellow photo backgrounds :) I have to be honest, this recipe is the one I liked best so far. The texture is just right, I love it when the cookie is not too soft but still soft. My normal preference for cookies is hard and crispy, but chocolate chip cookies are an exception. I like them when they are soft and combine with the melted chocolate inside it. I usually use smaller pieces of chocolate chips, and for this one I used the same, but I added more to match the amount of chocolate. And for an extra amount of sweet fantasy, I dipped half of the cookie in melted chocolate and it turned out to be the food of my dreams. Thank you for sharing this recipe, it definitely made me want to read all of your blogs!
Just wondering if the oven temperature is 350 or 360? Above it says 360?
hi elle,
it’s 360!