Perfect Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies

These are the best, most delicious chewy chocolate chip cookies we’ve made. You’ll use melted butter to make this easy recipe, which means no stand mixer, beating butter, or chilling is required. These cookies are super easy and taste amazing!

Watch the Video

Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe Video

I’ve made these easy chocolate chip cookies so many times that I have memorized the recipe. They are chewy in the middle with perfect golden brown edges.

I make these cookies with melted butter, which makes them chewier and easier than other recipes for chocolate chip cookies. For our recipe using room temperature butter and a stand mixer, see these classic chocolate chip cookies.

Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies from Scratch

Key Ingredients

  • Flour: I use all-purpose flour for these easy cookies. Some bakers love using bread flour to make their chocolate chip cookies chewier. If you want to experiment with it, the dough will be drier, so consider adding a tablespoon or two of milk.
  • Baking soda: It helps our cookies rise and turn a lovely golden brown.
  • Butter: It’s the reason these cookies taste so incredible. I love using brown butter to make chocolate chip cookies because it adds a toasty flavor (watch our video to see me make it). Plain melted butter is fine and still makes excellent cookies. I also use melted butter to make these easy oatmeal cookies.
  • Sugar: I use brown sugar and granulated sugar for these cookies. You can thank the brown sugar for the cookie’s flavor and chewy center, while the granulated sugar helps with crisp edges.
  • Egg: This recipe calls for 1 egg and 1 egg yolk. The egg yolk bumps up the richness and flavor of the cookie dough.
  • Vanilla, salt, and espresso powder: These combine to make the tastiest cookies I’ve made in a long time. I love the espresso powder, which won’t make your cookies taste like coffee (I promise). It just makes them taste more rich and flavorful. Instant coffee is a great substitute for espresso powder.
  • Chocolate chips: You can’t have chocolate chip cookies without chocolate. Use your favorite chocolate chips, or buy a big chocolate bar and cut it into chunks. You can also use a variety of chips (try mini and regular chips, for example).

How to Make Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

As their name suggests, these chocolate chip cookies are so simple to make! You’ll start with your butter. I love to brown my butter for brown butter chocolate chip cookies, but you can also use plain melted butter in this recipe.

If you want to brown your butter, swirl it in a saucepan over medium-low heat. It will melt, turn foamy, and finally start turning brown. When your butter looks light brown and smells nutty, it’s ready. Set it aside on the counter to cool for a minute or two while you gather the rest of your ingredients. I use the same method for these delicious chocolate chip blondies.

Whisk your dry ingredients together until they are well blended. Then, in another bowl, whisk your sugars, egg, egg yolk, and vanilla extract until they are well combined.

How to Make Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies - Mixing the batter

Make your batter by combining the two mixtures. I add the wet ingredients into the bowl with the dry ingredients and then stir until all of the ingredients are fully incorporated. Then mix in your melted butter.

The cookie batter will be on the thicker side. Add your chocolate chips, and you are ready to bake!

How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough - Adding the chocolate chips

I bake these chocolate chip cookies right away (although you can absolutely refrigerate or freeze this cookie batter – tips below).

I roll 1 ½ tablespoons of cookie dough into balls and then place them onto my baking sheet. Then, I press a few extra bits of chocolate into the top for picture-worthy cookies before baking in a 325°F oven for 12 to 16 minutes.

Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies

Storing Chocolate Chip Cookies

Baked chocolate chip cookies can be stored in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days or in the freezer for up to 3 months.

You can also store the chocolate chip cookie dough. Form the dough into balls and refrigerate for up to 3 days. Or add the cookie dough balls to a parchment paper lined baking sheet and freeze until hard. Transfer to a freezer-safe container and freeze for up to 3 months. Bake from the fridge or freezer. Frozen cookie dough will take a little longer to bake.

More Easy Cookie Recipes

Easy Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies

Perfect Easy Chocolate Chip Cookies

  • PREP
  • COOK
  • TOTAL

This easy chocolate chip cookie recipe is a family favorite, probably our most baked cookie on Inspired Taste. I love the rich flavor browned butter brings, but feel free to save time and use plain melted butter instead.

Makes about 18 cookies

Watch Us Make the Recipe

You Will Need

1 ¾ cups (220g) all-purpose flour

1/2 teaspoon baking soda

1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt

10 tablespoons (140g) unsalted butter

3/4 cup (150g) packed brown sugar

1/2 cup (100g) granulated sugar

1 large egg

1 large egg yolk

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/2 tsp espresso powder, optional, see tips

1 ¾ cups (226g) semisweet chocolate chips

Flaky sea salt, optional for sprinkling over baked cookies

Directions

    1Preheat the oven to 325°F (165°C). Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or a silicone baking mat.

    2Melt the butter or make brown butter (brown butter adds a toasted flavor). To brown butter, add the butter to a heavy-bottomed pan over medium-low heat. As the butter melts, continuously swirl it around the pan. It will melt, get a little foamy, and finally turn golden brown. Remove it from the heat when the butter is light brown and smells nutty. Set aside while you prepare the remaining ingredients.

    3Whisk the flour, baking soda, and salt together in a medium bowl. Set aside.

    4In a large bowl, whisk the brown sugar, granulated sugar, whole egg, egg yolk, vanilla, and melted butter or browned butter together. Whisk in espresso powder (optional).

    5Switch to a large rubber spatula, and then add the dry ingredients in 3 parts, stirring gently until they disappear. Fold in most of the chocolate chips, saving a handful for adding to the tops of each scooped cookie before baking.

    6Roll 1 ½ tablespoons of cookie dough into balls, or use a medium cookie scoop. Add to the baking sheets, leaving 2 inches between the cookies to allow for spreading.

    7Press a few extra pieces of chocolate into the tops of each cookie dough mound.

    8Bake the cookies, rotating the baking sheet once during baking, until golden brown around the edges but light in the middle, 12 to 16 minutes. For smaller ovens (like mine in the video), bake one baking sheet at a time.

    9Let the cookies cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely.

    10If you’d like, sprinkle a few flakes of sea salt on each cookie before serving.

Adam and Joanne's Tips

  • Espresso powder: Adds a little extra richness and flavor to the cookies. We don’t add enough to make them taste like coffee, but just enough to make them taste extra special. We use Medaglia D’Oro Espresso, which we purchased from a specialty kitchen store (I’ve also seen it online). Instant coffee granules can be used in a pinch, but use slightly less.
  • Chill cookie dough: These cookies are excellent when baked immediately, but chilling cookie dough does wonderful things. As the cookie dough sits in the fridge, it absorbs moisture and flavor from the wet ingredients (making them bake to be chewier and taste even better). You can chill this dough (covered tightly) for up to 3 days. Rolling the dough when cold is difficult, so I prefer to make my cookie dough balls and then store them in the fridge.
  • The nutrition facts provided below are estimates.
Nutrition Per Serving Serving Size 1 cookie / Calories 217 / Total Fat 10.6g / Saturated Fat 6.4g / Cholesterol 37.5mg / Sodium 106.9mg / Dietary Fiber 1.2g / Total Sugars 18.7g / Protein 2.7g
AUTHOR:  Adam and Joanne Gallagher
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28 comments… Leave a Review
  • sherill April 29, 2024, 9:50 am

    I made these cookies using olive oil. I didn’t have enough butter. They came out fantastic! Better than Tim Hortons cookies. I was deleriously happy with them, and guarded them with my life, or my grandchildren would have eaten them all, before they cooled! Sooooooo GOOD! I can only imagine how much more yummy they would have been with butter! Thank you for this easy and quick, recipe. Love you!

    Reply
    • Joanne April 29, 2024, 1:00 pm

      How wonderful to know that olive oil works well, thank you for sharing this. I am sure other readers will find this helpful! So happy you enjoyed the recipe, Sherill.

      Reply
  • Susan March 29, 2024, 10:33 pm

    I made these, and they are soooo good; crisp edge, soft center, full of chocolate! Def will be making these again. I added 1/2 teaspoon instant decaf coffee crystals… really does add awesome flavor. I melted margarine cuz it’s all I had. The ‘dough’ was not thick, I was not able to roll it in a ball. I may not have cooled it enough, and the cookies spread out. I will do again, with less in each cookie, cuz they sure are good..!!!

    Reply
    • Joanne May 13, 2024, 4:36 pm

      So happy you enjoyed the recipe, Susan!

      Reply
  • Debra March 28, 2024, 11:06 pm

    I’ve made many of your recipes and this is the first one that didn’t come out well! The brown butter was perfect but for some reason, the cookie batter came out crumbly which was odd. Not sure what I may have done wrong. Please advise.

    Reply
    • Joanne May 13, 2024, 4:38 pm

      Hi Debra, I’m sorry the cookies didn’t work as well as hoped. This cookie batter is drier (you can see the video for proof), but you should still be able to easily roll into balls for baking. Is it possible you had a bit too much flour. Here’s my favorite method (other than weighing): Fluff the flour in its container, then gently scoop it into your measuring cup until slightly mounded. Level off the top with a knife for accurate measuring. For even more accuracy, use a scale and measure the flour by weight (in grams). Hope that helps!

      Reply

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