Big, thick double chocolate chip cookies made bakery style. This recipe comes together quickly in one bowl and yields a batch of big cookies with crispy edges and thick, soft chewy middles.
Recipe updated March 2026.
My take on a bakery style double chocolate cookie is that; a. It has to be a big cookie, with great texture and flavor. The cookie’s chocolate flavor should be able to stand alone without the additional chocolate and it should have those signature crispy edges, and a thick chewy middle.
But an area I remedy rather than hope to recreate: more chocolate. I get very upset when I purchase a chocolate cookie then only get 3-4 tiny bits of actual chocolate in the entire 4-5 inch diameter cookie (which happens almost every time!). We will absolutely have more than a few bits of chocolate in every bite.
This one starts with these bakery style chocolate chip cookies but we’ve made ‘em double chocolate. One of my favorite double cccs, from a local bakery, is this rye brownie cookie and I’ve also always had a soft spot for the ones that come along with the subs here so I took inspiration from both.
I’ve kept most of the recipe similar to the originals but you can use regular butter in this (no need for the fancy stuff, but if you want to, use it!) and made some accommodations for the cocoa: broke the sugar down to equal parts brown and granulated, traded the bread flour for all purpose and skipped the additional yolk. This is also a melted butter recipe so it can be done with just a whisk and a bow.
Butter: Unsalted, no need to soften it. When you melt the butter don’t do it fully so it doesn’t start sputtering.
Sugar: You’ll need fine granulated and brown, dark or light brown will work.
Leavening: We’re using a combination of soda and powder here which is kind of necessary for large cookies; one to help them spread and one to help the middle rise and bake fully.
Egg: Just one large, no need to bring it to room temp.
Flour: Regular all purpose flour. To make these gluten free; I’d use a 1 to 1 gluten free sub like KAF for best results.
Cocoa: Dutch process cocoa NOT natural cocoa (the cookies will be lighter not as rich tasting plus natural can affect the chemistry of the cookie).
Chocolate: I use a mix of regular and mini chocolate chips like I did in the bakery style chocolate chip cookies but you are also welcome (verily, encouraged!) to chop up a chocolate bar. Use a bar you’d like to eat on its own, this will match the cookie to your taste. More on this below.
Salt & vanilla: as always, use a pure vanilla extract (good quality) and fine sea salt for best flavor.
Start by melting the butter but just partially. I do about 30-45 seconds in the microwave:
Sift the cocoa over it, then heat and whisk well – until smooth:
Add the sugars (it’s ok if the butter is warm or even slightly hot) and the flavorings, salt and vanilla. Then return it to the microwave for another 30 seconds. Whisk until it starts to clump:
Add the egg and whisk very well.
Add the flour and switch to a rubber spatula. Although I provide this recipe in grams (weight) as well as cups, I think this one brings its best foot forward when measured exactly; especially the flour which needs to strike a delicate balance of structure without compromising texture. If using cups, sprinkle in the flour then scrape off the top for an even top.
Start mixing the dry ingredients in and then add the chocolate.
Chill the cookie dough: this is going to help the flour absorb some of the moisture and the dough to develop flavor. It needs to be chilled for at least 4 hours but ideally you leave it overnight.
Bring the cookie dough to room temperature, so it’s easier to scoop.
Preheat the oven and prepare the pans to bake: grease a little then line with parchment paper. NEVER bake directly on the pan as the cookies will not have a barrier between them and the heat of the pan. This will make them overbake on the bottom and spread too quickly and too much.
Leave enough space between each cookie mound for it to spread, about a 2 inch diameter.
Before baking, you can add more chocolate chunks or chips to the cookie scoops for a “full of chocolate” look.
Bake until the edges have set, the middles have puffed and the cookies are matte all over, for about 12 minutes.
Yes! This hydrates the flour and allows the butter to firm up. It also deepens the flavor. Baking the cookies too early can mean that they will spread too much.
Some dutch cocoa brands I use: Valrhona Dutch, Rodelle Dutch Process and Guittard Rogue.
Since this is a double chocolate, bakery style cookie, I opt for a semi-sweet chocolate (somewhere between 55-75% cocoa solids).
Some chocolate brands I like: Theo 72%, Tony’s 70%, and Beyond Good’s 70% pure dark. I will also often use the red pound plus bars from Trader Joe’s (or the smaller packs that are easier to chop!). Also, if you’re interested here’s a source for ethically sourced chocolate.
Some chocolate chip brands I like: Valrhona feves (particularly the Caraibe 66%), Trader Toe’s 72% chips (the gold bag) and for mini’s I usually opt for whole foods brand.
Use a chocolate bar or chip that you – and this is important – like to eat. Don’t use a baking bar, or a chocolate that’s too dark or too sweet for your taste. Taste a bit beforehand and see if you’d like it in the cookie; bearing in mind the cookie is sweet but has a deep cocoa taste.

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These came out really well. The directions are off because they don’t include the vanilla (added with egg) or the baking powder, soda or salt (added to flour and the added that mixture at the flour stage). Also I’m confused because other reviews ask about malted milk powder that isn’t in the ingredients at all – so maybe the recipe has been updated and milk powder removed? Either way, I don’t miss it. Everything came out well, really chocolatey. I studded the warm cookies with a few white chocolate chips each and sprinkled with sea salt.
Sorry I updated this recently and looks like I missed a few things. On the malted milk powder, I talked about this ingredient in my newsletter; it seems it was rather hard for many people to find so I decided to skip it.
Absolutely amazing, also made these by weight! Threw some white chocolate chips and different kinds of Guittard discs. Yum!!!
Fantastic, made it by weight and they came out amazing. Finished them with a little sea salt as recommended and they were fantastic. I even made them a little smaller (3tbsp instead of 4) and the baking time still worked, not crunchy or dry.
nutritional value please
Was i impressed not really I found these cookies to be good but they are lacking something perhaps adding expresso to it would enhance the flavour profile as well they came out very crispy and crunchy even though I made sure my oven was set to the exact temp with a thermometer I would recommend cooking them for 10 mins and than let them rest on pan for another 10 mins. The recipe itself was very easy to follow but the batter was very dry and hard to work with I felt like there was far to much dry ingredients.
What could be substituted for malted milk powder? I would not use it otherwise and would hate to buy for such a small amount. Could it be left out? Thanks
Non-fat dry milk powder works too (you could even toast it before you add it!). Or leave it out and add a bit more vanilla 😉
Great flavor and creates a decadent cookie! When I first made this, the cookie came out really dry, but the second time around it came out perfect! Second time around I made sure the melted butter amount was 150g per the recipe rather than measuring the unmelted butter. As well, I made sure the scoops of dough were the exact size she mentioned to ensure accurate baking, plus making sure I correctly measured all the ingredients.
Lex, I’m so glad they worked out the second time!
I do not go by grams I go by cups and spoons sorry
I’ve updated the recipe to include cups but I do think results are less reliable when not using a scale.
Cookie recipe looked great and I was anxious try it, until I went to print it and realized I would be converting much of the recipe’s ingredients . 🤔
Chris, see the ‘steps to get right’ paragraph above, point 2
It doesn’t get much better than this! Simple assembly and a fantastic, flavorful result. A few notes—the ingredient list doesn’t include the vanilla. How much? Also, when is the malted milk powder added? Step 2 mentions “powder” but I assumed that meant the baking powder. I ended up adding the malted milk powder with the cocoa and flour. Thank you for this recipe!
Katherine, thank you – fixed both of those and yes you were right on! Appreciate your review and notes <3
Thank you for another no-mixer recipe. As someone who has had to recently party with hers, I greatly appreciate thoughtful bowl-only recipes.
I’m glad to hear it! I wouldn’t if I thought the recipe was better beaten but in these cases it’s working beautifully, mixer isn’t missed at all 😀