The Art of the Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookie

When I told a friend I was writing a post about making chocolate chip cookies, she commented, “Why bother?  My mom always just used the recipe on the side of the bag.”  And, certainly, if you do a search on “chocolate chip cookie recipes” you’ll find more recipes that you could make in a lifetime, all claiming to be the very best!

nestle choc chipsIf you click on this picture, you’ll be taken to the “Original Tollhouse Chocolate Chip Cookie” recipe by Nestle.  Okay, everyone raise your hand if your mom’s recipe box included the recipe cut off the back of the bag, but your mom used the cheaper, generic chocolate chips.  These days we can just google for a recipe – but it never seems quite the same.  That’s okay – my purpose in writing this today is to give you a few insights on making your cookies a little chewier and tastier, just like Mom’s.

chocolate chip cookies

Let’s assemble all our ingredients!  Or, if you have a really small kitchen like mine, just clear the counter around your mixer so you have room to work.

A cook is only as good as her ingredients.

Make sure all your ingredients are fresh.  I tend to bake in phases – I might go months without baking anything.  But when the holidays roll around, you know you’ll find me shifting through my cookbooks to find the perfect cookies for that season.  At that point, I’ll be checking the expiration dates on baking soda and baking powder (which has a relatively short shelf life), and always buying fresh flour.  A lot of these ingredients are not very expensive – when in doubt, throw it out.

butter and eggs

I have no particular preference for salted vs unsalted butter.  This recipe is not so sensitive that the salt in a stick of butter will cause it to fall apart.  What is important is that you melt the butter before creaming it with the sugars.  Some folks will tell you to avoid melting in the microwave, but I haven’t had problems.  Whether it’s melted on stovetop or in the microwave, use liquid butter in this recipe.

Eggs vs egg yolks…

What makes this recipe a little chewier and moister is

  1. There is more brown sugar than white, and
  2. We threw in an extra egg yolk.  Egg whites will add a certain stiffness.  Yolks add chewiness.

Now you know.

PICT0039

This is not a Nestle commercial!  These are just the chocolate chips I happen to have in my cupboard at the moment – they were on sale.  You can use any chocolate chips in your cookies – dark, white, M&M’s, caramel, butterscotch.  Go for it!  Use a mix of different flavors.  And use plenty of chips!  If your bag is slightly more than what you need according to the recipe – use the whole bag!

Don’t be a skimpy chipper! 

Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough (1)

Mixing the rest of the dough is fairly straightforward.  Once it’s all together, it’ll be thick and sticky.  Drop a third or a half of the dough onto a section of wax paper and shape it into a log.  Okay, I know, the picture has parchment paper!  That works, too.  I think waxed paper releases the chilled dough a little easier.  Use whichever you have on hand.  The key is to have this log of dough wrapped well and put in the fridge for 2-3 hours.  Overnight, if you want.

Chocolate Chip Cookies Apr2016 (2)

Next up you’ll cut your chilled log into sections.

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Shape them into balls and space them out on the cookie sheet/pan.  I like to use a silicone baking sheet on my pans – makes cleanup a little easier.  Or you can use parchment paper (not wax paper!).  Or just bake on an ungreased sheet/pan.

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Yes, my friends – these are chewy, puffy chocolate chip cookies baked at altitude, in the Mile High City!  It can be done!

“…Every time she puts another batch in the oven

There’s 15 minutes for some kissin’ and a-huggin’…”

— George Straight

Happy baking!

Mile High Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
Print Recipe
These cookies are so chewy and delicious - and easy to make - they will become the staple in your cookie exchange! Best yet, this recipe is already adjusted for high altitude baking. So break out the shoe box, line it with wax paper, and get ready to fill it to the brim!
Servings Prep Time
2-3 dozen 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
12 minutes 3 hours
Servings Prep Time
2-3 dozen 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
12 minutes 3 hours
Mile High Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
Print Recipe
These cookies are so chewy and delicious - and easy to make - they will become the staple in your cookie exchange! Best yet, this recipe is already adjusted for high altitude baking. So break out the shoe box, line it with wax paper, and get ready to fill it to the brim!
Servings Prep Time
2-3 dozen 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
12 minutes 3 hours
Servings Prep Time
2-3 dozen 15 minutes
Cook Time Passive Time
12 minutes 3 hours
Ingredients
Servings: dozen
Instructions
Mix the dough
  1. Cream the butter and sugars together.
  2. Sift together dry ingredients in a bowl - set to one side.
  3. Add wet ingredients to the sugar/butter.
  4. Add dry ingredients one cup at a time.
  5. Add chocolate chips.
  6. Roll in wax paper and chill in the fridge.
Bake Cookies
  1. Pre-heat oven to 375°.
  2. Roll dough into balls on an ungreased cookie sheet.
  3. Bake 10-12 minutes. Don't over bake!
Recipe Notes

Credit where credit is due:  this recipe is a variation on Alton Brown's "The Chewy".

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Big Bold BBQ

Jar of BBQ

Ah, yes – your jar of BBQ sauce is only half full and it’s time to make some more.  Summer’s comin’ and you can’t let yourself run out of BBQ sauce!

I love a good bar-be-que with a bold sauce slathered all over chicken or ribs and cooked just right! And you know what “just right” is – it’s bubbly and slightly blackened on the outside with the meat cooked to the perfect doneness…  It brings to mind summer days with backyard grill sessions – the men standing around the fire, making their manly grunts while the ladies chatter around the kitchen counter making all the fixin’s and listening to the kids squealing as they play and run through the lawn sprinkler.  Ah, good times!

I recently bought some BBQ sauce at the grocery store and decided I like my own better, so here’s my go-to recipe.  I’ll mix it up, throw the pot on the stove and just walk away for a few hours.

And since I’ve made this myself, I know just what’s in it.  Okay, the ketchup is store bought, but I have my favorite brand I use that I trust.  If you make your own ketchup, awesome!

Talk about great “gifts from the kitchen”!  I filled pint jars for Christmas gifts one year.  I didn’t “can” them, just filled the jars and told my friends to keep it refrigerated.  My creative wrapping was simply colored cellophane tied with some jute twine.

So here are a few suggestions to make this BBQ sauce your own:

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Vinegar

Who says you have to use cider vinegar?  I once made a bbq sauce that was bold enough to call the cattle home from Texas!  I used balsamic vinegar, of all things, and adjusted a few of the other ingredients to match the bold flavor.  Bold doesn’t necessarily mean “hot”.  Go – experiment!

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Add a little heat…

Just because it isn’t listed in the ingredients doesn’t mean you can’t add it.  To make your BBQ hotter, increase the Tabasco.  Or use “hot” chili powder.  Or add some cayenne pepper or cumin.  You can make a BBQ sauce that’ll singe the hair off your toes, if you want.

Or make it milder…

Maybe your friends and family like to keep their toe hair.  Maybe they prefer to savor the flavor… use a lighter vinegar (white wine vinegar or rice vinegar), eliminate the Tabasco entirely, use a mild chili powder.  Or any combination thereof.  It’s YOUR sauce.

Sweetners

Every marinade contains four components: Sweet, Salt, Seasoning and Vinegar.  BBQ Sauce is a specific type of marinade, but a marinade nonetheless.  We’ve already talked about vinegar, and touched on seasonings, salt is in the garlic salt and worcestershire… now for the sweet!  The sweet component balances out the rest for a fully rounded flavor profile.

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I call for brown sugar because it dissolves well and has a particular flavor.  But I recognize that many of you are limiting your processed sugar.  So use your favorite go-to sugar alternative.  Honey is fabulous in BBQ sauce!!  I have not experimented with other sweetners, but keep in mind that you are going to simmer this thing for several hours.  Be careful that the sweetner you choose can take the heat.

Go Forth and BBQ

I hope you see what I’m trying to do here.  I attended culinary school and the entire time our chef instructors were telling us to put away our books and recipes and just GO MAKE IT!  I love this sauce because it doesn’t need tending.  You can mix it up and let it simmer all day, if you want.  And after you’ve made it a few times, and tweaked it to your own personal satisfaction, then it becomes YOUR sauce, YOUR flavor, YOUR signature!  No one else will have a BBQ sauce quite like yours.

Big Bold BBQ
Print Recipe
You can make this BBQ sauce as bold and spicy or as mild as you want - just make it all yours!
Servings Prep Time
2 quarts 10 minutes
Cook Time
3-4 hours
Servings Prep Time
2 quarts 10 minutes
Cook Time
3-4 hours
Big Bold BBQ
Print Recipe
You can make this BBQ sauce as bold and spicy or as mild as you want - just make it all yours!
Servings Prep Time
2 quarts 10 minutes
Cook Time
3-4 hours
Servings Prep Time
2 quarts 10 minutes
Cook Time
3-4 hours
Ingredients
Servings: quarts
Instructions
  1. Mix all ingredients in a large pot and simmer on low for 3-4 hours, until the sauce reaches your desired consistency. (I happen to like a very thick bbq sauce.) Stir occasionally.
Recipe Notes

I use mustard so rarely that I will "make my own" for this recipe.  1 cup of yellow mustard can be made by mixing 3 Tbsp of powdered mustard with 1 cup of cider vinegar.

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