Giant Crinkled Chocolate Chip Cookies

Updated March 11, 2025

Giant Crinkled Chocolate Chip Cookies
Christopher Testani for The New York Times. Food Stylist: Samantha Seneviratne.
Total Time
30 minutes, plus chilling
Rating
5(6,928)
Comments
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You might think there's nothing new to learn about chocolate chip cookies, but this recipe by the baker and blogger Sarah Kieffer will prove you wonderfully wrong. The easy trick of banging the pan a few times during baking, causing the cookies to "fall," produces rippled edges that shatter in your mouth and a center that is soft and full of chocolate. Make sure to follow her instructions about freezing the dough and the size of the balls. —Julia Moskin

Featured in: An Internet-Famous Cookie Worthy of Baking in Real Life

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Ingredients

Yield:10 cookies
  • 2cups/256 grams all-purpose flour
  • ½teaspoon baking soda
  • ¾teaspoon salt
  • ½pound/227 grams unsalted butter (2 sticks), room temperature
  • cups/302 grams granulated sugar
  • ¼cup/55 grams packed light or dark brown sugar
  • 1egg
  • teaspoons pure vanilla extract
  • 6ounces/170 grams bittersweet chocolate (about 60 percent cacao solids), chopped into coarse pieces, bits and shards
Ingredient Substitution Guide
Nutritional analysis per serving (10 servings)

483 calories; 24 grams fat; 15 grams saturated fat; 0 grams trans fat; 7 grams monounsaturated fat; 1 gram polyunsaturated fat; 66 grams carbohydrates; 2 grams dietary fiber; 45 grams sugars; 4 grams protein; 247 milligrams sodium

Note: The information shown is Edamam’s estimate based on available ingredients and preparation. It should not be considered a substitute for a professional nutritionist’s advice.

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Preparation

  1. Step 1

    Adjust an oven rack to the middle position. Line 2 baking sheets with aluminum foil, parchment paper or nonstick baking mats.

  2. Step 2

    In a small bowl, whisk the flour, baking soda and salt.

  3. Step 3

    In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with a paddle, beat the butter on medium until creamy. Add the granulated and brown sugars and beat on medium until light and fluffy, 2 to 3 minutes. Add the egg, vanilla and 2 tablespoons water, and mix on low to combine. Add the flour mixture, and mix on low until combined. Add the chocolate and mix on low into the batter. (At this point, the dough can be refrigerated for several hours or overnight.)

  4. Step 4

    Heat the oven to 350 degrees. Form the dough into 3½-ounce (100-gram) balls (a heaping ⅓ cup each). Place 4 balls an equal distance apart on a prepared pan, and transfer to the freezer for 15 minutes before baking. After you put the first baking sheet in the oven, put the second one in the freezer.

  5. Step 5

    Place the chilled baking sheet in the oven and bake 10 minutes, until the cookies are puffed slightly in the center. Lift the baking sheet and let it drop down against the oven rack, so the edges of the cookies set and the inside falls back down. (This will feel wrong, but trust me.) Bang it down, if necessary, to make the center fall.

  6. Step 6

    After the cookies puff up again, 2 to 3 minutes later, repeat lifting and dropping the pan, every 3 minutes, to create ridges around the edge of the cookie. Bake 16 to 18 minutes total, until the cookies have spread out, and the edges are golden brown, but the centers are much lighter and not fully cooked.

  7. Step 7

    Transfer the baking sheet to a wire rack; let cool before removing the cookies from the pan.

  8. Step 8

    Repeat with remaining cookies, using the first sheet pan for the third batch of cookies.

Ratings

5 out of 5
6,928 user ratings
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Comments

Personally, I loved these cookies. I thought they were the right mix of chewy and ever so crispy around the edges. My boyfriend, let’s see if I keep him, decided they didn’t taste enough like soft-baked Chips Ahoy. Because no one wants a crispy cookie. That’s the review I got after spending 1.5 hours baking these. Happy social distancing, I’ll be starting mine from him tomorrow!

Seriously? The biggest complaint here is the cookies are too big? Too much cookie? That's a bad thing??? I guess you can make your cookies smaller (but lose the crispy/gooey texture from what I've read here) and do what you normally do and have three or four of those instead of one of these. Nothing to complain about then. As for me, if I win $100 in a bet I'm not going to complain that the denomination is too large if they give me a $100 bill instead of two fifties.

I made regular sized cookies following the recipe as written. I made changes to cooking time to account for the smaller size and they turned out great. I baked for a total of 11 min on convection, banging the cookie sheet after 5 min and then again 3 min later - 3 additional min and they’re done.

Superb. These look like the best high-end bakery cookies you can ever find - and they solve the crispy/chewy debate for evermore. 6 stars! (I will add pecans next time).

These cookies were extremely greasy.

yum yum yummy. But, they were really greasy. I'll cut back on butter next time. And I'm pretty sure they'd be just as tasty a little bit smaller.

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Credits

Adapted From "The Vanilla Bean Baking Book" by Sarah Kieffer (Avery, 2016)

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