No Chill Chocolate Chip Cookies
This is my go-to Chocolate Chip Cookie, with a soft and gooey middle, crisp edges, and a generous helping of chocolate chips. No chilling or wait time required.
Having tried a zillion chocolate chip cookie recipes over the past 10 years, this one has solidified its place as the most satisfying for what I want in a cookie.
I know this is quite subjective.
Frankly, there are many different styles, sizes, and textures for chocolate chip cookies and I enjoy many of them.
But there are a few qualities that are most important to me, which I’ll share below.
For me, these conveniently fast no chill chocolate chip cookies also happen to be the very best chocolate chip cookies!
Demand #1: I don’t want to wait for chilled dough – I want cookies NOW
I’ve played around with “aging” chocolate chip cookie dough after reading articles about how much better it makes the cookies.
Is it better?
Maybe a little, but truthfully, I care most about how fast a recipe is. I hate waiting for doughs to chill. I am impatient. Me want cookie NOW.
So this recipe is quick. There’s zero chill time whatsoever, and you don’t even have to set out butter ahead of time to soften, as this recipe uses melted butter.
And the flavor is still plenty delicious without “aging.”
Demand #2: I want multiple textures in one cookie, not just soft, or just crispy
Sure, every once in a while I’ll crave those crispy Tate’s-style cookies that are completely crunchy the whole way through, but my ideal cookie has crispness, softness, and gooeyness.
I want it all.
These cookies have a crunchy edge, with a soft, melty, gooey interior.
You can also bake a little less or a little more to get it even closer to your preference, if you like it one way over the other.
Demand #3. No weird ingredients or equipment, please
I’ve seen various “secret ingredients” and little tricks claiming to make chocolate chip cookies different, but none that I’ve tried have proved to be worthwhile.
This cookie has only the classic ingredients: unsalted butter, sugar, all purpose flour, egg, vanilla extract, baking soda, salt, and chocolate chips.
No cornstarch, no cream cheese, no boiling water, no cinnamon (?!), no cream of tartar, no lemon (why?!?!), and so on.
For equipment, you really just need the simple things, like bowls, a whisk, and a spatula.
I whip the cookies up with a hand mixer, but you can totally do this by hand too. No stand mixer required. although if you want to use one, use the paddle attachment for mixing.
This is a recipe I’ve been playing with since 2010, and it has been tweaked bit by bit from where it started, which was probably something close to the 1930s Tollhouse recipe. Here are the noteworthy features:
- Melted butter instead of softened makes these slightly chewy chocolate chip cookies, with crisp edges. It’s my favorite texture.
- A 2:1 ratio of brown sugar to granulated sugar also gives it a chewier, softer texture. Don’t worry, these aren’t crazy chewy like Molasses Cookies, it’s subtle. Feel free to use either light brown sugar or dark brown sugar.
- Scooped mounds of cookie dough gives the cookies ridges, an awesome texture, and somehow, a more even bake. Don’t roll the cookies.
- After testing these cookies on multiple cooking surfaces, I find that they brown best and spread the least on a Silpat. You may use parchment paper or bake directly on the pan though, if you’d like, but there will be slight variations with each surface.
Step by Step Overview:
Combine melted butter, brown sugar, and granulated white sugar in a large bowl:
Mix that together just enough so that the three ingredients are smooth and combined, then add a room temperature egg and vanilla extract:
I quickly warm the egg by putting it in warm water for a few minutes. Otherwise, a cold egg straight from the fridge will solidify the melted butter and make it uneven.
Mix together until smooth, then add the dry ingredients (flour, baking soda, and salt):
When the flour mixture has *almost* disappeared into the dough, add some semisweet chocolate chips:
Mix a little more, until the streaks of flour have been absorbed:
And that’s it for the dough! Required chilling time is…zero minutes. Let’s scoop!
Use a medium cookie scoop (#40/1.5 tbsp) (affiliate) to scoop mounds of cookie dough onto a Silpat lined baking sheet:
Don’t have a silicone mat?
You can use parchment paper instead for your prepared baking sheet.
If you don’t have that either, you can put the dough directly on the baking sheet, but your baked cookies may be a lot more brown on the bottom. Start checking for doneness a few minutes early.
By the way, I tested rolling the scoops into smooth cookie dough balls in the palms of my hands, and it is MUCH better scooped.
The little ridges and unevenness here somehow gives it a more even, desirable bake in the oven.
Finally, this is optional, but for best results, I prefer to sprinkle the top of each cookie with fleur de sel.
This gives you really stellar cookies. The salt is so lovely as a contrast to the sweetness.
Bake the cookies for about 11-12 minutes at an oven temperature of 350 degrees F.
You can see that the edges are golden brown, but they look pretty colorless on top:
Even though it may look too soon to pull from the oven, that is the perfect time to pull them.
The cookies will cook a little bit more outside the oven, and after a few minutes of resting on the cookie sheet, the domed shape will fall a little bit (no need to move the cookies to a cooling rack).
You can see here, if you look closely and compare it to the photo above, that they’ve flattened a little bit:
I think they are best when enjoyed warm, so dig in!
Note: I have also tested these as larger cookies, scooped using a large #60 3T scoop (affiliate). They need a few more minutes of bake time, but they are also delicious (but I like the #40 size better). The large cookie scoop cookies tend to brown more on the edges, if that’s your thing:
Peanut Butter Cookies, Monster Cookies, and Snickerdoodles are some of my other favorite cookies to bake, fresh out of the oven. Enjoy!
Tips and FAQ
You can keep these at room temperature, in an airtight container, for several days, and they’ll still be soft and delicious. They are best fresh out of the oven, but leftovers are easily devoured too.
Like other chocolate chip cookie recipes, dough scoops can be frozen and baked later, with a few more minutes of bake time added at the end. I find that they don’t spread as evenly as freshly baked though.
If you don’t have an oven thermometer, please get one. I’ve used a lot of different ovens over the years, and it’s incredible how inaccurate they can be. Often times overbaked cookies are just the result of an oven that is too hot. Also, do not add convection, which changes baking time pretty dramatically.
Did you enjoy the recipe? Please leave a 5-star rating in the recipe card below and/or a review in the comments section further down the page. Or, follow me on Facebook, Instagram or Pinterest!
No Chill Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup unsalted butter
- 1/2 cup brown sugar (light or dark)
- 1/4 cup granulated sugar
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1 large egg at room temperature*
- 7.5 ounces all purpose flour, by weight (1.5 cups, if measuring)
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
- 1 cup semi-sweet chocolate chips
- fleur de sel for sprinkling on top, optional
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Line a baking sheet with a silicone mat.**
- In a large heatproof bowl, melt the butter in the microwave until it’s just barely melted, watching closely that it doesn’t come to a boil or get too hot. If the butter becomes overheated, make sure you let it cool down before proceeding.
- Add the brown sugar and granulated sugar to the bowl, and mix to combine, either with a hand mixer or by hand with a whisk. Only mix it just enough so that it’s relatively smooth.
- Add the vanilla extract and egg, and mix again until just combined.
- In a separate bowl, whisk to combine the flour, baking soda, and salt, then add this to the wet ingredients. Stir until the flour has almost disappeared, then add the chocolate chips, and continue stirring until the dry ingredients have been absorbed.
- Use a medium scoop (#40/1.5T) to portion the cookie dough onto the prepared baking sheet. You should get around 18 cookies, so you can either bake two batches one after another (my preference) or add another baking tray.
- Sprinkle the tops of the cookies with fleur de sel, if using, then bake for 11-12 minutes, until the cookies look slightly golden on the edges, and soft in the middle, but with no visible glistening rawness in the center.
- Remove the cookies from the oven, and allow them to cool for a few minutes, during which time they’ll flatten a bit and cook a little more. Then enjoy while warm!
Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition is estimated using a food database and is only intended to be used as a guideline for informational purposes.
Post updated in March 2019. Originally published December 2010.
90 Comments on “No Chill Chocolate Chip Cookies”
My cookies came out chewy and delicious! My boyfriend said these are my best yet and I’ve tried several recipes! They were perfectly sweet and not cakey at all! I followed the recipe exactly. If yours come out cake like then you didn’t correctly measure the flour!
Agree with some of the other commenters – got cakey cookies that were quite tall and not very sweet. Had higher expectations but everyone likes different types of chocolate chip cookies!
My cookie dough turned out a little watery and not the consistency like in the pictures. What am I doing wrong?
These are my favourite home-made chocolate chip cookies, actually just my favourite in general since I’ve never really been a fan of store-bought! I like baking and I’ve tried more choc-chip cookie recipes than I can count over the last 10 years, but these really are perfect for me, and the cherry on top is how quick and simple they are to make!! Thank you so much for sharing this wonderful recipe!
Hi Rudy, that is wonderful! Really glad to hear this. Happy baking!
I first made them in jan and they turned out awesome!! everything I make the now they flat out completely (butte is not to hot, just melted) what am I doing wrong?? HELP!
Those cookies are awesome!! But I need help, I first made them in jan and they turned out awesome and every time I make them now they just falten put completely (butter is not even warm) WHAT AM I DOING WRONG???
Very dry and cakey. Wouldn’t try again
It needs to make MORE COOKIES!!!!!!!!!!
this recipe is horrible. cookies are too puffy and not chewy at all. too cakey.
Well, at least be KIND when saying a review.
Great recipe! I liked how quick they were to make since you don’t need to get butter to room temperature or chill the dough! They were really delicious. Just in case anyone needs it too, I converted the measurements into grams: It’s 125 gr butter, 50 gr refined sugar, 110 gr brown sugar, 212 gr flour and 175gr chocolate chips (I chopped a chocolate bar into chunks because we don’t use chocolate chips where I live)
Delicious cookies! I made these for my family and they said they were the best chocolate chip cookies they ever had! I highly recommend theses… and they take hardly any time – get baking!
Hands down THE.BEST recipe i have tried (and lemme tell ya, i have tried many)
my kids devour these within minutes. I have found that the recipe (without the Chocolate Chips) is the perfect base to add practically any chocolate you want….reeses pieces, andres, mini m&m’s…the possibilities are endlesss! thank you so much for ending my search for the best cookie.
I loved this cookie. Not too soft, not too hard. Hints of salt balance the chocolate. I did use dark chocolate chips because it is what I had and in this times thats what we do. My son said not sweet enough but to me it’s perfect
I have never been good at baking cookies. They always burn or are really buttery.
This recipe was brilliant! My cookies are soft & chewy and taste DELICIOUS!
Proof that you don’t have to be the best baker to make the best cookies.
This is the best chocolate chip cookie I’ve made. Perfect consistency! And no chilling! Worth leaving a review for.
i just made these and i didn’t have vanilla extract so i just used some vanilla ice cream and they turned out perfect.
I was excited to find a cookie recipe that fit with the ingredients I had on hand. However, these cookies were disappointing. I dislike some cookies because they’re just too sweet – but these were the opposite. They really desperately needed more sweetness. Also, be aware the portion size is about a dozen small cookies in total. I prefer to bake more at a time so I have leftover cookies, if I’m going to the trouble of baking. My husband has a terrible sweet tooth and he turned down seconds. If you liked them, that’s great – but they were not for me. *Please note I followed the recipe exactly and did not make any substitutions.