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Bakery style chocolate chip cookies are my favorite. They always come out chewy and thick, with the perfect balance between the sweet brown sugar base and the chocolate chips.


A Quick Look At The Recipe
This is a brief summary of the recipe. Jump to the recipe to get the full details.
Jump to RecipePrep Time
15 minutes
Cook Time
10 minutes
Chill Time
2 hours
Total Time
2 hours 33 minutes
Servings
36 cookies
Difficulty
Easy
Calories *
234 kcal per serving
Technique
Make dough, divide, roll, chill and bake!
Flavor Profile
Rich brown sugar, buttery, balanced sweetness, semi-sweet chocolate.
* Based on nutrition panel
This is such a great cookie recipe. Using cake flour and all purpose make the texture amazing. I made it regular with just the chocolate chips. Then I added some Reese’s pieces to the next batch! I highly recommend it! I will be sharing this recipe with everyone! ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐
Ben
Why This Recipe Works
- Cake flour and all-purpose flour in combination. Cake flour lowers the dough’s protein content, reducing gluten development and producing a softer, more tender crumb. Just like when making these brown butter chocolate chip cookies!
- The creaming method builds flavor and lift. Properly creaming the butter and sugars creates a base that distributes fat evenly and incorporates just enough air for cookies that bake up thick without spreading flat.
- Make-ahead friendly dough. The dough holds well in the refrigerator and freezes beautifully, so you can bake a full batch or pull just a few at a time. Chilling the dough also intensifies the flavor and helps the cookies hold their shape in the oven.
Table of Contents
- Why This Recipe Works
- Ingredients & Substitutions
- Variations on These Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Professional Tips
- How to Make Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip
- Recipe FAQs
- Fan Favorite Cookie Recipe
- Recommended Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipes
- Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe
- Before You Go
There is a reason that no matter how many new chocolate chip cookie recipes I try, I always return to this one. This bakery style chocolate chip cookie recipe is my favorite. It always comes out chewy, always thick, and always has the perfect balance between the sweet brown sugar base and the chocolate chips. And I ALWAYS get tons of compliments.
If you find yourself in need of another chocolate chip cookie recipe, might I suggest my other favorite, these thick chocolate chip cookies! Maybe you are looking for a gluten-free cookie, well, I got you these almond flour chocolate chip cookies, which are perfect!

Ingredients & Substitutions
- All-Purpose Flour
- Cake Flour
- Baking Powder and Baking Soda
- Butter: Butter is the primary fat and the detail that matters most here. Slightly softened means cool and pliable, not greasy or warm to the touch. Butter that is too soft will melt too quickly in the oven, leaving you with flat, greasy cookies instead of tall, chewy ones.
- Light Brown Sugar: Brown sugar adds moisture, chew, and a mild molasses depth that rounds out the sweetness without competing with the chocolate. Its hygroscopic nature pulls in moisture and keeps the centers soft well after the cookies have cooled. Don’t have brown sugar? Make these chocolate chip cookies without brown sugar!
- Granulated Sugar
- Eggs: Eggs bind the dough and contribute to the thick, tender interior. Weighing them to 100 g is worth doing precisely because larger or smaller eggs will shift the dough’s hydration and change the final texture.
- Vanilla
- Semi-Sweet Chocolate Chips: Semi-sweet chips deliver bold chocolate flavor without tipping the sweetness too far. At 12 oz, the ratio is high relative to the dough volume, so nearly every bite has chocolate, which I love.
See the recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities.
Variations on These Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Smaller Cookies. Portion the dough into smaller balls and reduce the bake time to around 10 minutes, checking early for set edges and a still-soft center. This is exactly how the cookies pictured here were made, by special request.
- Double Chocolate. Swap 3 tablespoons of the all-purpose flour for Dutch-process cocoa powder to turn these into double chocolate chip cookies with the same thick, chewy structure.
- Autumn Spiced Version. Swap the semi-sweet chips for white chocolate and adding 1 teaspoon of cinnamon and a pinch of cardamom would shift these toward a warmer, spiced profile, similar in spirit to my pear upside down cake, which leans on those same warm notes.

Professional Tips
- Do not overbake. Pull the cookies when the edges are set and golden. They will continue to firm up on the hot sheet pan, and a fully baked-looking cookie in the oven is an overbaked cookie on the cooling rack.
- Use a stand mixer if you have one. This dough is thick enough to strain a hand mixer, and I say that from painful personal experience. A stand mixer handles the heavy creaming and the final incorporation of chips without protest.
- Chill the dough for the best results. Chilling firms the fat and allows the flour to fully hydrate, which produces taller cookies with a denser, chewier center. Even 30 minutes makes a noticeable difference if 2 hours is not realistic.
- Add the flour in stages. Dumping all the flour in at once increases the risk of overmixing once the gluten begins to develop. Adding it gradually gives you more control and stops you from working the dough past the point where the texture is still right. I always do this with these New York Times chocolate chip cookies and cream cheese chocolate chip cookies!

How to Make Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
Use these instructions to make soft, chewy and thick bakery style chocolate chip cookies! Further details and measurements can be found in the recipe card below.
Step 1: Whisk together the dry ingredients. Combine the flour, cake flour, baking soda, and baking powder in a bowl and set them aside.
Step 2: Cream the butter and sugars. Add the butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar to the stand mixer bowl and beat until the mixture is creamy and uniform.
Step 3: Add the eggs and vanilla. Add the eggs one at a time, beating well after each addition before adding the next. The mixture should look smooth and fully emulsified before you move on. Beat in the vanilla last.
Step 4: Add the flour mixture gradually. With the mixer on low, add the flour mixture in 5 to 7 additions, letting each incorporate before adding the next. Once the last of the flour has almost disappeared, fold or stir in the chocolate chips.
For the chewiest, thickest cookies possible, chill the dough before portioning. Chilling deepens the flavor and gives you a taller, denser result.
Step 5: Portion the dough. For full-size, bakery-style chocolate chip cookies, roll the dough into balls approximately the size of a half lemon.
Step 6: Bake the cookies. Place the portioned dough balls on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake at 375°F (conventional without fan) or 350°F (convection with fan) for 13 to 14 minutes. The edges should be set and lightly browned, but the centers will still look soft and slightly underdone when you pull them. That matte, soft center is exactly what you are looking for. The cookies will continue to set as they cool on the pan, so pulling them at this point is correct, not early.
Step 7: Cool on the pan, then transfer. Let the cookies rest on the baking sheet for 10 minutes before moving them. This resting time is what allows the structure to finish setting without overbaking the centers. After 10 minutes, transfer them to a wire rack to cool completely.
Chef Lindsey’s Recipe Tip
The dough is intentionally thick, and that density is what makes these cookies work. The biggest mistake I see is adding the eggs and vanilla before the butter and sugars have fully creamed, which means the fat never gets properly aerated. Cream the butter and sugars until the mixture is pale, noticeably fluffy, and has increased in volume before anything else goes in. That base is what gives you height and chew, not just the flour blend.

Recipe FAQs
Chilling the dough is the single most reliable way to keep these cookies tall and chewy. Cold fat melts more slowly in the oven, which means the cookies have time to set up before they spread. Beyond that, use slightly softened, not melted, butter, and pull the cookies while the centers still look underdone.
The cookies are done when the edges are set and golden, and the centers still look slightly underdone, almost raw. They will continue to firm up on the hot sheet pan after you pull them from the oven. A cookie that looks fully set in the oven will be dry and overbaked by the time it cools.
A stand mixer is strongly preferred for this recipe. The dough is thick enough to strain a hand mixer motor, and I have seen it happen firsthand. If a stand mixer is not available, mix as little as possible once the flour is added and stop the moment everything is incorporated.
Store baked cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. For longer storage, freeze baked cookies in a single layer, then transfer to a zip-close bag for up to 2 months. Let frozen cookies come to room temperature before serving.
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If you tried this recipe and loved it please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it goes in the comments below. I love hearing from you; your comments make my day!

Bakery Style Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 3 ¼ cups all-purpose flour
- 1 cup cake flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1 ½ cups butter slightly softened
- 1 ¼ cups granulated sugar
- 1 ¼ cups light brown sugar packed
- 1 ½ tablespoons vanilla extract
- 12 oz semi-sweet chocolate chips
Instructions
- Whisk together the all-purpose flour, cake flour, baking powder, and baking soda in a bowl. Set aside.
- Beat the butter, granulated sugar, and brown sugar in a stand mixer on medium speed until pale, fluffy, and noticeably increased in volume, about 3 to 5 minutes.
- Add the eggs one at a time, beating after each addition. Beat in the vanilla.
- Add the flour mixture in 5 to 7 additions on low speed, mixing until just combined. Stir in the chocolate chips.
- Chill the dough for at least 2 hours. Portion into balls approximately the size of half a lemon for full-size cookies, or smaller if baking from frozen.
- Preheat the oven to 375°F. Bake for 13 to 14 minutes, until the edges are set and golden and the centers still look soft and slightly underdone.
- Cool on the sheet pan for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack. The centers will firm up as they cool.
Notes
Chilling: Chilling the dough for at least 2 hours produces taller, thicker cookies. The cold fat melts more slowly, giving the cookies time to set before they spread.
Mixer: Use a stand mixer. This dough is thick enough to strain a hand mixer motor. If using a hand mixer, stop adding flour the moment it is fully incorporated.
Storage: Store baked cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 5 days. Freeze baked cookies in a single layer, then transfer to a zip-close bag for up to 2 months.
Nutrition
Before You Go
These thick, golden-edged cookies with their pools of melted chocolate are worth making again and again. If you are looking for more to bake, browse my Cookie Recipes or make these chocolate pudding cookies next!






















I chilled the dough like you suggested and finally got that thick bakery look. The note about pulling them while the centers still looked soft made all the difference.
These are the best chocolate chip cookies! I like that you went straight from mixer to oven because I was pregnant and couldn’t wait. However, I did shave half of the cookie dough balls and freeze them for future cravings.
Hi
In your directions step 1 you say “Preheat your oven to 375°. Combine the flour, cake flour, baking soda, baking power, and salt; set aside.” You include SALT in this but in your ingredient list you don’t list salt. So I’m a little confused. Do you put salt in this cookie recipe and if so, how much?
I just want my cookies to come out as perfect as yours and therefore don’t want to miss any pertinent ingredients.
Thanks
Hi Courtney, Great catch! I’m so sorry about that. I’ve updated the recipe so that you can pull it up and see it all together. I use a teaspoon or 4 grams of kosher salt. I am sure your cookies will be delightful! I’ve been making these since high school but I didn’t add salt until college. 🙂 Happy baking!
hi! what happens if i cut the sugar?
Hi!
Just want to make sure I’m reading this correctly…is it 4 1/4 cups of flour total and only one bag of chocolate? That doesn’t seem like a lot of chocolate, however, the pictures look like they have a good amount of chocolate in each :).
Just want to make sure that is correct! Can’t wait to try these and the Johnny ones I just saw on your site!
Hi Kim! It is one bag – I usually use the 11.5oz bag of Ghirradeli semi-sweet or I use the same sized bag of semi-sweet Guittard (my current favorite). The good thing about chocolate chips is that you add them at the end, so if you feel like you want more chocolate in every bite, go ahead and add in more! I also put some on top of each cookie for the photos 🙂
These and Johnny’s are my favorites! Happy baking!