How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies?

How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies? - High angle of tasty homemade cookie with chocolate pieces on white ceramic plate

Since I'm British, I'm used to biscuits that are crisp, dry and crunchy all the way through, with no soft chewy centre. Most chocolate chip cookie recipes are trying to do the exact opposite. How can I bake chocolate chip cookies with a more British texture? Essentially, I want the exact opposite to the answers to this question.



Best Answer

The best way to achieve what you are looking for is to lower the temp and lengthen the baking time. Lowering the temp will slow the edges from getting burned while the center is allowed to continue to cook.

Allow the top of the cookie to brown before removing from the oven. For soft cookies, the moment it starts to turn brown is the moment you are just a little too late for the cookies to stay soft after they've cooled. If you let the cookie brown just a touch, the cookie will harden on the cooling rack.




Pictures about "How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies?"

How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies? - Closeup of baked cookies with chocolate on wooden board on table at home
How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies? - Yummy ice cream with waffle and biscuit topping
How can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies? - Tasty ice cream with crunchy cookies and sprinkles



How do you make chocolate chip cookies crunchy?

Since brown sugar is soft, we want to use more white sugar for a crispy cookie. Milk. Just like melted butter, milk helps the cookies spread in the oven which produces crispier edges.

How can I make my cookies crunchy?

Using lower-moisture sugar (granulated) and fat (vegetable shortening), plus a longer, slower bake than normal, produces light, crunchy cookies. That said, using a combination of butter and vegetable shortening (as in the original recipe), or even using all butter, will make an acceptably crunchy chocolate chip cookie.

What makes cookies crunchy vs chewy?

While brown sugar keeps your cookies moist and soft, white sugar and corn syrup will help your cookies spread and crisp in the oven. Using more white sugar in your cookies will result in a crispier end product. To achieve a crispy cookie, skip the rest in the fridge.



How to make crunchy Chocolate Chip Cookies!




More answers regarding how can I bake crunchy chocolate chip cookies?

Answer 2

It shouldn't be too hard to find a crispy chocolate chip cookie recipe if you want one, but if you're interested in experimenting with an existing recipe, here are a few ideas for things to change:

Mix in melted butter instead of creamed soft butter. That will greatly reduce the amount of air trapped in the dough. The dough will not loft while baking; it will spread out, allowing for more evaporation. (Not chilling the dough is a related tip: the faster it melts in the oven, the more it will spread.)

Cool them entirely on the baking sheet instead of transferring them to a rack. This has a strong effect on the finished cookies' crispness.

Use white sugar instead of brown. Brown sugar is used in baked goods when you want them to be soft, because it is even more hygroscopic -- pulling water from the air and holding onto it -- than white sugar.

Change the egg ratio to decrease the amount of yolk. While the whites contain a lot of water, they also contain much more protein than fat. The fat in yolks will diminish gluten formation and increase tenderness and "fudginess".

Answer 3

If what you want is a classic crunchy cookie with some chocolate chips thrown in, use your favorite crunchy cookie recipe and throw a few chocolate chips in. As you said yourself, the American "chocolate chip cookie" is a totally different thing, characterized by a soft texture. It makes no sense to use a recipe for that type of cookie if you don't like it.

Answer 4

Melted butter (or browned butter better yet!) will make a crispy cookie. Obviously, omitting all leaveners will help as well, but you can get an even flatter cookie by adding extra leavener, which will over expand and then collapse the dough.

Sources: Stack Exchange - This article follows the attribution requirements of Stack Exchange and is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

Images: Dayvison de Oliveira Silva, Dayvison de Oliveira Silva, Konstantin Mishchenko, Konstantin Mishchenko