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Fri 6 Feb, 2009 11:39 pm
It seems like no matter how much I try different chocolate cookie recipes in hope that I find a perfect one I cannot seem too. The cookies always taste fine, but after an hour or so I try one and they are hardened but thick. Does anyone have any tips or tricks they know that will give me that store bought chocolate chip cookie taste?
@nikitaLchikita,
I can only suggest not baking them for so long. Leave some of the moisture in.
@NickFun,
I do, and it sucks cause when I take them out of the oven they wanna fall apart, but the next hour they are hard, they still taste good, but are hard unless you soak them in milk.
@nikitaLchikita,
Read these tips from my favorite baking website.
This one is about cookie ingredients and the role each plays in a cookie's taste and texture.
http://www.baking911.com/cookies/101_tips.htm
This one is specifically about the category of drop cookies, of which chocolate chip cookies are a member.
http://www.baking911.com/cookies/drop.htm
This one contains tips specifically for chocolate chip cookies.
http://www.baking911.com/cookies/chocolate_chip.htm
This is the recommended chocolate chip recipe from the professional baker that runs the website. It is from Alton Brown of the Good Eats show on the Food Network:
http://www.baking911.com/recipes/cookies/chocolate_chip_chewy.htm
And these are variations on the same recipe by Alton Brown that have differing desired outcomes of either chewy cookies, puffy cookies and thin cookies.
http://www.baking911.com/recipes/cookies/chocchip_3ways.htm
This is the hour long episode Alton devoted to the chemistry of cookie making where he demonstrates the chocolate chip cookie recipe variations.
Part 1
Part 2
You might not be putting enough brown sugar in them, ad also try using criso instead of butter. They celll criso in blocks/sticks, that might make a difference. My friend uses crisco and her cookies always come out perfect! Also check the brown sugar thing, I think it is what makes the cookies soft. Don't seal them up right away either let them sit out for a while.
Grandma used to put a piece of bread in the jar if she wanted to soften cookies.
Try it- the bread becomes hard and the cookies soft!
@Jose Cuervo,
I was going to suggest the piece of bread too!
@martybarker,
Hey martybarker- great minds think alike!
You're cute too.
And the girl ain't bad neither ;^}
NIKITAL:
Good afternoon. It is obvious that your recipe is out of balance. Post your recipe & your directions this way we can help you.
If I let myself speculate in these matters I would venture say there is too too much sugar in this recipe. Anyway we will know if you post the recipe.
the
~FRIENDLY GHOST.
@the FRIENDLY GHOST,
This thread is eight years old. It's still an interesting thread, but Nikital is not apt to respond. One can learn quite a bit from reading the whole thread.
@nikitaLchikita,
If you want a cookie to be softer after they are baked, just underbake them by a minute or two.