02.24.08
Chocolate chip cookies
When you don’t have a great Valentine’s Day gift prepared, you’re pretty much at the mercy of your loved one to give you a way out of the predicament. Jen ordered these along with a home-cooked dinner. Be sure to not leave them in the oven for too long – when they come out the middles are not fully cooked so it’s tempting to leave them in for longer. One of the nice things about this recipe is that it calls for melted butter, which requires less patience than room-temperature butter.
Thick and chewy chocolate chip cookies
From America’s Test Kitchen’s The New Best Recipe
2 1/8 cups bleached all-purpose flour (about 10 1/2 ounces)
1/2 teaspoon table salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
12 tablespoons unsalted butter (1 1/2 sticks), melted and cooled slightly
1 cup brown sugar (light or dark), 7 ounces
1/2 cup granulated sugar (3 1/2 ounces)
1 large egg
1 large egg yolk
2 teaspoons vanilla extract
1–2 cups chocolate chips or chunks (semi or bittersweet)
1. Heat oven to 325 degrees. Adjust oven racks to upper- and lower-middle positions. Mix flour, salt, and baking soda together in medium bowl; set aside.
2. Either by hand or with electric mixer, mix butter and sugars until thoroughly blended. Mix in egg, yolk, and vanilla. Add dry ingredients; mix until just combined. Stir in chips.
3. Form 1/4 cup dough into ball. Holding dough ball using fingertips of both hands, pull into two equal halves. Rotate halves ninety degrees and, with jagged surfaces exposed, join halves together at their base, again forming a single cookie, being careful not to smooth dough’s uneven surface. Place formed dough onto one of two parchment paper-lined 20-by-14-inch lipless cookie sheets, about nine dough balls per sheet. Smaller cookie sheets can be used, but fewer cookies can be baked at one time and baking time may need to be adjusted. (Dough can be refrigerated up to 2 days or frozen up to 1 month—shaped or not.)
4. Bake, reversing cookie sheets’ positions halfway through baking, until cookies are light golden brown and outer edges start to harden yet centers are still soft and puffy, 15 to 18 minutes (start checking at 13 minutes). (Frozen dough requires an extra 1 to 2 minutes baking time.) Cool cookies on cookie sheets. Serve or store in airtight container.


Jeremy said,
February 25, 2008 at 11:52 am
These cookies are so unbelievably good. If you’re lazy the whole pulling apart and rotating bit isn’t truly necessary, but it wouldn’t be Cooks Illustrated if they didn’t over-engineer chocolate chip cookies :)