NYC Chocolate Chip Cookies!
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Giant, gooey and utterly delicious NYC chocolate chip cookies based on the famous cookies from New York City!!

NYC chocolate chip cookies
Can we take a minute, right at the beginning of this blog post, to appreciate… that I have given you guys this recipe. I have finally given you all the recipe that you have been after, for such a long long time. QUEUE THE APPLAUSE.
I’m joking – seriously. But anyway… I will say the reason they took this long to come to my blog, is because I only, finally, went to New York four months ago, so I finally got to try some classic NYC cookies for myself!
I wasn’t prepared or willing to post an NYC chocolate chip cookies recipe before I had actually eaten some for myself! I feel like that is pushing the limit really… can you make a recipe for something as famous as this, if you haven’t even there and eaten them?!


Levain Bakery
Anyway. When I was in New York, I ate so. many. cookies. The best of all, for me personally, was the ones from Levain Bakery. Oh, holy geeeeeeee they were insanely epic. I heard lots and lots of talk about Levain Bakery on my social channels before I went, and my gosh they did not disappoint.
I managed to get in when there was absolutely no queue, and then trotted over to Central Park to enjoy them, and my gosh it was the best thing ever. Not only was I finally taking in the sites of Central Park, in actual New York City, but the cookies… wow.
When it comes to making a recipe for them though, I will say that these are not authentic Levain Bakery cookies, as I just don’t think they can be recreated. I really don’t. There are many great NYC chocolate chip cookies recipes out there – this recipe from Modern Honey is great, so is this one from Cupcake Jemma, or this one from Kirbie Cravings!


Recipe
I have honestly made about 20 batches of cookies now, to get these right. There are so many factors when it comes to making these cookies – and jeez it’s hard to get them all right. When researching into recipes, what Levain Bakery and other bakeries such as Creme in London and so on do.. it is a bit of a mix. What flavours actually go into them, what order you put the ingredients in, and so on! Lots of recipes use a mix of two flours, but I like to stick to just one!
I basically just wanted to create giant chocolate chip cookies, that resemble NYC chocolate chip cookies, that are easier to make. They are definitely different from the rest of my cookies, but that’s what we want – NYC cookies are a world of their own. I teased this post on my Instagram a little while ago and you guys went crazy for them… so I hope you are READY!!
This recipe is quite easy to follow, luckily. I wanted to make it as simple as possible – but obviously any questions, leave them below.


The cookie dough
The cookie dough for this recipe is quite similar to the other NYC Cookie recipes I’ve shared on my blog – the basic cookie dough, as you will see can be used in so many variations, but they work for me – so why change it?
- Butter – I use fridge-cold baking spread or room-temperature block butter, but either works well.
- Sugar – A blend of granulated sugar and light brown soft sugar enhances the flavour and gives the cookies a rich taste.
- Egg – I usually bake with medium eggs, but you can substitute with one large egg if that’s what you have on hand.
- Flavours – Vanilla extract is optional but add a wonderful depth of flavour.
- Flour – Always use plain flour for your cookies! Self-raising flour will result in a cake like texture, which you want to avoid.
- Raising Agents – I use both bicarbonate of soda and baking powder. Bicarb is the traditional choice for cookies, while baking powder helps achieve the signature texture of a New York-style cookie.
- Salt – I add sea salt to my cookie dough because it enhances the flavours, but you can skip it or use salted butter if you prefer.
Sugar
I use a mix of two sugars… light brown sugar (soft), and white granulated sugar. This is similar to my other recipes, such as my Mini Egg cookie bars – in the fact that it gives the best flavour and texture. You really want to stick to these if you can – but you can use all brown, or all white if you have to.
Switch the sugars to caster sugar can really change the texture. I’m not the biggest fan of caster sugar in cookies anymore – and if you try this recipe as listed, you will agree with me. There is alot of science behind sugars in cookies – and if you can grab the listed sugars I will promise you, they will be better.


Flour
Now when it comes to the flour… I stand by using cornflour in my other recipes. I really honestly do. I even think these are better with a bit of cornflour. The cornflour creates a softer texture in the cookie, without drying the cookie out. It’s perfection. However, a lot of you don’t like using it.
A lot of NYC Cookie recipes use a mix of flours, but again I wasn’t a fan… I wanted to make it be fewer ingredients. However, you can switch it up. You can easily use self-raising flour instead of plain, but you would then only use the bicarbonate of soda, and no baking powder
I use all plain flour and add in the baking powder to get the texture, and I love it. You want the rise from the raising agents to create the perfect texture.. and it really works! You want a decent amount of flour, and to help it raise to get the classic texture so that when you bite into it… heaven.


Chocolate?!
When it comes to the chocolate chips, I, as always, use actual chocolate chips. I use a 50/50 mix of milk chocolate and dark chocolate. You get the sweetness from the milk chocolate, but also some bitterness from the dark chocolate which creates the balance. You can, of course, use all of one or the other.
I like to use baking chocolate chunks as they are slightly larger, but you can use bars of chocolate that you can chop up, or you can use any supermarket chocolate chip. Honestly, any work. You can use a mix of other flavours of chocolate as well, or even adapt to include extras. I just wanted a base recipe on this particular recipe post.


Tips & Tricks
- These are best eaten on the day of baking, but can be revived by microwaving for 15-30 seconds, or putting into a hot oven for 2-3 minutes
- You can freeze the raw cookie dough easily, and bake from frozen if you don’t want to bake the entire batch
- If you are baking straight from frozen after some time, I usually bake for the same 12-14 minutes, at the same temp, but an extra couple minutes won’t hurt
- Once baked, these will last for 4-5+ days
- You can use any chocolate you fancy, I just love the combination of milk and dark chocolate
- You can use chocolate bars chopped up instead of chocolate chips, just make sure the chunks aren’t too big
- If your oven runs hot you will want to reduce the temp slightly as mentioned in the method
- If you prefer your cookies flatter, you can squish them down slightly before baking but I don’t do this personally
- If you want a lovely texture – you can add in 1 level tbsp of cornflour, and take out 25g of the flour
- If you can’t access one of the sugars, use all of the other one – i.e. all granulated, or all light brown sugar. Using other sugars can change the texture.
- If you want to make smaller cookies (60g) – they take about 9 minutes to bake

NYC Chocolate Chip Cookies!
Ingredients
- 125 g unsalted butter
- 100 g light brown sugar
- 75 g white granulated sugar
- 1 medium egg
- 1 tsp vanilla (optional!)
- 300 g plain flour
- 1 + 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
- 1/2 tsp sea salt
- 300 g chocolate chips (150g dark, 150g milk)
Instructions
- Add your butter and sugars to a bowl and beat until creamy - I use my stand mixer with the beater attachment
- Add in your egg, and beat again. If using vanilla, add it in now
- Add in the plain flour, baking powder, bicarbonate of soda, and salt and beat until a cookie dough is formed
- Add in your chocolate chips and beat till they're distributed well
- Weigh your cookies out into eight cookie dough balls - they're about 120g each
- Once they're rolled into balls, put your cookie dough in the freezer for at least 30 minutes, or in the fridge for an hour or so
- Whilst the cookie dough is chilling, preheat your oven to 180C Fan, or 200C regular! If your oven runs hot, go for 160C-170c.
- Take your cookies out of the freezer/fridge and put onto a lined baking tray. I put four cookies per tray
- Bake the cookies in the oven for 12-14 minutes. I don't personally flatten the cookies, as they flatten enough during baking - however, if you like flat cookies, flatten them a bit before baking.
- Once baked, leave them to cool on the tray for at least 30 minutes, as they will continue to bake whilst cooling
- ENJOY!
Notes
- These are best eaten on the day of baking, but can be revived by microwaving for 15-30 seconds, or putting into a hot oven for 2-3 minutes!
- You can freeze the raw cookie dough easily, and bake from frozen if you don't want to bake the entire batch!
- If you are baking straight from frozen after some time, I usually bake for the same 12-14 minutes, at the same temp, but an extra couple minutes won't hurt!
- Once baked, these will last for 4-5+ days!
- You can use any chocolate you fancy, I just love the combination of milk and dark chocolate!
- You can use chocolate bars chopped up instead of chocolate chips, just make sure the chunks aren't too big!
- If your oven runs hot you will want to reduce the temp slightly as mentioned in the method!
- If you prefer your cookies flatter, you can squish them down slightly before baking but I don't do this personally!
- If you want a lovely texture - you can add in 1 level tbsp of cornflour, and take out 25g of the flour!
- If you can't access one of the sugars, use all of the other one - i.e. all granulated, or all light brown sugar. Using other sugars can change the texture.
- If you want to make smaller cookies (60g) - they take about 9 minutes to bake!
ENJOY!
Find my other Traybake Recipes on my Recipes Page!
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J x
© Jane’s Patisserie. All images & content are copyright protected. Do not use my images without prior permission. If you want to republish this recipe, please re-write the recipe in your own words and credit me, or link back to this post for the recipe.

Hi Jane
I’ve made lots of your cookies they are amazing, quick question if I made this recipe but used 300g chopped caramac would it work. Craving caramac cookies xx
Hiya! This is definitely worth a go – however the Caramac may melt slightly strangely as it isn’t proper chocolate, so may not work. Let me know if you give them a go! x
THESE COOKIES ARE THE BEST!!!! 🍪😋🍪😋🍪😋🍪😋🍪😋🍪😋
Best cookie recipe ever! So easy to make, absolutely loved them!
Hi Jane. These are fab!
If I make the dough in advance, can the dough balls be kept in the freezer for a day or two until needed?
Yes absolutely you can – you can freeze them for up to 3 months, just add on 1-2 minutes baking time when baking from frozen! Hope this helps! x
Could I refrigerate the cookie dough the day before I plan to cook them?
Love this recipe!
Hiya! Yes absolutely, the dough will last in the fridge for up to 48 hours! Hope this helps! x
I love these! They are my go to cookie recipe! I was wondering though, If i wanted to double or even triple the recipe would the ratios still work out? I’d love to know!
Thank you so muuuch! Yes absolutely, enjoy! x
I always double the recipe so I have a big batch in the freezer ready to grab some out whenever I need them. Perfect for popping in the oven for a quick treat!
Hi Jane,
I’ve made these cookies and also the Oreo NYC cookies. They were delicious but I found them to be too salty. Do you need to add salt or can I just leave it out? Also if I was to use table salt instead of sea salt do I reduce the quantity to 1/4 teaspoon instead of 1/2 teaspoon?
If it was table salt, you do need to use less as it’s much stronger and saltier in taste – generally I avoid it at all costs for cooking! So only a pinch x
Hiya Nicola, I use sea salt flakes and it just makes it not too sweet rather than taste actually salty. If you’re using fine salt you would need a lot less, maybe only a pinch
by far the best cookies ive ever made, many thanks jane.
Hi Jane I made these cookies and they are lush but wondered why they stayed like giant cookie domes? Didn’t flatten out almost at all where did I go wrong? X
Hiya! This can be due to rolling the balls too tightly, overworked dough, or your oven temp being too hot! Hope this helps! x
Hi I was wondering if I could add chocolate and plain peanuts . Do you think this would work ?
Yes it should be fine! Enjoy! x
Hi Jane, loved making these, my Granddaughters would eat them everyday, is there anyway to make these incorporating Carnation Caramel into the ingredients,
Hey! Have a look at my caramel cookie cups – it’s the best alternative! x
Hi Jane, I will take a look at them, was thinking of freezing some portions of caramel sauce and putting them in the Cookie ball, would this work do you think.
Hiya! Unfortunately this won’t work as the caramel doesn’t freeze! Hope this helps! x
HI!, I’m just wondering if I were to leave these in longer would the middle go a little more crispy, or have you a recipe up that I’m just not seeing maybe. Would love a cookie recipe that’s crispy throughout. Thanks!! 😀
Yum Yum Yum! I made these last night (had to switch out to GF flour) and they were delicious.
When do I put the kinder bueno on?
Hiya! There is no Kinder Bueno in this recipe. Take a look at my Kinder Bueno cookie recipe – hope this helps! x
These are SO good. We changed the chocolate to a mix of choc chips & m&ms. We only froze them for 20 mins as we made them slightly smaller. Definitely going to try these in a variety of flavours!
Just made these today . They didn’t really flatten out as much as yours in the picture but they still taste so good. Will definitely be making these again with my kids.
Hi Jane ,
I made your chocolate NYC cookies and they were absolutely incredible ! I just noticed a different in the volume of dry ingredients used in each one. The chocolate recipe uses a total of 285g of dry ingredients ( flour and cocoa powder) and this one has a total of 300g of dry ingredients ( plain flour ) . Because the chocolate ones went so well I tried doing these ones with the same amount of dry ingredients, so knocked off 15g of flour but they have come out underbaked. Do you think this could be the reason ? 💛xx
Hiya! The recipes are different for a reason (cocoa powder is slightly drier so this is one reason why), please follow the recipe for the best bake! Hope this helps! x
Hi janne I love your NYC cookies recipe, I make them all the time . I was just wondering if I could substitute the dairy ingredients for non dairy ingredients. I.e. butter, chocolate and the flour for a gluten free flour.