We all know that homemade brownies are exceptionally rich. And when it comes to brownie cookies, these are the richest—trust me, I’ve done my research! They’re extra chewy with soft fudge-like centers and only require about 20 minutes of chill time before baking. For best results, use pure baking chocolate. See all of my success tips below.
Why make a brownie cookie when you can literally just have a… brownie? A very good question and I have a very good answer. A pan of traditional brownies has varying textures. You have slightly crisp and chewy edge brownies with softer, fudgier brownies in the center. When you bake brownies as cookies, you get both in 1. A super chewy and textured edge with that beloved fudge center.
So the real question is this:
Why make a brownie when you can have a brownie cookie?
Tell Me About These Brownie Cookies
- Texture: Talk about a satisfying texture. If you love fudge brownies, you’ll appreciate all this cookie has to offer—chewy edges, soft centers, gooey chocolate chips when they’re fresh out of the oven.
- Flavor: These brownie cookies are for pure chocolate lovers. No caramel, nuts, fruits, or candies in the way. The wonderful part is that you can control the chocolate’s sweetness and strength. I recommend semi-sweet chocolate and adding a touch of espresso powder, which deepens the chocolate flavor. For sweeter cookies, use milk chocolate. For bittersweet cookies, use bittersweet or even unsweetened chocolate. (Warning—unsweetened chocolate lends a very deep, dark chocolate cookie!)
- Ease: Though this recipe much easier than, say, chocolate croissants, it’s not quite as simple as mixing brownie batter together. You need 3 main bowls—one for melted chocolate, one for dry ingredients, and one for other wet ingredients. Shaping the dough is a cinch, though. Use a cookie scoop to keep things uniform.
- Time: Some cookie doughs require chilling in the refrigerator and others don’t. This recipe requires just 20 minutes in the fridge, which is just enough time to quickly clean up and preheat the oven. You’ll be enjoying these cookies in under 1 hour.
Have you made my brownie walnut chunk cookies? This recipe is pretty similar, except the cookies aren’t quite as thick. I wanted a cookie with a little more spread and chew, so I reduced the dry ingredients and chill time. And if you’ve tried my Midnight Brownie Cookies in Sally’s Cookie Addiction cookbook, or my peppermint frosted chocolate cookies or peanut butter filled brownie cookies, today’s cookies are similarly rich. If you love chocolate, brownies, and cookies, you can’t go wrong with any of these 4!
Recipe Testing: What Works & What Doesn’t
When I was working on today’s recipe, I wanted to experiment with 2 variables: consistency of butter and chill time in the refrigerator. There are 4 cookies pictured below, with the bottom right cookie as the winner (today’s recipe). Each cookie was made with the same measurements and ingredients. For the cookies made with melted butter, I melted the butter with the 8 ounces of chocolate, then whisked in the sugars, eggs, and vanilla before beating in the dry ingredients.
Let me explain each.
- Top Left – Melted Butter + No Chilling: 5 Tablespoons of melted butter with no cookie dough chilling lended greasy cookies that over-spread. The edges burned and crumbled.
- Top Right – Melted Butter + Chilling: 5 Tablespoons of melted butter with 20 minutes of cookie dough chilling. Cookies were thicker, but tasted like pure chocolate. Delicious and rich, but didn’t really have a brownie texture.
- Bottom Left – Softened Butter + No Chilling: 5 Tablespoons of softened butter with no cookie dough chilling. The cookies had more of an irresistible brownie texture, but spread a little too much. The edges burned quickly.
- Bottom Right – Softened Butter + Chilling: 5 Tablespoons of softened butter with 20 minutes of cookie dough chilling. These cookies were the clear winner with nice spread, fudge brownie centers, crackly tops, and chewy edges.
Best Chocolate to Use
Most of the cookie’s chocolate flavor comes from melted chocolate. Do not cut corners here—use pure chocolate baking bars, just like we do for dark chocolate chunk oatmeal cookies. You can find them right next to the chocolate chips in the baking aisle. They’re typically sold in 4 ounce bars, so you’ll need 2. I’m not affiliated or working with this brand, but I strongly recommend Ghirardelli (pictured below). This chocolate simply produced the best tasting and looking cookie. The cookies made with Baker’s brand chocolate were great, but the cookies didn’t really have the crackly tops.
- I use and recommend semi-sweet chocolate, but you can use bittersweet or unsweetened chocolate for a much darker flavor.
- If you can find it and want to splurge, use 8 ounces of semi-sweet Scharffen Berger Chocolate. These are sold in 3 ounce or 9 ounce bars. My regular grocer carries it in the baking aisle, but you can find and purchase it online.
Overview: How to Make Brownie Cookies
The full printable recipe is below, but let’s walk through the recipe so you understand each step before you get started.
- Melt the chocolate. Start by melting the chopped chocolate. I recommend doing this first so it has a few minutes to cool down before you need it in step 3 below. (Don’t want to melt the creamed butter or scramble the eggs!)
- Whisk dry ingredients together.
- Work on wet ingredients. As detailed in the recipe below, cream the butter and both sugars together. Beat in the eggs and vanilla, then beat in the melted and cooled chocolate. Pay attention to your mixing times. We want to beat long enough to whip some air into these ingredients, which helps achieve a crackly brownie appearance on the cookies. (Which are usually created by deflated air, melted sugar, and quality chocolate.)
- Combine wet and dry ingredients.
- Chill as oven preheats. Chill the cookie dough for just 20 minutes. This quick chill time helps slightly solidify the chocolate and butter in the dough, which gives the cookies a nice spread (not over-spread). Chilling for longer creates thicker cookies where, in some cases, they may not spread at all. My peanut butter chocolate chip cookies have a super quick chill time, too.
- Scoop and bake. Dough is thick and sticky, so I strongly recommend using a cookie scoop. The medium size is perfect because each dough ball should be around 1.5 Tablespoons, the same exact size I recommend for double chocolate chip cookies.
Pictured above are our 3 bowls: 1 for dry, 1 for wet, and 1 for melted chocolate. When it all comes together, expect a thick and sticky cookie dough.
And for those of you who want your brownie cookies AND brownies… 😉
Sally’s Cookie Palooza
This recipe is part of my annual cookie countdown called Sally’s Cookie Palooza. It’s the biggest, most delicious event of the year! Browse dozens of cookie recipes over on the Sally’s Cookie Palooza page including:
- Hot Cocoa Cookies
- Peanut Butter Blossoms
- Christmas Sugar Cookies
- Chocolate Crinkle Cookies
- Gingerbread Cookies
And here are 75+ Christmas cookies with all my best success guides & tips.Â
Brownie Cookies
- Prep Time: 15 minutes
- Cook Time: 12 minutes
- Total Time: 50 minutes (includes chilling)
- Yield: 24 cookies
- Category: Cookies
- Method: Baking
- Cuisine: American
Description
These are extra rich, extra fudge-like, and extra chewy brownie cookies. For best results, use good chocolate and follow this recipe closely.
Ingredients
- 2 four ounce bars (226g) semi-sweet chocolate, coarsely chopped
- 3/4 cup (94g) all-purpose flour (spooned & leveled)
- 1/4 cup (21g) natural unsweetened or dutch-process cocoa powder
- 1 teaspoon espresso powder
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 5 Tablespoons (71g) unsalted butter, softened to room temperature
- 3/4 cup (150g) packed light brown sugar
- 1/4 cup (50g) granulated sugar
- 2 large eggs, at room temperature
- 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
- optional: 3/4 cup (135g) semi-sweet chocolate chips
Instructions
- Melt the chocolate in a double boiler or use the microwave. Microwave in 20 second increments, stirring after each until completely melted. Set aside to slightly cool (so it doesn’t melt the butter or cook the eggs).
- Whisk the flour, cocoa powder, espresso powder, baking powder, and salt together. Set aside.
- In a large bowl using a handheld or stand mixer fitted with a paddle attachment, beat the butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar together on medium-high speed until smooth and creamy, about 2 minutes. Add the eggs and vanilla extract, and beat on high speed for 2 full minutes. Scrape down the sides and up the bottom of the bowl, then beat on high for 1 more minute. Pour in the slightly cooled melted chocolate and mix on medium-high speed for 2 full minutes.
- Pour in the the dry ingredients and beat on low speed until combined. Finally, beat in the chocolate chips.
- Preheat oven to 350°F (177°C). Line large baking sheets with parchment paper or silicone baking mats. As the oven preheats, continue to step 6.
- Cover and chill the dough in the refrigerator for just 20 minutes as the oven preheats. This quick chill time helps slightly solidify the chocolate and butter in the dough, which gives the cookies a nice spread (not over-spread). Chilling for longer creates thicker cookies where, in some cases, they may not spread at all. If chilling for longer than 20 minutes, allow the dough to sit at room temperature for 15 minutes before rolling and baking.
- Roll or scoop the dough into balls, 1.5 Tablespoons of dough each. I recommend a medium cookie scoop. Place 3 inches apart on the baking sheets and bake for 12-13 minutes or until the edges appear set. (The centers will be quite soft, but will set up as the cookies cool.)
- Remove from the oven and allow cookies to cool on the baking sheet for 5 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
- Cookies stay fresh covered at room temperature for up to 1 week.
Notes
- Make Ahead Instructions: Baked cookies freeze well for up to 3 months. Unbaked cookie dough balls freeze well for up to 3 months. Bake frozen cookie dough balls for an extra minute, no need to thaw. Cookies won’t spread as much if dough balls were frozen, so about halfway through bake-time, gently press down on the baking cookies with a spoon to help get them to spread. Read my tips and tricks on how to freeze cookie dough.
- Special Tools (affiliate links): Double Boiler | Glass Mixing Bowls | Whisk | Electric Mixer (Handheld or Stand) | Baking Sheets | Silicone Baking Mats or Parchment Paper | Medium Cookie Scoop | Cooling Rack
- Chocolate: Use pure chocolate baking bars. You can find them right next to the chocolate chips in the baking aisle. They are sold in 4 ounce bars, so you’ll need 2. I strongly recommend Ghirardelli brand. I’m not working with this company– this chocolate simply produced the best tasting and looking cookie. I use and recommend semi-sweet chocolate, but you can use bittersweet or unsweetened chocolate for a much darker flavor. If you can find it (my regular grocer carries it in the baking aisle) and want to splurge, use 8 ounces of semi-sweet Scharffen Berger Chocolate. These are sold in 3 ounce or 9 ounce bars.
- Espresso Powder:Â Espresso powder deepens the chocolate flavor. You can skip it or use 2 teaspoons of instant coffee powder instead.
I just baked the cookies and they came out delicious. Everyone loved them.Thanks!
My husband and I made these cookies, we follow the recipe to the T. They came out delicious! Thank you so much for the recipe. We are going to make them again and again.
Wish you had high altitude directions…mine didn’t spread at all…still good but small and thick!
Hi Michelle, Some readers have found this chart helpful: https://www.kingarthurflour.com/learn/high-altitude-baking.html
These look delicious! I will be trying this weekend. I am thinking about using the Salted Caramel Chips I got from Trader Joe’s instead of the chocolate chips. Thoughts? Anybody tried this before?
Sounds delicious! Let us know if you give it a try 🙂
Hi sally
Can i reduce the sugars without changing the outcome of the final product
Hi Namrata, Sugar is used for moisture and texture in baked goods as well as taste. You can certainly try reducing the sugar, but the resulting texture will be different than intended.
Sally,
The cookies are out of this world. I can’t tell you how amazing they are. Thank you for the recipe and all the tips. The cookies had that shiny, cracked crust which i love. I brought some to work today and they all love love loved it!!! 🙂
These where absolutely amazing, I added mint and vanilla extract for a minty brownie. Super good.
hi Sally
If I need to make these cookies vegetarian what would be a suitable replacement for the eggs?
Hi Josephine, we haven’t tested this recipe with any egg substitutes, but let us know if you give anything a try. Here are all of our egg-free recipes if you are interested.
Sally, love your recipes- always my go to! These were really yummy! Though, I do find they are a bit dark for my liking- can I sprinkle icing sugar on them?
Definitely! Make sure to wait until the cookies are completely cooled before dusting with confectioner’s sugar. Enjoy!
These cookies are delicious! They are the perfect combination of fudgey, chewy brownies in cookie form. Thanks for the recipe, Sally!
i usually love all of Sally’s recipes but If you love chocolate than i really suggest adding the optional chocolate chips in this recipe because without them these cookies are not as rich/tasty as i thought they would be!
I made these cookies without adding the optional chocolate chips and i recommend putting them next time. This cookie is not overly sweet, which some people might like, but personally i like more rich cookies. This cookie is on the lighter side for me
Hi! My cookies spread too much (very very thin). But I used the exact ingredients.
can I add more flour so it won’t spread too much?
Hi Sabrina, For help troubleshooting cookies that spread, visit the post 10 Guaranteed Tips to Prevent Cookies from Spreading .
as long as I make Brownie Cookies at my mother’s house, I only use a simple recipe from my mother. Today I tried this recipe, it’s very delicious. thank you.
Hi sally, i only have salted butter, can it be used??
Hi Husna, you can use salted butter here with no other changes.
Thank you
Hi! How would you sub in almond flour in this recipe? Thanks!
Hi And, using almond flour would take a bit of recipe testing to guarantee results. Almond flour has very different baking properties and is not always a 1:1 swap. If you play around with it, though, you may want to adjust the wet ingredients since almond flour can’t absorb liquid like all-purpose flour does. Let us know if you give anything a try!
Dear Sally, I baked my very first brownie cookies following your recipe and steps religiously, and the outcome was some ridiculously yummy cookies which my husband and daughter loved so much that they’ve asked me to bake them again today!
What I’ve also learnt is that I need to adjust the baking time – I tried baking the cookies in two different sizes and made the mistake of baking them at the same time (13 mins), resulting in the smaller cookies being drier and more chewy than the larger ones which are softer and moist.
Will surely be baking them again soon!
Cheers, Grace from Singapore
Mine didn’t spread enough even though they weren’t chilled for long. I did use Belgian chocolate chips, as I didn’t have bars. Thanks for recipe.
These are absolute perfection.
One of the best gluten free desserts I’ve ever made.
I used Bob’s Red Mill 1 to 1 GF flour and followed the recipe, except for that I chilled them for several hours rather than 20 minutes because I wasn’t able to bake them right away.
Thank you so much for the fantastic recipe!!
Delicious! Crinkles on top, fudgy melted chocolate in the middle, crisp on the edges.
My friends and I made these cookies together, and people said they were:
“Phenomenal”
“Out of this world”
“Amazing”
“Sooooooooo gooooooood!!!!!!!!!!!”
“Better than brownies”
Can I Make with Chocolate Powder instead of Chocolate Chunks?
For best results we recommend following the recipe as written. You may enjoy these inside out chocolate chip cookies which are flavored with cocoa powder instead of baking chocolate.
Hi Sally
I made these as part of Christmas gifts to neighbours, along with Seriously Fudgy Brownies and Chewy CCC’s. These were amazing and definitely rank in my top 3 favourite bakes. I was wondering if it is possible to double this recipe for a larger batch or is it best to do as 2 separate batches?
Thank you
Hi Martin, you can double cookie recipes, no problem. So glad you and your neighbors enjoyed them!
Good evening from Idaho! I was wondering if I could possibly freeze these cookies? Looking forward to hearing from you. Thank you!
Hi Sarah, absolutely! Baked or unbaked cookies will freeze well for up to three months. See recipe notes for more freezing details.
Hi Sally – LOVE your recipes and make them often, thank you!
Question on this one, I use fresh espresso shot in my killer chocolate cake and prefer not to use powder. Can I add a shot of espresso instead? If so, what would I need to adjust in the recipe for it to come out well?
Hi Cindy, without trying it ourselves, it’s difficult to give exact adjustments. If you decide to give it a try, you’ll have to experiment with adjusting the dry ingredients to accommodate for the added liquid. Let us know if you give anything a try!
Hi Lexi, I’m happy to report that I went ahead and added a single shot of espresso to the recipe without making any changes. I followed every other instruction to the tee, and they turned out perfectly. After swirling in the cup to cool it down a bit, I added the shot between steps 3 & 4 and beat on low for just a few seconds before adding the dry ingredients. Delicious!!
Is the espresso powder necessary?
Espresso powder deepens the chocolate flavor. You can skip it or use 2 teaspoons of instant coffee powder instead.
Years ago (like 20) I had a killer chocolate cookie at “Bread” in Durango, CO. They called it a Gulch Cookie. I’ve been trying to reproduce it ever since. Although this is a different cookie, it has ended my quest. Bravo to you, Sally…another stellar recipe!
Mine didn’t look like Sally’s but they taste delicious. Mine didn’t spread enough even though they weren’t chilled for long. I did use Belgian chocolate chips, as I didn’t have bars. Wondering if that made a difference in texture.
Hi Maria! So glad you enjoyed these cookies. Chocolate chips have a coating on them that will change the outcome of these cookies – best to stick with baking bars in the future if at all possible!
Hi Sally!
Will these be thicker if I chill them for longer?
Hi Sarah! Chilling these cookies for longer creates thicker cookies where, in some cases, they may not spread at all. You can definitely give it a try! Here’s more tips to keep cookies from spreading if you’re interested!
I made these cookies and they taste great. But they overspread so so much. I had to cut it into small pieces. They were not thick but very very thin. I did everything as required. However, I didn’t have a cookie scooper. So I used a tablespoon.
Hi Janelle, If your cookies spread too much, your butter may have been a bit too warm or your flour under-measured. For next time, you can also chill them for a bit longer which should help them hold their shape more. We share more tips for preventing spread in this blog post on 10 Tips to Prevent Cookies from Spreading. Thank you so much for giving this recipe a try!
How much is the semi sweet chocolate in cups ?
Hi Sally. I only have unsweetened chocolate in my pantry. Do I need to adjust the amount of chocolate and sugar?
Hi Angela, no need to adjust the amount of chocolate or sugar — you’ll simply have a richer, darker flavored cookie. Enjoy!