Canal House Thin and Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
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A couple of weeks ago, a friend told me she had checked out Canal House Cooks Every Day from the library and described it as the loveliest cookbook she had seen in a long time.
Middle child that I am, afraid to miss out on any fun, I immediately followed suit. That night by the light of my itty bitty book lamp, I poured through every chapter, making mental notes of ingredients to purchase and recipes to try, feeling more wound up with every page I turned, finally closing my eyes to a photo of a sheet pan lined with chocolate chip cookies, the last beautiful image in the book.
The following morning, before even thinking about coffee, I set butter out to soften and turned to the recipe, credited to Katherine Yang, a New York City pastry chef. When the Canal House ladies sought Yang’s guidance for the best chocolate chip cookie recipe ever, Yang passed along this one, a thin and crisp variety, one that perfectly balances that irresistible salty-sweet dynamic — there’s no need to top these off with any flakes of fancy sea salt.
Crisp on the edges, chewy in the center, buttery with chocolate chunks throughout, these delicate cookies are enough to convert the thick-and-chewy-chocolate-chip-cookie lover in me forever. They are delectable. Even Ben, who never does any heavy lifting in the dessert department, eats them by the half dozen and swears he could eat them by the whole. I wouldn’t put it past him.
While I know the last thing many of you need is another cookbook, I am confident none of you would regret this addition to your libraries. And while these chocolate chip cookies, as simple and classic and timeless as they are, in some ways perfectly capture the spirit of the Canal House cooks, they aren’t perhaps the best reflection of the cookbook.
With chapters organized by the months of the year, the book’s recipes are driven by the seasons, not only its produce gems — peas and favas in the spring, squash and apples in the fall — but also its preparations — grilled salmon in the summer, braised brisket in the winter.
Be warned: If you acquire it soon, it will make you seriously regret having not visited more pick-your-own strawberry farms this past May and might make you feel you squandered asparagus season entirely. But don’t despair: you will redeem yourself soon, vowing to make every tomato recipe in the August chapter.
The book is inspiring to say the least. It will make you want to hang your pots and pans from the rafters and tie up your apron with pride every time you set to work. It will make you covet your mother-in-law’s china collection and make you want to scour flea markets (or have a field day at Fish’s Eddy) for vintage serving platters. It might inspire you to clear off your kitchen table and break out your pasta roller. It might make you a pickler, a poacher, a preserver.
As you read the vignettes, you’ll find yourself daydreaming about how you might get into mushroom foraging this fall, and although you’ve felt quite lazy in recent months, you think you might even consider peeling — yes, stalk by stalk — your asparagus next spring. And if your pleasure reading gets interrupted one more time, perhaps by a disagreeable toddler throwing himself at your feet, you might find yourself wishing to be nothing more than a duck floating along the canal ready to snatch up bread and any other nuggets tossed out the Canal House studio’s open French doors. Ahhh, where would we be without our dreams?
PrintCanal House Thin and Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Total Time: 31 minutes
- Yield: 15 to 20
Description
Adapted from Canal House Cooks Every Day
Notes: For best results, make this batter and store it in the fridge at least 24 hours prior to baking and up to 1 week in advance.
I like to weigh (so anal, sorry) my cookie balls before baking and find that 1 oz (28 g) is a nice size for these cookies.
Also, if you like thick-and-chewy chocolate chip cookies, try these.
Ingredients
- 10 ounces room temperature high-fat butter, such as Kerrygold
- 1¼ cups (298 g) dark brown sugar
- ¾ cup (149g) granulated sugar
- 1 tablespoon vanilla bean paste or extract
- 2 teaspoons kosher salt*
- 2 large eggs
- 1¾ cups plus 2 tablespoons (265g) all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 8 ounces chocolate chips
*It seems like a lot, but go for it…I even use salted butter, and the cookies are not too salty.
Instructions
- Line baking sheets with parchment paper. Combine the butter, brown sugar, granulated sugar, vanilla bean paste, and salt in the bowl of a standing mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Mix on medium-high speed until light, about 3 minutes. Add the eggs and mix on medium speed until blended, about 2 minutes.
- Whisk the flour and baking soda together, then add to the dough, continuing to mix on medium speed for 2 minutes. Stir in the chocolate chips. Using a spatula, quickly mix the dough, scraping down the sides and bottom of the bowl.
- Remove the bowl from the mixer. Portion the dough into balls weighing about 1 oz (28 g) each. For best results, store the dough balls in the fridge for at least 24 hours prior to baking and up to 1 week in advance.
- Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Once heated, place the balls, about 4 inches apart, onto the parchment-lined baking sheets. Bake until golden brown, 10–11 minutes. Let the cookies cool for 5 minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool.
- Prep Time: 20 minutes
- Cook Time: 11 minutes
- Category: Cookie
- Method: Oven
- Cuisine: American
This post may contain affiliate links. Please read my disclosure policy.
237 Comments on “Canal House Thin and Chewy Chocolate Chip Cookies”
Darn! I really think I followed the recipe exactly (though I didn’t weigh my dough balls!), and my cookies – while they taste delicious – don’t look anything like your gorgeous ones. Mine are not shiny, not “collapsed” around the chips – very dry looking and almost hollow inside. Any ideas? I have made a lot of chocolate chip cookies in my day, and your picture is my ideal. What can I try differently? Maybe I beat the butter too long? Or the eggs too long? I feel as though maybe there was too much air in the batter, which is lovely and very fluffy and shiny…
Darn is right 🙁 I’m sorry to hear this, but you’re not the only one who experienced different results. A few of the commenters described their cookies as lacy and very thin (mine were very thin, too, but still had a bit of chew). I haven’t been able to pinpoint what is causing the differences. I don’t think you could have overbeaten the butter. Perhaps the eggs, but unless you beat them for over 2 min, I doubt it would have made a difference. I have a few questions: How big were the balls you made? Small is best, and a rounded tablespoon (about an ounce) bakes into a surprisingly large cookie. Did you keep the portions of dough in balls versus flattening them out? Did you try chilling the dough balls before baking them? And what temp did you bake them at?
First of all, congratulations on your move! Thank you for taking the time to reply in the middle of all of that! How lucky you are to have apple and pear trees growing in your backyard…right now, I am flush with figs from my old tree, but you’ve got me thinking about planting…
Anyway, the cookies. I don’t think I beat the eggs over 2 minutes, but maybe that was it. Something was weird about the texture of the batter – very shiny and airy, and the baked cookies came out pale and “matte” and dry-ish – not shiny at all. They were almost dry looking, while a little chewy in the middle. I started at 375, but lowered to 350 after the first batch came out looking so weird. That helped them collapse a little, but still they did not brown! Maybe I’ll try the Kerrygold. I made the balls using my smallest “disher” which is probably about an ounce, ounce-and-a-half. The cookies were small. I did not flatten them, nor did I chill the dough first (I will do that this time). I am going to try again, measuring even more carefully. By the way, my family (and their teenage friends, my niece and nephews) devoured them, proclaiming them delicious. But I want them to be pretty too 🙂 I’ll let you know how they turn out…
Mary, hi, and thank you! I am sorry it has taken me a few days to get back to you on this. I finally have internet, and I am finally feeling somewhat settled, so I am hoping to be more responsive from here on out.
First of all, so jealous of your fig tree! What I wouldn’t do with an endless supply of figs on hand.
As for the cookies, and I said this to Monroe (below), too, but I think I need to revisit this recipe because several people have had issues with spreading, and I can’t really figure out why.
Also, I honestly forget what the batter looked like. When I made it, I portioned all the dough, stored the balls in the fridge and then baked 6 off at a time, but I can’t really remember what the freshly whipped dough looked like, and I can’t believe that I don’t have a photo to reference — I usually take so many process shots, which always helps with these sorts of questions. Anyway, what you are describing definitely sounds a little off, and I can’t pinpoint it because it sounds as though you were so precise and followed the recipe closely. Did you use dark brown sugar or light? Just curious. Next time I want to try dark brown sugar.
I am so glad your family and your teenage friends enjoyed the cookies but I totally understand wanting them to look pretty, too. We’re going to get this right! I am heading to a friend’s house this week for a few days…I’m thinking we’ll need to make a batch. I will be sure to report back.
I love chocolate chip cookies (especially thin chewy ones) and I decided to try my hand with this recipe. After I mixed up the batter I tied it and the taste was awesome, but when I baked them they spread. I tried refrigerating the batter but that did not work. Any suggestion on how to keep them from spreading?
Monroe — other people are experiencing this same issue. I think I need to revisit the recipe before I make any suggestions. I had a little bit of spread, but not quite as much as other people are having. My only suggestion at the moment is to make sure the balls are no bigger than a tablespoon. And also, to keep them in a mound when you drop them on the cookie sheet versus flattening them out, which I doubt you did, but just thought I’d mention that anyway. I will check back on this one soon I hope. Sorry for the trouble with the spreading 🙁
It’s been a while since I made these (thanks for the reminder), but I had massive spread issues with the Canal House recipe. I found that additional flour solved it. I made these with pulgra and flour from the bins at whole foods by the way – that may also have contributed to the additional spread. Anyway, if it helps, I just added additional tablespoonfuls until I thought the dough looked ok, then baked a test cookie or two until they looked right. My recollection is that I needed a few extra tablespoons to get them looking (something) like the photo. Not sure if its the four I used, the fat content of the butter, the temperature of my kitchen, or all of these – but that’s what worked for me.
Loren, thank you for all of this. Great ideas. I love the idea of adding flour by the tablespoon and then baking off a test cookie…very smart. As you say, there are so many factors that play into the end result, and it’s hard to know what causes all of that spread. One of my friends (Bates, who commented above with spread issues) made them again and this time was careful to really beat the butter on high for 3 minutes. She didn’t have the same spread issues, but again, hard to say if this is what solved the issue or something else. Thanks so much for writing in!
If I don’t own a mixer – is this a problem?
Rebecca, hi, and so sorry for this delayed response! I worry a little about you not having a mixer only because some people have had issues with spreading (as in the cookies spreading too far), I think this might be caused by not beating the butter and sugar for as long as the recipe says (3 minutes), and I feel that might be difficult to mimic by hand. That said, if you’re ok with a cooking that’s on the thin side, I say go for it.
Just made these and they are delicious! It’s like a caramel-y chocolate chip cookie. It’s the chewy texture that really makes the difference I think. Used Morton’s instead if sea salt, because I didn’t have it. Not too salty. Just the right amount for a nice salty/sweet flavor. Mine did spread, so next time I will beat the butter for longer. Glad to read that comment.
So happy to hear this! I know, that salty-sweet combo is irresistible. The spreading has been an issue for a number of people. Next time I make them I might add a little bit more flour.
Despite creamkng the butter well, and using the scale to measure ingredients, mine also spread too much. Alas, the dough was already mixed and chilled so I rolled each dough ball in flour. I have only, so far, done a test cookie but it worked out just fine.
delicious!! I love a well salted, buttery chcocolate chip cookie.
Ok actually, its still not enough flour.even when I rolled them in it. Yet I can not keep my hands off of them.
P.s, if you are attempting to make these without parchment,: good luck. I hope you sharpened your spatula!
Oh no! I have been meaning to revisit this recipe adding a teensy bit more flour to prevent the spreading as one commenter suggested. I’m sorry for the trouble! How far in advance did you roll the balls in flour? I’m wondering if it’s best to roll them in flour immediately before baking because maybe the dough absorbs that flour if it’s rolled too far in advance?
As a pastry chef, this recipe and pictures make me shudder in horror. Very few people would buy or eat cookies that looked like this. The large amount of butter is what makes them this way, and you can achieve thin and chewy cookies in other ways without these results.
Wow, ok, well, I can say from experience that many people have loved these cookies, but since you are so horrified by them, maybe you could offer some guidance as to how you would have prepared them without all of the butter. Side note, the recipe comes a pastry chef from New York City who was asked by the authors of Canal House Cooks Every Day to create a recipe for the best chocolate chip cookie. This is the recipe she passed along.
Hello again!
I just wanted to say that I love these cookies. I have made them 5 times already and every time they make my day. Lesley’s comment made me think about how narrow minded people are 🙂 Alexandra, you are doing a great job and this is my favourite cooking blog! Don’t let people’s taste/moods/arrogance bring you down! There are very many people who look up to you 50% because of your wonderful recipes and 50% because of your wonderful personality!
LOVE!
K
Kristine, you are too too kind! Thank you thank you. This means so much to me. I am so happy you like these cookies. They are one of my favorites, too. And I wish Lesley had provided some more information in her comment because it was useless otherwise. I don’t understand the negativity! Alas, thank you again for writing in.
Hello again!
I just wanted to say that I love these cookies. I have made them 5 times already and every time they make my day. Lesley’s comment made me think about how narrow minded people are 🙂 Alexandra, you are doing a great job and this is my favourite cooking blog! Don’t let people’s taste/moods/arrogance bring you down! There are very many people who look up to you 50% because of your wonderful recipes and 50% because of your wonderful personality!
LOVE!
K
Just wanted to let you know I just made these cookies with my 3 and 4 year olds and they were fantastic. 10 minutes at 350 and they were baked to perfection. I usually like big thick cookies but these have a beautifully thin and chewy texture that is to die for. The only thing horrifying about these cookies is how many of them I just ate.
Haha, not horrifying at all 🙂 I’m so happy to hear this. I am the same — I usually prefer a thick and chewy cookie, but there is something delicate and delicious about this thin and chewy one that I love. Thanks for writing in!
As a total layperson I just have to say these are totally delicious. I made them tonight with my son and we were blown away. My friend who is staying over said , and I quote “these are several expletives not appropriate in front of children good!”
I have to agree, cookies worth many expletives indeed.
Haha, I love it! So happy to hear this. I love these too — salty, sweet, thin, chewy…effing delicious :)!!
Leslie, there was no good reason for you to have made these negative, arrogant remarks. “As a pastry chef”, you wouldn’t be very pleased if someone degraded your product.
Thank you, Gayle. xoxo
Wow!!! I so disagree!! So harsh. And so wrong. I’ve made these many times and keep coming back for more.
Thank you, Lisa 🙂 I’m so happy to hear this.
Why are pastry chefs always so negative. Lesly seems like the type to steal recipes…
Haha, you’re hilarious 🙂 🙂 🙂
I just ordered this cookbook online….can’t wait! ❤️
Just made these last night and they are the best cookie recipe by far. I tried many recipes but nothing like this. Chewy in the middle and crispy on the edge. I can’t stop eating them. They are soft still the next day. The batch makes quit a bit so I stored the remainder in the fridge for later in the week or maybe tonight. Btw I added two more ounces of butter because I am so afraid from pass experienced recipes that it will not come out soft or stay soft the next day……thank you for this
what is the yield?
These are, by far, the absolute best chocolate chip cookies ever. I’ve tried more recipes than I care to even consider. Made these last Christmas and probably 20 times since then. Just the perfect mix of all things amazing….chewy, sweet, salty, soft, buttery. Nom/nom/nom.
Bad recipe. Not satisfied. Would rather use store bought cookie dough.
Oh no! sorry to hear this! What happened? Too flat? If you’re looking for soft and chewy, try this recipe.
These are my ULTIMATE chocolate chip cookies! Little chewy, little crispy, perfection! I haven’t found a bakery to do a cookie the way I like them. Maybe if more pastry chefs were open minded and experienced more they might be surprised at what some people enjoy. Thanks so much for sharing!
So happy to hear this, Julie! I love the texture of these, too. And the salt is just right, for me at least 🙂
Best. Cookies. Ever!
I’ve been searching for the perfect chocolate chip cookie recipe forever and these absolutely fit all of my requirements. The texture and flavor cannot be beat! Thank you, thank you, thank you!
So happy to hear this, Michele!!
Prepping to make these right now !!! I’ll let you know how they turn out!
Yay!
Made these cookies last night and they are OH SO GOOOOD!!! I have already eaten more than I should! I added pecans to half the batch for my husband and I and no nuts for the other half for the kids. Everyone loved them! My go to chocolate chip cookie recipe is The Pioneer Woman’s recipe with malted milk powder but these are just as good!!!!
Yay!! I’m so happy to hear this, Kristin!!
These sound amazing but please forgive me as i am confused as to the amount of ingredients to use. I dont understand the amount of four thats needed.
“2 large eggs1¾ cups plus 2 tablespoons (265g) all-purpose flour1 teaspoon baking soda8 ounces chocolate chips”
2 tablespoons of flour??? (That sounds wrong). So256 grams of flour. But then what are there 2 tablespoons of? I feel stupid but please assist as I would love to make these cookies!
So sorry about that! It was a formatting issue. It has been solved! recipe edited.
Having made a half dozen different recipes for chocolate chip cookies, I found these too salty and it overpowered the other flavors. I was also hoping that they would have more crunch around the edges. Sorry to say that i’ll be looking for the nest recipe.
Sorry to hear this, Christine!
I’ve been using this recipe for years and I’m shocked that some people don’t like it. It’s an amazing recipe, just how I like my cookies. I used vegan butter and they still turned out amazing. Thank you.
Thanks so much for this, Peter — I love this one, too. Great to know re vegan butter, too!
Oh my gosh these cookies are delicious. Made them just like the recipe. They came out thin and chewy just like what we were looking for. Baked them at 350 degrees for 10 minutes. Perfection!!!
I tried these cookies 2 days ago. I am not a HUGE fan of cc cookies, but…. I do like them flat, crispy around the edges, and chewy in the middle and THESE turned out perfect in my book. I was going to buy Plugra European Butter but noticed that Land O’ Lakes Euro Butter had a higher fat content, so I purchased that. I think that the key to this recipe is not only the brown sugar (I use ONLY C&H light brown sugar) but also, the lower amount of flour and the higher amount of fat. For me, it creates a more “spreadable” cookie while baking. I also baked mine on Convection 365 degree oven for 8-9 min; let them cool about 5 minutes and moved them to a cooling rack to cool completely before storing in a parchment-layer-separated zip-lock freezer bag. I made some w/o nuts for our 13 & 14 YO grandsons and froze them …. but my DH “middle of the night” snacker ate half of them, so I must make more. Apparently they went over BIG with him… Anyway, THANK YOU SO MUCH for the awesome recipe!!!! Cheers!
So happy to hear this, GrammaSue! I need to try that Land O’ Lakes Euro Butter. I’ve heard good things! So happy DH approved. Cheers to you!
This recipe was simply awesome. I added another 3/4 cup of chips as some of the first batch only had 2 chips in a cookie. Never can have too many chips!
I cooked it exactly as directed and they were just perfect. The real test will be tomorrow when my grandchildren give me their review
So happy to hear this, Mimi!!
Can you please tell me how many cookies this recipe yields?
I got 36 (each was about 30g and my son and I ate a good amount of dough so I’m guessing the actual yield is closer to 40).
Nice, thanks, Alex!
This is only the second time i ever baked cho. chip cookies. First recipe was a disaster. Not you recipe.
Your recipe on the other hand is perfect if you follow the recipe as written. Don’t change it and then say it’s not what you expected. If you change anything don’t comment. Get your own web page.Just how I feel!!!
Made this cookie about one hour ago. best chocolate chip cookie ever. I am not a pastry chef just someone who bakes when my wife let’s me in the kitchen. What I have found is people adjust the recipe and then complain that it’s not what they thought it was. Baking is a science and if you change the formula the product changes. If you change the formula then don’t comment because it’s not the same cookie. Get your own web page.
So happy to hear this, Donald! And thanks … I agree 🙂 🙂 🙂
I just made these today. They taste amazing but like many others I had way too much spread…I think the recipe should be adjusted for more flour or longer blending times. Otherwise they are delicious.
Any chance you’ve tried freezing the cookie dough before? I made 2 batches but wanted to freeze 1 set to be baked off another time but not sure about baking time, defrosting, etc.
Just made these today as my husband asked for thin, crispy, chocolate chip cookies, light on the chocolate chips. First batch spread super fast and they came out very thin, and fragile. I decided that maybe the dough needed to be chilled but read other comments that chilling made no difference. I found that hard to believe entirely. So I added more flour a tablespoon at a time til I got a consistency I liked ( about 4 tablespoons) then chilled the dough. Baked off six to try and kept dough in fridge in bewteen batches. They are perfect and exactly what my husband was looking for. THANKS!
So happy to hear this, Moira!