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Trusted Contributor
Posts: 1,583
Registered: ‎03-15-2010

Re: Cookie making question

[ Edited ]

For chocolate chip cookies, instead of creaming the butter with the sugar, try melting the butter to add to the sugar.  Creaming butter with sugar creates air cells in the batter.  These air cells expand during baking, leading to cookies that rise.  Using melted butter creates a batter that spreads and provides a chewy texture.  To keep  the cookie from becoming tough, add a little extra fat in the form of an extra egg yolk.

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Honored Contributor
Posts: 44,347
Registered: ‎01-08-2011

@deepwaterdotter wrote:

Do you wrap the dough tightly in plastic wrap before storing it in the Lock and Lock container?  I wonder if it might be drying out a bit by the air in the container.


@deepwaterdotter 

 

Your moisture question answer depends on the cookie recipe in question.

 

Follow your recipe to the last word.  There are interactions that happen to give you the success you depend on.

 

Melted butter gives cookies that spread out on the cookie sheet.  Soft means soft.

 

The Great Cookie Experiment: Butter Temperature

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Respected Contributor
Posts: 2,537
Registered: ‎07-18-2015

@ECBG 

Thanks for the picture. It made the info very clear and simple..

Esteemed Contributor
Posts: 6,297
Registered: ‎03-10-2010

@sharkb8and @ECBG  - In the case of melted butter, then there is no need to refrigerate the dough. Because you'll never get the same effect no matter how long you get the dough back to room temp.

 

 

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