Why It Works
- Melted butter makes for a denser, chewier cookie.
- Rolling the dough in brown sugar doubles down on brown sugar flavor, while adding a crackly texture to the exterior.
I had wrist surgery a week and a half ago and have mostly been sitting on my couch at home since, attempting to get work done despite the challenge of a large, stiff cast and sore metacarpals. It's been slow going. Less slow is the rate of sugar I'm ingesting.
That's fine by me, especially if it's in the form of these chewy cookies, which were originally developed byYvonne Rupertifor her excellent One Bowl Baking column.
There are a couple keys to this cookie's gooey interior and soft and chewy texture. The first is the brown sugar itself. Unlike white sugar, brown sugar is slightly acidic, which means it readily reacts with the alkaline baking soda in the dough, creating plenty of carbon dioxide that softens the cookies as they bake. Brown sugar is also more hygroscopic than white sugar, meaning it hangs onto moisture more readily. (You can read more onhow white and brown sugar differ in cookies here.)
The other key to these cookies is the butter. In recipes that call for creaming room temperature butter with sugar, the goal is to beat microscopic bubbles of air into the dough; when the baking soda activates, it's those little bubbles that puff up and expand into lofty cookies. In this recipe, though, the butter is melted first and then mixed with the brown sugar just enough to combine them, which means there's no aeration happening as there is with creaming. This balance ofjustthe right amount of leavening from the brown sugar/baking soda reaction without the added leavening effects of creaming is key.
With less aeration, the brown sugar is left to excel at another of its jobs: Its acidity speeds the development of gluten in the dough and the speed at which the proteins in the dough set during baking, enhancing the dense, chewy texture of the cookies.
To really play up the molasses-y flavor of the brown sugar, each dough ball is rolled in it first. This also enhances the crackly texture of the exterior of each cookie, along with an extra-intense blast of caramel flavor.
Recipe Facts
华体会应用下载
14 tablespoonsunsalted butter, melted (7 ounces;200g)
1 3/4 cups packedlight brown sugar, divided (12 1/4 ounces;350g)
3/4teaspoonDiamond crystalkosher salt; for table salt, use about half as much by volume or the same by weight (3g)
1largeegg(55g)
2teaspoonsvanilla extract(10ml)
2 cupsall-purpose flour(10 ounces;285g)
1teaspoonbaking powder(4g)
1/2teaspoonbaking soda(2g)
Directions
Getting Started:Adjust 2 oven racks to upper and lower-middle positions and preheat the oven to 350°F (180°C). Line 2 rimmed baking sheets with parchment paper.
Stir butter, 1 1/2 cups (10.7 ounces; 300g) brown sugar, and salt in a large bowl until combined. Stir in egg and vanilla until combined. Add flour, baking powder, and baking soda to bowl and stir until combined.
Scoop 1/4-cup sized balls of dough onto rimmed baking sheets (7 to 8 per pan). Add remaining 1/4-cup (1.5 ounces; 50g) brown sugar to now empty (unwashed) bowl. Roll each dough ball into sugar, return to pan, and press to about 1 inch thick.
Bake until tops have puffed and cracked, and edges are golden, 9 to 11 minutes, rotating pans from top to bottom and front to back halfway through baking. Let cool on pans for 5 minutes, then transfer to wire rack to cool.
Special Equipment
Rimmed baking sheet,wire cooling rack,mixing bowl,digital scale
Read More
Nutrition Facts(per serving) | |
---|---|
244 | Calories |
11g | Fat |
35g | Carbs |
2g | Protein |
Nutrition Facts | |
---|---|
份:14to 16 | |
Amount per serving | |
Calories | 244 |
% Daily Value* | |
Total Fat11g | 14% |
Saturated Fat 6g | 32% |
Cholesterol40mg | 13% |
Sodium146mg | 6% |
Total Carbohydrate35g | 13% |
Dietary Fiber 0g | 2% |
Total Sugars 21g | |
Protein2g | |
Vitamin C 0mg | 0% |
Calcium 41mg | 3% |
Iron 1mg | 6% |
Potassium 57mg | 1% |
*The % Daily Value (DV) tells you how much a nutrient in a food serving contributes to a daily diet. 2,000 calories a day is used for general nutrition advice. |