Minnesota baker's clever twist on chocolate chip cookie recipe goes viral (2024)

The headline blared, "A Bang-on-the-Pan All-Star."

The celebrated baker is Sarah Kieffer, and that's how the Columbia Heights blogger (thevanillabeanblog.com) and author of "The Vanilla Bean Baking Book" made her auspicious debut in the all-powerful pages of the New York Times.

The story, which appeared Oct. 4, chronicled Kieffer's uncommon approach to creating chocolate chip cookies that are flat, wide and chewy, with crispy edges and decidedly wrinkled tops.

Her method was revealed in that headline. Yes, during the baking process, Kieffer enthusiastically slams the baking sheets against the oven's rack, several times, causing the dough to deflate and sending distinctive ripples from the cookies' center outward.

"If you're having a bad day, it's a good way to take out any aggressions," she said with a laugh.

Now, her unorthodox technique is being practiced by Times readers all over the country.

"I still can't believe it," Kieffer said. "It's so exciting."

The hoopla started a little over a month ago, when Times food writer Julia Moskin contacted Kieffer.

"She said that she was curious about all the attention that the cookies were getting on Instagram," said Kieffer.

Kieffer has a daily habit of posting images on Instagram (find her at @sarah_kieffer) of whatever she's baking. Her chocolate chip cookies — chocolate-packed, wide and wavy, like an edible Shar-Pei — are perennial attention grabbers.

"More and more people are finding them, baking them and posting images of them," Kieffer said. "It grew into a slow whisper over Instagram, and that's what happened to catch the eye of the New York Times."

Did it ever. "I grew curious," wrote Moskin. "It seems impossible that there's anything new to say about basic chocolate chip cookies. But a recipe that spreads across Instagram (and isn't galaxy-, unicorn- or ombré-decorated) cannot be lightly dismissed."

The story first appeared on the Times' website, and when it did, Kieffer's phone practically blew up.

"I think I got, like, 5,000 texts in that first hour," she said with a laugh. "It was shocking. And super-nice, and fun."

The nitty-gritty

Just exactly how does Kieffer approach that baking sheet? "I open the oven door, I lift the pan up maybe 4 inches, and then I slam it down," she said. "It's a quick flick."

She eventually discovered that utilizing the freezer, pre-baking, made for a better looking cookie.

"The dough spreads — a lot," she said. "I found that briefly freezing it helped them keep their shape, and it kept the centers gooey, and the edges crispy, which I like."

Rather than freezing the dough, it can also be refrigerated overnight, she noted.

"I find the dough just needs to be cold," she said. "Refrigerating overnight essentially does the same work that freezing does. It also helps develop the flavors."

Still, Kieffer prefers the convenience of turning to the freezer for 15 minutes rather than relying upon eight-plus hours in the refrigerator.

"When I want chocolate chip cookies, I want them right away," she said. "I'm never thinking that far in advance.

"But if you're a planner, the overnight method will work for you."

On the subject of buying butter, she's a fan of the output from Hope Creamery in Hope, Minn. But for this recipe, she reaches for less fatty Land O'Lakes butter, the unsalted stuff.

"Hope butter is so good," she said. "But these cookies already spread a lot, and I've found that if I use Hope they'll spread too much."

With chocolate, Kieffer recommends Ghirardelli's widely available 60 percent cacao bittersweet chocolate bars.

"I figure that most people are just going to go to the grocery store, they're not getting fancy chocolate," she said. "I've always liked bittersweet, although semisweet would work just fine."

Celebrating in style

Those who follow her work know that Kieffer is also a gifted food photographer. She was shooting images for Zoë François and Jeff Hertzberg, authors of the "Artisan Bread in Five Minutes a Day" cookbook series, when the Times story first appeared online. "Zoë broke open a bottle of Champagne," she said. "We didn't get much work done after that."

Is Kieffer planning to frame her New York Times fame?

"Yes, but the Minnesotan in me feels a little self-conscious about it," she said with a laugh. "Is it conceited to hang up your Times article in your house?"

Insider's tips

Here are a few more kernels of chocolate chip cookie wisdom from "The Vanilla Bean Baking Book."

• Chopped chocolate, yes; chocolate chips, no ("The cookies will not turn out the same," Kieffer writes), but if that's a deal-breaker, use 8 ounces of chips "and make the cookies 2 ½ ounces big," she writes.

• Yes, the cookies are large (about 5 inches across), but there's a reason why. Make them smaller, and "you won't get as many ridges on the outer layer," she writes. Plus, the cookies' centers won't attain their gooey best.

• Instead of parchment paper, try lining the baking sheets with aluminum foil, shiny side down. "The foil makes for an extra-crisp, golden brown bottom," she writes.

• Finally, "the cookies are delicious warm, but I've found that I love them a couple of days later just as much," Kieffer writes." I usually store them in the fridge and sneak pieces of them cold."

Rick Nelson • 612-673-4757 • @RickNelsonStrib

Minnesota baker's clever twist on chocolate chip cookie recipe goes viral (2024)

FAQs

What is the world record chocolate chip cookie? ›

No joke – it was 102 feet wide and over 40,000 pounds! On May 17, 2003, we baked the World's Biggest Cookie right here next to our bakery in Flat Rock, NC. At 102 feet wide and over 40,000 pounds, we turned the previous 80 foot record on its head!

What is Snoop Dogg cookies? ›

Snoop Dogg's peanut butter chocolate chip cookie recipe - His original cookie features creamy peanut butter and semisweet chocolate morsels, making it the perfect indulgence this holiday season. #

How did the chocolate chip cookie became popular? ›

Created as an accompaniment to ice cream, the chocolate-chip cookie quickly became so celebrated that Marjorie Husted (a.k.a. Betty Crocker) featured it on her radio program. On March 20, 1939, Wakefield gave Nestlé the right to use her cookie recipe and the Toll House name.

What does putting cookie batter in the fridge do? ›

Popping your dough in the fridge allows the fats to cool. As a result, the cookies will expand more slowly, holding onto their texture. If you skip the chilling step, you're more likely to wind up with flat, sad disks instead of lovely, chewy cookies. Cookies made from chilled dough are also much more flavorful.

What is the most sold cookie in the world? ›

Oreo is the best-selling cookie in the world. It is now sold in over 100 countries. Oreo was first produced in 1912 by the National Biscuit Company, now known as Na-Bis-Co.

What's the most eaten cookie? ›

Chocolate chip cookies

What is the most popular type of cookie? It might just be this one. Ever the crowd-pleaser, the chocolate chip cookie is renowned for its balance of richness and sweetness.

What are penguin cookies? ›

These adorable treats are enough to bring out the kid in anyone. The classic Oreo® is covered in rich white and milk chocolate and carefully decorated to look like an adorable penguin. Absolutely the cutest way to enjoy milk and cookies, and they make a memorable dessert or holiday gift for the kid in all of us.

What are disco cookies? ›

Disco biscuits, slang for several recreational drugs: Methaqualone or Quaalude, popularised in the 1960s. MDMA or ecstasy, popularised in the 1980s.

What is a blondie vs cookie? ›

You can think of them as the cocoa-less cousin of brownies (which, I also have a best brownie bake off). Blondies characteristically include melted butter for chewiness (vs. creamed butter used in most traditional American cookies), which is the principal feature that sets them apart from say, a cookie cake.

What country is known for chocolate chip cookies? ›

Chocolate chip cookies are claimed to have originated in the United States in 1938, when Ruth Graves Wakefield chopped up a Nestlé semi-sweet chocolate bar and added the chopped chocolate to a cookie recipe; however, historical recipes for grated or chopped chocolate cookies exist prior to 1938 by various other authors ...

What were chocolate chip cookies originally called? ›

Wakefield's confection was known originally as the Toll House Chocolate Crunch Cookie, after the Toll House Inn, a popular restaurant that she ran with her husband in eastern Massachusetts.

What country invented chocolate chip cookies? ›

Believe it or not, everyone's favorite chocolate chip cookie is now over 80 years old! The original recipe was created in the late 1930s by Ruth Wakefield who famously ran the Toll House restaurant in Whitman, Massachusetts.

What happens if you don't chill cookie dough before baking? ›

Sure, you can skip the chilling step and bake the dough right away, but doing so runs the risk of flat disks with dry edges and a brittle texture; a far cry for the plush, chewy cookies with fudge-like centers we all crave.

Is it better to leave cookie dough in the fridge overnight? ›

Youngman says chilling the dough for at least one hour before baking is crucial. An overnight sleepover in the fridge is even better. But if you can't wait, shape your dough into balls and freeze them for 15 minutes before popping them into the oven. So yes, resting your cookie dough makes better cookies.

Should I chill my chocolate chip cookie dough before baking? ›

Firm dough prevents the cookies from spreading too much, which is why chilling the dough is a crucial step for cut-out and rolled cookies. "The colder and more solid the fat is, the less the cookie will spread," says food stylist and recipe developer Caitlin Haught Brown.

What is the world's largest cookie cookie time? ›

On 2 April 1996, Cookie Time Limited was put firmly on the international map by baking the World's Biggest Cookie – a giant chocolate chip creation covering an area of 487.15 square metres (or 5,243.6 sq ft!)…

What is the Guinness World Record of chocolate? ›

According to Guinness World Records, With a colossal chocolate-filled box weighing 2,547.50 kg (5,616.27 lbs), the brand Russell Stover (USA) smashed the record. For comparison, it weighs about the same as an adult black rhinoceros, with the animals typically weighing in between 1,400 and 2,800 kg (3,086 and 6,173 lb).

What is the world record for most cookies baked? ›

The most cookies baked in one hour is 6,018 and was achieved by Frank Squeo and Baking Memories 4 Kids (both USA), in West Nyack, New York, USA, on 7 December 2019.

What is the world record most chocolate? ›

Largest box of chocolates

This record-breaking box contains enough chocolate to last you a lifetime. It weighs 2,547.49 kg (5,616 lb 4 oz), and was achieved by Russell Stover in USA, on 17 April 2023, to celebrate its 100th anniversary.

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