Genius Recipes

The Internet's Favorite Chocolate Chip Cookie, Straight From Simply Genius

There is no more perfect cookie to launch the 'Simply Genius' cookbook (It’s here! It’s here!) than this legendary recipe from Tara O’Brady.

September 27, 2022

These miraculous cookies are somehow even easier, faster, and—I'll say it—better than the recipe on the back of the chocolate chip bag.

There is no waiting, no ambiguity—is my butter soft enough? room temp eggs…even when it’s 90°F?—about when to pass go. (Butter: Cold from the fridge. Eggs: Cold from the fridge. Go!)

Go! Photo by Julia Gartland. Food Stylist: Lauren Lapenna. Prop Stylist: Megan Hedgpeth.

But despite their speed and ease, they are the best sort of molten puddle cookies—buttery-bronze edges with a rippled give through the middle, and layers of pooling bittersweet chocolate throughout. There is nothing shortcut or half-measure about them.

I knew that they had to be a part of Simply Genius cookbook (which is finally, four years later, out today). The book was built around exactly this kind of smart, uncompromising recipe, with a desserts chapter driven by the promise that you don’t need a stand mixer, food processor, or blowtorch (or hours of prep time) to make memorable treats like this. Thankfully, Tara O’Brady, the cookie’s brilliant creator, agreed to share them with us.

When I first stumbled across the recipe on Tara’s blog Seven Spoons, their unassuming name drew me in: Basic, Great Chocolate Chip Cookies. Only later did I realize they’ve ridden wave after wave of popularity since Tara’s Seven Spoons cookbook debuted in 2015. They go by a tidy acronym (#BGCCCs) to those in the know, and were even recently referred to as “the best cookie recipe on the internet,” by Jesse Szewczyk on The Kitchn.

Join The Conversation

Top Comment:
“I tried the recipe last night and did not get the results that we are seeing. I was disappointed but will keep looking for that perfect easy CC recipe. Thanks for the video.”
Comment

Their secrets? The right combination of gently melted butter and fridge-cold eggs to hit the perfect dough temperature for spreading. Chopped chocolate (or discs or feves—anything but stabilized chips)—to melt into layers and force the dough outward. The hefty 3-tablespoon portion—rolled into a ball, with no foot to restrain them—to give plenty of topography to crisp, ripple, crisp.

While we can’t necessarily go willy-nilly swapping melted butter and cold eggs into all our favorite cookie recipes (it took Tara over 700 batches to land on this one), Tara has riffed on her formula in countless ways. She mix-matches chocolates, sneaks in oatmeal and whole-grain flours and brown butter, and stirs in last-minute flair like sprinkles, torched marshmallow fluff, malted cereal crackle, and peanut butter.

This was my—basic, great—dream for this cookbook: A collection of timeless recipes so simple they’ll bend around whatever is happening in your life, and so genius you never want to stop making them.

What will you do to make them your own?

Tune into @food52 & @taraobrady on Instagram Wednesday 9/28 at 7pm E.T. to see me and Tara make BGCCCs Live! What riff will Tara dream up this time?

The Simply Genius cookbook is out now—you can snag a copy in our Shop, or so many other places! Like Amazon, Barnes & Noble, Books-A-Million, Bookshop.org, Hudson Booksellers, IndieBound, Powell's, Target, Kitchen Arts & Letters, Now Serving, Omnivore Books on Food, Book Larder, or your favorite local bookstore.

Got a Genius recipe to share—from a classic cookbook, an online source, or anywhere, really? Please send it my way (and tell me what's so smart about it) at [email protected].

This post contains products independently chosen (and loved) by our editors and writers. As an Amazon Associate, Food52 earns an affiliate commission on qualifying purchases of the products we link to.
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I'm an ex-economist, lifelong-Californian who moved to New York to work in food media in 2007, before returning to the land of Dutch Crunch bread and tri-tip barbecues in 2020. Dodgy career choices aside, I can't help but apply the rational tendencies of my former life to things like: recipe tweaking, digging up obscure facts about pizza, and deciding how many pastries to put in my purse for "later."

22 Comments

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MarieHudgeons October 7, 2022
They are outstanding and we will definitely make them again
 
Smaug October 6, 2022
These were pretty good cookies. I am not a fan of enormous cookies or soft cookies, and these are both, but the flavor is generally good, with some caramelization of the sugar. The chocolate (I used Lindt 60%) spread as advertised in the recipe- it doesn't really come off as a chocolate chip cookie, more like a cookie with some chocolate in it, and I miss the solid hit of chocolate you get from chips; I also miss walnuts. I tried a few at half size (22g. dough), and it worked well enough; the cookies were noticeably crisper and a reasonable size, suiting my taste, but the chocolate is more attenuated.
The high proportion of flour to fat made surprisingly little difference, with the cocoa butter perhaps serving as substitute for some butter.
 
Kristen M. October 7, 2022
Thanks for trying them out! Interesting note about the chocolate replacing some of the fat.
 
Smaug October 10, 2022
ps These cookies did not store well, possibly because of the low fat content; though in an air tight container, they had a noticeably dry feeling after just a day. Edible, but definitely a step in the wrong direction.
 
MarieHudgeons September 30, 2022
Made these cookies two days ago the recipe is definitely a keeper..my kids and friends loved them and they will go into my cookie rotation. Plus they were as simple as can be. All the way around they were successful.
 
Kristen M. October 7, 2022
So glad they were a hit!
 
liz O. September 28, 2022
Anybody have a comment on the cookies instead of parchment paper?😄
 
[email protected] September 28, 2022
Just posted a response.
 
[email protected] September 28, 2022
I tried the recipe last night and did not get the results that we are seeing. I was disappointed but will keep looking for that perfect easy CC recipe.
Thanks for the video.
 
Kristen M. October 7, 2022
I'm sorry to hear it—thank you for letting us know. May I ask if you were measuring by volume or weight? (Weight will give you the closest to Tara's results.) Let us know if you'd like to troubleshoot.
 
spenlo September 27, 2022
I'm curious about the folded liner used on the cookie sheet. I don't think I've seen this before.
 
Smaug September 28, 2022
I'm a little curious about this comment- the recipe calls for sheet pans rather than cookie sheets, and I don't see any references to folded liners, it simply says to line the pans with parchment.
 
spenlo September 28, 2022
Used in the video
 
Smaug September 28, 2022
Hm- tried fast forwarding (I'm not going to watch 12 minutes of video)- it appears when the cookies are put on the she3edt pan the parchment is simply lying there; the parchment does appear to have been folded into a rectangle at some point- for storage, maybe?- is that what you're referring to? It does seem rather odd.
 
spenlo September 28, 2022
Yes. Re-usable parchment?
 
Smaug September 28, 2022
Probably- I reuse parchment all the time; it can get a little funky and grows brittle after a while, but with luck a piece can last a half dozen or so uses.
 
Jo October 2, 2022
I do the same King Arthur has a post where they talk about reusing parchment as they do until it is falling apart (employee owned company). I love this recipe as well it delicious easy.

 
Misha G. October 6, 2022
https://www.reynoldsbrands.com/products/parchment-paper/parchment-paper-pop-sheets
 
Kristen M. October 7, 2022
Hi all, I do try to reuse my parchment as many times as possible, which means after it's clean and dry, it gets folded in a drawer—hence the lines!
 
spenlo October 7, 2022
Thanks Kristen and others. I will try to salvage my parchment paper in the future and give it a try. I keep a segment of parchment paper in my microwave in the event of spills or overflows, but never considered re-using it after use in my oven. I guess I thought the heat might cause the paper qualities to diminish for baking. Good to know!
 
Smaug October 7, 2022
The heat does make the paper brittle; after a couple of uses I don't think I'd try folding it.