Secrets to making perfect cookies
Easy ideas for next-level bakes
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Use a mix of sugars
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Mixing sugars adds depth of flavour and helps give the perfect crunch and chew. Try granulated and soft brown sugar for a pleasing texture with a caramel flavour, or mix light and muscovado sugars for a darker cookie. Plus it's handy if you've only got odds and ends of packets of sugar in your cupboard.
Try this cookie recipe with a mix of light muscovado and golden caster sugar
Use plain flour
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Baking soda or baking powder?
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Butter or margarine?
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Butter makes the most traditional cookie, giving it a smooth, rich taste. But ultimately it's personal preference, as some cooks prefer to use softer margarine. And if margarine is all you have, recipes should still work.
Find more about the difference butter or margarine can make to your cooking
Keep butter out of the fridge
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Use room temperature eggs
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Chunks, chips or chopped?
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Don’t over-mix the dough
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Mix the dough until it just comes together because over-mixing adds too much air and makes a puffier cookie rather than a perfect one.
Love brownies too? Discover simple hacks to make the best-ever chocolate treats
Chill it
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How to shape cookies
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Keep your cookies the same size
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Baking tray or cookie tray?
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Specialist cookie trays are carbon steel, flat trays with perforated holes to allow full air circulation and get the ultimate crisp base. However a traditional large, flat baking tray without the holes works just as well.
Baking paper or silicone?
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Always preheat the oven
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How to avoid over-cooking cookies
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Turn the tray
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Cool on a wire rack
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Allow cookies to sit for a minute on the tray to firm up and transfer to a wire rack to cool completely. This helps them maintain a crisp bottom and avoid over-baking.
Find out how store cupboard ingredients can transform your favourite dishes
Freeze then bake
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Slow-cooker cookie
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You don't always have to make cookies in an oven. If you’ve got some time on your hands, experiment and try baking in a slow cooker. It'll be more dense than your average cookie but just as irresistible and perfect with a scoop of vanilla ice cream.
Add oats
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Rolled oats bring a chewy texture to classic cookies. Whizz up the oats into loose flour for a smoother finish or leave them chunky for more texture.
Simple sugar cookies
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Sometimes there's no need to complicate things. Easy sugar cookies have a shorter texture (more similar to a crumbly biscuit) but they're just as irresistible. Best of all, you probably have all the ingredients in your store cupboard.
How to ice sugar cookies
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For a professional finish, decorate sugar cookies with royal icing. The most important thing to remember is to ensure cookies are completely cool before you start icing otherwise it'll melt.
The best gluten-free cookies
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Cookies can still be an indulgent free-from treat, without gluten, wheat or refined sugar. You could also play around with the filling. Add toasted pecans, walnuts or hazelnuts, or substitute dark chocolate for white chocolate and dried raspberries.
Add a splash of colour
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Add a handful of nuts
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Walnuts, macadamia nuts and pecans all work well with chocolate, or bake an old-fashioned peanut butter cookie for a rich and nutty treat.
A pinch of salt
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Balance out the cookie dough sweetness with a pinch of salt in the mixture. Or as a final flourish, sprinkle sea salt flakes on top of each cookie when they come hot out of the oven for a delicious sweet and salty flavour.
For more baking advice, find out easy hacks for making best-ever cakes
Drinkable cookies
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If you just can’t wait for your cookies to come out of the oven, try a cookie-inspired smoothie. There’s not actually any cookie dough in it but it tastes just like the baked treat. Our version is packed with caramelly dates, pecans, cacoa nibs and lucuma powder, a natural sweetener.
Go back to basics
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Stay true to the chocolate chip cookie's roots and have a go at making the original recipe. The cookie craze started by accident when Ruth Wakefield experimented with a butter cookie recipe and chocolate chips at the Toll House Inn in Massachusetts USA, in the 1930s. Nestlé promptly bought the recipe and started printing it on the back of every packet of chocolate chips.
Double the chocolate
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Add cocoa powder and dark chocolate chips to your cookie mixture to really amp up the chocolate factor. The slightly bitter cocoa and chips will add a depth of flavour and provide a pleasing contrast to the sweet dough. If you prefer your cookies a little sweeter, mix in milk chocolate chips instead.
Get the recipe for the ultimate double chocolate cookies here
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