Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (2024)

With crisp edges and tender middles, these gluten-free chocolate chip cookies get a flavor boost from a blend of gluten-free floursoat flour, sweet white rice flour, and tapioca flour, plus brown butter, loads of bittersweet chocolate, and flaky salt.

This community-favorite recipe is ridiculously delicious, easy to make, and no one will believe the cookies are gluten-free!

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (1)

I originally shared the recipe for these heavenly brown butter gluten free chocolate chip cookies back in 2012. Over a decade later, these are still my very favorite gluten-free chocolate chip cookies and the recipe I'm most likely to whip up on any given day!

I've been baking gluten-free for over 20 years and chocolate chip cookies are my go-to when I need dessert ASAP. I love this gluten-free cookie recipe so much, I shared a version in my cookbook made with chestnut flour, dark milk chocolate, and dried tart cherries. And I shared versions on Food52 made with different flours: buckwheat, teff, and mesquite.

Here's why I think these are THE BEST gluten-free chocolate chip cookies that exist. They're:

  • crispy at the edges
  • soft, gooey, and chewy in the middles
  • rich & buttery
  • packed with butterscotch flavor from vanilla bean brown butter, oat flour, and brown sugar
  • undetectably allergy-friendly
  • optionally refined sugar-free, nut-free, & dairy-free as well as gluten-free
  • easy to make with one bowl in under an hour, no mixer or chilling required
  • super satisfying with better-than-classic flavor & texture
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But no need to take my word for it. Here's what one reader had to say in the comments:

5-Star Reader Review

“Third time making this awesome recipe. It's so nice to finally have a gluten-free cookie go-to that is actually better than any other cookie I can remember eating”

—Monica D

Add your review →

If you give them a go, I hope they become a favorite in your gluten-free baking repertoire as well!

And if you're still hungry for more, you can find all of my gluten-free cookie recipes here including these gluten-free oatmeal cookies (with chocolate chips or raisins), gluten-free ginger molasses cookies and gluten-free matcha chocolate chip cookies for a cookie smorgasbord.

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (3)

What does brown butter do to cookies?

Once you try gluten-free chocolate chip cookies made with brown butter, you'll never go back. It makes these cookies taste absolutely freaking amazing.

  • Browning the butter caramelizes the milk solids in the butter, giving it a rich, nutty flavor. In French this is called beurre noisette for its nutty flavor.
  • Browning the butter also releases some liquid in the form of steam, leaving behind more pure fat. This makes the cookies extra rich, dense, moist, and chewy.
  • I take it a step further by adding a vanilla bean to the browning butter. This infuses the butter with floral notes. But if you don't have a vanilla bean on hand, no worries: just brown the butter on its own and add 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract along with the egg.

Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies Without Xanthan Gum

My original recipe for these cookies called for 1/4 teaspoon of xanthan gum. But I've since made this recipe many times without it and I can't detect a difference. The cookies are still tender and chonky without it.

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (4)

Ingredients & Substitution Suggestions

Just a handful of ingredients go into these rice & oat flour gluten-free chocolate chip cookies.

  • Butter makes the cookies rich and moist. I prefer using European-style butter which has a higher fat content and is better for browning.
    • You can use plant butter such as Miyoko's to make these dairy-free.
  • Granulated sugar adds sweetness. I use organic granulated sugar, such as Florida Crystals, but regular white sugar will work too.
    • For a refined sugar-free cookie, swap both sugars for coconut sugar, measured by weight.
  • Brown sugar should be fresh, soft, and full of molasses. Either dark or light will work. I prefer organic dark brown sugar, which is more flavorful and slightly coarser.
    • For a refined sugar-free cookie, swap both sugars for coconut sugar, measured by weight.
  • One large egg helps the cookies puff as they bake and the proteins help the cookies hold together.
    • For egg-free cookies, my reader Debbie subs 2 tablespoons softened cream cheese and 1 tablespoon water, and she skips the step of browning the butter. Alternatively, try using a flax egg (3 tablespoons warm water mixed with 4 teaspoons ground flax).
  • A small amount of baking soda helps the cookies spread and brown.
  • A handful of toasted pecans add flavor, but you can leave them out if you prefer, or use a different nut.
  • A sprinkle of flaky salt makes these completely addictive. I prefer Maldon salt for its thin, crisp flakes.
  • Lots of bittersweet chocolate chunks offset the sweetness of the cookie dough. I like using baking chocolate with at least 70% cacao mass chopped into large pieces, but feel free to use your favorite chocolate chips.
    • For refined sugar-free cookies, use chocolate sweetened with coconut sugar or maple such as Raaka, Guittard Santé, or Hu.

The best gluten-free flours for baking chocolate chip cookies

A trio of GF flours creates dreamy flavor and texture here. You'll never know they're gluten-free!

  • Gluten-Free Oat flour (I use Bob's Red Mill brand) gives the cookies earthy flavor, tenderness, and crispy edges.
    • By weight, you can substitute teff, buckwheat, or chestnut flour (all of which have stronger flavors). Or try subbing sorghum flour, which will have a slightly sandier texture.
  • Sweet rice flour helps the cookies hold together and creates a smooth texture, like all-purpose flour would.
    • You can substitute Bob's Red Mill 1 to 1 gluten-free flour, which is made with sweet rice flour, or try cassava flour.
  • Tapioca flour adds chew and keeps the cookie middles soft.
    • You can try subbing arrowroot starch.
Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (5)

How to Make Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies

A few key techniques make these cookies extra-special.

  • This recipe makes 15-20 cookies and takes 30 minutes of prep time, 30 minutes to let the dough sit, and 10 minutes to bake. All you need is a bowl, a spoon, and a baking sheet!
  • The recipe can be doubled if you need more cookies!
  • No mixer required here! The melted browned butter is simply stirred with the other ingredients.
  • The dough can be made and scooped ahead of time and chilled or frozen until ready to bake. The baked cookies keep beautifully for up to 3 days.
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Make-Ahead Options

These oat & rice flour chocolate chip cookies can be made ahead for fresh, gooey cookies whenever the whim strikes. Chilling the dough for at least several hours results in cookies that are extra-thick and chonky because it allows the flours to absorb more moisture. Here's how to do it:

  1. Make the dough as directed, then let sit until firm enough to scoop (or chill for a few minutes to speed this up).
  2. Scoop the dough into balls using a cookie scoop, place the dough balls on a small baking sheet lined with parchment, and chill until firm, about 1 hour.
  3. Transfer the cold dough balls into a container and chill for up to a week or so. Or freeze for up to several months.
  4. When you’re ready to bake, just plop the dough balls on a cookie sheet as directed, top with flaky salt, and bake. They may need a bit longer in the oven if they're been chilled or frozen.

Troubleshooting & Tips for the Best Gluten-Free Cookies

Cookies are at once one of the simplest treats to bake and one of the most sensitive. Here are a few tips to ensure gluten-free chocolate chip cookie bliss.

Measure for measure

Accurate measuring is crucial for cookies. Too much flour will lead to thick, dry cookies, and not enough will lead to thin, greasy ones. For best results, weigh your ingredients with a food scale. This is the one I use.

When measuring by volume, use the dip and sweep method for flours: fluff up your flour, dip in your dry measuring cup, and use a flat butter knife or small offset spatula to sweep away the excess so that the flour is level with the cup. For brown sugar, pack it well into the cup; it should mostly hold the shape of the cup when turned out into the mixing bowl.

Testing, Testing

Bake off a single test cookie before baking the full batch. I like to use a small baking sheet that came with my toaster oven and a small piece of parchment. This way you can adjust the rest of the dough or the oven temperature and you didn't just ruin the whole batch!

Here are some common cookie troubles and how to rectify them:

  • The cookies spread too much.
    • Add a tablespoon of two more flour to the remaining cookie dough, and/or increase the oven temperature by 25-50 degrees.
  • The cookies didn't spread enough.
    • Lower the oven temperature by 25-50 degrees and/or flatten the dough balls before baking them. Next time you make them, use a little less flour.

Temperature

Make sure your oven is actually the temperature it claims to be! Most ovens don't run true to temperature (mine runs about 50 degrees cold), so do yourself a favor and invest in an oven thermometer. Your cookies are worth it!

If your oven is too cold, your cookies will spread too thin, and will overbake in the centers before the edges show signs of doneness. Too hot, and the cookies' outsides will firm up before they have a chance to spread; the outside will be overdone before the innards get a chance to cook.

Timing is everything

Pull the cookies from the oven when they look underbaked. The edges should be just starting to color, while the tops should be puffed and soft, collapsing when you touch them gently with a fingertip.

Use rimless cookie sheets and parchment paper so you can effortlessly whisk all the cookies off the sheet and onto a cooling rack to stop the cooking. The cookies' residual heat will bake them fully. Much of the softness of hot cookies comes from the melted butter and chocolate, both of which become solid at room temperature. The properly baked cookie will stay soft in the center when cooled.

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (14)

Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies for Everyone

This recipe is friendly to many different food sensitivities. Here how to adapt the recipe for your own needs:

  • Gluten-Free Dairy-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies: use vegan butter in place of the dairy butter, such as Miyoko's cultured butter. Take care when browning the vegan butter so it doesn't burn.
  • Coconut Sugar Chocolate Chip Cookies: omit the sugars and use the same amount of coconut sugar by weight. The dough will feel a little thicker, but the cookies will bake up exactly the same. The molasses flavor of the coconut sugar plays beautifully with the brown butter.
  • Refined Sugar-Free: Make the coconut sugar variation above and use chocolate sweetened with coconut sugar or maple.
  • Nut-Free: omit the pecans or swap them for toasted pumpkin seeds.
  • Egg-Free / Vegan Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies: I have yet to perfect this recipe using flax egg, but I will update it when I do! In the meantime, try one of these recipes:
    • Magical Tahini Chocolate Chip Cookies
    • Almond Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies

Whether you nom these gluten-free chocolate chip cookies warm and gooey from the oven or cooled to room temp, with a tall glass of milk or plant milk, shared with a friend or hoarded all to yourself, I hope you love them as much as we do!

*Bojon appétit!For more Bojon Gourmet in your life, follow along onInstagram,Facebook,orPinterest, purchase my gluten-free cookbookAlternative Baker, or subscribe to receive new posts via email. And if you make this gluten-free chocolate chip cookie recipe, I’d love to see. Tag your Instagram snaps @The_Bojon_Gourmet and #bojongourmet.*

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (15)

4.95 from 34 reviews

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies

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With crisp edges and tender middles, these easy gluten-free chocolate chip cookies get a flavor boost from a blend of oat flour, sweet white rice flour, and tapioca flour, plus brown butter, loads of bittersweet chocolate, and flaky salt. Ridiculously delicious and no one will believe they're gluten-free!

Alanna Taylor-Tobin

Prep Time: 30 minutes minutes

Cook Time: 10 minutes minutes

Resting Time: 30 minutes minutes

Total: 1 hour hour 10 minutes minutes

Servings: 12 -15 cookies

Ingredients

Wet Ingredients

  • 8 tablespoons butter (115 g) unsalted butter*
  • ½ vanilla bean, split lengthwise and scraped (or ½ teaspoon vanilla extract or paste, added with the egg)
  • ½ cup (100 g) packed organic dark brown sugar**
  • ¼ cup (50 g) organic granulated sugar***
  • 1 large egg (2 ounces by weight out of shell)

Dry Ingredients

  • ½ cup (78 g) sweet white rice flour (such as Koda Farms Mochiko)****
  • ½ cup (50 g) gluten-free oat flour (such as Bob's Red Mill)*****
  • 2 tablespoons (15 g) tapioca flour******
  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda
  • ¼ teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 7 ounces (200 g) bittersweet chocolate (around 70% cacao mass), coarsely chopped (1 ½ cups)
  • ½ cup (60 g) toasted pecans, cooled completely and coarsely chopped (optional)
  • flaky salt such as Maldon, for sprinkling (optional)

Instructions

Brown the Butter

  • Melt the butter and vanilla bean and scrapings (if using) together in a small, heavy-bottomed saucepan over medium heat. (If using vanilla extract or paste, just brown the butter by itself and add the vanilla along with the egg.)

  • Continue to cook, swirling occasionally, until the butter turns golden and smells absolutely amazing, 3-5 minutes. There should be dark brown bits (not black) on the bottom of the pan. When the butter starts to foam up, watch it very closely as it can go from brown to burnt in moments.

Wet Ingredients

  • Place the sugars in a large bowl and when the butter has browned, scrape it and the browned bits into the sugar immediately to stop the cooking. Let cool, stirring occasionally, for 10-20 minutes. Remove the vanilla bean if using (you can rinse and dry it and use it to make vanilla extract or to flavor a small jar of sugar or liqueur).

  • Whisk the egg (and vanilla extract, if using) into the cooled sugar-butter mixture until well-combined and emulsified.

Dry Ingredients

  • Meanwhile, sift together the flours, baking soda, and salt into a medium bowl.

  • Use a sturdy wooden spoon to stir the flour mixture into the sugar mixture, stir until well combined, then continue to stir vigorously for 45 seconds; the mixture will firm up slightly. This increases the stickiness of the flours, helping the cookies hold together and be more chewy.

  • Stir in the nuts and chocolate until evenly distributed.

  • Cover the dough and let it sit at room temperature for at least 30 minutes and up to 2 hours to allow the butter to firm and the starches to absorb moisture, leading to thicker, chewier cookies.

Bake the cookies

  • Position racks in the upper and lower thirds of the oven and preheat to 375ºF. Line two rimless cookie sheets with parchment paper.

  • At this point, I recommend baking off a single test cookie on a small baking sheet. This way you can adjust the rest of the dough and/or oven temperature before baking off the whole batch. See Troubleshooting & Tips in the recipe notes.

  • Scoop the dough into 1 ½ inch diameter balls (about 2.5 tablespoons each; a size 24 cookie scoop works wonderfully) and place on the prepared cookie sheets, spaced 2-3 inches apart. Top each cookie with a pinch of flaky salt.

  • Bake the cookies about 7-10 minutes, rotating back to front and top to bottom after 5 minutes. When the cookies are ready, they will seem underbaked. The edges should be just starting to color, and the tops should be puffed all over with soft centers that collapse when gently touched with a fingertip. The centers will look wet under a thin surface of dry, cracked-looking dough.

  • Remove the cookies from the oven and pull them, parchment and all, onto cooling racks to stop them from baking further. Let cool for at least 10 minutes before devouring. Or cool completely and store in an airtight container at room temperature; the butterscotch flavor comes through better when the cookies are cool.

  • The cookies will keep for up to 3 days, airtight at room temperature.

Notes

Ingredient Subs:

*Can sub vegan butter by weight (such as Miyoko's cultured butter) and take care when browning the butter that it doesn't burn

**Can sub by weight coconut sugar or maple sugar

***Can sub by weight coconut sugar or maple sugar

****Can sub by weight any GF AP blend, such as Bob's Red Mill 1 to 1, or try cassava flour

*****Can sub by weight sorghum, buckwheat, teff, or chestnut flour

******Can sub by weight arrowroot flour

Make-ahead:

Make the dough as directed, then let sit until firm enough to scoop (or chill for a few minutes). Scoop into balls, place the dough balls on a small baking sheet lined with parchment, and chill until firm, about 1 hour. Transfer the cold dough balls into a container and chill for up to a week or so. When you’re ready to bake, just plop the dough balls on a cookie sheet as directed, top with flaky salt, and bake. They may need a bit longer in the oven. You can also freeze dough balls for up to several months.

Dairy-Free Cookies:

Use a good plant-based butter such as Miyoko's in place of the butter. Watch closely during the browning process – it may need more or less time than specified – or skip the browning process altogether.

Refined sugar-free cookies:

Omit the white and brown sugars and use 150 g (1 cup + 2 tablespoons) coconut sugar. Use chocolate sweetened with coconut sugar (such as Hu) or maple (such as Raaka).

Troubleshooting & Tips for better cookies:

Since cookies are sensitive to slight changes in moisture and temperature, here are some ways to get foolproof cookies:

  • measure by weight, not volume
  • if measuring by volume, use the dip and sweep (aka scoop and swoop) method
  • make sure your oven is the correct temperature by using an external oven thermometer
  • bake off a single test cookie to make sure your cookies spread the right amount
  • if your cookies spread too much, add more flour or increase the oven temperature
  • if they don't spread enough, flatten the dough balls or decrease the oven temperature

Nutrition facts are for 1 of 15 cookies.

Nutrition

Calories: 238kcalCarbohydrates: 26gProtein: 2gFat: 14gSaturated Fat: 7gCholesterol: 28mgSodium: 120mgPotassium: 121mgFiber: 2gSugar: 15gVitamin A: 209IUCalcium: 22mgIron: 1mg

Making this? I'd love to see!Tag your snaps @The_Bojon_Gourmet and #bojongourmet!

My original photos from 2012!

Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (16)

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Thick & Chewy Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies • The Bojon Gourmet (2024)

FAQs

What is the secret to making cookies soft and chewy? ›

Cornstarch helps product soft and thick cookies. Using more brown sugar than white sugar results in a moister, softer cookie. An extra egg yolk increases chewiness. Rolling the cookie dough balls to be tall and lumpy instead of wide and smooth gives the cookies a bakery-style textured thickness.

How do you thicken gluten-free cookies? ›

Chill the cookie dough for at least 12 hours

If you want your cookies to stay thick, you'll need to chill them at least until they're cold. And if you want the cookies to have that beautiful caramel flavor that the best chocolate chip cookies have, you'll need to chill them for at least 12 hours.

Why are my gluten-free cookies falling apart? ›

Gluten-free flour is not a perfect substitute for wheat flour. Each mixture out there is designed to mostly work in certain kinds of recipe, but not in all of them. And yes, it is perfectly normal for a gluten-free cookie to be crumbly, since it is the gluten itself that holds wheat cookes together.

How do I make my cookies chewy instead of crunchy? ›

How To Make Cookies Chewy Without Cornstarch
  1. Go heavy on brown sugar. It has more moisture than its granulated counterpart, which means the cookie comes out less crispy. ...
  2. Choose margarine or shortening instead of butter. ...
  3. Use baking powder instead of baking soda. ...
  4. Rest your dough. ...
  5. Shorten baking time.
May 14, 2023

How do you keep cookies thick and chewy? ›

Chill the cookie dough.

Chilling cookie dough helps prevent spreading. The colder the dough, the less the cookies will over-spread into greasy puddles. You'll have thicker, sturdier, and more solid cookies. Whenever I make cookies, I plan ahead and chill the cookie dough overnight.

What is the best flour for chewy cookies? ›

Bread flour contains a higher protein content (around 12-14%), leading to more gluten development. This makes it ideal for bakers seeking a chewier texture in their cookies. The extra gluten can help retain gas and moisture, producing a denser and chewier result.

What is the best gluten free flour for cookies? ›

What's the best gluten-free flour for baking? Bob's Red Mill gluten-free 1-to-1 baking mix is my favorite gluten-free all-purpose flour blend for baking. It has a mild texture and plenty of "stick" thanks to a blend of sweet rice flour, brown rice flour, and sorghum flour, plus some starches and xanthan gum.

Should I add xanthan gum to gluten-free cookies? ›

Using xanthan gum helps provide some of the stickiness that gluten free goods lack, replacing some elasticity. Xanthan gum mimics some of gluten's most essential properties by sticking to flour and its moisture. This helps create moist goods that hold their shape after being baked.

What can I use to thicken gluten-free? ›

Arrowroot starch works in these sorts of dishes, too. Some sauces are thickened by starting with a “roux” (a butter + flour mixture), traditionally made with wheat flour. White rice or sweet rice flour is a perfectly good substitute.

How to make gluten-free cookies less dry and crumbly? ›

Add extra liquid: Gluten-free flours tend to absorb more liquid than regular flour, so you may need to add more liquid to your recipes to compensate. This can help to keep your baked goods moist and prevent them from becoming dry and crumbly.

Should you let gluten free cookie dough rest? ›

Instead of proceeding directly to baking, let the gluten-free cookie dough rest for about 30 minutes at room temperature. This resting period is crucial for hydration, not leavening. During this time, gluten-free flours absorb moisture from the wet ingredients, altering the dough's texture and consistency.

What holds gluten-free cookies together? ›

Binding agents (such as xanthan gum, guar gum, or flax) help give gluten-free baked goods the elasticity needed to create structure — so if your favorite gluten-free flour mix doesn't contain one, you'll probably want to add one.

What is the secret ingredient to keep cookies soft? ›

There's an ingredient that will make your cookies extra flexible and soft. It's corn syrup. That's it! That, my friend, is the secret ingredient to the best SOFTEST chocolate chip cookies.

How do you make cookies soft and chewy vs hard and crisp? ›

While brown sugar keeps your cookies moist and soft, white sugar and corn syrup will help your cookies spread and crisp in the oven. Using more white sugar in your cookies will result in a crispier end product. To achieve a crispy cookie, skip the rest in the fridge.

Is butter or shortening better for chewy cookies? ›

Those made with only shortening bake higher and spread less during baking. The butter cookie provides better flavor and a crispier exterior with browning around edges and a chewy interior; the shortening cookie spreads less, holding its shape better while baking.

What is the trick to keep baked goods like cookies soft? ›

This simplest kitchen hack you'll ever love!

If you bake too many cookies (as if there is such a thing!) and are concerned about them going stale, just add a slice of white bread to the storage container to keep them from hardening.

What are three factors that contribute to a chewy cookie? ›

There are a few things you can try to get soft, chewy chocolate chip cookies:
  • Use a higher ratio of brown sugar to white sugar. ...
  • Use more egg yolks and less egg whites. ...
  • Add a bit of cornstarch to the dough. ...
  • Make sure you're using the right type of flour. ...
  • Don't over-bake the cookies.
May 17, 2018

Should I use baking soda or baking powder in cookies? ›

Baking soda is typically used for chewy cookies, while baking powder is generally used for light and airy cookies. Since baking powder is comprised of a number of ingredients (baking soda, cream of tartar, cornstarch, etc.), using it instead of pure baking soda will affect the taste of your cookies.

How to make cookie dough more moist? ›

There are a few things you can do to add liquid to your cookie dough if it is too dry and crumbly. One option is to add milk, water, or another liquid until the dough is the right consistency. You can also try adding melted butter or shortening. If your dough is still too dry, you may need to add more flour.

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