The perfect Christmas cookie is here. Meet my soft and chewy Chocolate Crinkle Cookies filled with chocolate chips and covered in sugar. They boast a fudgy brownie-like centre and a festive sugar crust.
They’re here, they’re here!
With their perfect snow-white sugar shell and fudgy brownie middle, these are my delicious Chocolate Crinkle Cookies.
If you follow along on Instagram, you would know these cookies are highly anticipated. After numerous recipe tests, I finally nailed the right mix of chewy, fudgy and oh-so-chocolatey.
These are the ultimate Christmas cookie.
There is something incredibly festive about these cookies. I think it’s their white coating, which looks like a beautiful dusting of snow. Here in Australia, Christmas lands in the middle of summer which means all things hot and humid, so I have a soft spot for all things snow – especially at this time of the year.
When I was testing this recipe, I knew I wanted a few things – a stark white shell, a fudgy chocolate centre and classic chewy edges. And it took quite a few batches to get it just right.
Recipe testing
RECIPE TEST #1: I started by adjusting my Chocolate Fudge Cookie recipe but added slightly more flour and did one coating of icing sugar. The first problem I had was the sugar soaking into the cookie, resulting in a lacklustre coating once baked. My cookie was also slightly cakey – and I also had problems with the cookies not spreading.
RECIPE TEST #2: I decided to use melted butter instead of softened butter to help with the cookie spreading correctly. I also swapped out the brown sugar for caster sugar. I added an extra egg for moisture and used baking powder instead of soda. I had to chill the dough but was happy with the outcome – aside from the sugar coating which was still not thick enough.
RECIPE TEST #3: This time, I took inspiration from my Brownie Cookie recipe, and use real melted chocolate IN the cookie batter. I also reduced the amount of flour and double rolled the cookies – in both white sugar AND icing sugar. These cookies were good but a little too much like a brownie and not a classic cookie. I had solved the sugar problem though! They were lovely and white!
RECIPE TEST #4: I went back to test 2 but reduced the baking powder and upped the chocolate chips to make sure the cookie was lovely and fudgy. And BOOM, the result was PERFECT. A deliciously soft and chewy chocolate cookie with a perfectly white crinkled finish.
What are Chocolate Crinkle Cookies?
Chocolate Crinkle Cookies are chocolate cookies that are rolled in icing sugar or powdered sugar before being baked in the oven. The result is a deliciously fudgy chocolate cookie with a lovely white, crinkly finish that’s soft and sweet.
How to make Chocolate Crinkle Cookies
- This is a simple mix and stir recipe so you don’t need an electric mixer. But you will need to chill the cookie dough for 1 hour.
- Start by melting your butter in the microwave. Then add caster sugar (or granulated sugar) and vanilla and gently whisk together.
- Add eggs and whisk together, just to break up the egg yolks.
- Then add plain flour (or all purpose flour), cocoa powder, baking powder and salt. To ensure your cookies spread correctly, I highly recommend measuring out your flour and cocoa powder in grams using a baking scale. It’s very easy to overmeasure flour when using cup measurements. If you’ve had problems in the past with your cookies not spreading correctly in the oven, read my tips here.
- A sticky chocolate cookie dough will form. Throw in the chocolate chips. Cover with plastic wrap and refrigerate for 1 hour.
- By now the cookie dough will still be soft and sticky, but it should be just firm enough that you can scoop it and roll it into balls using your hands.
- Scoop out 1.5 tablespoons of cookie dough and then roll them in a bowl of white sugar (or granulated sugar). Caster sugar is too fine and not as effective in this step. We roll the cookie dough in this sugar first to ensure the second coating of icing sugar doesn’t soak into the cookie dough when baked.
- Finally, roll the cookie dough balls in a thick coating of icing sugar (or powdered sugar). Make sure you coat them really well. After I place them on my baking tray, I’ll sometimes go around again and give any that don’t look fully coated a second roll.
- Bake! Cookies will spread out naturally in the oven and get a beautiful, crinkly, white coating. Leave them to cool completely, before enjoying.
LOVE EXTRA FUDGY COOKIES?
Try storing your cookies in the fridge. They’ll go extra cold and fudgy in the centre. Perfect with a glass of milk!
Christmas Cookie Recipes to try
- Christmas M&M Cookies
- Snickerdoodle Cookies
- Maple Cookies
- Gingerbread Cookies
- Chocolate Peppermint Cookies
Did you make this recipe? Don’t forget to rate the recipe and leave a comment below. Hungry for more? Join me on Instagram, Facebook, Pinterest and Twitter for more amazing recipe ideas.
Let’s Bake
Chocolate Crinkle Cookies
Perfect Chocolate Crinkle Cookies made from scratch.
Ingredients
Chocolate cookies
- 115 grams (1/2 cup or 1 stick) unsalted butter
- 150 grams (3/4 cup) caster sugar or granulated sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 large eggs
- 175 grams (1 and 1/4 cup) plain flour or all purpose flour, sifted
- 40 grams (1/2 cup) cocoa powder, sifted
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 150 grams (1 cup) chocolate chips
Sugar coating
- 100 grams (1/2 cup) white sugar or granulated sugar
- 65 grams (1/2 cup) pure icing sugar or powdered sugar, sifted
Instructions
- Place butter in a large heatproof bowl. Heat butter in the microwave, stirring every 20 seconds, until melted and smooth.
- Add sugar and vanilla and use a hand whisk to combine. Add eggs. Whisk again, breaking up the egg yolks.
- In a separate bowl, sift together the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder and salt. Then add to butter mixture and whisk until a sticky chocolate cookie dough forms.
- Finally, stir through chocolate chips. Cover cookie dough with plastic wrap and place in the fridge for at least 1 hour to firm up.
- Preheat oven to 180 C (350 F) standard / 160 C (320 F) fan-forced. Line two baking trays with baking or parchment paper.
- Set out your sugars in two bowls ready for rolling. Then scoop out cookie dough, roughly 1.5 tablespoons per cookie, and roll into balls using your hands. The dough will still be soft and sticky but it should be firm enough to work with. If not, place it back in the fridge for another 15 minutes and check again.
- Roll each cookie dough ball first in the white sugar and then in the icing sugar before placing on your prepared trays. Repeat until all cookie dough balls have been coated in the two sugars.
- Do a quick check and if any of your cookie dough balls aren’t looking completely covered in icing sugar, roll them again.
- Bake cookies for approximately 11-13 minutes or until they’ve spread out and developed a crinkley top. Leave to cool for at least 15 minutes before carefully transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
- Store cookies in an airtight container either at room temperature or in the fridge.
Taariqa says
Can we make it without eggs?
Jessica Holmes says
Hi, I haven’t tested the recipe without eggs I’m sorry.
Carol says
Loved these so much.
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
Love hearing that Carol!
Michelle Wagner says
These were so delicious. Approved my work colleagues and partner. The fact that they look so fancy and yet they are so easy to make is an added bonus haha
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
They do look fancy don’t they! So glad you enjoyed them Michelle!
Liz says
Loved them!! Easy to make and beautiful. I used Hershey’s Special Dark Cocoa powder and the cookies are super rich with dark chocolatey goodness. Great recipe. Thanks for sharing it and doing the hard work to perfect it. 😉
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
Yay! So glad you loved them Liz!
A W says
Can you use cacao powder instead & if so, would you make any other modifications?
Jessica Holmes says
I haven’t tried with cacao so I can’t say. I do recommend using cocoa powder for best results.
Aurélie Marion says
Hello Jess, I can’t wait to try the recipe 🙂 I do have a question, do you use a sweetened cocoa powder, or unsweetened Dutch cocoa powder? Thank you!
Jessica Holmes says
Hi Aurelie, I use an unsweetened 100% cocoa for this recipe.
Aurélie Marion says
Thank you!
Cielo says
Tried this and have to leave the dough in the fridge over night bec I have a party to attend it is soooo good. Bring back my childhood memories. Though what I had before doesn’t have the choc chips.
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
So glad you enjoyed them!
Cielo says
Just wondering. Have you tried to bake them without adding chocolate chips? I love all of you recipes. Hoping next time you would do macarons and pistachio cake 😊
Jessica Holmes says
Hi Cielo, yes I have and they are still good without the chocolate chips. Hope you love them!
Rebecca Mclean says
Another level!! These are unlike any cookies I’ve ever tasted! The combination of sugary crunch on the outside and gooey, fudgey chocolate cookie on the inside was amazing. Easy to follow recipe! Perfect for when you have to bring a plate over Christmas!
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
I’m so glad you enjoyed them! Thank you for the kind feedback Rebecca!
Fiona says
Hi – can this dough be made the night before and left in the fridge overnight?
Also, can one halve the ingredients? So many cookies I want to bake to have a lovely variety to enjoy
Jessica Holmes says
Hi Fiona, yes you can keep the dough in the fridge overnight. Just don’t roll them in the sugar until you are ready to bake them. I haven’t tested it with half the ingredients, but I think it would be ok.
Megan Prevost says
Excellent recipe! Baked to perfection with exquisite ‘crinkle’ on top. I left the dough in fridge overnight and it was a perfect consistency for baking next day. Thank you for another perfectly successful recipe. These are a lovely addition to a festive treat plate 🙂
Jessica Holmes says
Aw so happy to hear that Megan! Thank you for your lovely feedback!
Josh says
Loved these! Especially cold from the fridge, they were so fudgy.
★★★★★
Jessica Holmes says
So glad you enjoyed them!
Esha says
Hi! I have a question. Is it possible to make these without eggs or a substitute for eggs?
Jessica Holmes says
Hi Esha, I haven’t tested these without eggs so I don’t know – sorry!
Christina Azzopardi says
These were so fun to make! They’re cooling atm 😊😊
Should it be 1 or 2 eggs please? As ingredients say 1, but method refers to 2 I think 🙂
Unfortunately I only read the whole description after baking them and only the first couple were quite caked with icing sugar so not all of them look like they’re supposed to, but they look delicious!! Thank you for putting us in the Xmas spirit 💚❤️💚
Jessica Holmes says
Aww I’m so glad you enjoyed them Christina! And sorry for the typo, it should be two eggs – I’ve corrected that now.
Daniela says
Excited to try these! These are very much like a cookie we make in Croatia called raspuknutici!
Jessica Holmes says
Ooh how cool! I hope you enjoy them.
Hannah says
Sounds delicious. I’ve got 2 questions. One, by melting the butter you mean it should turn in to complete liquid? And my other question is when you have the cookies out of the oven should they already be baked completely or they need little bit of a rest?
Jessica Holmes says
Hi Hannah, the butter should be melted and smooth but not hot. Just give it a mix with a fork to get rid of any lumps. And the cookies will be soft when they first come out of the oven but will firm up as they cool. Hope you enjoy them!