It has to do with the amount and temperature of key ingredients:
1. Sugar: The moisture in sugar affects chewiness. The relative amount of white sugar to brown sugar has a great effect on the baked cookie, as the brown sugar has a much wetter moisture content (approximately 35% more moisture). Therefore, using more brown sugar will result in softer, chewier cookies, while using more white sugar will result in cookies that are flatter and crisper overall.
2. Butter and Eggs: The temperature of these key ingredients helps control how much the dough spreads. Cool ingredients will keep you dough cooler, which results in the cookies spreading more slowly in the oven allowing the oven's heat to "set" the cookie while it still thick and therefore producing a denser, chewier cookie. Warm dough spreads more quickly in the oven, which makes the cookies thinner and crisper. Also, keep this theory in mind if you have the habit of dropping cookies onto still-hot cookie sheets. If you don't want them spreading quickly, use cool sheets.
3. Flour: A high proportion of butter to flour in the dough will also allow it to spread quickly. Makes sure you are measuring your flour correctly. Adding more flour to a recipe to produce a thick chewy cookie won't work for you. Too much flour will make the cookie, firm, dry and tough - you need to control the amount and temperature of all the key ingredients together and that includes the butter, eggs, sugar and flour. To insure that you are accurately using the amount of flour called for in the recipe, use a kitchen scale to weigh it or measure properly: use a dry measuring cup, not a pyrex cup meant for liquid measurements. Fluff the flour with a fork to avoid densely packed flour. Then spoon the flour into the measuring cup and level it with a knife. Never scoop right from the bag as that will compact too much flour into the cup and don't shale or tap the cup as you add the flour or this will pack the flour down as well.
4. One last tip: Bake cookies on light colored cookie sheets - dark cookie sheets will cause cookies to brown too quickly and cook too fast. If all you have is dark cookie sheets, try baking your cookies on parchment paper lining the cookie sheets. You'll be surprised at the difference it makes. Cookies also cook more evenly on cookie sheets that do not have sides as the heat flows over the cookies more evenly.
2006-12-20 10:58:21
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answer #1
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answered by tiny_tim 6
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From my research, the difference in crisp vs. chewy is the egg! I also, like to substitute 1/2 the butter with applesauce, lowers the calories and cholesterol. Rather than add a recipe here I have included a website with a soft chewy Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe. P.S. I hate shortening in my cookies. Butter is much more healthy for you!
2016-05-23 02:09:03
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answer #2
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answered by Ann 4
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you need to add more brown sugar and less granulated. that is the easiest way to get a chewy cookie.2 sticks unsalted butter
2 1/4 cups bread flour
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 cup sugar
1 1/4 cups brown sugar
1 egg
1 egg yolk
2 tablespoons milk
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 cups semisweet chocolate chips
that is from Alton Brown good eats recipe.
2006-12-20 11:00:46
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answer #3
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answered by matija9199 2
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Add a little bit of extra water but bake it for 5 mins more or untill you think its ready
Good Luck!!
2006-12-20 10:54:46
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answer #4
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answered by shifteh f 2
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Use a little less flour.
2006-12-20 10:56:18
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answer #5
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answered by Anonymous
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umm probably a few minute less....thats how i do it
2006-12-20 10:56:44
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answer #6
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answered by claydoggie1991 1
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http://web.foodnetwork.com/food/web/searchResults?searchType=Recipe&searchString=chewy+chocolate+chip+cookies+&site=food&gosearch=Search
Pics:http://images.search.yahoo.com/search/images?ei=UTF-8&fr=sfp&p=chewy+chocolate+chip+cookies+
2006-12-20 11:50:24
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answer #7
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answered by Anonymous
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