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If you’re craving a thick, fudgy cookie that tastes like three kinds of chocolate in every bite, these Triple Chocolate Cookies absolutely deliver. They bake up with soft, brownie-like centers, rich cocoa flavor, and melty pockets of chocolate throughout — the kind of cookie that feels straight out of a bakery case.
This recipe works so well because it layers chocolate in multiple forms and balances structure with richness. A blend of Dutch-process and natural cocoa gives deep flavor and proper lift, while bread flour, extra egg yolks, and a touch of corn syrup keep the centers dense, chewy, and ultra-moist instead of dry or cakey. Chilling the dough locks everything in, so the cookies spread just enough and stay thick where it counts.
If bakery-style cookies are your thing, you’ll also love our Rockstar Cookie or Kitchen Sink Cookies — both big, bold, and loaded with mix-ins. For full-on chocolate lovers, Espresso Brownies bring that same rich cocoa depth in bar form, while Chocolate Crinkle Cookies deliver classic, crackly tops with nostalgic holiday vibes.
Let’s make a pan of chocolate happiness — the fudgy, melty kind.
✨ Before You Start
✨ Brown butter timing matters. Pull it when the milk solids are a pecan-brown color—too far and it turns bitter.
✨ This dough needs chilling. At least 2 hours (48 is even better) for thicker cookies and deeper flavor.
✨ Bake one test tray first. Ovens vary, and these go from “perfect” to “oops” fast at 370°F.
✨ Don’t judge doneness by color. The cocoa makes them look done before they are—watch the edges and dome.
✨ Plan to cool them fully on the pan. That’s when the centers set into that fudgy, chewy texture.
Triple Chocolate Cookies Ingredients + Key Notes
This is just a quick glance at what you’ll need. For exact measurements and the full ingredient list, head down to the recipe card below.
This dough is built like a bakery cookie on purpose: browned butter for depth, two cocoas for a layered chocolate flavor, and two different chocolates for both structure and melty pockets.
Browned butter + dry milk powder: Browning butter creates that nutty, toffee-like backbone. Adding dry milk powder boosts the milk solids so you get even more caramelized flavor—this is a big reason these taste “fancy” without extra work.
Dutch-process cocoa + natural cocoa: Dutch cocoa brings a smooth, deep chocolate flavor and darker color, while natural cocoa adds a little extra chocolate “spark” and intensity. Using a high-fat Dutch cocoa (like the one you noted at 20–22% cocoa butter) helps the cookies taste richer and less dry.
Brown sugar + granulated sugar: Brown sugar adds moisture and chew, while granulated sugar helps you get those lightly crisp, caramelized edges. Together they create that chewy-center / crisp-edge combo.
Eggs + extra yolks: Whole eggs give structure, and the extra yolks add richness and fat for a more fudgy, brownie-like interior.
Corn syrup: Helps the cookies stay soft and chewy for days and improves the texture of the center (less dry, more bendy).
AP flour + bread flour: All-purpose flour keeps the cookie tender. A smaller amount of bread flour adds extra protein for chew and helps the cookies hold their shape without turning tough.
Baking soda + cornstarch: Baking soda encourages spread and browning (and that classic chewy texture), while cornstarch softens the flour proteins for a more tender bite.
Milk chocolate chips + Guittard 48% cookie chips: Milk chocolate chips add creamy sweetness and hold their shape, while the cookie chips bring a deeper chocolate note and melt into gooey pockets.
Flake salt: Sprinkle on warm cookies for balance, crunch, and that bakery-style finish that makes the chocolate pop.
⭐ Pro Tips
⭐ Don’t over-brown the butter
The second it hits that pecan-brown stage, pull it. Darker than that can taste bitter in a cocoa-heavy dough.
⭐ Cool the mixture before adding eggs
If the butter/cocoa mix is too hot, you risk scrambling eggs and breaking the emulsion. Warm is fine—hot is not.
⭐ Chill is what makes them thick
This dough is intentionally rich and loose. Chilling firms the fat, hydrates flour, and gives you that thick bakery shape and chewy center.
⭐ Bake for “underbaked-looking” centers
If the centers look fully done in the oven, they’ll likely be dry once cooled. You want set edges + domed, soft centers.
⭐ Let them finish on the pan
They keep baking from carryover heat. Cooling on the sheet is what sets that fudgy interior without overbaking.
🥣 How to Make Triple Chocolate Cookies
Here’s a quick look at how to assemble this easy Triple Chocolate Cookies (full instructions in the recipe card below).
Bold butter + milk powder. Melt butter, stir in dry milk powder, then brown until the milk solids turn pecan-brown and smell nutty. Scrape every bit into a heatproof bowl (those browned bits are flavor).
Bloom the cocoa. Whisk Dutch cocoa, natural cocoa, and salt into the hot browned butter until glossy and smooth. Let cool until warm—not hot.
Mix the sugars + wet ingredients. Stir in both sugars, then once the mixture is closer to room temp, mix in eggs, yolks, corn syrup, and vanilla until smooth and slightly thickened.
Add dry + chips. Whisk flours, baking soda, and cornstarch, then stir into the chocolate base just until combined. Fold in both chocolates. Stop the second everything looks evenly mixed.
Scoop + chill. Scoop #40 portions (40–41g), roll into balls, and chill at least 2 hours (or up to 48 hours).
Bake fast. Bake at 370°F for 7–8 minutes. The edges should look set and slightly spread, but the centers should still look domed and a little underdone.
Finish + set. If you want perfect circles, scoot with a round cutter while warm, press a few extra chips on top, sprinkle flake salt, then cool completely on the baking sheet.
🔬 Science
Blooming cocoa in hot browned butter dissolves cocoa particles and “wakes up” fat-soluble flavor compounds, making the chocolate taste deeper and smoother. The extra yolks, corn syrup, and high-fat cocoa also stack the deck toward chewy, fudgy cookies that stay soft longer, while bread flour adds just enough structure to keep them thick instead of puddling.
Storing + Reheating + Freezing + Make-Ahead Tips
Storing
- Store cooled cookies airtight at room temp for 3–5 days. The corn syrup helps them stay chewy.
Reheating
- Warm a cookie for 8–12 seconds in the microwave for gooey chocolate pockets again. (Don’t overdo it—these get molten fast.)
Freezing
- Freeze baked cookies airtight up to 2 months. Thaw at room temp, then warm briefly if you want that fresh-baked vibe.
Make-Ahead
- Scoop and roll the dough balls, then chill up to 48 hours before baking—this is one of those recipes that genuinely improves with time.
Food Safety
- If you’d like more info on food safety, check out this link.
Frequently Asked Questions
✦ Why do my cookies look underbaked in the middle?
That’s the goal. These finish setting as they cool on the baking sheet. If you bake until the centers look done in the oven, they’ll cool down dry.
✦ Can I chill the dough longer than 2 hours?
Yes—up to 48 hours is ideal for thicker cookies and deeper flavor.
✦ Can I swap the Guittard 48% cookie chips?
Yes. Any good-quality semi-sweet chocolate will work, but cookie chips melt differently than standard chips—expect slightly less “puddly” pockets if you use regular chips.
✦ Can I use all all-purpose flour and skip bread flour?
You can. The cookies will be slightly less chewy and may spread a bit more, but they’ll still be delicious.
Still have questions? Drop them in the comments — I love helping you bake + cook with confidence! 💗
🍫 More Chocolate Desserts You’ll Love
-
Mississippi Mud Cookies: Ultra-fudgy and loaded with rich chocolate flavor — the perfect “if you loved these triple chocolate cookies, go here next” click.
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Oreo Chocolate Chip Cookies: Cookies-and-cream vibes with plenty of crunch and chocolate — a fun twist that feels totally different, but still hits that chocolate-cookie craving.
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Chocolate Chunk Cookies: Big melty puddles, classic bakery texture, and that “one cookie turns into three” factor — a must-link for readers who want a simpler chocolate cookie next.
-
Double Chocolate Snowballs: Soft, tender, and dusted in powdered sugar — a lighter, holiday-ish chocolate cookie that adds great variety to your chocolate-cookie lineup.
-
Brownie Cookies with Cookie Dough Filling: A full-on showstopper — brownie-style cookies with a surprise center that makes readers feel like they just discovered your “secret menu.”
-
Red Velvet Brownies: Same rich, fudgy energy, but with that festive red velvet flair — an easy next click for readers who love bold color + cozy chocolate.
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Frosted Fudge Brownies: Thick, deeply chocolatey brownies with a luscious frosting layer — the ultimate “lean in to the chocolate” finish for anyone still craving that fudgy bite.
Tried This Recipe?
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Thanks for stopping by my kitchen today — happy cooking, friends! 💗 Kathleen
Triple Chocolate Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 1/4 cups (254.5g) unsalted butter
- 2 tablespoons dry milk powder
- 1 teaspoon kosher salt
- 3/4 cup (88.5g) Dutch-processed cocoa
- 1/4 cup (29.5g) natural cocoa
- 1 cup (213g) brown sugar
- 1 cup 198g granulated sugar
- 2 eggs
- 2 egg yolks
- 2 tablespoons corn syrup
- 1 tablespoon vanilla
- 1 cup (120g) all-purpose flour
- 1/2 cup (60g) bread flour
- 2 teaspoons baking soda
- 1 teaspoon cornstarch
- 1 cup (170g) quality milk chocolate chips
- 1 1/4 cups (213g) Guittard 48% cookie chips
- flake salt for cookie tops
Instructions
- Preheat the oven: First, preheat the oven to 370°F (188ºC).
- Brown the butter: In a medium-size saucepan, melt the butter over medium-high heat. Once melted, stir in the dry milk powder and break up the small chunks. Continue to brown the butter, scraping the bottom and sides, until the milk solids turn a pecan brown color. Do not cook too long. Immediately pour into a heatproof bowl. Be sure to scrape all the browned bits out of the saucepan, as they contain all the yummy flavor.
- Bloom the cocoa: Whisk both cocoa powders and salt into the browned butter until it is smooth and glossy. Let the mixture cool slightly.
- Mix wet ingredients: Stir in both sugars until combined. Once cooled to room temperature, add the eggs, egg yolks, corn syrup, and vanilla. Mix vigorously until smooth and slightly thickened.Note: Let cool until the bowl feels warm, not hot, before adding eggs.
- Combine dry ingredients: In a separate bowl, whisk together the all-purpose flour, bread flour, baking soda, cornstarch, and salt.
- Bring dough together: Add the dry ingredients, as well as the milk chocolate and 48% cookie chips, to the chocolate mixture. Stir just until everything is evenly combined—don’t overmix.
- Portion and chill: Scoop dough with a #40 scoop (40–41g), roll into balls, and place on a parchment-lined baking sheet. Chill for at least 2 hours, or up to 48 hours for the best texture and flavor.
- Bake: Arrange the chilled dough balls a few inches apart on a parchment-lined baking sheet, about 5-6 per sheet. Bake at 370°F and start checking at 7 minutes; pull when edges are set, and centers still look domed and soft.
- Finish and cool: Reshape warm cookies with a round cutter if desired, add extra chocolate chips to the tops, and sprinkle with flake salt. Let cool completely on the baking sheet so they continue to bake and deflate as they set.
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I LOVE these cookies! It was hard to wait for the chill… BUT so worth it! The chocolate is heavenly. I haven’t eaten a chocolate cookie that I like better than these. I made some for a party and EVERYONE wanted the recipe! They raved about these cookies! They are definitely on my “make again… and again” list! Thank you!
Im so happy you enjoyed these cookies, Kim. Thanks so much for leaving a comment with your experience. I love that your friends wanted the recipe 🙂