We bake our chunky cookies fresh in-house every day, and people always ask how we get that thick edge with the gooey middle. So here’s the home version. It won’t be identical to ours — café ovens and a daily routine help — but it’s a genuinely good cookie, and the method is what matters.

The whole idea is real butter, proper chocolate cut into chunks (not chips), and pulling them out before you think they’re done.

What you’ll need

Makes about 10 big cookies.

  • 250g plain flour
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/2 tsp fine salt
  • 170g unsalted butter, browned then cooled until soft
  • 150g soft light brown sugar
  • 80g caster sugar
  • 1 large egg + 1 egg yolk, at room temperature
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 200g good chocolate, chopped into rough chunks (we love Belgian — a mix of dark and milk)
  • Flaky salt for the tops

Method

  1. Brown the butter in a pan over medium heat until it smells nutty and turns golden, then tip it into a bowl and let it cool until it’s soft but no longer hot. This is the step most people skip and it’s the one that gives the deep flavour.
  2. Whisk the brown sugar and caster sugar into the cooled butter until smooth. Add the egg, egg yolk and vanilla, and whisk hard for a minute so it goes glossy.
  3. In a separate bowl, mix the flour, baking soda and salt. Fold this into the wet mix with a spatula until you can’t see any dry flour. Don’t overwork it.
  4. Fold in the chocolate chunks. Leave a few of the biggest pieces aside to press on top later — that’s how you get the “see the chocolate” look.
  5. Chill the dough. Cover and rest it in the fridge for at least 1 hour, ideally overnight. Cold dough spreads less, which is what gives you that thick edge instead of a flat, crispy disc.
  6. Heat the oven to 180°C (fan 160°C) and line two trays. Roll the dough into big balls — about 80g each, roughly a golf ball plus a bit. Bigger balls give you a better gooey centre, so don’t go small.
  7. Space them well apart, press a reserved chocolate chunk into each top, and bake one tray at a time for 11–13 minutes. Pull them when the edges are set and golden but the centres still look soft and a touch underbaked. They keep cooking on the tray.
  8. Sprinkle with flaky salt straight away. Let them sit on the tray for 10 minutes to firm up before you move them — they’re fragile while hot.

A couple of things that make the difference

  • Chunk size matters. Chopping a bar instead of using chips gives you those proper molten pools and thin shards through the dough. Keep some pieces big.
  • Underbake on purpose. A cookie that looks perfectly done in the oven is overdone by the time it cools. Trust the soft centre.
  • Warm them back up. Day-old cookie? Ten seconds in the microwave and the middle goes gooey again.

And honestly — ours are still better fresh from the café. If you’re in Budapest, Bucharest or Belgrade, come grab one warm and skip the washing up. Walk-ins only, no booking needed.