World Domination Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies


In the beginning, there was a recipe cut out of a magazine, and lo, it was meh. For it contained too much sugar, insufficient flour, and way too few chocolate chips.

Then there were the years of tweaking, years filled with tears and frustration, years of trying to chew on puck-like blocks of nastiness.

Somewhere amidst this temporal and chocolatey swirl, the original recipe became torn, grease-stained, and eventually lost. But the brave continue their trek without a map when the map is wrong in the first place.

Thus, through toil and strife, through beaters and blades, sometime in the early 90s was born THE GREATEST COOKIE OF ALL TIME.

Many asked – nay begged! – for the recipe. All were denied. Gradually, it became clear that the Cookies had immense power that needed to be kept under careful control lest they burst forth in chocolatey goodness and threaten to tear apart the very fabric of the universe. Or at least, too many waistbands.

The Cookies became known as World Domination Cookies, whereby first samples were given liberally for free, but subsequent deliciousness could only be attained by providing the Baker with small favours on her path to glory and conquest over all things.

But then life changed. The Baker had a baby and got sidetracked away from global conquest. Plus seriously, the world is messed up and really not worth ruling when there’s good stuff on TV.

And lo, when the Great Cookie Swap of 2012 came around, the Baker thought, “Maybe it’s time. I have a food blog now. Why am I keeping this recipe so secret? Doesn’t the world deserve this? Mightn’t it bring about world peace through chocolate? Who am I to contain such power alone?”

First, let’s talk ingredients, because it matters. Oh, I know how this works: people get a recipe and immediately substitute out ingredients for diet preference, taste, what’s on hand, etc. I do it. We all do it. That’s fine if you want to do it here but if your cookies fail to delight all and sundry, don’t blame the recipe (as with the hilarious spoof comments on the ice cube recipe). World Domination Cookies do not fail; some bakers may fail the cookies.

This recipe uses margarine, not butter. Butter is not the same. Butter is awesome, delicious, and something I use in lots of recipes, but in this one it makes the cookies too hard, especially in a dry environment. The ingredients say “margarine” and by that I mean “margarine”, the kind we ate for decades because it was supposedly healthy and now we know it’s awful for us. These cookies are not health food. The margine I use is Canoleo Premium, which is very soft and made with hydrogenated oils which I fully realize are wretchedly unhealthy. So be it. Nothing else makes them come out as well.

This recipe also uses AP flour. There are lots of times where it’s good to substitute whole wheat flour. Again, these are not health food. Use AP flour.

This recipe uses sugar, although not a huge amount. Don’t even think about using a substitute unless you like munching on hockey pucks. Seriously. Any less sugar and you’ll lose the hygroscopic nature of that crystal.

This recipe uses baking soda, not baking powder. Don’t confuse these two or they’ll come out dry.

This recipe uses regular powdered cocoa, not dutch-process and certainly not chocolate drink mix (I believe the original recipe did and it was Not Good). They are already fudgy and dark without tons of sugar; if you change the cocoa, you are changing the basic chemistry and they will not be the same.

This recipe uses dark chocolate chips, specifically Ghiradelli 60%. That’s the perfect level of dark and sweet to balance with the cookie portion. Using other chips will be tasty, but not as tasty.

I mean sure, if you want to substitute, fine, but you won’t be making World Domination Cookies. You will be making Pretender Cookies, and maybe they’ll be good, but not this good. You might be able to use Pretender Cookies to take over a small borough or hamlet, maybe even a province or state if it doesn’t have diamonds or oil. But not an entire world, no.

At the bottom of this post is a printable version of the recipe with precisely weighed/measured ingredients all fussed out, because I gather that’s what Proper Food Bloggers do. But I also live in the real world where I sometimes do things that aren’t the Proper way, so I’ll take you through my procedure step-by-step first, with pictures.

First I measure and soften the margarine. It just so happens that the right amount is for me to pack my little glass measuring cup full, which I’ll officially call 1 1/4 cups. I weighed it to be sure and it comes out to 10 oz/283.5 g. To soften, I warm it in the microwave for about eight to ten seconds: it should be soft enough to mix, but DO NOT MELT IT.

Measuring Margarine

I pack it in to minimize air pockets, and I fill to just under the top lip. The margarine in this photo weighed precisely 10.0 oz on our digital scale, with the glass cup tared out.

I cream together the softened margarine with a cup of granulated sugar. The original recipe had two or three cups, I can’t recall. I made it for a long time with two but then mis-measured on a batch once and everyone agreed that while the two-cup version was nice, the one-cup version was much more rich and deep-chocolatey. I’ve stuck with one cup since and nobody’s ever said, “Meh, this is insufficiently sweet.” The reactions are still always, “OMG I LOVE YOU MARRY ME AND BAKE ME COOKIES EVERY DAY!” Paraphrased slightly.

Cream sugar and margarine.

Notice the spoon. Yup, this is a hand-mix recipe. Old school with exercise FTW. Then you can totally pretend you burned off a batch’s worth of calories. Shhh, never shatter my precious illusions…

Next I beat in two eggs, followed by a teaspoon of vanilla.

Beating in the eggs

You don’t have to make a smiley face with your eggs as you add them to the bowl, but if you actively don’t want to beat a smiley face, you really have to ask yourself if you’re ready for World Domination in the first place. And I say this as a person who collects smiley faces.

In a separate bowl, I mix together 2 cups of AP flour (10 oz by weight), 3/4 cup of cocoa, 1 teaspoon of baking soda, and 1 teaspoon of salt.

Dry ingredients

I probably should use a sifter to make sure there are no lumps, but I never have. If I see lumps of anything I crush them with my mighty spoon against the side of the bowl until they disintegrate with the knowledge of how they have wronged me.

Next I add the dry to the wet and mix completely.

Adding dry to wet and mixing

Mmmm, chocodough…

Then I add in at least two cups of Ghiradelli 60% dark chocolate chips. I say “at least” because I start with that amount and then if there’s a lot of batter left stuck to the bowl at the end, I add in a small amount more as necessary to ensure every cookie is full of chips. You don’t win friends with stingy-chip cookies. Or salad.

Then I put the whole bowl in the fridge for at least half an hour to firm up. I have skipped this step from time to time when rushed, but the cookies are better if dispensed cold to the tray. The insides take longer to cook so they come out puffier plus more tender on the inside. I also return the bowl to the fridge between trays, trying to keep the mix as chilled as possible before going into the oven.

I can vary the size depending on how many I need versus how big I want them to be. Generally speaking, I can get 35-40 cookies out of a batch of “teaspoon”-dropped size balls. By “teaspoon” in that context I mean the medium-small spoons in my drawer; not the big serving spoons, not the teeny weeny little almost-baby-sized spoons, but a generic sort of cereal spoon. For kicks I weighed a couple of these and they’re about 1.5 oz / 42.5 g.

I put them on a very lightly greased non-stick pan and bake at 350 F / 177 C for 16 minutes / 1.78 x10^46 Planck Time Units.

Dropped on pan

You can cram more per tray at this size but I prefer not to just so they don’t risk running together.

Voila! WORLD DOMINATED!

Fresh baked cookies

Try to wait at least a minute or two so you don’t have to give your first World Domination speech with a numb tongue from molten chocolate burns. But ohhhhhh yes these are so good fresh from the oven…

Sixteen minutes seems to always be about right even if I vary the size slightly, but since ovens vary, what you want to look for is the tops to be firm and the bottoms to have started to brown but not darken too much. Do not overbake them! They’re not very good toasted.

Finished cookie

Note how the bottom is darkening slightly. This is what it should look like when done.

Bottom vs top

This is the very limit of how dark you should let the bottoms get. They crisp up after this point and while that’s good on some cookies, it’s suboptimal with these. Old pans may cause premature browning on the bottoms. Use good pans. Seriously. It’s worth it.

I put them on a cooling rack a few minutes later, then gently wipe the pan with a paper towel and start putting out the next set. I use two pans in rotation that way. No extra spray is needed: just be sure to clean off any crumbs that might burn.

Cookies on cooling rack

And now a word from our sponsor…sort of. Oxo gave all of the participants of the Great Blogger Cookie Swap these spatulas (spatulae, surely?) as part of the promotion of their Cookies for Kids’ Cancer campaign. A portion of the proceeds from the sale of these go to a non-profit to fund pediatric cancer research. They also do bake sales for fundraising and want volunteers for that. I used the spatula to help get the word out and it’s not bad, especially since the silicone edge will prevent scratches on my good pans, but honestly you don’t need a spatula for these cookies. As they cool, you can lift them directly off. And to be honest, the bendy edge of this spatula kind of chased the cookies around the pan. If you’re going to use a spatula, use a stiff one with a thin front edge. But if you want a silicone-covered spatula for other reasons, this one seems well-built and raises money for a good cause.

There you have it: my deepest, darkest, fudgiest secrets revealed. I feel so…exposed. No wait, that’s just the draft from the window I cracked open so I can let the scent of these babies waft out and enrapture the general public. Muahahahahaha.

World Domination Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies

Mmm…sucromancy…

 

 

 

World Domination Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies
 
Prep time
Cook time
Total time
 
My best-ever cookie: deep chocolate flavour with a lightly crisp exterior over a melt-in-your-mouth fudgy interior. So good people have begged me for the recipe for decades but I refused, saying instead they could earn more by helping me on my path to World Domination. But now I'm giving out the recipe for free...you're welcome, world!
Author:
Recipe type: Dessert
Serves: 35-40
Ingredients
  • 1¼ cup margarine (10 oz, do not substitute butter)
  • 1 cup granulated sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla
  • 2 cups All-Purpose flour (10 oz by weight, sift if necessary)
  • ¾ cups regular powdered cocoa
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1 teaspoon salt
  • 2 cups chocolate chips (60% Ghiradelli recommended, plus extra if needed at the end)
Method
  1. Preheat oven to 350 F.
  2. Soften the margine, but DO NOT MELT.
  3. Cream margarine and sugar thoroughly.
  4. Beat in eggs and vanilla. Set aside.
  5. In a separate bowl, mix the flour, cocoa, baking soda, and salt. Combine thoroughly.
  6. Add the dry ingredients to the wet and mix thoroughly.
  7. Add chocolate chips. Combine thoroughly.
  8. Refrigerate dough for at least ½ hour to firm up.
  9. Drop by rounded teaspoonfuls onto lightly greased non-stick cookie sheet.
  10. Bake at 350 F for 16 minutes or until bottoms start to brown slightly. Do not overbake.
  11. Add extra chocolate chips to bowl scrapings at the end as necessary.

 

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14 Responses to World Domination Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies

  1. amberini says:

    These are indeed World dominating cookies. We loved them! Thanks so much for sending them in the cookie swap.

  2. nopinkhere says:

    I giggled a lot. Now I need to go bake . . . if I just had a functional oven.

  3. Martha T says:

    These sound great and I will be making them. btw … I meant to comment before now, but I loved your baby carrot story!

  4. Mindy says:

    I want a cook book from you.

  5. Saku Mättö says:

    What a recipe! Your world domination has achieved to convert Finland. I just printed this recipe for my wife to try, yummy for (my) tummy 🙂

  6. Troy says:

    Yum!!! Have you made this with sugar substitute? Would it taste ok?

  7. Sugar substitutes don't usually fare well in cookies, as the chemistry of cookies uses the crystal structure of sugar to create a particular texture. I've always found that substitutes turn cookies into hockey pucks. I'd strongly advise making the recipe as is and then making small cookies and consuming in extreme moderation if sugar is a problem.

    I do use sugar substitute in many other recipes, just never in cookies.

  8. To Trainer SKLPT says:

    I made a batch and didn’t feel bad about my cheat day at all. Thanks for the great recipe.

  9. Paisley says:

    All hail to the chocolate chip cookie!!!

    I'm trying out this recipe this weekend and nobody try to stop me!!!

  10. mike says:

    Think I gained some weight from this page but well worth it thanks.

  11. avantgarbe says:

    Man, figuring out what not-butter to buy in the store was tricky, so hopefully I end up with world domination cookies tomorrow! It's possible I end up with small-county domination cookies instead…

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