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Crispy crunchy mini chocolate chip cookies with an amazing toffee aroma you will absolutely love. Every mini bite of these chocolate chip cookies will leave you begging for more! No kidding!
Are these copy-cate Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies ?
I have tried A LOT of different recipes for copycat Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies this past one year. They were all good in their own ways, but I felt like something were missing, until this last batch that I’ve tried I feel like the texture and the aroma are the closest to the original Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies. Are they exact copy cat? Nope. In fact, I may like them even more than the original Famous Amos? LOL. My daughter absolutely loves this Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies.
What are Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies?
Wally Amos invented the Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies. He enjoyed baking them using a modified version of his Aunt Della’s recipe. The cookies are characterized by their small size, crunchy texture, and amazing molasses and toffee aroma. Because they are small, it’s hard to stop eating just a few of them. You want to eat the entire batch! LOL!
Ingredients
If you look at the ingredient list on Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies, these are what they use:
Enriched Wheat Flour, semi-sweet chocolate Chips, Sugar, Vegetable Oil, Contains 2% or Less of Molasses, Salt, Eggs, Baking Soda, Natural and Artificial Flavors, Whey.
Here are the ingredients I used. They aren’t exactly the same as Famous Amos’s. They did not use butter and brown sugar, but they did have molasses, other artificial flavors, and whey in their ingredients.
1. Butter
I used unsalted butter. The butter needs to be soft at room temperature
2. Light brown sugar
Brown sugar gives a nice molasses aroma without having to add molasses
3. Salt
A pinch of salt definitely bring out the overall aroma in the cookies
4. Vanilla extract
5. Egg
6. All-purpose flour
The all-purpose flour I use has a gluten content of 10-11%
7. Cornstarch
Cornstarch helps to give cookies nice crumbs without falling apart
8. Baking powder
This is one of the leavening agents in this recipe
9. Baking soda
Baking soda is also added to leaven the cookies and gives the cookies that airy and crunchy texture that baking powder alone won’t be able to achieve. The baking soda also works together with the acidic brown sugar that we use in the recipe
10. Oil
A little bit of oil in a cookie recipe also gives the cookies that crunchy texture. You don’t want a lot of oil but using it together with butter gives a great result
11. Semi-sweet chocolate chips
I would personally go for 1/2 dark and 1/2 semi-sweet chocolate chips, simply because I’m a dark chocolate person. But since Famous Amos uses semi-sweet chocolate chips, I would stick with semi-sweet chocolate chips
12. Instant coffee powder
I don’t know if I can say this, but instant coffee is the “secret” ingredient in this recipe that gives this Famous Amos cookies that distinct “toffee-ish / caramel-ish” aroma that I really love. I strongly suggest not to omit this for real!
Famous Amos Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
Please measure ingredients by weight and not volume
- 125 gr butter unsalted, softened
- 125 gr light brown sugar
- ½ tsp salt
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 25 gr egg
- 25 gr oil
Dry ingredients:
- 155 gr all-purpose flour
- 30 gr cornstarch
- ½ tsp baking powder
- ½ tsp baking soda
- 175 gr semi-sweet chocolate chips
This adds amazing aroma to the cookies (please do not omit):
- 1 tsp instant coffee see notes
- ½ tsp water
Instructions
- Please make sure that the egg and butter are at room temperature. The butter should be soft but NOT melty
- Crack one whole egg in a bowl and whisk to loosen up the egg. Measure out 25 grams of egg to be used in the recipe. It is important to measure by weight
- Mix instant coffee with water and set aside
Prepare cookie dough:
- You don't need a mixer to prepare the cookie dough. Mash the softened butter with the brown sugar using a rubber spatula. Then add the room-temperature egg and mix again until combined. Add the instant coffee mixture and vanilla extract and mix again
- Sift the dry ingredients into the butter mixture. Add oil. Use a spatula to start mixing. The mixture will still be dry at first. Just keep mixing and when you get a rough dough, meaning you still see some flour here and there, fold in the chocolate chips and continue to mix into a dough. It will be sticky
Chill the cookie dough (do not skip this step)
- Cover and refrigerate the cookie dough for at least 1 hour. If you can do it overnight, that's even better because the flavor gets even better (I know waiting can be a pain, but this is worth waiting). They can be kept in the fridge for 3-4 days
When ready to bake: (updates on baking temperature and time, read my post above for details)
- Preheat the oven to 350 F (180 C) for a conventional oven. For a convection oven, lower the temperature by 20 F or 15 C
- I no longer recommend baking two trays at one go. It's so hard to get both trays of cookies to turn out right. Everyone's oven is different. Please bake one tray at a time
- Line the baking pan with parchment paper
- Scoop about 8 grams of the cookie dough and roll into a round ball and put them about 1 inch apart as they will spread some during baking
- If the cookies have gotten too soft after all the handling, you can put the whole tray in the freezer again for 15 minutes before baking. This helps to prevent the cookies from spreading too much
- UPDATE: I suggest baking 2-3 cookies first and see how they behave (whether they spread too much or not). Some of you have shared with me that your cookies spread more and some didn't spread at all and prefer that they spread a bit more. If they spread too much, you may want to chill the cookie longer and if the cookies don't spread at all, you may not need to chill the dough before baking. It could be that the dough is too cold and or ingredients aren't measured correctly (too much flour, etc).
- Bake for 18 minutes if you use a light color pan and about 15-16 minutes if you use a dark color pan. The timing is just for your reference. It also depends on how big you size the cookies. You know your oven better and so please adjust accordingly. If you want the cookies to be crunchy, add a minute or two (or could be 5 minutes longer, depending on your oven)
Cooling:
- The cookies appear very soft when they are out from the oven. Let the cookies cool down on the rack for 5 minutes and then remove and cool down completely at a cooling rack. They will crisp up further
- If your cookies do not stay crispy after the next day, they can be easily re-crisp in the oven at 350 F (180 C) for 3-5 minutes and then let them cool down and they will be crispy again
Age the cookies for a day:
- Usually cookies (or pretty much any baked goods) won't taste as good on the same day you bake them. If you can wait until the next day, you will be rewarded with a much better flavor and texture.
Storage:
- Store the cookies in an air-tight cookie jar. They can be kept this way at room temperature for weeks (They didn't last more than 3 days at our house!)
RECOMMEDED TOOLS
Marv’s Recipe Notes
*Nutrition facts are just estimates and calculated using online tools*
How to make copycat Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies at home
1. You don’t need a mixer to prepare the cookie dough. Mash the softened butter with a rubber spatula
2. Then add the room-temperature egg and mix again until combined. Add the instant coffee mixture and vanilla extract and mix again
3. Sift the dry ingredients into the butter mixture. Add oil. Use a spatula to start mixing. The mixture will still be dry at first. Just keep mixing and when you get a rough dough, meaning you still see some flour here and there
4. Fold in the chocolate chips and continue to mix into a dough. It will be sticky
5. Cover and refrigerate the cookie dough for at least 1 hour. If you can do it overnight, that’s even better because the flavor gets even better (I know waiting can be a pain, but this is worth waiting). They can be kept in the fridge for 3-4 days
6. Preheat oven to 350 F (180 C) for a conventional oven. For convection oven, lower the temperature by 20 F or 15 C. Scoop about 8 grams of the cookie dough and roll it into a round ball and put them about 1/2-inch apart as it will spread some during baking. If the cookie dough has gotten soft after all the handling, put the whole tray in the freezer again for 15 minutes before baking. This helps to prevent the cookies from spreading too much
7. I suggest baking one tray at a time. Put the baking sheet on the middle rack. Bake for 18 minutes if you use a light color pan and about 15-16 minutes if you use a dark color pan. The timing is just for your reference. It also depends on how big you size the cookies. You know your oven better and so please adjust accordingly. If you want the cookies to be crunchy, add a minute or two (or could be 5 minutes longer, depending on your oven). Let the cookies cool down on the rack for 5 minutes and then remove and cool down completely at a cooling rack. The cookies may look soft at first but will crisp up once cooled down
Look at the airy crumb texture at the back of the cookie. These copycat Famous Amos chocolate chip cookies are seriously crunchy and airy with a deep intense aroma you will love!
My little experiment for crunchy Famous Amos cookies that stays crispy
1. The sugar
Famous Amos cookies with all brown sugar: Crunchy on the same day, maybe less crunchy the next day (especially if it’s humid where you are. They stay crispy for days in the winter weather where I am). The best flavor hands down.
Famous Amos cookies with all white sugar: Crunchy on the same day and the next day. The flavor is my least favorite. My family is not fond of Famous Amos cookies made with all white sugar. I would not recommend using all white sugar.
Famous Amos cookies with half brown sugar, half white sugar: Crunchy on the same day and the next day. The flavor was a bit better compared to using only all-white sugar, but my daughter could tell immediately that it was still not as good as the one using all brown sugar
2. Baking temperature
All three varieties I mentioned above were baked at 320 F (160 C) for 15 minutes and 20 minutes with my conventional oven, one tray at a time, and were crunchy, but when I presented the cookies baked at 350 F (180 C) for 18 minutes, these batches won the votes!! They are super crunchy and they stay crunchy!
My conclusion: Because I don’t want to sacrifice the flavor, I decided that the recipe should still be made with all brown sugar. The crunchy texture that everyone’s looking for in these Famous Amos cookies can be achieved by altering the baking temperature and time. I, now, bake these cookies at 350 F (180 C) for 18 minutes using an aluminum pan (which is light in color). Please understand that every oven is different. What I listed here is just for reference, you may have to experiment a bit with your oven.
How to store unbaked Famous Amos cookies
Once you have chilled the dough for at least 1 hour or longer, roll into 10-gram dough ball and then keep in the freezer for 15 minutes and then transfer it to a freezer bag and they won’t stick to each other anymore. They can be kept frozen for 1-2 months. When ready to bake, they go straight from the freezer to the oven. If they have been kept frozen for more than 2-3 days, add an extra 2-3 minutes to the baking time.
How to store baked Famous Amos cookies
Let the baked cookies cool down completely. Then transfer to a freezer bag. They can be kept frozen for a maximum 1 month for the best result
42 comments
Excellent! like Famous Amos if not better! All the tips shared were useful esp the part on chilling the dough pre-baking. Makes a lot difference in preventing the cookie from spreading out.
I’m happy to know that you enjoyed these cookies too. These are our favorites too. My daughter asked for these on a weekly basis lol!
I tried the recipe taste very good , will try to lesser the sugar next round.
But I have increase the time of baked from 15 to 17 minutes but it still turn soft or chewy the next day. What can I do to amend ?
Hi Brittania,
You can probably bump up the baking time a bit more longer, I would say 5 minute extra in total and see. Another thing you can try is to replace half the amount of brown sugar with white sugar or replace all with white sugar. I have yet to try this myself, but I plan to do some testings again and see if that helps to make extra crispy cookies that stay crispy for days. I know white sugar will give you extra crispy cookies. Brown sugar has more moisture but it has more flavor compared to white sugar.
Thank you Marvellina, I’m trying it again today. Besides, I tried 2 trays baking at a time but it became disaster after 20 minutes baking time. The cookies are not crispy after cooling. My oven is the conventions top & bottom heat , fan can be choose off or on. What can I do to bake 2 trays at once.
Thank you for your sharing
Hi Brittania,
I usually would place one rack 3rd from top and another one 3rd from the bottom, basically you want to space them out so the air can circulate. If you want to bake for 20 minutes, bake for 10 minutes and then rotate the tray front to back, top to bottom and then bake another 10 minutes and see. If I may suggest that you bake one tray first to try out the 20 minutes baking time and see how that works. Baking two trays at a time can be very tricky. With my oven, I often have to prolong the baking time further even when I turned the fan on because the bottom rack always seems to be not cooked enough and the top rack already getting so dark!!!
The cookies had a good flavour, but they dont remain crispy. By the next day the middle was chewy, i suspect it could be the moisture from the brown sugar.
Hi DT, maybe try to bake it a bit longer? oven may varies slightly!
I’ve baked another batch longer and yes the cookies now remain crispy. Thank you so much! This is a recipe for keeps. 🙂
I’m so glad it worked out now 🙂 Thank you for letting me know!! 🙂
Hi,
Can I check if you use bottom / bottom heat or fan element when baking the cookies?
If bigger size, how long do we bake?
Thank you in advance for your reply!
Cheers. Thanks for sharing the recipe. 🙂
Hi Amy, my oven is conventional (bottom heat). So I bake at 320 F (160 C), if you have top and bottom heat, you may need to lower by about 20 degrees. I baked for about 15 minutes for a 8-10 grams cookies. If yours are bigger, you may want to add 2-3 minutes extra. When they first come out they will be very soft, but will crisp up once they cool down completely. I suggest doing a test batch first to figure out the timing that you like to give you a crunchy consistency.
Hi, my baking tray is quite big and cant fit into my freezer. Can i place the dough further apart instead and skip the 15mins freezer time?
Hi Ber, you can try that. I hope they turn out well for you!
how do we measure the egg? do we whisk both the white and yellow together, then measure it? will that work?
Yes, that’s how you measure it, whisking the whole egg and then measure out what you need
Hi, thank you for this recipe. I’ve tried using this recipe and the result has been a hit! I would like to know if i could double the recipe for a bigger batch – just double all the ingredients, right?
Hi Sheeda, yes, you can just double the recipe and the baking time remains the same unless you change the size of the cookies!
Thank you!