Almost 1/2 pound of the most indulgent chocolate chip cookie ever! Our Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe was founded after hours and hours of research, testing and of course, tasting. This is the make-at-home version you will make over and over again!
If you’ve traveled to, or live in New York City, you have probably heard of Levain Bakery and their famous chocolate chip cookies. On my last trip back east, I made a stop at the popular bakery on West 74th Street to see for myself if this was indeed the best chocolate chip cookie in the world!

Levain Bakery is rumored to have the best chocolate chip cookies in the world. Yes, in the world. Hmmmmmmm. This is a highly debatable subject. What determines if a recipe is the best recipe in the world?
It’s all a matter of personal opinion and preference. Follow along and I’ll give you my observations and the results of my taste testing and baking research.

Last September, I took a trip with my oldest daughter Corrine to NYC. She was there for Fashion week and I was there for support, choosing restaurants and overall sightseeing. Levain Bakery was high on my list of places to visit this trip. We purchased each of the four types of cookies they sell. My favorite was the Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookie.
I Instagrammed a photo (below) of the cookie while we were in NYC and received loads of comments from readers professing their love for Levain cookies, recipe requests and even comments stating a copycat recipe would be an answer to prayers!

In the interest of answering prayers and helping everyone who doesn’t live close to NYC (or even those who just want a make a batch of Levain style cookies) I’m going to share my version of the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookie recipe (and also the no-nut version, read end of post). But first, I’ll give you the story of how this recipe came to be…
Cut to the chase:
I know some of you probably just want the cookie recipe. If you are one of those people, skip to the bottom of this page and I’ll spare you my three thousand word essay on the who/what/why of recreating the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie. If you want the back story, here it is…

History:
Levain Bakery was opened in 1994 by two women, Pam McDonald and Connie Weekes, who trained for triathlete/Ironman competitions together. They were often hungry after training and wanted a treat that would fill them up. During the training process they talked about creating the best chocolate chip cookie in the world. Over 20 years later, they are still baking cookies (and muffins, breads, pizza, sticky buns) and wowing New Yorkers and tourists every day.
They have 3 (now) 7 locations! There is almost always a line out the door, and their locations even sport a line cam giving you a look at the length of the line. Not that a long line seems to deter anyone from buying Levain’s cookies! We visited the West 74th street location and waited in line for less than 20 minutes.

Why is the Levain Chocolate Chip Cookie so popular?
Size: Huge. 6 oz (almost half a pound) of cookie. Everything is is big and flamboyant in NYC, and Levain cookies are no exception. The cookies are enormous. If you are forking out $4 per cookie (price in 2016 when this post originally went live), you want a cookie you can sink your teeth into.
I’ve purchased big cookies in the past, only to be disappointed that the flavor didn’t match up to the size of the cookie. The Levain cookies deliver in both the size and deliciousness categories!
Texture: Perfect combination of crisp outside and incredibly gooey center. The cookie is baked at a high temperature, and mounded high, allowing the outside of the cookie to crisp up perfectly while the middle barely gets baked and creates puddles of chocolate in the cookie dough.
Hype: New Yorkers love to wait in line! No really. Anything with a long line in NYC= (usually) an experience you don’t want to miss. This isn’t a tourist-only line. New Yorkers faithfully stand in the Levain line, patiently waiting for their cookie fix.


Why recreate the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie?
Reason 1. They are delicious- See all of the above reasons. A big melty hunk of a cookie.
Reason 2. Cost- At $4 per cookie, if I lived in NYC and could run down the street to buy a cookie whenever I had a craving, it would be an easy choice. Four dollars a cookie is a reasonable price, given the size of the cookie. I mean, it’s a meal for $4. So one cookie or two or three are affordable. But when you consider you can make 8 at home for about a dollar per cookie, the make at home option starts to look very attractive.
Reason 3. Location- If you don’t live in NYC, (and who does?) I mean, only about 8 million people, but most of them don’t read this blog, which brings us to the out-of-towner option, having the cookies shipped. See reason 4.
Reason 4. Affordability of shipping: The mail order option, in my opinion, is not very affordable for most people. And who wants to wait 2 days when they have a chocolate chip cookie craving? Levain cookies are sold four to a package in the smallest package available. The least expensive shipping option (to Utah, 2 day air) will set you back approx $64 or about $16 per cookie. For two day old cookies. Gulp.
or
The next option is $81.50 for next day air, which is about $27 per cookie. Fairly fresh, but still a day old.
or
Last, but not least, next day (early) delivery is $108.50 or $34.94 PER COOKIE. Did you just pass out? I’ve eaten a lot of cookies in my lifetime. Probably more than my share. I don’t ever recall eating cookie that was worth $35 per cookie.
The shipping is what increases the price of the cookies. If you have a friend visiting NYC, having them hand deliver cookies is a sweet option. Unless they leave the cookies on the plane. Oops. See Reason 6.
Reason 5. Everyone asks for the recipe. Many of you have been to Levain, and NEED this recipe. After eating one of the Levain cookies, I knew it was my duty to create a make at home version of the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie.
Reason 6. I want to help you keep your integrity intact. These cookies are a HOT item. Don’t leave them unattended, or else. True story. My friend Maria was visiting her kids in New York last year. We were texting back and forth and talking about some of the fun restaurants and treats they were enjoying in the city, including Levain cookies. At one point, I asked her to pick up a cookie for me if she was close to the bakery again before returning home… for research purposes.
Maria was kind enough to buy a few cookies, had them packaged up and carried them back on the plane to SLC in a cute little Levain Bakery bag. After she left the plane, she realized she had left the cookies onboard. Maria tried unsucessfully to re-board the plane. Her husband saw a man leave the plane with the cookies in hand…
He approached the man and said “I believe that is my wife’s bag of cookies she left on the plane.” (awkward, right?) The man looked startled, but acted like they were his cookies, although he had no story to share or no retort for the insistence by Maria’s husband that they were Maria’s cookies.
Picture me, reading this text from Maria, about what happened to the cookies, and saying over and over again, “OH MY GOSH” Grant thought maybe someone had passed away. No, just a cookie casualty… Maybe this gentleman did purchase the cookies, but it sounds like a possible cookie heist to me. Don’t take something that doesn’t belong to you. Just bake a batch at home instead.


Observations, baking tips and how I came up with this copycat Levain Bakery recipe…
In order to make a cookie that tastes, looks and has the same texture of the Levain cookie, I started by watching an episode of Bobby Flay’s Throwdown, where the Levain Bakery owners and Bobby Flay bake up a batch of cookies and judges pick their favorite cookie.
Pam and Connie (Levain founders) show up to the throw down with their dough already made, so it was difficult to do much observing of the actual cookie making process in the video clip.
I did take a look at the texture of the dough, which seems to be fairly sticky, leading me to believe there is not an excessive amount of flour in the dough. They also state a few times during the segment, they like to “keep it simple”. Bobby Flay’s cookies include Muscavado sugar and gourmet chocolate. In the end, the Levain cookies won the throw down.
The second video “Levain Bakery Pam and Connie Make Cookies” shows Pam and Connie making the cookies. They don’t show specifics, such as amounts, but I carefully watched and re watched the video several times and gathered the following:
-They use cold butter in 1 lb blocks
-The walnuts are not chopped, and don’t appear to be toasted.
-It looks like the amount of brown sugar is a bit more than the white sugar added, and the brown sugar appears to be light brown sugar, but difficult to tell the proportions of white to brown sugar, since brown sugar is usually measured in packed down amount, and the amount in the bowl does not looked packed.
–No vanilla. They also mention in the Bobby Flay video they don’t add vanilla because they think it is not needed. At first I thought WHAT? No vanilla in a cookie? But they are right. It really doesn’t add much flavor.
–Eggs, appear to be 2 per recipe, from what I can see, the butter and egg ratio per (at home) recipe would be 1/2 lb butter to 2 eggs.
–Chocolate chips. Semi sweet. About 2 cups per recipe. They add the walnuts first and pulse the dough, then add the chocolate chips last. They add the walnuts and chocolate chips after the dry ingredients have been pulsed into the wet ingredients.
–Dry ingredients. They add the dry ingredients in one big bowl, so it is difficult to tell what is in the dry ingredient portion of the recipe. I tried all purpose flour, cake flour, bread flour, a combination of bread and AP flour, a combo of cake flour and AP flour, and the AP flour by itself. I also tried baking soda, baking powder and a combination of both. Many people believe Levain Bakery includes cornstarch in their cookie, but I believe it is just plain old baking powder, which is made with a bit of cornstarch (remember the “keep it simple” quote)?
-The cookies also seem to be on the less salty side, which is less to my liking. I’m a firm believer in salt to balance out and enhance the flavors in desserts. I think they probably use about 1/4 to 1/2 teaspoon of salt per recipe. I always use a coarse sea salt for best taste results. I am not sure if they use salted or unsalted butter, but I always use unsalted.
–Mixing: The mixer used in the video is a large commercial grade machine. They mix the butter and sugars together first, with the mixer on low. The mixer speed is always on low, it seems. When making other chocolate chip cookies, I usually add my chocolate chips and nuts with the flour to get them coated with flour (which is supposed to help them from sinking into the bottom of the dough) but Levain just adds the walnuts and chocolate chips after mixing in the dry ingredients. They pulse the mixture several times to prevent the flour and other dry ingredients from spilling over the bowl.
–Refrigeration of dough: They don’t talk about refrigerating the dough, but there are reports of the dough being refrigerated or frozen before baking. Refrigeration of dough usually enhances the texture of the cookies, but I don’t feel it is necessary in this cookie. I have baked this recipe right out of the bowl and also refrigerated the dough before baking. You can see what will be best in your oven by baking a cookie right after mixing up. If the cookie flattens too much, refrigerate the remaining dough for 30 minutes before baking.
–Shaping: Pam and Connie talk about “no baseballs” when shaping the dough. I usually create “baseballs” by using a cookie scoop. The Levain cookie is a more rustic looking treat. They use their hands to shape the dough. I prefer to use a food handler’s glove and measure the dough out and weigh it on my trusty kitchen scale.
–Baking time and temp: I found the best temperature in my oven is 400 degrees. If I am baking on a regular setting, I bake at 400 for 11-12 minutes. If using convection, I bake for 8-9 minutes. To achieve the gooey consistency of the Levain Bakery cookie, you must take the cookie out of the oven before the center is baked.
–Cooling-an important step: The Levain cookie needs to sit on the cookie sheet for at least 15 minutes before eating. Leave the cookie on the warm cookie sheet so it can finish baking and set up. I believe the cookies are best when left to sit for about an hour after baking.

Cookie Conclusion
I loved this cookie at the bakery and at home. It’s definitely a cookie lover’s dream. Not to be confused with the New York Times Chocolate Chip Cookie, which is a chocolate lover’s dream, this cookie is a mini-mountain of chocolate chip cookie dough.
I’m still partial to my all time favorite, ABK’s Tried and True Chocolate Chip Cookie. If you know someone who loves to eat the dough more than a baked cookie, I am guessing they will fall in love with the ABK version of the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookie. One recipe makes 8 GINORMOUS cookies. I look forward to reading your reviews… Happy baking!
Can’t Get Enough Levain?
I’ve made multiple copycat versions of Levain cookies: The Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip, the Oatmeal Raisin, and the Dark Chocolate Peanut Butter Chip Cookie. They were all tested, tested again, and retested until I felt the recipe was as close as possible to the real deal.
This Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe has the most in-depth explanation of all the who, what, why and how on everything in my Levain Bakery copycat cookie journey. A little over the top, but seriously some of the most fun I’ve had in the recipe development game.
**Update May 2017** NO-NUT VERSION**
After receiving lots of feedback on this recipe several of you have said in emails, messages through Instagram and comments on Instagram posts that your cookies are going flat. I was puzzled by this! As you can see, the cookies are HUGE balls of dough before baking. I finally measured, and the dough balls sit about 3 inches high.
How could they flatten out after baking for such a relatively short time? When I drilled down the problem, I found the readers who were having issues with the cookies going flat were NOT adding walnuts to the recipe. I stated in the recipe notes originally – “If you are going to omit the nuts, you may want to try adding more chocolate chips and 1/4 cup of additional flour.”
I should have been more specific. I didn’t want to add much more flour than the originally called for 2 1/2 to 2 3/4 cups total, because once you add too much flour it changes the texture and flavor of the end product. Apparently 1/4 cup of additional flour was not enough.
I talked through this with my friend Melinda a few days ago. She mentioned something about replacing the volume of nuts in the cookies with something else. Then it hit me. To have success with this recipe the volume of the nuts had to be replaced exactly if the cookies were going to hold their shape.
I experimented with adding the additional 1/4 cup of flour- 3 cups total flour (1 cup cake flour, 2 cups AP flour) and 4 cups total semi sweet chocolate chips. HOORAY! The no-nut perfect version of the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie Copycat was born. The adjustments are in the recipe notes.
I highly recommend refrigeration of dough if you do not have a convection oven. Refrigerate for 45 minutes after shaping the dough, then bake as directed. This will also help the cookies hold their shape.
One more note- The chocolate chips weight equals 14.6 oz for 2 cups, while 2 cups of whole walnuts equal 10.16 oz for 2 cups. The walnuts take up more volume, but weigh less than the chocolate chips. When measuring out the cookies made with chocolate chips only, the dough is more dense and the dough balls are smaller.
I weighed out the cookies without walnuts to about 7 oz per cookie, as opposed to 6 oz for the cookies with nuts. The recipe will still yield about 8 cookies per batch!
**Update May 23, 2017 Mini Version**
The cookies can be made in a “mini” size, about 3-3.5 oz each. Perfect size for any gathering where you don’t want to make and serve cookies that are nearly 1/2 lb each! Shape as directed, then bake at 400 degrees ( I use convection bake, but you can use regular bake as well) for about 5-6 minutes or just until top of cookie forms a crust.
**Update June 2017**
Lots of questions about CAKE flour. It is usually found on the top shelf at grocery stores, in a small box. Most groceries sell ” Softasilk” Cake Flour in a box. Make sure you read the label if you buy other brands and buy Cake Flour and not a “Cake Flour Blend”.
If you can’t find cake flour at your grocery, you can make your own at home by using this method to Make Cake Flour at Home:
- Measure out 1 cup of all purpose flour into a medium size mixing bowl.
- Remove 2 tablespoons of the flour and place back in the flour container.
- Add 2 tablespoons of cornstarch to the flour in mixing bowl.
- Sift the flour and cornstarch mixture. Sift again about 3-4 more times.
- You now have cake flour! Place in a bag or container, measure out and use as needed.

Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookies

Ingredients
- 1 cup butter cut into tablespoons, I prefer unsalted
- 3/4 cup light brown sugar, packed
- 1/2 cup sugar
- 2 eggs
- 1 cup cake flour
- 1 1/2-1 3/4 cup all purpose flour* see notes
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon coarse sea salt
- 2 cups walnut halves
- 2 cups semi sweet chocolate chips* see notes
Instructions
- Pre heat oven to 400 degrees and set rack in middle of oven.
- Place butter into bowl and turn mixer on low. If using a stand mixer, use the paddle attachment.
- Add sugars and beat butter until smooth on medium speed. This should take about 1 minute. Mix until the butter pieces are completely blended with the sugar and is no longer visible in pieces.
- Add the eggs and beat on medium just until incorporated with butter and sugars, about 30 seconds.
- Turn the mixer off. Add the cake flour, all purpose flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt. Pulse the dry ingredients on low until the wet and dry ingredients are mixed together.
- Pour the walnuts into the batter all at once. Pulse the batter 5-6 times.
- Pour the chocolate chips into the batter and pulse again 5-6 times.
- Pour the batter out onto a clean surface. Fold the dough together a few times until all of the chocolate chips and walnuts are mixed into the batter.
- Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces about 6 oz each. Use your hands to shape cookies. Do not use a cookie or ice cream scoop. The cookies are meant to be roughly shaped. Do not flatten the dough.
- Bake 4 cookies per pan, for 11 minutes on regular bake or 400 convection bake for 8-9 minutes.
- The cookies are done when the top is a bit golden and the bottom is also golden.
- Do not over bake. Let cool for 15 minutes before serving.
- To make the cookies without walnuts, see recipe notes below!
Notes
Did you make this recipe?
Be sure to leave a comment and rate this recipe! I’d love to see a photo, tag @abountifulkitchen on Instagram!
Ashlee
Hello,
I was wondering what the best type of sugar would be to use? Normal white or granulated? I can’t wait to make these!
Si Foster
Ashlee,
From my research, white and granulated sugar have identical molecular structure and they will bake the same. Some sugars are made from sugar cane, while others are made from beets. So, use the sugar you have at home and enjoy these cookies! They are fantastic.
Thanks for your question and thank you for reading ABK.
xo,
Si
Leslie Power
Just made these cookies. They were gorgeous and deilcious! All your helpful hints were awesome! I just happen to find your blog and can’t wait to try another recipe!
Si Foster
Leslie,
Thank you so much for your positive comments! I work hard to put quality recipes on my blog. Please let me know what you try next – I appreciate your feedback. Thanks for reading ABK.
xo,
Si
Aubree
I made these for a game night with friends and I didn’t have nuts or the amount of semi-sweet chocolate chips it calls for, so I substituted heath bits for the nuts and did a mix of semi-sweet and milk chocolate chips and they were so good!!! Everyone loved them! I also made them a little smaller than 6 oz so I didn’t cook them for the whole time and they turned out great! These will definitely be a make again cookie!
abountifulkitchen
Thanks Aubree! Love the idea of using Heath bits. I could eat a whole bag of those alone! Thanks for reading ABK.
xo
Si
Courtney
Every single time I have made these cookies, everyone LOVES them!! Literally every single person that tries them asks me for the recipe. Good work. Thank you for blessing the world with amazing cookie recipes. 😉
Si Foster
Courtney,
You are so welcome! Thank you for reading ABK and sharing the love!
xo,
Si
Alexa
Do I need to switch attachments to just the whisk attachment after mixing the butter?
Si Foster
Alexa,
I just use the paddle attachment for this recipe. I’m afraid this dough would break a whisk.
Let me know how your Levain cookies turn out. This recipe is a keeper!
xo,
Si
Laurie
Delicious! I did use pecans instead of walnut- I’m allergic to those. It’s so fun to have a crunchy outside and a soft doughy inside… are they supposed to be dough like? It was delicious to me!
Si Foster
Laurie,
Yes, the inside is a bit doughy, outside crunchy. Pecans are delicious as well. Thank you so much for your comments!
Enjoy!
xo,
Si
Marisa
Hands down the yummiest, biggest Cookie I have ever made!!! It stayed huge and fluffy and was PERFECT! I followed all your instructions and made the 3oz smaller version. Thank you!!!
abountifulkitchen
So glad you loved this cookie! It has become the crowd favorite in many homes! Thanks for your feedback and for reading ABK!
happy baking,
Si
Becky
Have you ever used almonds or pecans instead of walnuts?
abountifulkitchen
Becky,
Yes, lots of readers have successfully used pecans in this recipe! Make sure to add two full cups.
xo
Si
Maricela C Montoy-Wilson
These were UNBELIEVABLE. Thank you! New favorite recipe.it seems like you recommend to cook them THEN freeze. Can you freeze the dough instead?
Si Foster
Maricela,
Yes, you can form the dough and freeze on a cookie sheet, then remove the cookie dough balls when frozen and place in a zipper bag till you’re ready to bake. When you’re ready to bake, let the dough sit on the cookie sheet till they are refrigerator-cold, then bake. Deelish!
xo,
Si
Aly
This is so wonderful! My fiancé said it was better than Levain since he was able to have it warm fresh out of the oven 🙂 They are huge for sure! I would love to add salt flakes on top next time, I do love that salt taste but he doesn’t so it was perfect. I may have ordered my Mother cookies from Levain for her 60th Birthday for $40 including shipping…. I honestly considered cancelling the order after I made these! Thank you! p.s. she is a baker and very picky, I know these will win her heart over!!
Si Foster
Aly,
I’m so glad you and your fiancé enjoyed this recipe. I’d be honored if I also got the seal of approval from your mother as well!
Thanks for reading ABK
xo,
Si
Chrystal
In December i was diagnosed with a gluten and dairy allergy! It’s been hard to find good recipes to convert. This one however worked amazing!! I used smart balance butter substitute and 2 3/4cup Grandpas kitchen GF all purpose flour blend. Then I used Costco’s Kirkland brand chocolate chips (they are dairy free) did everything according to your directions and they turned out amazing! Next time I would do a full 3 cups of flour (my dough was a little stickier than the usual recipe) and try refrigerating the dough after shaping just to help a little with the structure but over all they turned out so so so so good. Also GF flour has a tendency to dry out pretty quick. I would recommend storing them in a bag and heat them up in the microwave a little before eating leftovers.
Si Foster
Chrystal,
Thank you so much for sharing your tips to making an amazing gluten free cookie! I’m sure the GF readers will love this. Who doesn’t love a wonderful Levain cookie?
Thank you for reading ABK!
xo,
Si
Kristen
I have made these no less than ten times in the last three months! After trying the recipe as posted the first few times, I got adventurous and switched out some of the chocolate chips for m&m’s and have subbed pecans/almonds for the walnuts and they have all been a success! Thank you so much for the recipe, it’s definitely a new family favorite!
abountifulkitchen
Kristen,
Haven’t ever tried it with M&M’s! That’s going on my list to try soon.
thanks so much for your review of this recipe!
xo
Si
Louise
So I know I’m new to this recipe but is there really no vanilla? I’ve never had chocolate chip cookies without vanilla.
Si Foster
Louise,
I KNOW! really. No vanilla and they are fantastic. I’m making a batch right now!
xo,
Si
Brett Berman
I have been to Levain several times and it’s heavenly. Your recipe is so close it’s not even funny. I made one batch of 8 and now was asked to make them for my friend’s wife birthday tomorrow. I made mistake of not refrigerating mix for 45 mins after forming on first go around so they did flatten a bit but still amazing. If I replace walnuts with peanut butter should I add more flour?
Si Foster
Brett,
I have obsessed over this recipe and have received great reviews from happy cookie lovers. I’m glad you like it too! I’m worried the peanut butter won’t give the cookie enough structure to hold it’s shape. You may want to try peanut butter with a portion of your dough and see how it works. Please let me know! Thanks for reading ABK
xo,
Si
Sarah Sorensen
I made these this weekend and forgot to take a picture. They were eaten so fast.
I like warm cookies, so I made the dough, then froze them, and cook the 2-4 at a time.
I made minis (just under 3 oz.) from frozen, with a 10 minute thaw. 400 degrees, 11.5 minutes or so. I used pecans because I had them.
Boy were they amazing!
Si Foster
Sarah,
Glad the recipe was a hit for you. I love pecans and I bet they tasted fantastic in this cookie.
Thanks you for sharing your freezing/baking process. Warm Levain cookies are amazing!
xo,
Si
Lisa McClean
Have you ever had a cookie taste so good it brought tears to your eyes? Well, this cookie will do that. Bravo Si!! Your homework and note taking with the Bobby Flay show helped you hit a home run here.
Wow. Just wow. I can’t stop sharing this recipe…and I received this from a friend! Keep sharing people! Let’s stop passing around those mediocre cookie recipes that leave you saying “ehhhh” and just share the good stuff.
Si Foster
Lisa,
Thank you for the two thumbs up! I’m so glad you love this cookie as much as I do. It was a quest for me to find the perfect Levain recipe, but well worth the effort. Let me know if you try the other Levain recipes I have posted!
xo,
Si
Mack O.
Divided the dough into 8 cookies and bake them at 400 as directed (11 min). There were completely burned in the bottom ): (I made the no nut version and doubled the amount of chips plus the extra flour). Each one weigh of each one was about 6.4 oz. Suggestions?
Si Foster
Mack O,
I’m sorry they were burned! Was the oven completely preheated before you started baking? Was the rack in the middle of the oven? If using a convection oven the baking time would be decreased. (Bake 4 cookies per pan, for 11 minutes on regular bake or 400 convection bake for 8-9 minutes). Do you have a way to check if your oven is cooking at a hotter temperature? Perhaps the next time you make them, you will need to watch the cookies and adjust baking times for your oven.
Don’t give up. These cookies are worth the re-make!
xo,
Si
Tammy
Made this with 1c finely chopped almonds and 3c choc chips Bs it was divine!! Refrigerated the dough first as suggested before baking. And baked tablespoonful sized blobs for approx 10-12mins. Again, can’t say enough about how amazing these were!!! Thanks for the recipe!!!
Si Foster
Tammy,
Sounds amazing! I’m gong to give it a try as well. Thanks for commenting on the recipe!
xo,
Si
Sandy
I live in NJ and have stood on line to get Levain cookies may times before. I just made your recipe and I have to tell you that this recipe is EXACTLY like the Levain Bakery cookies!
I made the version without nuts, and they held their shape and were perfect. In my oven I did have to bake for 13 minutes.
You did an amazing job with this recipe. Thanks so much!
Sandy
Si Foster
Sandy,
Thank you so much for your rave reviews of this recipe! If you read the post, I worked on this recipe for quite some time. I’m so glad to have your stamp of approval. Enjoy!
Thanks for reading ABK!
xo,
Si
Mehmet Ali
Hello,
-I want to make only chocolate chip cookie (no nuts)
-I use convectional oven (so ı don’t put the dough in the fridge) ?
-I use 1 cup and 1/2 cup and extra 1/4 cup flour (cake and all purpose flour)
-Only bakes 8-9 minutes
Do I understand correct or not ?
Thank for your recipes…
Si Foster
Dear Mehmet,
For the no-nut version, use 3 cups total flour (1 cup cake flour, 2 cups AP flour) and 4 cups total semi sweet chocolate chips.Refrigerating dough for 30-45 minutes after shaping and before baking is recommended. If time is a factor and you have a convection oven, try a batch without chilling. Make sure your oven is pre-heated and bake 8-9 minutes.
Let me know how you like them!
xo,
Si
Tzippi
Heaven!!! These cookies put me on 9th cloud. Im a native New Yorker whose been trying to find a replica of Levains cookies and you nailed it!!
One question though, I made the cookies 4.4 oz and while they took 13 min to bake they spread a little, what do you think I did wrong?
Si Foster
Tzippi,
I’m glad these cookies were such a hit! Now for your question…was your oven fully pre-heated? I recommend refrigerating these cookies 30-45 minutes before baking. Also, shape the dough in a tall mound before baking. I don’t shape them in a ball or use a scoop.
I hope this helps!
xo, Si
Tzippi
Thank you Si! My oven was preheated but maybe didn’t refrigerate them enough or didn’t mound them enough.. Will be trying again very soon;)
Si Foster
Keep me posted and enjoy the results of your baking!
Si
Tzippi
Hi Si,
I made sure to refrigerate for the required time, mounded them and preheated my oven, and it still spread. I’m wondering if perhaps my ovens temp is off? I’m definitely enjoying the cookies though:).
Tzippi
Just made a batch of these heavenly goodness! Ever since I left NYC tried to find replications, THIS recipe definitely is THE one!!!
I made my cookies 4.4 oz but they needed 13 min to bake and flattened a little, What do you think I did wrong?
Abby
I’ve been making your tried and true cookies for a long time. They’re my favorite! But decided to try these and oh my word!!!! The best cookie I’ve ever put in my mouth. No joke. Love love love!
Alana
I just want to say THANK YOU for an amazing recipe. I was never able to go to New York to buy them fresh. But I have had them shipped to me and they were amazing. BUT now that I was able to make them and have them straight out of the oven any time I want is even better. Thank you so much for this recipe! You’re a baking genius
Lisa
Hi, this recipe looks great, but do you have this recipe by weight? Thanks!
Dark Chocolate Cherry Oatmeal Cookies – The Food Charlatan
[…] and also just like today’s recipe, I didn’t trust them at first.) and also these Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookies from A Bountiful Kitchen that convinced me to repent of my no-nut ways. (Brownies, however, should […]
Katie
Thank you! I needed a big delicious cookie with chocolate and nuts and this was perfect! I sized mine down to 2oz and baked them for 9 mins and they were so amazing! Next time I’m going to try a cup of semi sweet chips and a cup of milk chocolate chips for fun
Si Foster
Katie,
Whatever size you choose to make these, they taste fantastic! Half semi and half milk chocolate sounds great. Let me know how you like them! Don’t miss out on our other varieties of Levain cookies! Dark Chocolate/Peanut Butter and Oatmeal/Raisin. Yum.
Thank you for reading ABK.
xo,
Si
Isabel
Just wanted to thank you for this recipe and for all of your tips! I followed everything to the letter for adding more chocolate chips, placing the cookies in the refrigerator for 45 minutes, setting the time limit for regular bake – and the cookies came out perfect!! If I could upload a picture, I would. I appreciate that you took the time to work on this copycat recipe and added the suggestions and tips. THANK YOU THANK YOU THANK YOU!
Si Foster
Isabel,
Thank you for your kind words! So glad this recipe turned out so well for you.
It’s worth the time to read and follow the directions to be able to enjoy such an amazing cookie!
Thank for reading ABK!
xo,
Si
Jeanelle
This is the most perfect cookie recipe. Love the texture of this cookie (especially the next day!). I make with all chocolate chips, 3 oz size. I make the mounds of dough, refrigerate then store in the freezer and take a few out at a time, let thaw and then bake. SO delicious!!
Si Foster
Jeanelle,
It sounds like you have this recipe perfected! Having a stash in the freezer is a great idea – you can have fresh baked cookies anytime you want. So glad you love this recipe.
Thanks for reading ABK!
xo,
Si
Val
Hi,
Thank you for this recipe! i am a bit confused with the non nuts version. If I don’t want nuts, should I add 1/4 cup of flour AND 2 extra cups of chocolate chips? Or should I add one OR the other? thank you so much! I am a big fan a Levain… living in France!
Si Foster
Val,
Yes, if you don’t use nuts, add BOTH 1/4 more flour and 2 more cups of chocolate chips.
You will be so pleased with the results! Enjoy your amazing cookies!
xo,
Si
Mish
I’m so excited!!! Tried the recipe out, and I am currently waiting for cookies to cool! 😀
I divided my dough into two, the other half I baked in the original size, and the other half I baked in mini version. I hope it turns out nicely –– I’m still testing out what temperature to use for our oven. Will report back! (The cooling part is testing me. Haha.)
Thank you for this wonderful post and recipe!
Si Foster
Dear Mish,
Waiting for these cookies to cool is definitely the hardest part! Did you prefer the smaller or larger ones?
Thank you for reading ABK! Enjoy!
xo,
Si
Kaela
These lived up to the hype. We’ve got a nut allergy in our home, so I did 4 cups of chocolate chips and an extra 1/4 cup of flour (making 2 cups of flour total). I also cooled the dough for 35 minutes, and made sure to let our electric oven preheat 20 minutes (just to make sure it really was hot enough. With only 2 minutes left in baking, they still looked like a complete dough ball….we were skeptical. I let left them in for 1 extra minute (12 min total), and my gosh, they were AMAZING! Looked just like yours, too! Perfect instructions, perfect adjustment recommendations, perfect cookie! I’m officially obsessed. So thank you!
Si Foster
Kaela,
You’re welcome!
I’m glad these turned out so well for you! What can be better than the perfect cookie?
Wish I was there to have one with you.
Thanks for your comment!
xo
Si
Karey
These are delicious! Made the mini version, which is funny since they’re still huge and my son wanted to know why I’d made them so big. Thanks for figuring all this out and sharing with us.
Rachel
I made these after seeing you post something about them on Instagram a couple weeks ago. They are amazing. My new special occasion chocolate chip cookie! And dare I say they cook up better from frozen. And I’ve learned they are just as good and beautiful if they are smaller than 6oz. If smaller than 3oz, just watch the cooking time. Also, you’ll be tempted to dive right in, but let them rest. It’ll make them that much better!
abountifulkitchen
Rachel,
I love the mini size too! Glad they have been a hit in your home! I would love to know if you let them thaw at all when baking from frozen? There is rumor that Levain bakes their cookies from a frozen state…
xo
Si
Rachel Harper
The rumor may be true, because I cooked them straight from frozen to my preheated oven. Watch the cooking time (it’s slightly longer) but they cooked up nicely. They were beautifully browned on the outside and soft on the inside-just like the picture. It has been nice to cook only a couple at a time for my husband and I as a little treat after the kids go to bed!
Levain Bakery Oatmeal Raisin Cookie – A Bountiful Kitchen
[…] a copycat cookie so we could enjoy the Levain goodness anytime a craving struck! It began with the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookie, then the Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Peanut Butter Chip Cookie, and now, my latest Levain copycat […]
The Naptime Chronicles | hope, trust, and pixie dust
[…] a popular recipe (from A Bountiful Kitchen) and threw my apron on to bake up a yummy […]
fantasy friday 8.18.2017 • Oh, honey honey
[…] my way down a pinterest hole looking for a fresh summer fruit pie, I saw these copy cat levain bakery cookies and changed my mind […]
Gustavo
Hello! I’m from Brazil and I’d like to thank you for this delicious Levain Bakery cookie recipe!
I have a question: can I put 1/2 cup butter instead of 1 cup?
Many thanks and congratulations!
Ps. Sorry for my English! =)
Gustavo
Hello!
I’m a reader from Brazil, so I’m sorry for my English. Congratulations on the recipe, I always accompanied Levain Bakery for instagram and I was very keen to try the cookies, now I can do them here in my country =)
I have a question: can I use 1/2 cup butter instead of 1 cup?
Thanks and congratulations again.
Ps. I hope you have understood my text.
abountifulkitchen
Gustavo,
No need to apologize for your English! No you need to use the full amount of butter for the cookies to turn out a success, 1 cup of butter is needed!
thanks for reading A Bountiful Kitchen!
Si
Maria Contessa
I absolutely cannot wait to try this! Just to be clear, if i omit nuts, does that mean I add both 1/4 cup extra flour AND 2 more cups of chocolate chips? Thank you!
abountifulkitchen
Hi Maria, If you omit the nuts add 1/4 cup of all purpose flour and 2 additional cups of chocolate chips! Good luck!
Lilly Ambers
The best! Thank you!
abountifulkitchen
Thank you Lily!
Maria Contessa
This recipe looks so good and I cannot wait to try it soon! Just to clarify if I omit the nuts, do I add both 1/4 cup AP flour AND 2 more cups of chocolate chips? Thank you so much!
Bethany Jackman
I made these yesterday in “mini” version for a family gathering (I stretched one batch to make 2 dozen) and they were ALL gone! Everyone devoured them. For the nuts: I only had 1 cup of walnuts, so I added those plus 1 cup of pecans. The mixture of those two nuts plus the chocolate chips was surprisingly amazing! Super yummy. Thank you!!
abountifulkitchen
I love both pecans and walnuts! I’m going to give your combo a try soon! Glad everyone loved the cookies. They are addictive!
Thanks for reading ABK
xo
Si
Shanna
This recipe was perfection! It really does replicate the Levain cookie! Yum!
abountifulkitchen
Shanna,
I think they are pretty darn close to the originals!
Thanks for reading ABK!
xo
Si
July 2017: Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookies | thesassechronicles
[…] I settled on a recipe from the blog A Bountiful Kitchen. This lady seemed just as excited as I was into recreating these buddies and her original recipe contains tons of details & tips that you must go read before starting: A Bountiful Kitchen Levain Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe […]
Sarah
My friend made these and brought me one, and I’ve been craving them ever since! So excited to make them!! I usually like to put pecans in my cookies rather than walnuts… what do you think about making that sub Thanks for the recipe!!
Chelsea Darden
I can’t wait to try these tonight! Do you have a suggestion for an eggless version? Maybe a substitute that may still work?
Tracy
Hi! These cookies tasted fantastic, but mine didn’t come out thick like yours. Mine spread out wayyy too much! I did the no nut recipe and added extra chocolate and flour as you said, and chilled the dough 40 mins. Any idea what went wrong? It seemed like too much chocolate. Thanks so much! I will definitely try these again!
Chocolate Chip Walnut Cookies – Happy Dumpling
[…] Original recipe here […]
Marisa Dittmer
I made the smaller version (2.75 oz) how raw are the supposed to be in the middle? Used a regular oven, baked about 8 minutes with the outside edges/top golden brown. Haven’t tasted them yet so hoping they work out. They look and smell amazing and it was such an easy recipe!
abountifulkitchen
Hi Marissa,
These cookies are barely cooked in the middle, and baked until the chocolate chips are just melted.
Hope you loved the finished product!
xo
Si