The long-awaited Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookie copycat recipe is pure chocolate heaven! It’s the ultimate make at-home version of the popular cookie sold in NYC. It lives up to the hype and is everything a serious chocolate lover craves in one gigantic gooey cookie.
A Chocoholics cookie
If you know me, you know I LOVE a good cookie. This recipe for Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies is definitely for chocoholics. If you’re a person who can never get enough chocolate, you have to make this cookie right away! The Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookie is filled with loads (3.5 cups) of dark chocolate chips and cocoa that make for a rich and delicious homemade treat. I have to say, I prefer the original Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie to this recipe, but I know there are readers who can never get enough chocolate…this recipe is for you!
Technique, Technique, Technique
Levain Bakery takes baking seriously. They take cookie making to a whole new level. The normal size of their cookies are 6 ounces, nearly half a pound in every cookie! Big enough to be an entire meal, right? Because they are SO HUGE, I often make the Levain copycat cookies in the mini size, 3-3.5 ounce. Even the “minis” are generous for a standard cookie. Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies are the perfect way to make gourmet, homemade cookie at home. You may be asking yourself what makes this cookie so special? A scroll to the bottom of this post to see the ingredients will find the standard chocolate chip cookie players. Butter, sugar, flours, soda, powder, salt. It is the technique that sets this cookie apart from the rest. The trick to getting the cookie to be big and thick, soft on the inside and a little crunchy on the outside lies in two basic techniques…
First- temperature. The oven temperature has to be high. Standard cookie baking usually takes place at about 350 degrees. This cookie is baked at 375-400 degrees, depending on if you are or are not using convection. If you have a convection oven, use it! I cannot stress this enough. The convection setting will produce a crispier crust without overcooking the dough inside.
That said, if you don’t have a convection oven, just turn the oven up to 425 regular bake and let it heat up for at least 20 minutes before baking. This will insure your cookies are baked at high temperature and still produce a crispy outside and gooey melted inside. One of the most often made mistakes when baking is not preheating the one properly. When the oven door is opened, the temperature will decrease by at least 25 degrees. If the oven walls are piping hot, the oven will come back up to temperature more quickly and stay hot. ALWAYS preheat the oven for at least 20 minutes before baking!
The second technique (which is equally important) is to stack the cookie high on the baking sheet. I’m talking about a minimum of 3 inches tall. I promise your cookie will flatten out as it bakes. Take a look at this post to see how I shape the cookies for baking. Think tall pile of dough, verses a round ball. If you stack it tall, it will end up being a big thick cookie, which is what we want with this recipe! I’ve added a couple of other tips to insure success and help you achieve the big Levain Bakery cookie signature look when making this recipe. Make sure to read the recipe notes for tips!
Not our first rodeo
If you don’t live near NYC, no worries, you can bake a copycat that will leave you wondering which cookie is better? All of the copycat versions of the Levain Bakery cookies are here on ABK. I’ve made multiple copycat versions of Levain cookies: the original Levain Chocolate Chip Cookie, the Oatmeal Raisin Cookie, 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. Take a look at the Levain Bakery Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe for 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.
One for you, two for me
I love to gift these cookies because they are so huge and friends and family love the novelty of a big, gooey cookie! All of the Levain Bakery copycat cookies freeze well and stay fresh for a couple of days on the counter since they are underbaked. I just wrap up the cookies in large or small ziplock bags after they are completely cooled and take them out as needed when gifting or when I need a Levain cookie fix! They are also pretty close to perfection when microwaved on top of a paper towel or napkin for about 10 seconds before eating. I hope you enjoy this recipe for Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies and would love to hear your feedback in the comment section!
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Levain Bakery Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 1/4 cups unsalted butter microwave for 10 seconds or set on counter for 30 minutes
- 1 cup granulated white sugar
- 1 cup dark brown sugar
- 2 large eggs, cold
- 1/3 cup Hershey’s Special Dark Unsweetened Cocoa powder
- 2 cups all purpose flour
- 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons cake flour
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoons salt
- 3.5 cups or two 12 oz bags dark or semi sweet chocolate chips
Instructions
- Place rack in center of oven with no other rack on the shelf directly above the center rack. Preheat oven to 400 convection bake or 425 regular bake. Let oven heat up for at least 20 minutes before baking.
- Cut the butter into tablespoons size pieces. Place the butter in the bowl of a stand mixer or a large mixing bowl. Turn the mixer to medium speed and beat butter, and sugars for about 1 minute until butter is broken up and starts to blend with the sugar.
- Add eggs, one at a time until mixed well. Keep the mixer speed on medium. Turn mixer off and add unsweetened cocoa, mix until cocoa is blended well. Scrape down sides of the bowl a couple of times during mixing.
- Turn mixer off. Add all purpose flour, cake flour, baking powder, baking soda and salt to bowl all at once. Pulse the mixer until the wet and dry ingredients are combined using low speed. Scrape down sides of bowl again.
- Fold in chocolate chips. Mix on low, or fold in with large spoon until chips are incorporated in dough.
- Scoop the cookies with hands onto a kitchen scale*, the cookies should weigh 6 oz each. There will be approximately 8-9 pieces of dough. If you are making minis, measure out to 3 – 3.5 ox size and refrigerate before baking to avoid excess spreading of dough.
- The large 6 oz cookies do not require refrigeration before baking. Bake the cookie sheets one at a time, 4-5 cookies per sheet at least 3 inches apart.
- Bake for 5-7 minutes on convection or regular bake. The cookies are done when a top crust is formed and the cookies no longer look wet. Do not over bake!
- If the cookie edges spread too much, use a small spatula and push the edges in while still hot to form circular shape. Let the cookies cool for 30 minutes before eating.
Notes
- I use Hershey’s Special Dark Cocoa for this recipe. It is usually the darkest cocoa readily available at most grocery stores. It comes in a smaller container than most cocoa, but will last for quite a while since only small amounts are used in most recipes.
- When making this recipe, I prefer to use food handler’s gloves to form the dough. I don’t ever use a scoop when making any of the Levain copycat recipe. Explanation regarding forming of dough on this post.
- It is important to note that when making this cookie, it is best to start making dough about 10 minutes after the oven has begun preheating. The dough should not sit out on counter at room temperature. If the dough sits at room temperature, the butter will begin to melt and the cookie will not hold its shape as well when baking. Also, using cold eggs and butter that is only slightly softened contribute to the cookie holding its shape.
- If you feel the dough has been sitting at room temperature longer than you anticipated, form the cookies and place the pan inside of the fridge to allow the cookie dough to chill for a while. Then place immediately in the preheated oven to cook.
- Cook time will vary depending on if using convection or not and the oven. Remember, this cookie only needs to be baked until the cookie has formed a slightly crust on top and the dough is no longer shiny (see photos).
- Always use unsalted butter and large eggs.
- When storing these cookies, I try to not cover them up, this will cause the cookie to lose its crisp outer layer!
Did you make this recipe?
Be sure to leave a comment and give this recipe a rating, letting me know how you liked it. I’d love to see a photo, tag @abountifulkitchen on Instagram!
Chelsea Ridley
I just saw that Levain does a dark chocolate peppermint cookie so I used this recipe and did about half chocolate chips and half peppermint baking chips. SO GOOD. A new holiday favorite!
Gina Marie
Hello! I would like to know if King Arthur black cocoa powder would work in this recipe. thank you!
Jillian
Hi Gina!
Yes, any type of cocoa powder that has proper cocoa flavor will do great in this recipe.
Best wishes,
Jillian @ABK Team
Emma Sears
5 delicious stars! They are just too good. Love to eat them warm with a small scoop of vanilla ice cream. It’s a match made in heaven.
Emily Ferons
Oh my heck! These cookies were so freaking good! Make them!
Andrea
Favorite cookies! Especially love the mini version because we don’t like them quite as gooey in the middle around here—can’t wait to try the other varieties!
Laura Oblinger
These have become my sister-in-law’s most requested cookie. I love the chocolate-y flavor without being too dark or bitter. The perfect indulgent treat!
MarisA
This one is spot on! We love these. I’ve also tried baking them in smaller balls, just for those with lower sugar tolerances hahaha
Alyssa
Love love love ABK cookie recipes! You can’t go wrong!
Dee
Hello! I would love to add Walnuts to this recipe, as I absolutely love ‘Double Chocolate Walnut cookies’ sold here in Paris!! Will the recipe or baking time be changed in any way? Should i reduce the amount of chocolate chip maybe?
Si Foster
Hey Dee, I haven’t made the Double Chocolate Walnut cookies yet. If I were going to, I would add in 1 cup of walnuts and reduce 1 cup of chocolate chips. Let me know how it goes! You can also check out my Levain Bakery Chocolate Walnut chips recipe. https://abountifulkitchen.com/levain-bakery-chocolate-chip-cookie-recipe/
XO
Si
Simone
I followed the recipe almost exactly as you did, I just did a mixture of AP and cake flour (1 cup each) and balanced with a bit more light brown sugar compared to white sugar.
When I put the rack in the oven (400 F, convection oven), the cookies started melting from the bottom. I waited 8-9 minutes, as in the recipe, and they were basically a puddle of raw chocolate, barely edible.
I don’t know what I exactly did wrong. My guesses are three:
1) Overmixed the ingredients;
2) also preheated the rack they were supposed to go on (when I put the balls on the rack they were already starting to melt at the bottom) ;
3) bad oven
I haven’t tried the original Levain Bakery cookies so I don’t know how the taste is close to the original cookies, but the taste of what I ended up getting seemed fairly good… Besides the consistency.
Tara
Im going to chalk my experience up to a difference in taste for this one. Im frustrated that the measurements are volumetric and not by weight, so I think my brown sugar might have been too heavy handed, (packed) which resulted in overly sweet soupy cookies. This recipe doesnt specify packed or not, so I went with packed since thats standard. Big mistake. These are so sweet I cant even finish one, and Im a die hard chocoholic from the south yall.
4 oz dough balls fully chilled (10 minutes) baked for the recommended 7 minutes in a 400° convection oven (temperature confirmed with separate oven thermometer) was also not enough. Even after letting the cookies fully set up they were too soupy and fell apart like chocolate sauce. Luckily the mixed reviews warned me this might happen, so I baked in batches of 3 until I got my timing down. 11 minutes is about the sweet spot for my GE wall oven. (Sea level altitude)
Again, I think everyone is getting different results because volumetric measurments are just not reliable/replicable, which is not the authors fault.
If you are going to sink $10 worth of good chocolate into this recipe, err on the side of less brown sugar or 1/4cp more flour. Your cookies will still be eddible compaired to too much spreadding and you have nothing to show for your time and $$.
Author, please dont mind my feedback, just trying to help other bakers who might be trying this for the first time.
CC
Hello, I followed every step and measurements of this recipe but got super flat and greasy cookie/brownie… I don’t understand what I did wrong :(( the taste was great nevertheless
Terri
I visited Levain Bakery for the first time a couple weeks ago. I loved the Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip cookies! I tried your recipe and loved it too. So I returned to Levain Bakery to purchase a cookie and do a side by side comparison. I must admit I loved your recipe more than the Levain cookie. Thank you so much for all the work you put into it and sharing this with everyone!
Si Foster
Hi Terri,
What a compliment! I love this cookie too and think anything made in your kitchen at home is always the best!
Thanks for your review and thanks for reading ABK,
xo
Si
May K
The 5-7 min bake time must be a typo. There’s no way that a 6oz cookie bakes in 5 min. Even in that short amount of bake time the cookie flattened, totally gooey in the middle not in a good way. And this is after keeping the dough in the refrigerator for an hour. Bake time definitely needs to change and possibly use more flour to give the cookie more structure
Si Foster
Hi May,
Not a typo! In my oven, I rarely bake this cookie over 6-7. minutes. If I use convection bake, they usually take 5 minutes for the 6 oz cookie. As the recipe explains, if the butter or eggs are not refrigerated, the cookie will not most likely not hold its shape. If your cookie flattened, I suggest adding two more tablespoons of flour. Watch the cookie carefully, the cookie will no longer be shiny on top when done. The cookie must sit for at least 30-45 minutes in order to hold its shape before eating. Hope this helps!
xo
Si
SOPHIE
Hello, i would like to know how many grams or oz are 1 cup. Thank you
Cat
I have tried a lot of Levine Copy Cat recipes and this is by far the best. I will say that other recipes call for Cake flour and this is the first time I’ve read why that matters. Convinced I used it and it does make a difference. I made the “smaller” cookies and found 6 mins to be perfect timing for my oven. Thanks for all the baking tips. Now on to Oatmeal Raisin.
Aimee Ortiz-Tolley
one of my go-to cookie recipes that’s always a hit since they taste more like brownies! I followed the recipe to a tee and refrigerated the batter overnight to make 25 3oz little mounds of love which I baked at 425 for 6 minutes and cooled for a significant amount of time. I did wish I left them in the oven for a minute or two longer since they were a bit too gooey and didn’t have as much of the hard crust I wanted, but I think it’s because I had 3 trays baking at the same time. regardless, they were still a huge hit!
Karyn Leonardi
Thank you so much. I moved out
Of NYC 5 yrs ago. Yes, I would wait online for these cookies. ❤️ I have been missing Levain Bakery cookies. I followed the recipe exactly and they came out amazing. Taste just like them. 😊 I did make mine smaller. Can’t wait time try the other recipes.
Si Foster
I’m so glad to hear that, Karyn! Thank you for sharing and let us know what else you try on the blog!
xo
Si
Kristine
Hi there…..today I made your oatmeal raisin cookies. I hate raisins but my hubby loves them. They were delicious, they may make me a convert. Tomorrow I am going to make these double chocolate cookies. My question is about refrigeration. I need to make these in advance and I am planning on making them 4.5 oz. If I refrigerate the formed dough balls overnight can I stick them straight on a cookie sheet and stick them in to bake or should I let them come up to a cool room temperature before baking? I see two different directions for different sizes…thanks.
Si Foster
Hi Kristine, sorry for the late comment! I would stick them on a cookie sheet and go ahead and bake them if you’re refrigerating overnight. Thank you for asking!
xo
Si
carol gregersen
Yuuuuuummmmm!! I just made these and they are perfect and yummy!! I used white chocolate chips. Thank you soooo much for this amazing recipe
Quarantine Habits That Will Keep You Happy for Life
[…] and have perfected a few Adobe Lightroom techniques. I’ve mastered some new recipes (like this one and this one). And I’m pretty pumped about my newfound hobby creating themed […]
Aaron
Just made them and they turned out fabulously. Now the majority of them won’t be eaten until tomorrow. What is the best way to store them for a day?
Si Foster
Hi Aaron, I would store them in a sealed container or covered tightly with plastic wrap. Thanks for asking and for reading ABK!
Si
Julie
Recipe has great flavor due to the Cookie Cowgirl dark cocoa blend but gets zero stars for how they bake. They ended up almost oozing all over the baking sheet and I pretty much had a flat cake. Next time I’ll add more flour and refrigerate until the balls are firm. I have a baking business so I know how to bake cookies but this recipe really didn’t work for me as is. I’ll try it again tho. Thanks.
Si Foster
I’m sorry to hear that, Julie, let me know how they turn out for you the second time around. I definitely recommend refrigerating them for a while longer before baking. Thanks for sharing,
xo
Si
Angie
Thank you for being so detailed in the instructions! I have worked with some wonky ovens as we have been moving around to different rentals the past few years so that has been a challenge with baking, but we usually make out ok when I follow you directions to the T! These are SO GOOd! If you are a serious chocolate lover these are your cookie!
Si Foster
I agree, Angie, the details make such a difference! Thanks for commenting and for reading ABK,
xo
Si
Robin Portnoy
I live in Manhattan and consume levain choc choc chip cookies regularly. I would like to create copycat that is a bit less sweet and seek your advice on how to go about this without sacrificing all other cookie attributes
Si Foster
Hi Robyn,
You can reduce the sugar by about 1/4 cup, but I would not go much lower. This will change the texture of the cookie considerably if reducing the sugar too much. Hope this helps!
Si
Becky
These are amazing!!! Thank you for the fabulous recipe!!
Si Foster
You’re very welcome, Becky, thanks for your comment!
xo
Si
Peggy
Love Levain cookies. I made the chocolate chip and the turned out great. This is the second time making the dark chocolate and both times they flattened. What makes Levain’s so great is the mound. I followed your recipe exactly and even refrigerated the dough. Still flattened. All I can think of is adding a little more flour and not so much butter. With all the chocolate and butter they seemed to be more oily. Any suggestions?
Si Foster
I’m sorry to hear that, Peggy. I would make sure you refrigerate the dough after you shape it into balls, also make sure the eggs are cold and the butter is only slightly softened. I hope this helps and thanks for asking!
xo
Si
Chanel
I know you said you prefer the classic over the dark chocolate but do people prefer the dark chocolate peanut butter or just plain dark chocolate? Don’t want to make a recipe and wonder if the other type of cookie is better 😂
Danielle
At last… my love has come along. Another gem from our friend Si. I visit New York frequently for work, so I’ve indulged in this cookie more than I care to share. I love that I can share a Levain-like experience with my friends at home. Thanks for perfecting this one, Si!
Katie W
These are the BEST! If you love chocolate these are the way to go! I brought them the a neighbor gathering and everyone wanted the recipe. Thanks for sharing this one.
Shelley Brown
I have made these amazing cookies many times !! Can’t get any better than all the chocolate that is in these gems !! So grateful for people like you who take time to share these copycat recipes with us and all of your other delicious creations !
Jennifer
Just leaving a comment because I love the way this cookie turned out but it took me two tries and I learned some things I wanted to share!
The first time I tried making this a month or two ago they turned out HORRIBLY – there was no distinct chocolate flavor even though it was packed with chocolate – and it just felt muddy. My cookies also baked out really flat compared to the size and the way the other “levain” cookies have turned out.
I just made a version of these cookies tonight and they turned out GREAT. Here are the differences I’ve picked up on that may help others:
1. Neither of the stores in my area had Hershey’s Special Cocoa Powder – so for the first batch I used what I assumed was good cocoa (Ghiradhelli 100%). However, this time around I used Guittard Cocoa Rouge and it made ALL the difference. In both appearance (Guittard’s has a very deep brown/reddish hue compared to Ghiradhelli’s much lighter one) and in smell (Guittards truly SMELLED richer and more deeply of cocoa). This made an ENORMOUS difference in both the color and taste of my cookie.
2. The first time I mixed semi sweet and bittersweet chips and not only was I missing some texture in the cookie, the chocolate flavors seemed to muddle together. This time, I used your 3.5 cups chip as a guide for volume and used 1.5 c semi sweet (Guittard), .5 cup smashed pretzels, .5 cup mini marshmallows and about 3/4 cup pb chips. Having different flavors and textures helped – and they kept their shape much better.
3. I formed the cookie balls and weighed them – then refrigerated them completely before baking. I think this may have helped them keep their shape? But I’m not sure. If nothing else, it’s how I bake your other “levain” cookies and definitely ensures they’re super gooey!
They turned out perfectly and the chocolate dough base is delicious! Thanks so much!
Cali
These were delicious. Thank you.
Si Foster
You’re welcome, Cali, and thanks for reading ABK!
xo
Si
Emily
Hi, Si. I love your Levain chocolate chip recipe! Why a different recipe for the peanut butter chip vs chocolate chip chocolate cookies? And why brown/white sugar vs all white sugar? That’s the only difference I see.
Si Foster
Hi Emily, the Dark Chocolate Peanut Butter Chip is made with all granulated sugar because when I tested the cookie in NYC, they bottom of the cookie is very hard (explained in the recipe post) the Dark Chocolate Chocolate Chip cookie does not seem to have as crispy of a bottom, so I assumed the cookie has a bit of brown sugar as well as white! Thanks for asking and for reading ABK,
xo
Si
BreAnn Howell
Is there a need to add more flour for high altitudes?
Si Foster
Hi BreAnn, if you live at a higher altitude, you could try using more flour if they bake too flat. You could also try refrigerating them beforehand. Hope this helps and thanks for asking!
xo
Si
Jessie
Is it necessary to use the special dark cocoa powder, or would regular cocoa powder work okay with this?
Si Foster
Hi Jessie, I think it’s best to use special dark cocoa powder to get the best result for these cookies. It adds to the rich chocolate flavor. Thanks for asking!
xo
Si
Emily
I tried it with regular cocoa powder, and it didn’t turn out very good. Definitely not very chocolatey!
Si Foster
I’m sorry to hear that, Emily. They’re definitely worth another try, the special dark cocoa makes a difference in this recipe! Thanks for reading ABK,
xo
Si
Krystal Wight Armstrong
Just clicked over from Instagram- these definitely looked like something special! And I was already telling my Husband I was craving cookies today. This will probably be my next baking project.
Couple quick questions:
• I’m not a huge cookie expert, so I was curious- why never use salted butter? We always have salted kerrygold that I prefer to use, would it ruin these?
• And, I can tell you obviously worked really hard to get the meticulous details of this recipe exactly right; so I shouldn’t even ask, but again curious- what would happen if we didn’t use cake flour? I don’t have that but I do have a couple other flours including einkorn. I wondered how much I’d mess these up if I didn’t make a grocery run for cake flour first.
Thanks so much for all your work on sharing this with us!
abountifulkitchen
Hi Krystal,
I prefer to use unsalted butter because it is the easiest way to control the amount of salt in my baking and recipes. I’d rather add salt to a recipe than guess how much salt is in the cube of butter, and how that will taste in the finished product! I definitely do not think Kerry Gold will ruin this recipe, I love their product, but would purchase the unsalted for baking. If you use All Purpose flour instead of cake flour you will end up with a cookie that is not quite the same texture. Take a look at this post for full disclose and details on the difference in flours and the end result! Thanks for your questions and comments 🙂 and for reading ABK,
happy baking,
Si