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Home » recipes » sourdough discard recipes

Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies

Modified: Jul 1, 2025 · Published: Jun 6, 2024 · by anita | wild thistle kitchen · This post may contain affiliate links · 8 Comments

  • 8
Jump to Recipe·Print Recipe· 4.5 from 2 reviews

Ooey, gooey, chewy, buttery, and so irresistible, these Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies will become your new favorite way to use sourdough discard! My easy, no-mixer, no-chill recipe combines the perfect ratio of ingredients to ensure a soft, chewy cookie (no cakey cookies here!) with plenty of melty chocolate puddles.

tray of sourdough discard chocolate chip cookies with one cookie broken in half showing the melted chocolate oozing between the cookie halves

Recipe Background and Details

In my quest to expand my collection of sourdough discard recipes, I knew I needed a good ccc. These sourdough discard chocolate chip cookies are so good! And so easy. A quick mix in a bowl is all you need - no mixers, no chilling, just instant cookie gratification. Isn't that what we all want when we're craving cookies? Yes, I brown the butter but it takes minutes and there is a good reason which I'll explain below. And I will give options if you just can't be bothered with that step. For another easy sourdough discard cookie recipe, don't miss my Chewy Sourdough Discard Peanut Butter Cookies.

My issues with most sourdough cookie recipes: they are either big and cakey or they are flatter than pancakes. Also, they almost always require a chilling period. I knew I wanted to create just the right size, thickness, and texture. Yes, a cookie should be gooey, but you should be able to pick it up while warm without it falling apart. And I knew I really wanted to eliminate the need to chill the dough before baking (which was actually pretty easy to do). Now, if you want to chill your dough balls you totally can and should. I'll give some make ahead and freezing instructions below. Now let's make some cookies!

If you love finding ways to use your sourdough starter, be sure to check out these other very popular sourdough discard recipes: Sourdough Discard Soft Pretzels, Sourdough Discard Cinnamon Rolls, and Sourdough Discard Pizza Crust.

cookie stacked on top of more cookies with bite taken showing the chewy interior
Jump to:
  • Recipe Background and Details
  • Ingredients for Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • How to make sourdough chocolate chip cookies - step-by-step instructions
  • Do I have to Brown the Butter? (and why)
  • What Can I Use Instead of Browned Butter?
  • Will My Sourdough Cookies Taste Sour?
  • Substitutions and Variations
  • Make Ahead, Freezing, Storage
  • How to Reheat Chocolate Chip Cookies
  • Top tips
  • FAQ
  • More Sourdough Discard Recipes
  • Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies

Ingredients for Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies

ingredients for sourdough discard chocolate chip cookies laid out on warm marble surface

browned butter: for delicious flavor but also to evaporate extra moisture from the butter to achieve a chewy cookie. See below under Do I Have to Brown the Butter and What Can I Use Instead of Browned Butter headings.

light brown sugar and white granulated sugar: equal parts of each creates the best texture and flavor.

vanilla extract: and plenty of it. I say a tablespoon but just measure with your heart like I do.

egg yolk: just the yolk to get the perfect texture and eliminate any additional moisture from the egg white.

sourdough starter: this is a discard recipe but you can use your starter in any state. You might get a slightly puffier cookie if your starter is very bubbly and active.

baking powder, baking soda, and salt

all purpose or bread flour: I have used both with great results. The bread flour helps with a chewy texture.

chocolate: chips or chunks or a combo

See recipe card for quantities.

How to make sourdough chocolate chip cookies - step-by-step instructions

one stick of sliced butter in a small enameled skillet
butter melted and foaming in small enameled skillet
browned butter in small skillet with white silicone spatula
  • First, brown the butter. Place butter in a skillet and melt over medium heat. Continue cooking, stirring and scraping the bottom often, until the butter foams, the foaming subsides a bit, and the milk solids begin to turn brown. Remove from heat when they are a light golden brown color and quickly pour into your mixing bowl.
browned butter, brown sugar, and white sugar in white mixing bowl with small white silicone spatula
sourdough discard and egg yolk added to sugar and butter in white mixing bowl with large wire whisk
wet ingredients for cookies in white mixing bowl with wire whisk with baking soda, baking powder, and salt added on top
flour added to wet ingredients in white mixing bowl with wire whisk
cookie dough beginning to form in white mixing bowl with wire whisk
chocolate chunks added to partially mixed cookie dough in white mixing bowl with small white silicone spatula
  • Add both sugars to the browned butter and stir or whisk to combine. This mixture will be like wet sand.
  • Next, add egg yolk, vanilla, and sourdough discard. I like to use a whisk at this stage to really combine it very well.
  • Then, add baking powder, baking soda, and salt and whisk again to combine thoroughly. I know this is different, but I like adding these at this stage as I fell they combine a lot better than if they are added with the flour.
  • Add flour and mix until a shaggy dough begins to form.
  • Add chocolate chunks or chips at this stage and mix until combined and no flour is visible.
sourdough discard chocolate chip cookie dough in white mixing bowl with metal dough scoop full of cookie dough
12 cookie dough balls on parchment lined cookie tray
12 cookies after baking on parchment lined cookie tray
  • Scoop two tablespoons of dough at a time (I love to use my cookie scoop for this) and place on parchment lined tray about an inch apart.
  • Flatten the dough balls slightly so they are more like little round patties about ½ an inch thick.
  • Bake at 350 degrees F for 8-9 minutes. Allow to cool on trays.

Do I have to Brown the Butter? (and why)

OK, here's the deal with browned butter. Yes, it adds incredible flavor but in this particular recipe, there is some actual science behind it. Sourdough discard contains a good amount of moisture and so does butter. Moisture is the enemy of chewiness in a cookie. So by browning the butter we are evaporating a lot of that moisture out of the butter. This step along with only using the egg yolk takes out enough moisture to avoid a cakey cookie outcome.

What Can I Use Instead of Browned Butter?

If you really, really don't want to use browned butter you can use melted butter and you'll get a little bit of a cakier texture. You can bake the cookies for less time to try to avoid that. Or, you can use oil such as light olive oil, avocado oil, or melted coconut oil in place of the butter. You will of course miss out on the butter flavor this way, but you'll still end up with a chewy, not cakey, texture.

Will My Sourdough Cookies Taste Sour?

No, these cookies will not taste sour and I used my very, very mature starter that I had in the back of my fridge for about a month. So it was super sour but somehow the cookies don't taste sour - they just have a unique and complex flavor both from the sourdough discard and the browned butter. They are SO GOOD!

cookie dough balls on parchment lined tray

Substitutions and Variations

Chocolate Chips or Chunks: Use your favorite chocolate here - chips, chunks, milk, dark. I prefer high quality chopped chocolate for a few reasons: it tastes amazing, it melts into luxurious chocolate puddles, and by chopping it myself I get little bits of chocolate shavings and dust which I just love in a cookie.

Nuts: If you love a nutty ccc, feel free to add some chopped nuts. Pecans or hazelnuts would be my choice. Just promise me you'll toast them first. And to make it even easier, you can toast them in the browned butter! Also, be sure to check out my Brown Butter Pecan Cookies.

Browned Butter: See above under Do I Have to Brown the Butter and What Can I Use Instead of Browned Butter headings.

Make Ahead, Freezing, Storage

Now, earlier I explained my desire to eliminate the chilling step that is in so many cookie recipes. But if you want to chill these, you can! I recommend scooping them all, covering, and chilling for up to 24 hours before baking. It's so much easier to do this than to try to scoop rock solid cookie dough.

To freeze the dough balls, scoop onto parchment in a single layer, freeze until solid, and transfer to freezer bags or containers. Having a stash of cookie dough balls in the freezer is one of my favorite things!

Store baked and cooled cookies at room temperature in an airtight container for 2-3 days. Pop them in the microwave or air fryer for a few seconds to get them ooey gooey again.

overhead view of chocolate chip cookies piled on cooling rack sprinkled with sea salt

How to Reheat Chocolate Chip Cookies

The best cookies are warm and gooey. To easily achieve this after the cookies have been baked and cooled, try these methods:

  • Oven or Toaster Oven: Bake cookies at 350 degrees F for 3-5 minutes until warmed through.
  • Microwave: Heat cookies for 5-10 seconds until warmed through.
  • Air Fryer: Preheat air fryer to 350 and heat cookies for 3-5 minutes until warmed and softened.

If cookies are very hard they can be wrapped in foil (not in the microwave!) and they should soften as they reheat. To achieve this in the microwave, wrap them in a very lightly dampened paper towel.

Top tips

The key to the perfect texture is to under-bake these slightly. 8 minutes is perfect in my oven and then I let them cool and finish baking on the cookie sheet once they are removed from the oven. This results in the perfect texture in my opinion.

Make sure to eat a few while they are warm and gooey!

Stacks of sourdough chocolate chip cookies with melty chocolate and small dish of flaky sea salt

FAQ

Why use sourdough discard in cookies?

Sourdough discard is great to use in cookies because we are all looking for ways to use up our discard rather than wasting it. Also, it imparts a wonderful texture and tanginess to these sourdough discard chocolate chip cookies. The tanginess will be more pronounced if your starter has been sitting in the refrigerator for a long time which is how I prefer to make mine.

More Sourdough Discard Recipes

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    Sourdough Peach Cobbler
  • a tray of scones with streusel topping and glaze topped with lemon wedges and lemon rind curls
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See more sourdough discard recipes →

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sourdough discard chocolate chip cookies on parchment lined tray

Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies

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4.5 from 2 reviews

Print Recipe
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Ooey, gooey, chewy, buttery, and so irresistible, these Sourdough Discard Chocolate Chip Cookies will become your new favorite way to use sourdough discard! My easy, no-mixer, no-chill recipe combines the perfect ratio of ingredients to ensure a soft, chewy cookie (no cakey cookies here!) with plenty of melty chocolate puddles.

  • Total Time: about 40 minutes
  • Yield: 22 cookies

Ingredients

4 ounces (113 grams) butter, browned

½ cup (110 grams) light brown sugar

½ cup (100 grams) white granulated sugar

1 egg yolk

½ cup (140 grams) sourdough discard

1 tablespoon vanilla extract

½ teaspoon baking powder

¼ teaspoon baking soda

½ teaspoon kosher salt

2 cups (240 grams) all purpose flour

2 cups (340 grams) chocolate chips or chunks

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees F and line a couple cookie sheets with parchment.
  2. Next, brown the butter. Place butter in a skillet and melt over medium heat. Continue cooking, stirring and scraping the bottom often, until the butter foams, the foaming subsides a bit, and the milk solids begin to turn brown. Remove from heat when they are a light golden brown color and quickly pour into your mixing bowl to stop the cooking process.
  3. Add both sugars to the browned butter and stir or whisk to combine. This mixture will be like wet sand.
  4. Next, add egg yolk, vanilla, and sourdough discard. I like to use a whisk at this stage to really combine it very well.
  5. Then, add baking powder, baking soda, and salt and whisk again to combine thoroughly. I know this is different, but I like adding these at this stage as I fell they combine a lot better than if they are added with the flour.
  6. Add flour and mix with wooden spoon or silicone spatula until a shaggy dough begins to form.
  7. Add chocolate chunks or chips at this stage and mix until combined and no flour is visible.

  8. Scoop two tablespoons of dough at a time (I love to use my cookie scoop for this) and place on parchment lined tray about an inch apart.
  9. Flatten the dough balls slightly so they are more like little round patties about ½ an inch thick.

  10. Bake one tray at a time at 350 degrees F for 8-9 minutes. Allow to cool on trays.
  • Author: anita | wild thistle kitchen
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 8 minutes per tray
  • Category: baking, sourdough, cookies bars and brownies, desserts
  • Method: baking, sourdough
  • Cuisine: American

Did you make this recipe?

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  • 8

About anita | wild thistle kitchen

Hi, my name is Anita! Welcome to Wild Thistle Kitchen. This is where I share rustic, comforting, seasonal recipes (both sweet and savory!) as well as nostalgic food memories. I'm so happy you're here! xo - Anita

Comments

  1. Em says

    September 18, 2025 at 6:55 pm

    These are the best! I have made them multiple times for different occasions and everyone loves them.

    Reply
  2. Robyn Baker says

    May 24, 2025 at 11:22 am

    Can I long fermentation these? To break down all the gluten

    Reply
    • anita | wild thistle kitchen says

      May 24, 2025 at 1:38 pm

      Hi Robyn. You can long-ferment them by storing in the refrigerator for up to 24 hours before baking - if your starter is active and well-established you will get some fermentation during this time. Be sure to cover them very well so they do not dry out. I do want to point out that while long-fermenting does break down some of the gluten proteins, it does not break down all of the gluten (this is true for any sourdough recipe). Let me know if you have any other questions. Thanks! - Anita

      Reply
  3. Debbie says

    February 25, 2025 at 8:54 pm

    Omg! I made these today. I love that they are a thicker cookie. I did add pecans that I toasted in the brown butter. My goodness! Delicious

    Reply
    • anita | wild thistle kitchen says

      February 26, 2025 at 8:25 am

      Hi Debbie! I'm so happy you enjoyed this recipe! That brown butter pecan addition is my idea of heaven! YUM! Thank you for this lovely feedback!! - Anita

      Reply
      • Debbie says

        February 26, 2025 at 12:33 pm

        You are welcome Anita.

        Do you think the recipe could be doubled?

      • anita | wild thistle kitchen says

        February 27, 2025 at 9:05 am

        Hi Debbie - yes it doubles nicely! We doubled it a few times this winter during our many snow days. 🙂

  4. Barb says

    December 06, 2024 at 1:23 pm

    Want to try them all

    Reply

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Welcome!

Hi there! My name is Anita - welcome to Wild Thistle Kitchen - where I share lots of sourdough and sourdough discard recipes as well as seasonal sweet and savory comfort food and baking recipes.

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