Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies are the kind of cookies I tuck into when I want a familiar childhood comfort with a little grown up twist.

My first time making these was on a rainy afternoon when I had a craving for something soft and buttery, but I was out of my usual mix in a cupboard. I grabbed a small box of instant vanilla pudding and thought, why not? The result was astonishingly tender cookies with a slightly cakey crumb and pockets of molten chocolate chips. From that day on, these became my weekend ritual, something I make when a friend stops by or when I need to reward myself after a long week.

What I love most is how forgiving they are. You can scoop the dough and freeze it for a future baking day, or bake a tray and share them with neighbors. Every bite carries a whisper of vanilla pudding that lifts the flavor without shouting, and the edges crisp just enough to contrast the soft centers. I remember serving them warm, the kitchen smelling like butter and sugar, and watching everyone argue about who got the last cookie.

Recipe Snapshot

Total Time:
25 mins
Prep Time:
15 mins
Cook Time:
10 mins
Difficulty:
Easy
Calories:
150 kcal
Cuisine:
American
Diet:
Gluten-Free, Low FODMAP
Course:
Desserts
Tools Used:
Stand mixer, Paddle attachment, Mixing bowl, Baking sheet, Parchment paper, Cooling rack, Cookie scoop

The Beauty of This Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Ultra Tender Texture

I find the magic of Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies is the pudding powder, it keeps the crumb soft and slightly cake like while still holding its cookie shape. I love how each bite yields a plush, yielding center, which makes them perfect for dunking. The texture difference is something I talk about when friends ask why these stand out from classic cookies.

Simple, Pantry Friendly Ingredients

These cookies rely on familiar staples like all purpose flour, butter, and a package of instant pudding mix. I keep these ingredients on hand, so they are my go to when I need a quick bake. The pudding mix is a tiny shortcut that elevates the result without complicated steps, and I appreciate recipes that respect my limited free time.

Flexible and Freezer Friendly

One reason I make these often is their adaptability. You can freeze dough balls and bake later, or freeze baked cookies for a ready stash. I like to portion dough on baking day and freeze extras; when guests arrive, I pop a few into the oven and they taste freshly baked. This makes them a reliable option for unexpected company.

Balanced Sweetness and Chocolate Pockets

The combination of light brown sugar and granulated sugar gives a rounded sweetness and appealing chew, while the semi sweet chocolate chips provide melty pockets of flavor. I enjoy how the sugars work together to build a caramel like note while the chips add bursts of richness, creating well balanced bites.

Kid Approved and Crowd Pleasing

I’ve brought these to bake sales and potlucks, and they always disappear fast. They hit familiar flavor notes, which makes them a safe bet for mixed groups. I love that they feel special but are easy to scale up when I need more than a single batch.

Recipe Ingredients for Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

These ingredients are intentionally simple, built to produce a cookie that is both soft and dependable. The key players here are the butter for richness, the pudding mix for tenderness, and the chocolate chips for sweet pockets of texture. Together they deliver a cookie that is comforting yet slightly elevated.

  • 1 cups salted butter, softened: Cream softened to room temperature and provide a rich, tender base that adds moisture and helps cookies spread and brown evenly during baking.
  • 3/4 cup light brown sugar: Sweeten and contribute deep caramel notes while adding moisture that helps produce a soft, chewy texture in the finished cookie.
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar: Provide bright sweetness and help control spread; also lends structure by dissolving into the dough and interacting with other ingredients.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract: Enhance overall flavor with warm, aromatic notes and help accentuate the other sweet components for a well-rounded taste.
  • 2 large eggs: Bind ingredients together while adding richness and leavening power from the trapped air when beaten, resulting in a lighter cookie crumb.
  • 2 1/3 cups all-purpose flour: Provide structure and bulk through gluten development while combining with leaveners to create the desired chew and density.
  • 1 (3.4-ounce) package instant vanilla pudding mix (just the dry mix): Add concentrated vanilla flavor and a slight thickening effect from the powder, contributing tenderness and a subtle creamy note to the dough.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder: Offer additional leavening lift and help create a light crumb by reacting with wet ingredients to produce carbon dioxide gas during baking.
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda: React with acids and other components to provide balanced rising and browning, contributing to texture and spread control.
  • 1/4 teaspoon Kosher salt: Enhance flavor complexity and balance sweetness while tightening gluten structure slightly to improve overall taste and dough handling.
  • 1 1/2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips, plus more to taste (can do a mix of milk or white): Provide chocolate flavor and texture, melting to create pockets of sweetness and contrast while also contributing to the cookie's overall richness.

Recipe Directions for Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

These directions are straightforward but there is room for technique to make them sing. Take your time with the creaming and mixing, and watch the dough as it bakes so you catch the perfect moment between soft center and golden edge.

  1. Prep. Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.: As the oven warms, you will notice a faint, dry heat filling the kitchen, which primes the baking surface so cookies start to set the moment they hit the tray. Proper preheating ensures even rise and browning, so I always wait for the full temperature rather than guessing. If your oven runs hot or cool, an oven thermometer will save you from overbaked or underbaked results. A common slip is placing the tray in too early, which can prevent the cookies from spreading correctly.
  2. Cream wet ingredients. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the 1 cup butter, 3/4 cup brown sugar, and 1/4 cup granulated sugar 1 to 2 minutes, or until smooth and fluffy. Add 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla and 2 eggs one at a time until combined.: When you cream the butter and sugars , you will see the mixture lighten in color and become aerated, creating tiny bubbles that contribute to lift. The aroma will shift from sweet to a more complex, caramel like scent as the brown sugar blends in. Adding the vanilla introduces warm notes, and incorporating eggs one at a time helps form a glossy emulsion. If the butter is too cold, it will not cream properly, producing dense dough. Scrape the bowl to ensure everything is evenly mixed and avoid overbeating once eggs are added to prevent a cake like structure.
  3. Combine wet and dry ingredients. In a medium bowl, whisk together 2 1/3 cups flour, 3.4 ounce dry pudding mix, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Slowly stir into the wet ingredients until well combined. Fold in the 1 1/2 cups chocolate chips.: The dry mix will smell faintly of vanilla and powdered sweetness, and whisking distributes the leaveners and pudding mix evenly so pockets of rise are consistent. As you slowly incorporate the dry into the creamed base, watch for the dough to come together without streaks of flour. Folding in the chocolate chips last preserves their shape while ensuring even distribution. A frequent mistake is mixing too vigorously, which tightens gluten and yields tougher cookies, so stop mixing the moment the dough is uniform.
  4. Scoop. Using a medium cookie dough scoop, portion the dough onto the baking sheet.: When scooping, you will feel the dough hold shape with a slight tackiness, and the scoops should sit as rounded mounds on the sheet. Spacing is important, I leave room for gentle spread so edges can brown. If the dough is too soft, chill for a bit to prevent excessive flattening. Using a scoop promotes even sized cookies so they bake uniformly, which matters if you want consistent texture across a tray.
  5. Bake. Bake 8 to 10 minutes, or until the edges are lightly golden brown; you want the center to look a little underdone. Let sit 2 to 5 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack. Enjoy with a cold glass of milk!: As the cookies bake, you will notice the edges begin to set first and take on a light golden hue while centers remain pale and soft, that contrast is the cue to pull them. The oven will release a warm, butter rich aroma with chocolate notes as the chips soften. Allowing them to rest a few minutes on the hot sheet lets residual heat finish the center without overbaking, so you end up with a tender inside and slightly crisp rim. A typical error is leaving them in until fully browned, which removes that desirable soft center; remove them when the center still looks slightly underdone for best results.

Recipe Notes about Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

These notes expand on the small tricks that make a big difference. Think of them as the lessons I learned after many batches, the tweaks that turn good cookies into something you keep making.

  • Use the correct pudding mix: The recipe depends on the smaller 3.4 ounce instant vanilla pudding mix, not the cook and serve variety. If you only find the larger box, use a little more than half and it will still work, but the intended texture comes from the smaller package. Instant pudding adds starch and flavor without extra liquid, which is why it must be the dry mix.
  • Freezing the dough: Portion dough into scoops and freeze on a tray until solid, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to three months. When baking from frozen, place dough on a lined sheet and let warm slightly while the oven preheats, then add one to two minutes to the baking time. This method keeps your freezer stocked with ready to bake cookies for last minute guests.
  • Substituting pudding flavors: You can swap in other instant pudding flavors like chocolate or butterscotch, but vanilla provides the most neutral lift that highlights the chocolate chips. Different flavors will change the cookie’s aroma and final color, and I recommend testing a small batch to confirm you like the variation.
  • Storage after baking: Once cooled completely, store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for several days or freeze them in a bag for up to three months. Thaw at room temperature or warm briefly in a low oven for that just baked sensation. Avoid stacking while still warm as condensation can make them lose their slight crisp edge.
  • Ingredient temperature: Use softened room temperature butter and room temperature eggs for the best emulsion during creaming. Cold ingredients resist combining which can lead to uneven texture, while overly warm butter causes spreading during baking.

Serving Ideas for Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

These cookies are versatile, fitting casual gatherings as well as small celebrations. Here are ideas for serving, storing, and occasions where they shine.

  • Classic snack pairing: Serve warm with a cold glass of milk for a timeless pairing, the milk cuts through the sweetness and enhances the soft, pudding driven crumb.
  • Party platter: Arrange on a platter with a variety of cookie sizes, adding a few extra chocolate chips on top of some cookies for visual appeal. They work well for potlucks and bake sales because most people love chocolate chip flavors with a twist.
  • Gift idea: Package a dozen in a baker’s box with parchment and a ribbon for a homemade gift. These cookies travel well when stored in an airtight tin and make a thoughtful homemade present for neighbors or hosts.
  • Make ahead: Freeze dough balls for last minute baking; they can be popped onto a sheet straight from the freezer and baked with minimal extra time. This is perfect for unexpected guests or quick fresh baked treats.
  • Occasions: Ideal for casual gatherings, school events, afternoon tea, or a Ramadan snack table when you want something sweet and familiar. They fit many contexts because they are approachable and broadly liked.
  • Serving temperature: I recommend serving slightly warm for melty chocolate chips and the best texture contrast between crisp edges and soft centers. Reheat gently to avoid hardening the crumb.
  • Storage tips: Keep at room temperature for several days in an airtight container, or freeze baked cookies for longer storage. Thaw at room temperature or warm briefly in a low oven to refresh texture.

FAQ

Absolutely, you can swap the instant vanilla pudding for other flavors like chocolate or butterscotch, and each will subtly change the cookies aroma and taste. Vanilla remains the most neutral choice and lets the semi sweet chocolate chips shine, but experimenting with flavors is part of the fun. If you try a richer pudding flavor, the cookie will lean more toward that profile and you may notice a deeper color. I recommend testing a small batch first so you can judge if you prefer the flavor balance before scaling up. Remember to use the dry instant pudding mix, not the cook and serve variety, to maintain the intended texture and moisture level.

If your cookies are spreading excessively, the usual culprits are overly soft butter or too warm dough. Chill the dough for 15 to 30 minutes before scooping if your kitchen is warm, and make sure the butter is softened but not melting. Measuring the flour properly by spooning into the cup and leveling helps avoid under measured dry ingredients, which can cause flattening. Using a medium cookie scoop ensures uniform sizes and predictable spread. Finally, avoid placing the baking sheet too low in the oven, as intense bottom heat can accelerate spread at the edges.

Yes, both options work well. Portion dough into scoops and freeze them on a tray until solid, then transfer to a freezer bag and store for up to three months. When baking from frozen, let the dough warm a few minutes while the oven heats, and add one to two minutes to the baking time. For baked cookies, cool them completely, then freeze in an airtight bag for up to three months. To refresh frozen baked cookies, thaw at room temperature or warm briefly in a low oven for that freshly baked experience. This make ahead strategy makes it easy to serve warm cookies on short notice.

The instant pudding mix provides a unique combination of starch and flavor that keeps the cookie crumb soft and slightly cake like while not adding extra liquid. It helps retain moisture and contributes to the tender interior that distinguishes these cookies from classic chocolate chip varieties. Other thickeners do not impart the same vanilla aroma and may change the doughs hydration, leading to different textures. The instant mix is an easy trick for a reliably plush result and is why this recipe is especially forgiving for home bakers.

Conclusion

These Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies stand out because they combine familiar cookie flavors with the surprising tenderness that instant pudding provides. You get a soft, slightly cake like center with lightly crisped edges and melty pockets of chocolate in every bite. Give them a try on a quiet afternoon or bake a batch for friends, they are forgiving, freezer friendly, and reliably popular. Enjoy the warm aroma as they bake and the smiles when you offer the first plate.

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies

Chocolate Chip Pudding Cookies are ultra tender and slightly cake like, with melty pockets of rich chocolate. This easy cookie uses pantry staples and instant vanilla pudding to create soft, chewy centers and lightly golden edges, making them ideal for quick treats and crowd pleasing dessert moments. Perfect for busy bakers seeking an effortless, comforting cookie to share.
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 10 minutes
Total Time 25 minutes
Course Desserts
Cuisine American
Servings 24 servings
Calories 150 kcal

Equipment

  • Stand mixer
  • Paddle attachment
  • Mixing Bowl
  • Baking Sheet
  • Parchment Paper
  • Cooling rack
  • Cookie Scoop

Ingredients
  

  • 1 cups salted butter, softened Cream softened to room temperature and provide a rich, tender base that adds moisture and helps cookies spread and brown evenly during baking.
  • 3/4 cup light brown sugar Sweeten and contribute deep caramel notes while adding moisture that helps produce a soft, chewy texture in the finished cookie.
  • 1/4 cup granulated sugar Provide bright sweetness and help control spread; also lends structure by dissolving into the dough and interacting with other ingredients.
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract Enhance overall flavor with warm, aromatic notes and help accentuate the other sweet components for a well-rounded taste.
  • 2 large eggs Bind ingredients together while adding richness and leavening power from the trapped air when beaten, resulting in a lighter cookie crumb.
  • 2 1/3 cups all-purpose flour Provide structure and bulk through gluten development while combining with leaveners to create the desired chew and density.
  • 1 (3.4-ounce) package instant vanilla pudding mix (just the dry mix) Add concentrated vanilla flavor and a slight thickening effect from the powder, contributing tenderness and a subtle creamy note to the dough.
  • 1 teaspoon baking powder Offer additional leavening lift and help create a light crumb by reacting with wet ingredients to produce carbon dioxide gas during baking.
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda React with acids and other components to provide balanced rising and browning, contributing to texture and spread control.
  • 1/4 teaspoon Kosher salt Enhance flavor complexity and balance sweetness while tightening gluten structure slightly to improve overall taste and dough handling.
  • 1 1/2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips, plus more to taste (can do a mix of milk or white) Provide chocolate flavor and texture, melting to create pockets of sweetness and contrast while also contributing to the cookie's overall richness.

Instructions
 

  • Prep. Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.: As the oven warms, you will notice a faint, dry heat filling the kitchen, which primes the baking surface so cookies start to set the moment they hit the tray. Proper preheating ensures even rise and browning, so I always wait for the full temperature rather than guessing. If your oven runs hot or cool, an oven thermometer will save you from overbaked or underbaked results. A common slip is placing the tray in too early, which can prevent the cookies from spreading correctly.
  • Cream wet ingredients. In the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment, cream the 1 cup butter, 3/4 cup brown sugar, and 1/4 cup granulated sugar 1 to 2 minutes, or until smooth and fluffy. Add 1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla and 2 eggs one at a time until combined.: When you cream the butter and sugars , you will see the mixture lighten in color and become aerated, creating tiny bubbles that contribute to lift. The aroma will shift from sweet to a more complex, caramel like scent as the brown sugar blends in. Adding the vanilla introduces warm notes, and incorporating eggs one at a time helps form a glossy emulsion. If the butter is too cold, it will not cream properly, producing dense dough. Scrape the bowl to ensure everything is evenly mixed and avoid overbeating once eggs are added to prevent a cake like structure.
  • Combine wet and dry ingredients. In a medium bowl, whisk together 2 1/3 cups flour, 3.4 ounce dry pudding mix, 1 teaspoon baking soda, 1 teaspoon baking powder, and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Slowly stir into the wet ingredients until well combined. Fold in the 1 1/2 cups chocolate chips.: The dry mix will smell faintly of vanilla and powdered sweetness, and whisking distributes the leaveners and pudding mix evenly so pockets of rise are consistent. As you slowly incorporate the dry into the creamed base, watch for the dough to come together without streaks of flour. Folding in the chocolate chips last preserves their shape while ensuring even distribution. A frequent mistake is mixing too vigorously, which tightens gluten and yields tougher cookies, so stop mixing the moment the dough is uniform.
  • Scoop. Using a medium cookie dough scoop, portion the dough onto the baking sheet.: When scooping, you will feel the dough hold shape with a slight tackiness, and the scoops should sit as rounded mounds on the sheet. Spacing is important, I leave room for gentle spread so edges can brown. If the dough is too soft, chill for a bit to prevent excessive flattening. Using a scoop promotes even sized cookies so they bake uniformly, which matters if you want consistent texture across a tray.
  • Bake. Bake 8 to 10 minutes, or until the edges are lightly golden brown; you want the center to look a little underdone. Let sit 2 to 5 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack. Enjoy with a cold glass of milk!: As the cookies bake, you will notice the edges begin to set first and take on a light golden hue while centers remain pale and soft, that contrast is the cue to pull them. The oven will release a warm, butter rich aroma with chocolate notes as the chips soften. Allowing them to rest a few minutes on the hot sheet lets residual heat finish the center without overbaking, so you end up with a tender inside and slightly crisp rim. A typical error is leaving them in until fully browned, which removes that desirable soft center; remove them when the center still looks slightly underdone for best results.

Notes

  • Use the correct pudding mix: The recipe depends on the smaller 3.4 ounce instant vanilla pudding mix, not the cook and serve variety. If you only find the larger box, use a little more than half and it will still work, but the intended texture comes from the smaller package. Instant pudding adds starch and flavor without extra liquid, which is why it must be the dry mix.
  • Freezing the dough: Portion dough into scoops and freeze on a tray until solid, then transfer to a freezer bag for up to three months. When baking from frozen, place dough on a lined sheet and let warm slightly while the oven preheats, then add one to two minutes to the baking time. This method keeps your freezer stocked with ready to bake cookies for last minute guests.
  • Substituting pudding flavors: You can swap in other instant pudding flavors like chocolate or butterscotch, but vanilla provides the most neutral lift that highlights the chocolate chips. Different flavors will change the cookie’s aroma and final color, and I recommend testing a small batch to confirm you like the variation.
  • Storage after baking: Once cooled completely, store cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for several days or freeze them in a bag for up to three months. Thaw at room temperature or warm briefly in a low oven for that just baked sensation. Avoid stacking while still warm as condensation can make them lose their slight crisp edge.
  • Ingredient temperature: Use softened room temperature butter and room temperature eggs for the best emulsion during creaming. Cold ingredients resist combining which can lead to uneven texture, while overly warm butter causes spreading during baking.
Keyword easy cookie dough freezer, pudding cookie recipe, soft chocolate chip cookies, vanilla pudding cookies

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