Brown Butter Sourdough Chocolate Chip Cookies – Chewy, Nutty, and Comforting

By Nichole J. •  Updated: 03/05/26 •  8 min read
Brown Butter Sourdough Chocolate Chip Cookies

These cookies bring together the deep, nutty flavor of brown butter and the subtle tang of sourdough starter for a batch that tastes like your favorite bakery special. They’re chewy in the middle, crisp at the edges, and packed with pools of melty chocolate. This is a great way to use up extra discard without anything tasting “bready” or overly sour.

If you love a cookie that feels both nostalgic and a little grown-up, this one hits the sweet spot. Get your butter browning and your oven preheating—these are worth it.

What Makes This Recipe So Good

Close-up detail: A just-baked brown butter sourdough chocolate chip cookie broken open to reveal goo

What You’ll Need

Instructions

Cooking process: Mid-bake scene of cookie dough mounds on a parchment-lined sheet pan inside a 350°
  1. Brown the butter: Add butter to a light-colored saucepan over medium heat. Cook, stirring, until it foams, then turns golden with brown bits at the bottom and smells nutty, 5–7 minutes.

    Pour into a heatproof bowl, scraping in the browned bits, and cool to room temperature until thickened but not solid.


  2. Whisk dry ingredients: In a separate bowl, whisk flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  3. Cream sugars and butter: In a large mixing bowl, whisk or beat the cooled brown butter with brown sugar and granulated sugar until combined and glossy, about 1–2 minutes.
  4. Add eggs and vanilla: Beat in the egg and egg yolk until the mixture is smooth and slightly thick. Stir in vanilla.
  5. Mix in sourdough starter: Add the starter and mix until fully incorporated.

    The batter may look slightly silky—this is good.


  6. Add dry ingredients: Fold the flour mixture into the wet ingredients just until a few streaks remain.
  7. Stir in chocolate: Fold in the chocolate, reserving a small handful for topping. Do not overmix.
  8. Chill the dough: Cover and chill for at least 45–60 minutes, or up to 24 hours. This helps the cookies hold their shape and develop flavor.
  9. Preheat and prep: Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C).

    Line two baking sheets with parchment.


  10. Scoop: Scoop 2-tablespoon mounds (about 45–50 g each) and place 2–3 inches apart. Press a few extra chocolate pieces on top, if desired.
  11. Bake: Bake 10–12 minutes, until edges are set and lightly golden and centers still look slightly underdone. If needed, rotate pans halfway for even browning.
  12. Finish: Immediately sprinkle with flaky salt.

    For rounder cookies, use a glass or round cutter to “scoot” edges into shape while warm. Cool on the sheet 5 minutes, then transfer to a rack.


How to Store

Tasty top view: Overhead shot of a cooling rack filled with finished brown butter sourdough chocolat

Health Benefits

What Not to Do

Variations You Can Try

FAQ

Can I use active, bubbly starter instead of discard?

Yes. Active starter works fine. The cookies may puff slightly more and taste a touch tangier, but the overall flavor stays balanced.

What if I don’t have time to chill the dough?

You can bake right away, but the cookies will spread more and bake thinner.

If you’re in a rush, pop the scooped dough in the freezer for 15–20 minutes before baking.

Why brown the butter instead of using it plain?

Browning concentrates flavor and adds nutty, toffee-like notes that make these cookies taste complex and bakery-worthy. It’s a small step with a big payoff.

My dough seems greasy—what happened?

The butter may have been too warm, or the dough was under-chilled. Let the dough rest longer in the fridge, or stir in 1–2 tablespoons flour to firm it up before scooping.

How do I get thick, chewy centers?

Chill the dough, use slightly larger scoops, and pull the cookies when the edges are set and centers look soft.

Let them finish on the hot tray for 5 minutes.

Can I make them smaller?

Absolutely. Use a 1-tablespoon scoop and bake 8–10 minutes, watching closely. Smaller cookies bake faster and set quickly.

Do they taste sour?

No.

The starter adds complexity, not obvious sourness. You’ll notice a gentle tang that balances the sweetness and amplifies the brown butter and chocolate.

Wrapping Up

Brown Butter Sourdough Chocolate Chip Cookies bring big flavor with simple pantry moves: toast your butter, stir in starter, and give the dough a short chill. The result is a cookie that’s chewy, gently tangy, and irresistibly chocolatey.

Keep a stash of dough balls in the freezer, and you’re always 12 minutes away from warm cookies and a very good day.

Print

Brown Butter Sourdough Chocolate Chip Cookies – Chewy, Nutty, and Comforting

Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Total Time 32 minutes
Servings 24 servings

Ingredients

  • 1 cup (226 g) unsalted butter, browned and cooled to room temp
  • 1 cup (200 g) packed brown sugar (light or dark)
  • 1/2 cup (100 g) granulated sugar
  • 1 large egg + 1 large egg yolk, room temperature
  • 1/2 cup (120 g) sourdough starter (unfed/discard is fine), room temperature
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 2 1/4 cups (270 g) all-purpose flour
  • 1 teaspoon baking soda
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 3/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
  • 1 1/2 to 2 cups (255–340 g) chocolate (chips, chunks, or chopped bars; semi-sweet or dark)
  • Flaky salt, for topping (optional but recommended)

Instructions

  • Brown the butter: Add butter to a light-colored saucepan over medium heat. Cook, stirring, until it foams, then turns golden with brown bits at the bottom and smells nutty, 5–7 minutes. Pour into a heatproof bowl, scraping in the browned bits, and cool to room temperature until thickened but not solid.
  • Whisk dry ingredients: In a separate bowl, whisk flour, baking soda, baking powder, and salt. Set aside.
  • Cream sugars and butter: In a large mixing bowl, whisk or beat the cooled brown butter with brown sugar and granulated sugar until combined and glossy, about 1–2 minutes.
  • Add eggs and vanilla: Beat in the egg and egg yolk until the mixture is smooth and slightly thick. Stir in vanilla.
  • Mix in sourdough starter: Add the starter and mix until fully incorporated. The batter may look slightly silky—this is good.
  • Add dry ingredients: Fold the flour mixture into the wet ingredients just until a few streaks remain.
  • Stir in chocolate: Fold in the chocolate, reserving a small handful for topping. Do not overmix.
  • Chill the dough: Cover and chill for at least 45–60 minutes, or up to 24 hours. This helps the cookies hold their shape and develop flavor.
  • Preheat and prep: Heat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line two baking sheets with parchment.
  • Scoop: Scoop 2-tablespoon mounds (about 45–50 g each) and place 2–3 inches apart. Press a few extra chocolate pieces on top, if desired.
  • Bake: Bake 10–12 minutes, until edges are set and lightly golden and centers still look slightly underdone. If needed, rotate pans halfway for even browning.
  • Finish: Immediately sprinkle with flaky salt. For rounder cookies, use a glass or round cutter to “scoot” edges into shape while warm. Cool on the sheet 5 minutes, then transfer to a rack.

Nichole J.

Food Lover, Coffee Addict, and Recipe Tinkerer. When I'm not testing recipes, I'm debating whether coffee counts as a meal (it does). I created cooksandcoffee.com and my goal is to help you cook better, faster and have some fun along the way

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