This is a copycat of Australia’s most famous chocolate chip cookie – Byron Bay Milk Choc Chunk Cookies. They’re big, crunchy, buttery and generous on the chocolate! At $3.50 for a single biscuit, they aren’t cheap – so save a ton by making them yourself!
BONUS: They stay 100% crunchy for 2 whole weeks! (Possibly longer – I caved).
Chocolate Chip Cookies – Byron Bay Copycat!
Australia’s most famous cookie are Byron Bay Cookies. They come in all sorts of flavours, and three of the most popular ones are White Chocolate Macadamia Cookies, Triple Chocolate Fudge and the chocolate chip cookies.
They’re sold at cafes all across Australia, and they are without a doubt the most well known cookie brand. While sometimes you find them individually packaged and sold at grocery stores for around $2.50 each, most cafes will charge $3.50 to $4 for a single cookie.
Which means a dozen of them cost $42…. or you can make them at home for around $7!!
These chocolate chip cookies stay 100% crunchy for 2 whole weeks!
What they taste like
These cookies are crunchy but it’s a soft, buttery crunch – sort of like Shortbread Cookies, except not as sandy/crumbly. The mouthfeel is what’s quite unique about these thick cookies – most crispy cookies this thick are noticeably rougher and drier (rice flour is the secret ingredient here that specifically achieves this).
There’s generous chunks of chocolate littered throughout, and the really great thing is that they stay 100% crunchy just like they’re freshly made for up to 2 weeks!!! (Probably longer, I just couldn’t hold out any longer).
Ingredients for Byron Bay Chocolate Chip Cookies
Here’s what you need to make these cookies. The ingredients are basically a replica of the ingredients disclosed on the Byron Bay Cookie packets, with minor tweaks to achieve the same mouthfeel and flavour using ingredients available to home cooks (eg. things like cultured dextrose, emulsifiers and soy lecithin that normal folk like us can’t get).
Just a note on a few ingredients:
Rice flour – this is the secret ingredient to give these crunchy cookies a sort of “velvety” mouthfeel which is unique to Byron Bay Cookies and one of the reasons people love them so much. You can substitute with more flour – the cookies still work out perfectly but the mouthfeel is “rougher” (still extremely delicious and this is what I use if I don’t have rice flour). Cornflour/cornstarch also works but the texture becomes more crumbly like Shortbread but the mouthfeel is drier than shortbread;
Yolks – we use 2 egg yolks in these cookies to give them richness.
Leftover egg whites – Here’s my list of what I do with them and all my egg white recipes can be found in this recipe collection;
Softened butter – you need softened butter for these cookies so they whip up creamy and smooth. If you’re like me and always forget to leave it out to soften, or if it’s so cold that it just never softens even if you leave it out all night, you’ll love this trick: microwave a jug of water for 3 minutes, then remove and put in a plate of diced butter and just leave it. The residual heat softens the butter perfectly. Never try microwaving butter to soften it – it doesn’t soften evenly, you will always end up with melted pockets which will affect the success of the recipe;
Brown and white sugar – each of these bring something different to the cookie. White makes them crispy while the brown sugar adds flavour and adds softness to the crunch; and
Chocolate – Byron Bay calls their chocolate chip cook “Milk Choc Chunk Cookies”, being that they’re made with a darkish milk chocolate. Good quality milk chocolate for baking isn’t readily availably, so I’ve taken the liberty of using dark chocolate instead. If anything, it makes them even BETTER with a more intense chocolate flavour! Use chips or chunks if you prefer.
How to make Byron Bay Chocolate Chip Cookies
And here’s how to make them – pretty standard really. We need the chill time to make the cookies sliceable and also to stop them from inflating when they bake (yep, tried to shortcut it and ended up with sumo cookies).
Cookie emergency? No beater?
No worries! Make these super easy Chocolate Chip Cookies instead (they’re soft and chewy, no chill time).👍🏼
Ahh, it’s a good moment when you pull them out of the oven.
I know, I know, you want to grab one right away while it’s hot and the chocolate is all melty and glistening but WAIT!! We have to let them cool on the tray so they become nice and crunchy. It’s worth it!!
Use the cooling time to think about the people in your life who will be lucky enough to put one in their gob. Think very carefully – there are only 12 of them, which makes them exponentially more valuable than most cookies that make a couple of dozen in a single batch. These are very, very special Chocolate Chip Cookies! 😉 – Nagi x
Watch how to make it
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Byron Bay Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 175g / 12 1/2 tbsp unsalted butter , softened (6.2 oz, Note 1 – softening tip!)
- 1/3 cup brown sugar (light or normal, not dark)
- 1/3 cup white sugar , caster / superfine
- 1/8 tsp salt
- 2 egg yolks , at room temperature (Note 6 for using leftover whites)
- 2 tsp vanilla extract/essence
- 1/2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 cup rice flour (sub with plain/all purpose flour, Note 2)
- 1 1/2 cups flour , plain/all purpose
- 200g / 7 oz dark or semi-sweet chocolate block , chopped into pretty small pieces (Note 3)
Instructions
- Place butter, salt and both sugars in a bowl. Beat on speed 5 for 1 minute until it’s soft, creamy and fluffy.
- Add yolks and vanilla – beat for 1 minute until well incorporated.
- Add baking powder, rice flour and half the plain flour. Beat until you can’t see flour anymore, then add remaining flour and beat again until incorporated.
- Mixture will be fairly clump and thick, but if you press between your fingers, it should stick together (rather than being dry and crumbly).
- Use a wooden spoon to stir chocolate through.
- Tip out onto a work surface then press together into a 22cm / 9″ log. Wrap in cling wrap or paper, twisting to seal the ends.
- Refrigerate 1.5 – 2 hours (Note 4).
Baking:
- Preheat oven to 200°C/390°F (180°C fan).
- Line 2 trays with baking/parchment paper. Put one shelf in the middle of the oven, and the other underneath.
- Remove from fridge, unwrap.
- Use a serrated knife to slice into 1.75cm / 2/3" thick slices. Saw carefully through choc chunks. If it falls apart on edges, just press if back together, no big deal. Place 6 on each tray.
- Bake 10 minutes. Turn oven down to 170°C/340°F (150°C fan), switch trays (Note 5)
- Bake for a further 15 minutes until surface is light golden and edges are a bit golden.
- Remove from oven and cool completely on trays – this makes them crunchy.
- STORAGE: Keeps for at least 2 weeks in an airtight container – they stay 100% crunchy, just like they’re freshly made.
Recipe Notes:
- cut into 1 cm cubes (or for US sticks, slice 1/3″ thick) and place in single layer on small plate
- place 2 cups water in a microwave proof jug or bowl. Microwave on high for 2 – 3 minutes until just before boiling
- working quickly, remove jug, put plate in microwave and shut door, DO NOT TURN MICROWAVE ON! Leave for 10 minutes – the residual heat in the microwave will soften the butter perfectly!
- if still not soft enough (eg cut too big, microwave has lower power), then just repeat (but for round 2, check after a few minutes)
Nutrition Information:
For Cookie Monsters
Life of Dozer
“Everybody” thinks I bundle Dozer up in jumpers just because I’m a crazy dog lady / for my own amusement. And while both these hold true, the main reason is because it holds in his fur and sand which means marginally less littered all over the house.
Honestly, I seriously reckon it reduces sweeping by almost half. You should see how much fluff/sand poofs out when I pull the jumper off him (outside of course!!!)
George says
The texture on these is really bizarre. It takes on a powdery like feel. I suspect it has something to do with the rice flour. Recipe might need a refresh.
Hilda Yan says
Hi Nagi, we made this for the first time and loved it! Just wondering if you’ve tried making smaller cookies eg. 32 instead of 16, and what changes to the baking time and temperature you would recommend? Thanks in advance!!
Daryl says
The notes tell you how to adjust for smaller cookies.
Flora says
Once the cookie dough is made and rolled up, can it go into the freezer? And baked another day?
Rachel says
These are the best! Super easy to make. Devoured the lot in a very short time.
Nari in Thun says
This made my 5 and 7-year-old kids super proud (and saved me from cookie-free holidays 😅).
Generously thick, crispy crunch yet not choking up, simply great cookies! Thank you & Happy New Year, Nagi❣️
Linda says
If I’m baking the cookies one tray at a time, am I correct to just leave the oven at 390F for the full 25 minutes?
Love all your recipes of which I have made many, many!! Linda
Penny says
WOW!!! There’s are seriously DELICIOUS! I have been searching high and low for a crunchy biscuit, not one that goes flat and soggy when you cook it.
These really are amazing.
I doubled the recipe and did half white chocolate, they caramelise when cooked 🤤
Jean Morrison says
No-one else has commented on this so perhaps the issue is with my ability. I found the “log” was so hard that my serrated knife (tried two different ones) wouldn’t cut through it. Maybe I left it in the fridge a little too long. Nice tasting biscuits though.
LF says
Crunchy for 2 weeks? I’d have no idea, they don’t make it past a couple of days here! Love this cookie so much!
Vika says
These are DANGEROUSLY AWESOME COOKIES!!!! I cut sugar by 50g as used white chocco and milk chocco chips
WOW!
Jürgen says
Hi Nagi, these are the best chocolate chip cookies I ever made! Thank you for this recipe.
Katie Holley says
Made this many times, kids love them and is now my go to for choc chip cookies 🍪
Suzy says
Such a great dough! Have made twice now – once with out of date rice flour 😂 the second time with no rice flour. Nagi I have found glutinous rice flour in my supermarket – is this the same as normal rice flour from an Asian food store??
THESE COOKIES ARE THE BEST💥
Dylan says
Hi! I noticed int he description these would have a more crumbly texture like shortbread but still be crunchy my question is how can I get that rough texture full on crunchy like store bought ones? Just don’t use rice flour?
Kayla Hoskins says
These turned out great! Followed the recipe to a T, and tasted just like described. Only difference is I made 16 cookies instead of 12. Will definitely make again, and will add some nuts next time. Made in Manitoba, Canada.
ally says
These cookies are amazing.
I browned the butter and let It resolidify before making the cookies.
Daphbychoc says
First recipe I’ve tried from this website. I substituted with gluten free flour and it came out really light and has a crisp texture. Used Whittakers dark chocolate and it held well. Yummy…won’t last long in my family!
bridget says
I loved this recipe! Really delicious little cookies.
Blitzo says
Hi Nagi, your always deserve my 5 star rate.. I think this is my second time to leave s comment.
jas says
Hi Nagi. My daughter decided to make these cookies for the school bake sale. She reckons this is a “Quality” recipe. Here comes the question: What do you recommend she needs to do to either incorporate (like you do with the chock chip) SMARTIES or put them on top before baking? Thanks in advance. X