Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies are one of those things I end up making when I’m wandering into the kitchen after dinner looking for something sweet but not wanting to deal with anything fussy. I usually throw a batch together on a weeknight if I’ve got the energy, or on a slow Sunday arvo when I’m pottering around the house and pretending I’m being productive. They’re useful because the ingredients are mostly pantry stuff, they don’t need fancy gear, and they tend to calm down that “just one sweet thing” mood without turning the kitchen into a full baking project.
They also suit the way I cook most of the time, which is casually, slightly distracted, and with a sink that probably already has a bowl in it. Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies are pretty forgiving, which is handy when I’m tired or trying to multitask dinner and dessert at the same time. They’re not precious, they don’t need exact perfection, and they still turn out like proper biscuits you’d happily dunk in tea.
How This Fits Into My Week
On workdays, I usually only make Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies if I’ve had a decent day or if I’m procrastinating doing something else like folding washing. They’re low enough effort that I can mix them while dinner’s in the oven, and they don’t keep me stuck in the kitchen for hours. Most of the time, it’s about 20 minutes of actual doing-stuff, then just letting the oven handle the rest while I sit down for five minutes and scroll my phone.
Weekends are different. I’m slower, maybe slightly more organised, and sometimes I’ll double the batch because biscuits disappear fast in my place. Especially if someone drops by or I decide they count as breakfast the next day, which honestly happens more than I’ll admit out loud.
Energy-wise, this sits in the low-to-medium effort category. If I’m properly exhausted, I might not bother. But if I’m just regular tired, it’s fine. The mixing is quick, and there’s something relaxing about scooping cookie dough onto trays without overthinking it.
They’re also good during cooler weather. When it’s raining or a bit miserable outside, turning the oven on feels less annoying. In summer, I still make them, but I usually regret heating the kitchen unless the air con is doing its job.
Ingredients (Loose & Flexible)
I don’t follow strict ingredient rules for Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies. I’ve swapped and adjusted things heaps depending on what’s in the cupboard.
The essentials I always use:
- Plain flour
- Brown sugar (or sometimes raw sugar)
- Dairy-free chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate
- Plant-based butter or margarine
- Baking soda
- A pinch of salt
- Vanilla extract
- Some type of plant milk (soy, almond, oat, whatever’s open)
Things I sometimes add or change:
- White sugar mixed with brown sugar if I want slightly crisp edges
- Coconut sugar if that’s what I’ve got left
- Olive oil instead of butter in lazy situations (texture changes but still works)
- Cornflour if I want them softer in the middle
- Chopped nuts if there’s half a bag hanging around
- A tiny splash of maple syrup if the dough feels dry
Things I often skip:
- Fancy vegan egg replacements. I’ve tried flax eggs and chia eggs, but honestly, these cookies don’t always need them.
- Special flours. Plain flour is fine. Self-raising can work if I adjust baking soda, but I usually don’t bother with the maths.
The chocolate part is the easiest to mess around with. Sometimes I use proper chocolate chips, other times I just chop a block of dark chocolate because it’s cheaper and gives those chunky melted pockets that look a bit rough but taste good.
Cooking Flow (NOT Instructions)
When I make Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies, I usually start by grabbing the butter or margarine and letting it soften a bit while I do other things. If I forget to take it out of the fridge, I’ll microwave it for a few seconds and usually overshoot slightly. I’ve melted it completely before, which makes the dough looser and spreads the cookies way too much. Now I try to stop when it’s just soft enough to press with a spoon. If it melts, I sometimes stick the bowl in the fridge for a bit and hope for the best.
I mix the butter and sugar first because it feels like the base of everything. When it looks slightly fluffy and lighter in colour, I add vanilla and a splash of plant milk. I used to pour milk straight from the carton without thinking and ended up with cookie dough that felt more like cake batter. These days I add it slowly and stop once the dough feels like it’ll hold shape.
Dry ingredients go in next, but I never sift them. I just stir them together with a spoon or spatula and hope I’ve broken up any lumps. I’ve accidentally left baking soda clumps before, and biting into one of those is pretty unpleasant. Now I give the flour mix a quick stir before adding it, which usually solves it.
Chocolate gets folded through last. I tend to add more than recipes suggest because I like biscuits that look slightly overloaded. The only downside is they spread weirdly sometimes if there’s too much chocolate melting through the dough.
I used to crowd trays because I wanted everything baked faster. That was a mistake. The cookies melted into each other and turned into one giant sheet of biscuit that I had to cut apart while it was still warm and floppy. It still tasted fine, but it looked like a baking accident. Now I leave decent gaps between scoops, even if it means doing multiple trays.
Another thing I’ve messed up is pulling them out too early because they looked soft. Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies firm up a lot as they cool. I used to think they were underdone and put them back in, which made them crunchy instead of chewy. Now I pull them when the edges look set but the middle still looks slightly soft.
I’ve also forgotten to rotate trays halfway through baking. My oven heats unevenly, so one side browns faster. When I forget, half the cookies are perfect and the other half are darker than I’d planned. They still get eaten, but rotating helps keep things consistent.
One more mistake I’ve made plenty of times is moving cookies off the tray too soon. They break easily when hot. Now I just leave them alone for a few minutes until they firm up, even though it’s tempting to poke them straight away.
The whole process feels pretty relaxed once you’ve done it a few times. There’s a smell that tells you they’re nearly ready — warm sugar and chocolate, slightly toasted. That’s usually when I hover near the oven and pretend I’m checking them for safety reasons.
Tweaks I’ve Used
I’ve played around with Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies a fair bit depending on mood, ingredients, or how lazy I’m feeling.
For protein swaps, I’ve added peanut butter or almond butter to the dough. It changes the texture and makes them slightly softer. Peanut butter especially gives them a richer flavour, but it can make them spread more, so sometimes I add a bit more flour to balance it out.
I’ve also added crushed walnuts or macadamias when I’ve had leftovers from something else. Macadamias work surprisingly well with chocolate, though they make the cookies feel slightly fancier than my usual cooking vibe.
Pantry changes happen constantly. I’ve used oat flour mixed with plain flour when I was running low. It makes the cookies slightly softer and crumbly but still decent. Coconut oil instead of butter gives them a slightly crisp edge but can make them taste different, depending on the oil.
The lazy version is mixing everything in one bowl and not worrying about creaming butter and sugar properly. They still turn out alright, just slightly denser.
The effort version is chilling the dough before baking. I don’t always bother, but it helps the cookies hold shape better and deepens the flavour slightly. I mostly do this if I’m making them for guests or if I accidentally made the dough too soft.
I’ve also made mini cookies before when I wanted something snack-sized. They bake faster and disappear faster, which can be dangerous if you’re standing near the tray.
Leftovers & Reheating
Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies usually keep well for a few days in a container on the bench. They soften slightly over time, especially if the weather’s humid, which honestly isn’t a bad thing.
By day two, the chocolate inside is firmer, and the cookie texture becomes more chewy than crisp. I actually like them this way with coffee in the morning.
If they start feeling a bit dry after a few days, I sometimes microwave one for about ten seconds. It softens the chocolate again and brings them back to life a bit.
Freezing works too. I’ve frozen both baked cookies and raw dough. Dough balls straight from the freezer can go into the oven with a slightly longer baking time, which is handy when I want fresh biscuits without making a full batch.
One thing that doesn’t hold up well is leaving them uncovered. They dry out quickly and lose that soft centre.
Common Questions
Do they taste different from regular chocolate chip cookies?
Not massively. The texture can be slightly softer, but flavour-wise they’re still recognisable as chocolate chip biscuits.
Can I make them gluten-free?
I’ve tried using gluten-free flour blends and they mostly work, but the texture changes slightly. They can be more crumbly.
Do I need special vegan chocolate?
Not really. Most dark chocolate is dairy-free, but I still check labels just in case.
Can I reduce the sugar?
You can a bit, but it changes the texture. They won’t spread or brown the same way.
Do I need to chill the dough?
Not always. It helps with shape, but if I’m hungry, I skip it and accept slightly flatter cookies.
Wrap-Up
I keep coming back to Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies because they’re reliable and low stress. They don’t need fancy ingredients, they don’t require perfect timing, and they fit into normal life pretty easily. Most of the time, I make them without planning ahead, which suits the way I cook after work.
They’re also one of those simple homemade food options that feel like you’ve put in effort without actually exhausting yourself. If the batch turns out slightly uneven or a bit overbrowned on one tray, it doesn’t really matter. They still taste good with tea, coffee, or straight off the tray while standing in the kitchen.
I like recipes that don’t demand perfection, and this is one of them. It’s just biscuits that work.
RECIPE CARD
Recipe Name: Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies
Prep Time: 15 minutes
Cook Time: 12–15 minutes
Servings: About 16 cookies
Ingredients:
- 125 g plant-based butter or margarine, softened
- ¾ cup brown sugar
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 2 tablespoons plant milk
- 1 ½ cups plain flour
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- Pinch of salt
- ¾ cup dairy-free chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate
Method:
- Preheat oven to 180°C and line a baking tray.
- Mix butter and sugar until combined.
- Stir in vanilla and plant milk.
- Add flour, baking soda, and salt, mixing into a dough.
- Fold through chocolate chips.
- Scoop dough onto tray, leaving space between cookies.
- Bake until edges are lightly golden.
- Cool on tray before serving.
