Brown Butter Salted Caramel Chocolate Chunk Cookies. Regular pantry staples are elevated to another level to give this cookie a 'fancy with only a little more effort' vibe. Brown butter is stirred in with toasty muscovado sugar to form a perfect cookie dough, and then hard caramel shards and chocolate chunks are folded in to give the perfect amount of chocolate and caramel per bite. Finished with flaky sea salt, this is a super easy yet satisfying baking recipe.

Brown Butter Salted Caramel Cookies
Earlier this year, I spent a long time recipe testing to come up with what I consider to be my perfect chocolate chip cookie. I took a couple of different ‘fomocookie’ recipes, took what I liked from each, then tweaked and tweaked and tweaked until I found something that I considered to be perfect.
I have since learnt, that while that one recipe IS perfect (to me, anyway), there are a whole bunch of iterations of chocolate chip cookie recipes that are also perfect. Changing up the fats used (such as subbing olive oil for olive oil chocolate chip cookies), adding mix-ins such as peanut butter cups, Nutella chunks, or mini eggs, and browning the butter, along with playing around with the egg, sugar, flour and leavening agent ratios, all can give you variations on a perfect cookie.
And today, I learnt that browning the butter, and stirring in chunks of salted caramel into a chocolate chunk filled cookie mixture, also yield a very, very perfect cookie.

Salted Caramel Chocolate Chip Cookies
When I was making this cookie, I wanted something elevated, and a little fancy, but not something that required crazy ingredients that would leave you with a nearly full bag of something obscure in your cupboard for the next year - the kind of fancy you could achieve with pantry staples. Like when you wear jeans around the house instead of yoga pants kind of fancy. You’ve made a little effort, but didn’t have to go out of your way to achieve it. Just me? Thought so.
I achieved this little bit of fancy by taking ingredients that are already in cookies, and elevating them slightly. I browned the butter, which adds a beautiful toasty note to the cookies, and complimented it with muscovado sugar in the dough. I then made a quick hard caramel, let it set, then bashed it up into chunks.
The caramel chunks were stirred through the mixture, along with some dark chocolate chunks. The caramel is the ultimate bestie for the chocolate chunks - it is chewy and crunchy, adding texture alongside the smooth taste of the chocolate.
These cookies really don’t take a huge amount of extra work, but the few extra steps really do make a huge difference. I also did a bunch of tests and found that the dough can be baked off without a resting period, which means cookies in an instant. The best.

A few wee tips for Brown Butter Salted Caramel Cookies
- I have posted the recipe here in grams because that is how I tested it - lots of people don’t realise, but as little as 50g of flour makes a huge amount of difference when it comes to the texture of your cookie, so weighing your ingredients removes the margin of error that comes with measuring by volume. That, and there are far less dishes to do! I would rather you spend $10 on a scale than on ingredients for a cookie that didn’t work out because you didn’t measure your ingredients properly.
- Don’t be intimidated by the extra steps of browning the butter and making the caramel. They don’t add a huge amount more time, and you can make the caramel while the brown butter cools!
- I like to chop my chocolate so that you have both shards and chunks. You can also use a baking bar here and chop it roughly using a sharp knife.

Why are there two quantities of butter in the recipe?
You will see that there are two different weights of butter called for in the recipe - the starting weight of 225g, and the 175g of brown butter called for in the recipe. When you brown butter you cook off the water, so the starting weight and ending weight are different. The initial quantity of butter accounts for this moisture loss. Measure out 175g of the brown butter to use for your cookie recipe.

How do you store salted caramel cookies?
Store these cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to five days. I like to re warm mine slightly before serving or serve with a scoop of ice cream!
Can this cookie dough be frozen?
Because of the caramel in the recipe, this cookie dough does not freeze well. The caramel will go super weird and weepy. You are better off baking them all at once. Alternatively, my egg yolk chocolate chip cookie recipe is smaller batch and also has the caramel!


For more cookie recipes, check out:
- My Perfect Chocolate Chip Cookie
- Brown Butter Salted Caramel Chocolate Ganache Tart
- Small Batch Double Chocolate, Olive Oil and Rye Cookies
- Brown Butter Spelt Chocolate Chip Cookies
❤️ Made this recipe and love it? ❤️
I would LOVE for you to leave me a review and star rating below to let me know how you liked it! Also, please make sure to tag me on Instagram!
Answers to your baking questions
Over the years, many of you have asked me questions about:
- baking in grams
- adjusting oven temperatures
- what kind of salt to use
- and many more!
I've curated and answered them all for your easy reference in this frequently asked questions post!
Brown Butter Salted Caramel Chocolate Chunk Cookies
- Prep Time: 25 minutes
- Cook Time: 40 minutes
- Total Time: 1 hour 5 minutes
- Yield: 30 cookies 1x
- Category: cookies
- Method: baking
- Cuisine: american
Description
Brown Butter Salted Caramel Chocolate Chunk Cookies. Regular pantry staples are elevated to another level to give this cookie a 'fancy with only a little more effort' vibe. Brown butter is stirred in with toasty muscovado sugar to form a perfect cookie dough, and then hard caramel shards and chocolate chunks are folded in to give the perfect amount of chocolate and caramel per bite. Finished with flaky sea salt, this is a super easy yet satisfying baking recipe.
Ingredients
- 225g unsalted butter, straight from the fridge
- 200g granulated sugar (for the caramel)
- 150g muscovado sugar
- 60g dark brown sugar
- 100g granulated sugar
- 2 eggs, at room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla bean paste or vanilla extract
- 330g all-purpose flour
- ¾ tsp baking powder
- ¾ tsp baking soda
- 1 tsp kosher salt
- 255g good quality dark chocolate, chopped
- Flaky Sea Salt for Finishing
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350˚f / 180˚c. Line 3-4 baking trays with parchment paper.
- Make the Brown Butter. Place the butter in a medium saucepan, and place over medium heat. Cook until the butter has melted, and then continue to cook, swirling the pan often, until the butter foams and turns golden brown and nutty - this should take 3-4 minutes. Measure out 175g of the brown butter into the bowl of a stand mixer. Allow to cool slightly.
- Make the caramel. Place the 200g granulated sugar into a medium saucepan and place over medium heat. Place a silicone mat on a heat resistant surface (I use my counter) or onto a baking tray, and have nearby. Place the sugar in a medium saucepan, and place over medium heat. Heat the sugar, stirring occasionally with a whisk, until all of the sugar has melted (the sugar will clump as you heat, but continue to stir - it will soon smooth out). Continue to cook the caramel until it is amber in colour and just beginning to smoke slightly. Immediately pour onto the prepared silicone mat, and leave to cool while you prepare the cookie dough.
- Make the cookie dough. Place the bowl with the brown butter onto the mixer, and fit with the paddle attachment. Mix the brown butter, muscovado sugar, dark brown sugar, and second measure of granulated sugar on medium speed until combined. Add the eggs one at a time, followed by the vanilla, then increase the mixer speed to high and beat for 2-3 minutes, until the mixture has lightened in colour and thickened.
- Add the Dry Ingredients. In a medium bowl, sift together the flour, baking powder, baking soda, and salt. With the mixer off, add to the mixing bowl, then mix on low until just combined. Remove the bowl from the mixer and finish the incorporation of the dry ingredients by hand if needed - scrape down the bowl and ensure that all the mixture at the bottom of the bowl is fully incorporated.
- Add the chocolate and caramel. Add the chopped chocolate to the bowl. Carefully peel the caramel sheet off the silicone mat, and place onto the chopping board. Using a sharp knife, cut into chunks ½” to ¾” or smaller in size - there will be some small shards, and larger pieces. Use caution as the shards will be sharp. Add the caramel shards to the bowl along with the chocolate, and mix briefly to combine.
- Scoop the cookies. Using a two tablespoon scoop, place level scoop fulls of dough onto the prepared baking trays - 8 per tray works well for me, but I like to start with 6 just to make sure there will be enough space. Roll each into a ball and arrange on the trays, leaving ample room for spreading.
- Bake the cookies. Bake the trays one at a time for 11-12 minutes, or until the cookies are puffed up and set around the edges. Remember that they will continue to cook a little once you remove them from the oven. If the cookies have lost their round shape a little in the oven due to the caramel, you can use a round cookie cutter slightly larger than the cookie to nudge it back into a circular shape. Sprinkle each cookie with coarse sea salt, then cool on the tray for 10 minutes before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
- Repeat the baking process with the remaining cookies. Store leftovers in an airtight container at room temperature.
Notes
Please note that if you use the 2x button to double the recipe, this only doubles the ingredients list and not the quantities within the method, so you need to weigh out 350g brown butter to use in your cookies.

Comments
Olivia says
Absolutely the best cookie recipe out there. The pools of chocolate - perfection.
Erika says
This is my "go-to" recipe when I need to bring something to an event. I've never had leftovers and I've always gotten rave reviews.
Melissa says
These were the first cookies I made from scratch when I began baking a few years ago and although I’m not the biggest fan of chocolate chip cookies, I love the brown butter flavor and the crunch and chewiness of the caramel. It has become a favorite of mine. Instead of chopping the caramel, I recommend throwing it in a food processor. Safer and less messy.
Jocelyn says
Being making this for a few years. Instructions are great and such an elevated cookie.
Allie says
Is there a good way to store the cookie dough?
Erin Clarkson says
Hi! Because of the caramel in the recipe, the dough doesn't store that well sorry as the sugar attracts the water and it goes a bit weird!
Rebecca says
Do the shards make the cookie crunchy or do they melt away during the cooking process and just leave behind a caramel flavor similar to herb you make flan?
Erin Clarkson says
Hi, no they stay pretty solid!
Karissa says
I made these cookies this past weekend and they were absolutely delicious! I took some to work and they were a hit there too. I made them using the new Whittakers Peanut Brittle block and Kimbella’s Candy Peanut Brittle (both NZ products). I had the brittle on hand so used it instead of making from scratch. I’m keen to make these again but up the flour by, say, 50g to stop the cookies spreading as much. What do you think? I love the crispy outer and chewy middle but also love a thick cookie so trying to get the best of both worlds!
Lindsi says
I made these about two months ago and I think about them at least weekly. The results were INSANE. Everyone was dying over them. The instructions were very well written because I've never made caramel right before and I was successful with your instructions. The way this recipe is written too, is just magic. Thank you for the recipe and all your work! This one is worth it
Suzy says
STOP IT!!!
These would have to be the most complex of flavor of any cookie I’ve made. My husband and friends have said never to make any other cookie again, but how can I when all I want to do is make everything you post on IG.
Thanks Erin for not backing down on using scales (maybe the Marylin’s will wake up one day and realise it’s so much easier and far less washing up using them!) Thanks for making the recipes a hundred times to perfect them for us, even when we don’t pay you a cent! This is without doubt THE BEST COOKIE EVER!!! x
Erin Clarkson says
You are so so welcome - I am so glad you enjoyed! x
Sally says
Does the caramel turn hard again after it cools at room temp, or does it stay soft?
Erin Clarkson says
Yep it stays quite crunchy!
Lauren says
Can you make these cookies without the chocolate? Would like to make for a friend that doesn’t like chocolate!
Erin Clarkson says
Hi, they will spread too much so I would use a different recipe sorry!
Zacki says
Hi
Recipe looks amazing! A little help pls, Ive read through it twice but im sorry i dont understand the part about the butter. If im melting 225g butter until brown, but measuring out only 175g into the mixer bowl, where must the balance of the brown butter go?
Thanks in advance!
Erin Clarkson says
Hi! There is a section in the blog post called 'why are there two quantities of butter?' when you brown butter, you cook off the water so there is less total butter left afterward.
Jess says
Omg these are delish and so easy to make. if your a beginner with making caramel (like me ibjol) , put a few tablespoons of water in with the sugar to make it a bit easier. I just made then and I'll def make again