"Moist" in baked goods isn't related to water. It's related to fat. If you use a hard fat, such as butter or lard, you end up with a crispier cookie. If you use a liquid oil, you end up with a softer cookie. If you use an oil that's been hydrogenated, partially or fully, you end up with trans fats which make your cookies more dangerous than cigarettes. In the 1980s, they started selling "soft" cookies in grocery stores. These used corn syrup instead of sugar. They also tasted pretty lousy. Butter is 80% fat, 20% water, and when you're baking, the water evaporates. Not a very good result. Lard works better. The best pie crusts are made from lard, too. Be sure not to overbake the cookies. And make sure you have plenty of ice-cold milk.
leave them alone
no
The basic ingredients for all types of cookies, chocolate chip cookies just add the chocolate chips, are... *Flour *Sugar *Butter *Water *Oil / Milk *Eggs *Baking Powder / Baking Soda *Vanilla Extract *Salt
Chocolate chips don't change the baking time.
i affects by having different or specfific cooking or baking
actually there aren't any recipes for chocolate chip cookies without baking soda. it isn't impossible u use self-raising flower instead of using baking powder
The best cookies to bake depends on who you are baking for and your skill level. A good starter cookie to bake is the Toll-house chocolate chip cookie recipe, which you can find on chocolate chip bags in your grocery store's baking aisle.
they taste good and smell good!
Sugar helps the cookies taste sweeter and helped them spread out a little when baking.
Chocolate chip cookies are produced in many nations.
I prefer oatmeal cookies instead, because they are sweeter and moist. Yes. I like chocolate chip cookies, but I like chocolate chip oatmeal cookies even better!
The first chocolate chip cookies were invented in 1937 by Ruth Graves Wakefield.
Adding chocolate chips is often the last step in many baking methods of recipes for foods such as chocolate chip cookies, cakes, or brownies.