In cookie recipes, the recipe probably means semi-sweet chocolate chips. Bakers' chocolate, which is usually unsweetened, would be far too bitter. But you have a lot of choices, depending on the taste you want in your cookies. Semi-sweet chocolate chips tend to be the most popular, but you could choose chocolate mint chips, peanut butter, butterscotch, white chocolate chips or chocolate pieces of various sizes, from mini-chips to the larger "chunks."
1 and 1/3 cup of chocolate chips
1/3 cups
Since semi-sweet and milk chocolate are very similar, you can interchange one for the other in most any recipe. Simply use the same amount that is called for in the recipe, just with the different type of chocolate and it should be fine. For example, if the recipe calls for 8 ounces of semi-sweet chocolate chips, instead just use 8 ounces of milk chocolate chips.
Sometimes, but it depends on what materials are being used exactly. If taking out Baking Chocolate squares, you have to use baking Chocolate Chips, not just average chocolate chips or else the recipe will not be correct. Another view: I've found that choc. chips usually substitute pretty well for chocolate squares. Just keep in mind that most chocolate chips are "semi-sweet" while chocolate squares may be "bitter-sweet" or completely "unsweetened." If the recipe calls for unsweetened squares, your product will turn out rather sweeter than the recipe intends. If you look on the chocolate chip package, you may find the equivalent listed.
Whether chocolate chips can be used in place of a chocolate bar depends entirely on the recipe. If the chocolate bar is broken or chopped up, and the chips are the same type of chocolate - milk, semi-sweet or bittersweet - then the chips probably would be a good substitute.
In most recipes you can use an equivalent amount of dried fruit, like raisins, nuts or another flavor of chips like peanut butter, cinnamon or vanilla chips. Obviously this will not work in a recipe that calls for melting the chips to get a chocolate flavor in the recipe. If the recipe calls for melting the chocolate chips- you can use 3 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder, 3 tablespoons sugar and 1 tablespoon butter or margarine for every 1 ounces of semi-sweet baking chocolate needed.
86 semi-sweet chocolate chips equals 3 squares of semi-sweet baking chocolate.
A an easy raspberry fudge recipe calls for raspberry preserves, chocolate chips, vanilla extract, sweetened condensed milk and some red food coloring.
Morsels just means small pieces of something. In a cookie recipe morsels generally refers to chocolate chips.
6 ounces of chocolate chips = 1/3 cup = 1 baking chocolate square
I just found something that says 3 squares equals 86 chocolate chips.... so that would be about 29 chocolate chips for 1 square!!! Happy Baking!