If you’ve ever struggled to get soft and delicious cookie using freshly milled flour, this recipe is about to change everything. These fresh-milled soft chocolate chip cookies have rich flavor and none of the dryness people often expect from whole grain baking. They come together quickly, don’t require chilling, and use simple ingredients you probably already have on hand. Convinced yet?

They’re perfect for Christmas baking, gifting to neighbors, or adding to a dessert table when you want something familiar but homemade in the best way. That said, this is also my go-to “just because” cookie.
If you want to venture beyond cookies using flour milled with your grain mill, be sure to check out my other dessert recipes (you can start with my fresh-milled sourdough cinnamon rolls!)
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Quick Look
- Prep Time: 15–20 minutes
- Rest Time: 10–15 minutes (dough rest)
- Cook Time: 12–14 minutes per batch
- Total Time: 30–35 minutes
- Servings: 12 large cookies (or 9 extra-thick)
- Difficulty: Easy
- Baking Method: Oven
- Best For: Dessert, snack, gift-giving
Jump to:
- Summarize & Save This Recipe On:
- Quick Look
- Important Ingredients
- Substitutions & Variations
- How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Baking Schedule
- 💭Crucial Success Tips
- Recipe FAQs
- How To Store Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Other Delicious Recipes
- Fresh-Milled Soft Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Need Help Tweaking This Recipe?
- Other Fresh-Milled Dessert You'll Love
Important Ingredients

- Fresh-milled hard wheat flour is the only flour used in this recipe.
- Butter ...because there's no (good) chocolate chip cookies without butter.
- Sugars (white and brown) balance sweetness and add moisture.
- Egg and vanilla for structure and flavor.
- Chocolate chips or chunks are the main point.
See recipe card for quantities.
Substitutions & Variations
- You can swap chocolate chips for chopped nuts or dried fruit for variety.
- Use hard red wheat for more flavor and a slightly heartier cookie.
How to Make Chocolate Chip Cookies
Step 1: Microwave the butter just until melted, about 30–40 seconds. It should be liquid but not hot. Let it cool for a minute if needed.

Step 2: In a bowl, mix the melted butter with both sugars until creamy and smooth (Image 2). This doesn’t need a long mix, just enough to combine everything well.

Step 3: Add the vanilla and egg and mix briefly until just incorporated. Don’t overmix here. Once the egg is blended in, stop.
Add the fresh milled flour, baking soda, and salt. Mix until you get a not too dry, but not too wet dough (Image 3).
Let the dough sit for 10–15 minutes. This gives the fresh milled flour time to absorb moisture and softens the bran. The dough will come together more easily after this rest. During this time, you can preheat your oven to 175°C (350°F). Line a baking sheet with parchment.
Use your hands to gently press the dough into one cohesive ball. This is about testing the consistency, not about shaping! It should feel soft and slightly tacky, not dry. If it feels crumbly, give it another minute or two of rest before adding anything.

Step 4: Fold in the chocolate chips or chunks with your hands until somewhat evenly distributed (Image 4).

Step 5: Divide the dough into 12 large balls (or 9 if you want extra-thick cookies). Place them on the baking sheet with space between them (Image 5). Don’t flatten.

Step 6: Bake for 12–14 minutes. The cookies should look pale, puffy, and just set on top. The centers will look underbaked (Image 6). That’s exactly what you want.

Step 7: Let the cookies cool (Image 7) on the pan for at least 20–30 minutes. They’ll sink, firm up slightly, and turn into soft, dense cookies as they cool.
Hint: don’t rush the dough rest. Fresh milled flour needs those 10–15 minutes to fully hydrate, and skipping this step is the fastest way to end up with crumbly dough or dry cookies.
Baking Schedule
- Mix butter and sugars: 5 minutes
- Add egg, vanilla, and flour: 5 minutes
- Dough rest: 10–15 minutes
- Form balls and bake: 12–14 minutes per batch
- Cooling: 20–30 minutes
💭Crucial Success Tips
The biggest key to success with these cookies is not overbaking them. They should look pale and slightly underdone when you pull them from the oven. The centers will finish setting as they cool, giving you that soft, dense texture instead of a dry or crumbly cookie. Also, resist the urge to flatten the dough balls. Baking them tall helps them stay thick and soft.
Recipe FAQs
Crumbly cookies usually mean the flour didn’t have enough time to absorb moisture. Fresh milled flour needs a short rest before baking. Make sure you let the dough sit for at least 10–15 minutes before shaping.
Yes, these cookies freeze very well. You can freeze the baked cookies once fully cooled or freeze the dough balls and bake straight from frozen with a couple of extra minutes added to the bake time.
They do have more depth of flavor. Fresh milled flour adds a subtle nutty, wheaty taste that pairs beautifully with chocolate, without being heavy or dense when baked correctly.
How To Store Chocolate Chip Cookies
Store in an airtight container at room temperature for 2–3 days. They can also be frozen for up to 1 month; thaw at room temperature before serving.

Other Delicious Recipes
- 100% Fresh Milled Sourdough in a Loaf Pan (The Two-Pan Method)

- Fresh Milled Banana Muffins with Applesauce

- How to Make a Sourdough Starter With Fresh Milled Flour - From Scratch!

- Fresh-Milled Cinnamon Toast Crunch Cereal

If you tried these fresh-milled soft chocolate chip cookies or any other recipe on my blog please leave a 🌟 star rating and let me know how it went in the 📝 comments below! Happy Baking!

Fresh-Milled Soft Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
- 110 g salted butter if using unsalted, just add a pinch of salt!
- 100 g white sugar raw cane works great
- 50 g light brown sugar
- 5 g vanilla
- 1 egg large
- 180 g fresh milled hard wheat flour
- 2.5 g baking soda
- 1.5 g salt or a little extra if you like
- 130 g chocolate chips or chunks
Method
- Microwave the butter just until melted, about 30–40 seconds. It should be liquid but not hot. Let it cool for a minute if needed.
- In a bowl, mix the melted butter with both sugars until creamy and smooth. This doesn’t need a long mix, just enough to combine everything well.
- Add the vanilla and egg and mix briefly until just incorporated. Don’t overmix here. Once the egg is blended in, stop.Add the fresh milled flour, baking soda, and salt. Mix until you get a not too dry, but not too wet dough.Let the dough sit for 10–15 minutes. This gives the fresh milled flour time to absorb moisture and softens the bran. The dough will come together more easily after this rest. During this time, you can preheat your oven to 175°C (350°F). Line a baking sheet with parchment.Use your hands to gently press the dough into one cohesive ball. This is about testing the consistency, not about shaping! It should feel soft and slightly tacky, not dry. If it feels crumbly, give it another minute or two of rest before adding anything.
- Fold in the chocolate chips or chunks with your hands until somewhat evenly distributed.
- Divide the dough into 12 large balls (or 9 if you want extra-thick cookies). Place them on the baking sheet with space between them. Don’t flatten.
- Bake for 12–14 minutes. The cookies should look pale, puffy, and just set on top. The centers will look underbaked. That’s exactly what you want.
- Let the cookies cool on the pan for at least 20–30 minutes. They’ll sink, firm up slightly, and turn into soft, dense cookies as they cool.
Notes
- Use a fine grind. The finer the flour, the softer the cookie. Coarse flour can make cookies feel dry or gritty.
- Keep in mind that fresh milled flour absorbs more moisture.That’s why the dough will change more as it sits. If the dough feels stiffer after resting, that’s normal.
- Overmixing makes cookies firm. Once the dough comes together, stop.
- Pressing the dough together gently keeps the cookies soft, don’t squeeze them excessively.
- Pull the cookies while they still look pale and slightly underdone. Fresh milled cookies dry out quickly if overbaked.
- Hard white gives a softer, milder cookie. Hard red has more flavor but feels heartier.
Private Notes
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