
This edible cookie dough recipe gives you everything you want from a bowl of raw dough without any of the risk. No eggs, no raw flour, no cutting corners. The butter is properly creamed, the flour is heat-treated, and the result is thick, soft, and deeply buttery with chocolate chips in every bite. It comes together in about 10 minutes with ingredients you already have. Eat it straight from the bowl, layer it into ice cream, roll it into bites and freeze them, or pack it into a jar as a gift. However you serve it, it disappears fast.

- 1.25 cups all-purpose flour , Must be heat-treated before using. Instructions are in Step 1.
- 0.5 cup unsalted butter , Softened to room temperature. Not melted.
- 0.5 cup packed light brown sugar , This is what gives the dough its classic flavor. Do not reduce it.
- 0.25 cup granulated white sugar
- 3 tablespoons whole milk or heavy cream , Start with 2 tablespoons and add the third only if the dough needs it.
- 1.5 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 0.5 teaspoon fine sea salt , Reduce to 0.25 teaspoon if using salted butter.
- 0.75 cup mini chocolate chips , Mini chips distribute more evenly than full-size ones.
- Large mixing bowl
- Hand mixer or stand mixer with paddle attachment
- Rubber spatula
- Baking sheet lined with parchment (for oven method of heat-treating flour)
- Microwave-safe bowl (if using microwave method)
- Instant-read thermometer (optional but helpful)
- Airtight storage container

- Heat-treat the flour in the oven or microwave and let it cool completely.
- Beat the softened butter with both sugars until light and fluffy.
- Add vanilla, salt, and milk and mix until smooth.
- Add the cooled flour and mix just until a soft dough forms.
- Fold in the chocolate chips and chill before serving.

- Spread the flour in an even layer on a parchment-lined baking sheet.
- Bake at 350 degrees F for 5 minutes. Alternatively, place the flour in a microwave-safe bowl and microwave on high for 1 minute, stirring halfway through.
- Spread the treated flour onto a clean plate or sheet and let it cool completely to room temperature before using it. This step is not optional.
- Place the softened butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar into a large mixing bowl.
- Beat on medium speed for 2 full minutes until the mixture is light, fluffy, and pale in color. Scrape the bowl down halfway through.
- Add the vanilla extract and salt. Pour in 2 tablespoons of milk.
- Mix on low speed until everything is combined and the mixture looks smooth and creamy.
- Add the cooled flour to the bowl all at once.
- Mix on low speed just until the dough comes together. Stop as soon as you no longer see streaks of flour. Overmixing makes the dough dense.
- Check the texture. The dough should be thick and hold its shape but not crumble. If it feels dry, add the remaining tablespoon of milk and mix briefly.
- Add the mini chocolate chips to the bowl.
- Use a spatula to fold them in by hand until evenly distributed.
- Transfer the dough to a serving bowl or airtight container.
- Cover and refrigerate for at least 20 minutes before serving. This firms up the texture and brings the flavors together.
- Let the flour cool all the way before adding it. Even slightly warm flour will soften the butter too much and change the texture of the finished dough.
- Use room-temperature butter, not melted. Melted butter makes the dough greasy and flat instead of fluffy.
- Brown sugar carries most of the flavor here. It is what makes this taste like actual cookie dough instead of sweetened butter.
- Start with 2 tablespoons of milk. Add the third only if the dough looks dry or crumbly after the flour goes in.
- Mini chocolate chips are worth using over regular-sized ones. You get more chocolate in every scoop because they spread throughout the dough more evenly.
- Chilling the dough for at least 20 minutes is worth the wait. Room-temperature dough is soft and a little greasy. Chilled dough scoops cleanly and tastes better.
- Skipping the flour heat-treatment. Raw flour is not safe to eat. It can carry bacteria the same way raw meat can. This step takes 5 minutes and is not something you can skip or substitute.
- Using cold butter straight from the fridge. It will not cream with the sugar properly, and you will end up with a lumpy, uneven dough.
- Pouring all the milk in at once. The dough can go from too dry to too sticky with just one extra tablespoon. Add it gradually.
- Overmixing after the flour goes in. Once the dough forms, stop. Extra mixing makes it tight and dense.
- Serving it warm. Let the dough chill so the butter firms back up. The flavor and texture are noticeably better cold.
- Dairy-free: Swap the butter for vegan butter and use oat milk or full-fat coconut milk in the same amounts.
- Gluten-free: A 1:1 gluten-free flour blend works here. Heat-treat it the same way you would regular flour.
- Peanut butter version: Replace half the butter with creamy peanut butter and leave out the milk entirely. The dough will be slightly denser but still works well.
- M&M cookie dough: Use mini M&Ms in place of the chocolate chips, or use a mix of both.
- Funfetti version: Replace some of the chocolate chips with rainbow sprinkles. Use about 3 tablespoons of sprinkles and reduce the chips to half a cup.
- Extra salty finish: Before serving, press a few flakes of flaky sea salt into the top of the dough. The contrast works well.
- Frozen bites: Roll the dough into small balls about the size of a tablespoon. Freeze on a parchment-lined tray for 1 hour, then transfer to a bag. Eat them straight from the freezer.
- Vanilla ice cream, with scoops of dough pressed in or layered on top
- Fresh strawberries or sliced bananas on the side
- Warm brownies, with the dough added as a topping or middle layer
- Waffle cones or thick pretzel rods for scooping
- Graham crackers for a cookie dough dip situation
- A cold glass of milk or a hot cup of coffee
- Refrigerator: Store in an airtight container with plastic wrap pressed directly against the dough surface to prevent it from drying out. It keeps well for up to 5 days.
- Freezer: Freeze the dough as a whole block or in pre-rolled balls for up to 3 months. Thaw overnight in the refrigerator before eating.
- Do not microwave the dough to soften it. If it comes out of the fridge too firm, leave it at room temperature for 10 to 15 minutes.
- Frozen dough balls can be eaten directly from the freezer. They firm up to a fudge-like texture that many people prefer over the room-temperature version.

Yes. The two ingredients that make traditional raw cookie dough unsafe are raw eggs and raw flour. This recipe uses no eggs, and the flour is heat-treated to a temperature that kills harmful bacteria. Both steps are included in the recipe.
No. This recipe is formulated for eating raw. It has no eggs and the ingredient ratios are adjusted for texture and flavor without baking. It will not set into a proper baked cookie. Use a separate cookie recipe if you want to bake.
The flour absorbed too much moisture during mixing, or not enough milk was added. Fix it by adding milk one teaspoon at a time, mixing gently between each addition until the dough holds together.
Yes. If you use salted butter, reduce the added salt in the recipe to about one quarter teaspoon or leave it out entirely depending on how sensitive you are to saltiness.
An instant-read thermometer inserted into the flour should read at least 165 degrees F. If you do not have one, baking the flour at 350 degrees F for 5 full minutes in a standard home oven is sufficient.
Yes, it doubles without any issues. If you are making a larger batch, use a stand mixer to make the creaming step easier on yourself.
- Heat-treating the flour is a food safety step, not a texture step. Do not skip it or rush it.
- Measure flour by spooning it into the measuring cup and leveling off the top. Scooping directly from the bag packs the flour and can throw off the ratio by a noticeable amount.
- If the finished dough tastes a little flat, a small extra pinch of salt usually fixes it.
- This dough works as a cookie dough dip too. Thin it with a little extra milk until it is scoopable rather than spoonable, and serve with graham crackers, pretzels, or apple slices.
- For gifting, press the dough into a small mason jar and scatter a few extra chocolate chips on top before sealing.
This edible cookie dough recipe is one of those things that earns a permanent spot in your regular rotation. It is fast to make, requires no special equipment, and uses ingredients most people already have. The flavor holds up because the recipe is built around real butter, brown sugar, and enough salt to keep things balanced rather than cloyingly sweet. Once you have the base down, the variations practically write themselves. Peanut butter, frozen bites, layered into brownies, stirred into ice cream. The recipe handles all of it. Make a batch when you want something satisfying without turning on the oven for a full baking project. Keep it in the fridge and it stays good all week. If it lasts that long.