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Chocolate Truffle Cookies

by Dawn T in Rouxbe Recipes

These are the best chocolate cookies I have ever eaten! They are rich...decadent...and simply unforgettable!

  • Serves: About 2 dozen
  • Active Time: 1 hr
  • Total Time: 8 hrs
  • Comments: 35
  • Views: 6809
  • Success 100%

Step 1: Melting the Chocolate and Butter

Melting the Chocolate and Butter

Finely chop the chocolate. Melt it on low heat over a double boiler. Remove from the heat and add the butter. Mix until melted and evenly combined.

*Note: The better the chocolate, the better these cookies will be. We use a chocolate that is around 70% cocao.

  • 1/2 lb bittersweet chocolate*
  • 3 tbsp unsalted butter (room temperature)

Step 2: Beating the Eggs

Beating the Eggs

With a mixer, beat the eggs and slowly add the sugar and honey until the mixture is light and it falls into thick, smooth ribbons, about 10 minutes.

  • 2 large eggs
  • 1 tbsp honey (preferably blackberry honey)
  • 1/3 cup granulated sugar

Step 3: Folding the Eggs into the Chocolate

Folding the Eggs into the Chocolate

Gently fold one-third of the egg mixture into the chocolate mixture until just combined. Then gently fold in the remaining two-thirds.

Step 4: Finishing the Cookie Batter

Finishing the Cookie Batter

In a small bowl, mix the cocoa powder, salt and ground almonds together. Gently fold into the chocolate mix.

Cover the surface of the dough with plastic wrap and then cover bowl with plastic wrap. Refrigerate overnight (or for at least 5 hours).

  • 2 tsp Dutched cocoa powder
  • 1 pinch sea salt
  • 2/3 cup finely ground almonds

Step 5: Rolling out the Cookies

Rolling out the Cookies

Using a small ice cream scoop, form the dough into balls. If you do not have a small scoop, then just use a small spoon to evenly scoop out the mixture.

Once done, refrigerate (or even freeze) the chocolate balls for a few minutes. This will help keep the cookies from flattening out during baking.

Step 6: Rolling the Cookies in the Sugar

Rolling the Cookies in the Sugar

Preheat the oven to 325° F (163° C). Line a baking sheet with parchment and set aside.

Next, place the sugar onto a small tray or plate. Roll each ball into the sugar and place onto the baking sheet, about 2 inches apart.

  • 1/3 cup sugar (approx.)

Step 7: Baking the Cookies

Baking the Cookies

Bake the cookies for 12 to 15 minutes, or until the centers are moist but no longer wet. The cookies will continue to cook as they sit (they are best when just cooked through and not over-baked).

Cool slightly and sprinkle with icing sugar. These cookies are great when served slightly warm.

  • 1/4 cup icing sugar (optional)

Notes

These cookies are inspired by Thomas Haas. Every time I make them people go crazy for the recipe...so here it is!

You can freeze the chocolate balls and bake them off as you need them. Baking time will need to be increased slightly.

Related Cooking School Lessons

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Basics of Quality Chocolate

Patrick O

A few questions

Hi dawn, these look absolutely amazing and if I’m going to make them for my sweetheart on V-Day (also my wedding anniversary :-) I want them to be perfect.
1. Cocoa: I'm assuming its Dutch Processed as there's no baking soda
2. What brand and % chocolate did you use? As many chocoholics would go for something around 70% or greater, what do you think would be more in line with a variety of palates? ~54%?
3. Serving suggestions: If served fresh out of the oven I’m thinking maybe crème anglais w/ a few fresh berries or raspberry coulis/puree and a sprig of mint. What about ice cream sandwiches with a natural Vanilla Bean ice cream. Of course, on their own with a double espresso would be simply divine!

Cheers!

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

Re: Chocolate Truffle Cookies

Patrick, good questions. The chocolate I use is usually around 70% cocao and the cocoa powder is indeed Dutched. I have updated the recipe as well.

I also wanted to reiterate that these cookies are best when not over baked. In fact, it is so important to me, that when I make these cookies I usually just bake off one (or two) at the beginning, just to test my oven temperature and my timing.

As for serving suggestions, I have served them with cafe latte ice cream and a few other desserts. I found the ice cream to be pretty good, but it does compete a bit with the star of the show, which are the cookies...but that could just be me. I like the idea of some nice berries or maybe a simply crème anglaise, as you suggested.

Good luck, I am sure you and your wife wife will love these cookies.

Patrick O

Thanks Dawn.

I especially like the idea of the "samples" you make before the batch....;-0
And good with a glass of milk I bet...

Josh K

A Mistake?

Hello,

I gave these a try and after refrigerating the batter for the five hours I noticed that it seemed hard and brittle. Is this normal or is it likely I make a mistake somewhere?

Thanks for looking!

Josh K

Follow Up

After letting the batter sit at room temperature for awhile it softened up a bit and despite being a bit hard still worked out just fine and made excellent, rich, cookies. Great recipe, thank you!

Mildred C

Blackberry Honey

I can't find any blackberry honey in my area (Philippines), can i use any alternative?

Josh K

Blackberry Honey

I couldn't find it either so I just used normal honey. The cookies still came out excellent. If you have time I suppose you could always order it online.

Srirat P

crumbly cookie???

I have a problem in spite of following direction carefully after baking, my cookies fall apart too easily!!!making them difficult to eat as cookie fall apart in my hand??? what should I do to prevent this??? thank you
Tum

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

Re: Crumbly Cookie?

I guess without knowing all the details, it is hard for me to access what could have went wrong. This has never happened to me, so I am not sure what to say?

My first guess is that perhaps you baked them for a bit too long or your oven temperature was higher? Do you have an oven thermometer to test the true internal temperature of your oven?

Sorry I couldn't be of more help, I say try them again. Just make sure to rest the batter and perhaps try baking them for a bit less time, as every oven is different.

Divina P

For Breakfast

I will be making these cookies next week for breakfast service in school. I am positive that I will be successful in making these.

Divina P

flour substitute

Would regular all-purpose flour work with this recipe?

Kimberley S
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Flour Substitute

We haven't tried this substitution ourselves. The almond flour gives these cookies their unique texture. They will be completely different using all-purpose flour and may not hold their structure. Cheers!

Peter K

Cookie question

Do you flatten the cookies before baking them?

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Cookie Question

No we do not flatten them before baking. They will flatten naturally in the oven. Cheers!

Richard F

Awesome cookies

I had to substitute acacia honey for the blackberry honey, but these still turned out great. We love that they freeze well, because the cookies are so rich a couple is enough!

I made these with Valrhona Manjari 64% chocolate, but I think the 66% Caraïbe will work even better so will give that a go the next time.

Maria C

Chocolate Truffle

Help! I need somebody…help! I made a disaster out of the Chocolate Truffle Cookies. I used Ghirardelli 100% chocolate instead of 70%. I thought it will be the real truffle but it’s so bitter. I realize the error, but is there something I can add to rectify the batter? I only baked ½ of the batch and the rest is still in the refrigerator. The supermarket only carried 60% and 100% bars so I decided to purchase the 100% because Dawn mentioned that she uses 70%. I thought it would be better than the 60%. Now I think that the better decision would have been to have gotten 1 bar at 60% and the other at 100%. Am I correct?

Kimberley S
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Chocolate Truffle

Unfortunately, it will be difficult to rectify the batter at this point. I say, roll them in plenty of sugar and bake them off. Try to incorporate them into something sweet. For example, you could break up the cookies and serve them with some vanilla ice cream to cut the bitterness.

It is important to use the proper chocolate that a recipe calls for because the amount of cocoa mass in the chocolate will not only affect the flavor but it will have an impact on the result. By learning from our mistakes, this is how we get better at cooking and baking.

Make sure to take the lesson on the Basics of Quality Chocolate in the Cooking School. I think this will help a lot. Cheers!

Debra G

Freezing?

I'm anxious to make these cookies. How do they freeze?

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Freezing?

I am sure you could freeze them (form them into balls first) and then bake them from frozen. Cheers!

Michelle B

Mine didn't work

After refrigerating the batter overnight, I couldn't form these into balls. What did I do wrong?

Kimberley S
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Trouble Forming Cookies

I'm not entirely sure what you mean. Was the batter too hard? If so, to ease forming the cookies, you can let it sit at room temperature until it softens just. Cheers!

Nuala H

Chocolate truffle cookies

Today is my first time joining Rouxbe. I am so excited already. First recipe today will be Truffle cookies.

Can I use white chocolate instead of 70% chocolate and then what do I use instead of the Dutch chocolate powder.

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: White Chocolate

No, you cannot use white chocolate for these particular cookies. There is no cocoa mass in white chocolate and it will be far too soft. You might want to watch the lesson the the Basics of Quality Chocolate for more information. Cheers!

Darren S

Mmm

Tried these tonight. I really likes then and while others said two was enough I ate 4! They reminded menif mini choc fondants.

I think many of my friends would find them a bit too strong so will try with a 62 cocoa next time I think.

Also any tips for rolling into balls as I wasted a lot of choc which melted onto my hands. O guess you could buy moulds and pour batter IMO them before putting in fridge?

Kimberley S
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Shaping Truffle Cookies

A mini ice cream scoop or melon baller will help. You can wear foodsafe gloves or wash your hands and cool them down with cold water (dry thoroughly) in between several rolls. Who doesn't like mucky chocolate hands though? There are worse things I can think of - haha :-) Cheers!

Echo S

no almonds....

could i leave out the almond? is the almond only adding texture to the cookie, or does it have some sort of a chemical reaction with the cookie? thanks alot!

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: No Almonds

I have never tried this recipe any other way than the recipe is written. If you want, you could try leaving out the almonds but they do make up a good portion of this recipe. Whenever you start omitting entire ingredients from a baking recipe you run the risk of things not working out the same. Cheers!

Darren S

Alternatives

Made these twice now. I think next time I will try it with flour. Also thinking it would work with ground hazelnut. Will let you know the verdict!

Caroline D

finely ground almonds

May I purchase finely ground almonds or do I have to make it myself? Thanks

Joe G
Rouxbe Staff

You can purchase finely ground almonds in most stores

I even found it on Amazon. But if you have a food processor, you can do them yourself and they will be much fresher. You may just want to remove the skins first.

Wendy C

Yummmm!

These had a wonderful flavor! I found they flattened quite a bit...I like a higher cookie! Your picture looked perfect! I rolled them in the sugar then put them in the freezer before baking. In your picture yours looked less flat then mine...any suggestions? Should I have used convection instead? I ground the almonds in my food processor....I was unsure if they were fine enough...I went for a very long time...I'm not sure if I could get them finer. This is a recipe worth working to get right :) Thanks

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Shape of Cookies

Perhaps your oven was a bit too hot if they flattened out too much. Test the internal temperature of your oven with an oven thermometer and bake the cookies in the center. Convection can be used but it is not necessary. Try it again and make sure the cookies are not warm before going in. Cheers!

Wendy C

Yummmm!

Thanks I will give it a try!

Bill P

Cookies great. Hard to get into balls of dough.

The cookies turned out great.

Fresh hazelnuts are in season now, so I ground them a nut grinder (my 5 year-old was helping) -- then finished in a food processor. I also threw in some fresh almonds for a hybrid flour :) Turned out great.

Lke Darren S, I had a hard time scooping the dough into balls -- it sort of flaked apart when I used a small ice cream scoop. I then had to use my hands to mold it together. It was a mess, but not a disaster.Didn't know if I was doing something wrong. I would have loved foodsafe gloves. I guess I need to find some.

Will also see if I can find a melon baller next time.

Dawn T
Rouxbe Staff

RE: Cookies Great | Hard to Shape

Yes these cookies are a bit messy to shape but they are well worth it and chocolaty mess. I do generally wear gloves when I roll them out.

By the way, I buy the latex, food safe gloves at Costco but you can find them in many stores. Cheers!

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