Chocolate Chip Marshmallow Cookies

4.94 from 46 votes
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I am starting the holiday baking season in epic fashion – with these ultra gooey chocolate chip marshmallow cookies!

Soft chocolate chip cookies, with a creamy marshmallow filling inside!
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The radio has been playing Christmas music already for weeks, and holiday displays magically appeared in shopping malls pretty much the day after Halloween, but it still never feels like Christmas to me until after Thanksgiving.

Technically, I believe the Christmas season shouldn’t start until December… but when it comes to Christmas cookies, I am impatient and always start a little early.

Because, cookies.

*For a keto version, make these Keto Cookies

marshmallow cookies
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These are homemade chocolate chip cookies with a twist:

Stuff mini marshmallows inside each cookie—I recommend vegan marshmallows because they stay fluffy when baked—and suddenly you have transformed the ordinary into the extraordinary.

To an unsuspecting guest, they look like your average chocolate chip cookies…

So imagine their surprise when they take a bite and discover a surprise marshmallow creme filling hidden inside!

dandies cookies
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Step One: Make up a batch of cookie dough, then roll into balls and press two mini marshmallows inside of each ball.

I used vegan mini marshmallows here, which retained their shape beautifully while baking and yielded a visible marshmallow creme center.

Step Two: Refrigerate the cookie dough balls if you want soft chocolate chip cookies, or bake right away if you don’t.

The marshmallow cookies will look underdone when you take them out of the oven, so let them cool for 10 minutes, during which time they will firm up.

vegan chocolate chip cookies
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Step Three: Bite into a cookie to reveal the hidden marshmallow creme center.

Store leftovers in a covered container. And if you want to make up a bigger batch of dough, you can make up the dough ahead of time and store extra cookie dough balls in the freezer to thaw and bake any time a hot-from-the-oven chocolate chip cookie craving hits.

smores cookies
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Check out the following link for more holiday baking inspiration:

Healthy Cookie Recipes – Over 50 Healthy Cookies

 
Gooey Chocolate Chip Marshmallow Cookie Recipe
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The recipe was adapted from these Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies.

4.94 from 46 votes

Chocolate Chip Marshmallow Cookies

These homemade chocolate chip marshmallow cookies are a holiday favorite recipe.
Cook Time: 11 minutes
Total Time: 11 minutes
Yield: 11 – 13 cookies
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Ingredients

  • 1 cup spelt, oat, or white flour, loosely packed
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/4 tsp salt
  • 1/2 cup sugar (unrefined or xylitol if desired)
  • 1/3 cup chocolate chips
  • 2 tbsp milk of choice
  • 2 tbsp oil
  • 1/4 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 2 mini marshmallows per cookie – I like vegan mini marshmallows because they hold their shape once baked

Instructions 

  • Combine all dry ingredients (except marshmallows) in a medium mixing bowl, then stir in wet to form a dough – it will be dry at first, so keep stirring until a cookie-dough texture is achieved. (Only if needed, add 1 tbsp extra milk of choice – I didn't need it.) Roll into balls, then smush two mini marshmallows into each cookie and re-roll into a ball. (If dough is too soft to roll, you can refrigerate before rolling.) For soft cookies, refrigerate or freeze until cookie dough balls are chilled. Preheat oven to 325 F. Place cookie balls on a greased baking tray and bake 11 minutes on the center rack. They’ll look underdone when you take them out. Let them cool 10 minutes, during which time they will firm up. You can also choose to make extra cookie dough balls and freeze them to bake at a later date.
    View Nutrition Facts

Notes

Also be sure to try these Chocolate No Bake Cookies.
 
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!

More Holiday Cookie Recipes:

Snowball cookies that literally MELT in your mouth.

Snowball Cookies – 60 calories each

The Best Easy Keto Chocolate Cookies

Keto Chocolate Cookies

6 Ingredient Lemon Snowball Cookies

Lemon Meltaway Cookies

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Chickpea Cookie Dough Dip

Meet Katie

Chocolate Covered Katie is one of the top 25 food websites in America, and Katie has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Fox, The Huffington Post, and ABC’s 5 O’clock News. Her favorite food is chocolate, and she believes in eating dessert every single day.

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81 Comments

  1. Rachael says:

    I NEED these cookies in my life!
    Rachael xx.
    theteacozykitchen.blogspot.co.uk

  2. Whitney says:

    Katie, how did you know I was just started to experiment with healthy, sugar-free marshmallows over Thanksgiving break??? You have given me something to smile BIG about! Thank you! This is like an early Christmas gift! Question: do you think I could use your healthy marshmallow fluff instead of mini marshmallows? I’m thinking of adding a a firming agent (such as a gelatin-like-something) to help hem retain their shape longer. What do you think? Do you think it would work without that, anyway?

    1. Julie Dove says:

      You never know unless you experiment, but it sounds like a fun experiment to try. Be sure to report back if you do try!

  3. Kate says:

    I love how these cookies look like regular chocolate chip cookies, but there is marshmallow hiding inside! Do you (or anyone) know why vegan marshmallows retain their shape? I did not know that and it’s super interesting! And yay for holiday baking!

    1. Abby says:

      I made two batches, one with vegan marshmallows and one with regular. The vegan batch’s filling was much puffier but BOTH batches turned out fantastic! 🙂

    2. Rachel says:

      I believe (after a quick internet search) that the melting point of agar is much higher than the melting point of gelatin – the thickeners used in vegan and non marshmallows, respectively. Related interesting tidbit: agar sets at a lower temperature than it melts! Yay science!

    3. Grace says:

      Hiya its becasue vegan marshmallows don’t have any gelitine in them so they don’t melt every easily

  4. Sara @ Last Night's Feast says:

    Yum! I can’t wait to try these!

  5. Tanya says:

    I just made these with oat flour and it was a total flop…literally. They are flattened out and the marshmallows melted all over. Definitely not like your photos suggest!

    1. Julie Dove says:

      Did you use vegan marshmallows or regular ones?

    2. Erica says:

      Probably the nonvegan ones I’m guessing. I made them with oat flour (and vegan marshmallows) and they were awesome! I also made a batch with white flour. I know, not the healthiest but I don’t know where to get spelt flour and don’t live near a whole foods.

  6. Jens says:

    Hi…where do you find the marshmallows that are vegan?? Thank you for giving us so many healthy dessert recipes. My husband loves your banana bread….he said it is the best he has ever had and that it is ridiculously moist……which is a huge rave from him. He comes from family bakers but the banana bread is the best by far. Also, how long will the cookies stay fresh tastinf in the freezer?

    1. Becky says:

      Yes, I’d also like to know where to buy vegan marshmallows!

      1. Heidi Brieanne Bruner says:

        I find mine at Whole Foods or Fresh Thyme and even Meijer. They are the Dandies Brand and I love them!

      2. Kelly says:

        You can find them online at places like vitacost.com if you don’t live near a Whole Foods or health food store that would have them.

    2. Chocolate Covered Katie says:

      Aside from the places Heidi said, I have also seen them at Target (!) and small health food stores. But my favorite place to get them–and health food supplies in general–is Vitacost. I’m not really big on online shopping, but they have such incredible prices on things that I make an exception. http://www.vitacost.com/dandies

    3. JJ says:

      Trader Joes’s also has them.

    4. Turia Stewart says:

      Trader Joe’s!

  7. AB says:

    1/2 cup of sugar in a dozen cookies? And that doesn’t count the sugar in the chocolate chips and marshmallows. They look delicious, granted, but healthy they’re not….

      1. AB says:

        Yes, the recipe link that you found online does indeed use 1/4 c. more sugar. A quick perusal through my traditional recipes (passed to me from my mother) confirms my initial thought–1 to 1 1/2 c. sugar per recipe, which typically makes 3 dozen cookies….which equals 1/2 c. per dozen cookies. But you can easily lower the sugar amount on most cookie recipes by 25% without many people noticing. We all need to do the math on any recipe–baker beware!

        While less sugar is better, it is still sugar. Sure, a 3 scoop ice cream sundae is “healthier” than a 5 scoop sundae, but few people would tout it as healthy! My larger point is that I’m sorry to see an increase in sugar-based recipes on this blog instead of the outstanding, earlier recipes that utilized more creative non-sugar options, like dates.

        1. Abby says:

          It says “unrefined sugar” so just use date sugar, which is an unrefined sugar, if you want to use dates 🙂

          1. hi says:

            lol date sugar is still sugar

    1. Ann says:

      Then don’t make them. Lord that’s too easy!

  8. Sabrina @ Familynano says:

    WOW Katie, it’s like chocolate chip cookies and s’mores all at once. Freaking awesome.

  9. Caetera Moda says:

    Your recipe is killing me. At first I was like “marshmallow ? but I’m veggie I can’t eat marshmallows” and then boom vegan marshmallows ! Cookies sent from heaven !

    xx

    http://www.caetera-moda.blogspot.com

  10. Nina says:

    Another awesome CCK recipe. I want to eat them all and not share. I think I will make two batches next time.