Make your own soft, gooey, and secretly healthy deep dish cookie pie for dessert tonight, with melted chocolate chips in each unbelievable bite!

Table of Contents

Deep dish chocolate chip cookie pie
What is even better than a warm chocolate chip cookie?
If you answered, “Katie, nothing is better than a warm chocolate chip cookie,” you’ve obviously never met a chocolate chip cookie pie…
Especially not when it is topped with Almond Milk Ice Cream or Keto Ice Cream, or my personal favorite dairy free Coconut Ice Cream Recipe.
Serve the showstopping dessert for Labor Day, Thanksgiving, Christmas, Memorial Day, graduations, birthday parties, or the Fourth of July.
And prepare to be amazed at just how much you can love a dessert.
You may also like these Healthy Chocolate Chip Cookies

The best party dessert of all time
I could sit here and tell you about how I was in charge of dessert for our neighborhood summer party.
I could tell you about my desire to impress the neighbors with a sinful tasting finale and then shock them by revealing the dessert was really not so sinful after all.
And I could tell you how this desire became reality when my dessert was the single biggest hit of the party, with everyone raving about it.
One guest even hired me to make a pie for her husband’s birthday in June.
But really, you don’t want to know all of this, do you? You just want the recipe!
Also try the popular Protein Cookie Dough
Deep dish cookie pie recipe video
Above, watch the step by step recipe video

Healthy dessert deep dish cookie pie
In comparison to your standard cookie pie, with its plethora of butter, eggs, and white flour, the above version is a much healthier alternative, while still tasting just as temptingly decadent and delicious.
Plus, you get a full five grams fiber and over six grams of protein per slice, thanks to the whole grain oats and chickpeas.
And I promise no one can tell that these ingredients are in there.
Need proof? Just read the thousands of positive reader reviews on this recipe post!
Depending on the specific ingredients you choose, the cookie pie includes options to be dairy free, nut free, oil free, no sugar added, gluten free, and vegan.

The chocolate pie is a real crowd pleaser.
Even people who are not used to eating healthy desserts will rave about the recipe.
Imagine chocolate chip cookie dough in the form of a pie.
Side note: If you make a half recipe in an eight inch baking pan, you can have a healthy cookie cake like the ones at the Great American Cookie Co in the mall!
And if you make one fourth of the recipe, you can even put it in a mini springform pan for a baby chocolate chip cookie pie.
Extra chocolate chips? Add them to Healthy Banana Bread

Chocolate chip cookie pie ingredients
The recipe calls for chickpeas, quick oats or almond flour, pure vanilla extract, baking soda, salt, applesauce or yogurt, nut butter or oil, sweetener of choice, and of course chocolate chips.
You can use white beans, such as cannellini or great northern beans, instead of the chickpeas. Garbanzo beans are just another name for chickpeas, so they are also fine.
If you want to use dried garbanzos instead of canned, substitute about 500 grams total of cooked garbanzo beans for the two standard size cans (15 ounces each).
An equal amount of canned pumpkin, roasted sweet potato puree, or even mashed banana can be swapped for the applesauce. You may also use plain or Greek yogurt.
Rolled oats or instant oats work as swaps in place of quick oats. If you wish to use all purpose flour or spelt flour, decrease the amount to three fourths of a cup.
Add brown sugar for the most authentic Toll House chocolate chip cookie flavor. If you prefer a healthier option, I also love the results with unrefined coconut sugar.
Pure maple syrup, honey, agave, or sugar free xylitol work as well.
For a neutral flavor, go with either almond butter or cashew butter or the oil option (vegetable, sunflower, or coconut oil). Or use peanut butter if you want a chocolate chip peanut butter cookie pie.

How to make the recipe
The first step is to open and fully drain the cans of beans. Rinse them well.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
If using rolled oats, pulse them alone in a food processor. Stop when they turn into a fine flour consistency.
Add all remaining ingredients except for the chocolate chips to the food processor, and blend until the mixture is completely smooth like cookie dough.
Tip: I highly recommend going with a food processor over a blender if one is available. While some readers mention using a blender successfully, my experience is that the texture and taste of this cookie pie is far superior when prepared in a food processor.
Turn off the machine, and stir in the chocolate chips by hand. Stir in a handful of shredded coconut or chopped walnuts or pecans as well if you wish.
Spread the cookie dough batter evenly into a greased nine inch springform pan. A ten inch pan works too.
Optionally, sprinkle more chocolate chips on top or swirl Homemade Nutella into the unbaked pie with a spoon.
Bake on the center rack of the oven for thirty five minutes. Then remove the pan from the oven and let it cool for an additional ten minutes.
Take off the springform top, and serve the deep dish chocolate chip cookie cake hot, topped with ice cream or whipped cream and hot fudge sauce.
Tips for storing the deep dish cookie pie dessert
Let the pie cool fully before covering it. Make sure to leave an opening in the container or cover so that extra moisture can escape.
You may store the chocolate chip dessert at room temperature overnight or while transporting it to a party or event.
After a day, I recommend storing in an airtight container. Due to the perishable ingredients, it is best to keep the recipe refrigerated when not serving.
Or for an almost instant cookie pie whenever you are craving soft homemade chocolate chip cookies, slice and freeze leftovers. Thaw in the microwave or in a warm oven or toaster oven before serving.
However, once you taste this incredible deep dish chocolate chip cookie treat, it is highly unlikely you will have any leftovers!


Deep Dish Cookie Pie
Ingredients
- 2 cans white beans or garbanzo beans (500g total, once drained)
- 1 cup quick oats or almond flour
- 1/4 cup applesauce or yogurt
- 3 tbsp oil or 1/4 cup nut butter
- 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
- 2 tsp baking powder
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp salt
- 1 1/2 cup brown sugar or unrefined sugar (click for a Sugar Free Cookie Pie)
- 1 cup chocolate chips
Instructions
- Drain and rinse beans very well. Blend everything except the chocolate chips very well in a food processor. Mix in chips, and pour the batter into a greased pan. I normally use either a 10 or 9-inch springform pan. Cook at 350 F for 35 minutes. Let stand at least 10 minutes before removing from the pan. Serve hot, or let cool. Storage tips are included above.*Some commenters have had success using a blender, but I feel that the texture comes out much better when using a food processor.View Nutrition Facts
Video
Notes
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I spoke too soon! After going through pretty much each recipe i see where you use agave and other sweetners. 🙂 I made the Deep Dish Cookie Pie last night and it was a a HUGE hit! I only used about half the amount of sweetner, and made it with Agave..delicous! With half the sweetner it was still plenty sweet for us..but we are used to “less” sweet dishes. I have printed many other recipes to make..can’t wait! I also shared your blog with my mom who has a very restricted diet to control her cancer..she made pumpkin muffins and said they were great too! ! Coudn’t be happier i found you!! Thanks!
Aww Ashley, that makes me SO happy! I am so so glad that the pie worked out well and even happier that your mom liked the muffins. Please give her my well-wishes!!
The beans will work fine. I have a recipe for Pinto Bean Pie, when you mix the sugar with the mashed pinto beans they taste just like pecans.
This is not even remotely healthy. Great, there’s beans and oats in here (healthy, though? those are debateable. Everything else is trash. Canola oil is completely unhealthy and sugar…REALLY?
Did you even bother to read the whole post before you left your snarky comment? Just wondering…
Katie – Just commenting to see if by hitting the ‘submit’ button without checking the “Notify” box, it will unsubscribe me from comments!
Aha! It worked – it gave me a link to the manage page. 🙂
this looks fabulous, but what can i sub for oats? i don’t seem to be able to tolerate oat gluten, and don’t want to risk trying again!
I’m not sure… maybe rolled spelt flakes or kamut flakes? Maybe flaxmeal?? I don’t know how it would taste with the flax, but you can try! 🙂
spelt and kamut both have gluten, albeit less than wheat, but i’ll hunt for other flakes. thanks for the idea!
I don’t have a food processor. Do you think I could use my blender intsead?
Probably!
Sooo I’m DYING to try this out… but Katie, I can’t find a link to the nutritionals anywhere? How many calories are in a slice of trhis decadence? I have to know so I have SOME incentive to not eat the whole thing once I make it… 😉 Thanks!
Sorry, I actually haven’t calculated that one out. It also depends on whether you use the lower-sugar version and how many slices you get.
That makes sense… I was just wondering for the recipe as it is on this page, since I like my desserts with plenty of sugar 🙂 I know, super healthy…not… 😛
But if you could calculate it that would be great because a) I’m awful at math and b) it’s one of the most popular recipes, right? So I bet people would like to know the calories!
P.S.- I’ve been on your site many time but tonight I’m going to try making the ultimate chocolate fudge pie! It will be the first recipe I’ve actually made from here 🙂
is it possible to sub out the oats for something that isn’t a grain? maybe almond meal?
best,
liz
I’ve not tried it with almond meal, but I don’t see why that wouldn’t work! I have done ground flax, and maybe something like quinoa flakes would work too!
I stumbled across your blog two nights ago while doing some random Internet surfing. This was the first recipe I saw and, although skeptical, I was so intrigued. Made it the next day and haven’t been able to stop talking about it. I’ve always enjoyed “healthifying” foods and watching as friends and family chow down, clueless to the substitutions. I’ve been looking through the rest of your recipes since and can’t wait to delve into more of them. Thanks for sharing your innovations! I’m so glad I found your blog.
Aww you are so welcome! I’m so glad you found my blog, too :).