Chocolate Marshmallow Cookies
I made these chocolate marshmallow cookies on a whim one rainy Saturday because I had a desperate hankering for gooey chocolate and zero patience for a s’mores bonfire. They’re basically fudgy chocolate cookies with melty marshmallow pockets that puff up, stick to your fingers, and make you stop whatever adulting you were doing. They’re slightly messy, wildly comforting, and somehow fancy enough to impress people who expect store-bought restraint.
My husband calls them “danger cookies” because he can’t eat just one. The kids hover in the doorway like vultures whenever I pull the tray from the oven. One night I tried to be clever and packed two for lunches, and the kids staged a full-on negotiation at the bus stop. Now it’s become our lazy-weekend ritual: cookie dough scooped while the coffee brews, cookies cooling while we argue about cartoons. They’re the kind of recipe that makes the kitchen smell like happiness and marshmallow dust.
Why You’ll Love This Chocolate Marshmallow Cookies
– Melty marshmallow pockets that give a soft, pillowy contrast to a rich chocolate cookie base.
– No fancy equipment — just a bowl and a baking sheet, but they look like you put in a lot more effort.
– Great for sharing but not for self-control; consider this a group dessert or a family trap.
– Flexible: swap dark chocolate for milk, use mini marshmallows for little bursts, or go big with a marshmallow slab in the center.
Kitchen Talk
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I once forgot to add baking soda and realized halfway through baking when the cookies looked like sad chocolate pancakes. Turns out they were still edible — just flatter and more chewy. Another time I used giant marshmallows and had molten marshmallow ooze into little glassy puddles across the tray (mad scientist vibes). If you’re impatient like me, freeze the dough balls for 15 minutes so they keep their shape and the marshmallows don’t entirely escape the cookie during baking.
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Shopping Tips
– Baking Basics (Flour/Sugar/Leaveners): Use all-purpose flour and don’t skip the leavener — it gives the dough lift so the marshmallows sit prettily inside instead of spilling everywhere.
– Chocolate: Pick a bar or chips you genuinely like to snack on; the chocolate flavor is the star here, so mid-to-high quality makes a difference.
– Eggs: Room-temperature eggs mix into the dough better for even texture; a quick 10 minutes on the counter does the trick.
– Fats & Oils: Butter gives the best flavor and slightly crisp edges — don’t swap for oil unless you’re out and desperate.
– Sweeteners: Use a mix of granulated and brown sugar if you can — brown sugar keeps the cookie chewy and gives a hint of caramel.
Prep Ahead Ideas
– Make the dough a day ahead and portion into balls; store on a tray covered with plastic wrap in the fridge and bake straight from cold.
– If you want, stuff the marshmallows into the dough balls the night before and freeze them on a tray; transfer to a freezer bag once solid.
– Use airtight containers for prepped dough or a zipper bag with date label; dough keeps 3 days refrigerated and up to 3 months frozen.
– For weeknight ease: bake in the evening and serve warm with milk for dessert — zero assembly required.
Time-Saving Tricks
– Use mini marshmallows for even distribution and faster prep instead of cutting large ones.
– Chill dough for 15 minutes to prevent spreading; this saves you from re-baking flat cookies.
– Line your sheet with parchment so you can bake multiple batches quickly and not babysit the pan.
– Use chocolate chips if you don’t want to chop bars; fewer dishes and just as delicious.
Common Mistakes
– Overworking the dough: I once kneaded mine like bread — the result was tough cookies. Mix until just combined.
– Letting marshmallows touch the pan directly: they’ll caramelize into sticky messes. Wrap them slightly in dough or use parchment.
– Baking too long: cookies keep baking off the sheet, so pull them when edges are set but centers look soft.
– Skimping on chill time: dough that’s too warm will spread and lose those lovely marshmallow domes.
What to Serve It With
– Cold glass of milk (classic and zero surprises).
– Scoops of vanilla ice cream — warm cookie, cold cream, total bliss.
– A simple fruit salad for a slightly lighter contrast.
– Coffee or hot chocolate for a cozy afternoon treat.
Tips & Mistakes
– Use room-temp butter so it creams properly; cold butter = lumpy mess.
– If dough spreads too much, pop the tray back in the fridge for 10 minutes between batches.
– Salt is your friend — a pinch on top before baking wakes up the chocolate.
– If marshmallows are melting out too fast, use fewer per cookie or chill the dough longer.
Storage Tips
Toss cooled cookies into an airtight container at room temp for up to 3 days. If they get a little firm, microwave one for 8–10 seconds and it’s like magic — gooey again. Dough freezes great: scoop into balls and freeze on a tray, then bag. Baking frozen dough takes a couple extra minutes. Cold cookie for breakfast? No shame — that marshmallow still tastes like rebellion.
Variations and Substitutions
– Use dark chocolate for a bittersweet bite or milk chocolate for kid-friendly sweetness.
– Try mini peanut butter cups instead of chocolate chips for a PB-meets-marshmallow vibe.
– For a nutty twist, fold in chopped toasted pecans or walnuts — they add crunch.
– Vegan-ish option: use vegan butter and dairy-free chocolate and marshmallows, but expect a slightly different texture.
– If you’re out of eggs, try a flax egg (1 tbsp flax + 3 tbsp water = 1 egg) though cookies will be denser.
Frequently Asked Questions

Chocolate Marshmallow Cookies
Ingredients
Cookies
- 3/4 cup unsalted butter, melted and cooled
- 2/3 cup dark brown sugar, packed
- 1/3 cup granulated sugar
- 1 large egg
- 1 large egg yolk
- 1 1/2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 1 1/3 cups all-purpose flour
- 2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder natural or Dutch-process
- 3/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/4 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
- 1 teaspoon instant espresso powder boosts chocolate flavor
- 1 cup semisweet chocolate chips
- 1 1/4 cups mini marshmallows, divided
- flaky sea salt, for finishing (optional)
Instructions
Preparation Steps
- Line two sheet pans with parchment. Spread 1 cup of the mini marshmallows on a plate and place in the freezer for 10–15 minutes (this helps them hold their shape). Preheat the oven to 360°F (182°C).
- In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, baking soda, baking powder, fine sea salt, and espresso powder until evenly combined.
- In a separate bowl, whisk the cooled melted butter with the dark brown sugar and granulated sugar until glossy and thick, about 1 minute. Whisk in the egg, egg yolk, and vanilla until smooth.
- Tip the dry mixture into the butter mixture and fold with a spatula just until no dry streaks remain. Stir in the chocolate chips. Cover and chill the dough for 15–20 minutes to firm slightly for shaping.
- Scoop dough into 18 portions (about 1½ tablespoons each). Flatten one portion in your palm, place 3–4 of the frozen marshmallows in the center, then wrap and pinch to seal. Set seam-side down on the prepared pans, spacing 2 inches apart. Repeat. Chill the filled dough balls on the pan for 10 minutes while the oven finishes heating.
- Bake one pan at a time for 8 minutes. Pull the rack out, quickly press 2–3 of the remaining (unfrozen) mini marshmallows onto the tops of each cookie, and add a few extra chocolate chips if you like. Rotate the pan and bake 2–4 minutes more, until edges look set and the tops are just matte with gooey marshmallow showing.
- Cool on the pan for 5 minutes, then move cookies to a rack. While warm, sprinkle lightly with flaky sea salt (optional). Repeat with the second pan.
Notes
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