A slightly different version of this delicious chai spice oatmeal cookie recipe has been floating around Mountain Rose Herbs since at least 2012 when someone adapted it from a white chocolate oatmeal cookie recipe they found online. The first time I made these chai-inspired gems, I loved the spice mix and oat combination, and the amount of sugar was just right, but the texture was seriously off by my standards. Cookie texture is of course a matter of preference; by my taste, the cookies were dense instead of tender and they were too dry. I wanted the flavor of the chai spices, but also a moist, chewy cookie with great mouthfeel. I was trying to decide how I wanted to alter the recipe—cut back on flour, add more moisture maybe. There were a couple different ways to address this, but I wanted to stay as true to the original as I could, so I started to track the recipe history to find the right fix. Recipe detective work is one of my food-nerd joys.
The chai spice cookie author (bless you, whoever you are) left a note that they adapted this recipe from one they found at Smitten Kitchen. So I went to that recipe, written in 2008, and found that our mystery author had simply removed six ounces of chocolate and replaced it with powdered spices… which accounted for the dryness of the cookies, but didn’t give me the clue I was looking for to make the perfect recipe fix.
Reading more closely, I found in the fine print of the Smitten Kitchen recipe that that author had in fact adapted it from an even older, classic chewy oatmeal raisin cookie recipe by Cooks Illustrated (which you can’t get from Cooks Illustrated unless you subscribe, but the recipe is all over the internet). The proportions in the original are dramatically different (and way too sweet for my taste), but there I found the clue I was seeking! The Cooks Illustrated test kitchen chefs were using one egg for every 3/4 cup of flour. The Smitten Kitchen recipe had reduced the sugar significantly (good move!) and changed that flour-egg proportion to one egg for every one cup of flour, which made sense because they were adding white chocolate. But when the white chocolate was removed in favor of delicious chai spices, no one compensated for the loss of moisture. Now that I understood the problem, the fix was obvious.
The fix: Add an extra egg yolk. Voila!
Makes about 2 dozen cookies.
Ingredients
Pro Tips
Flax eggs are not a great choice for egg-heavy recipes, but they are a wonderful option in cookies like these that only require one or two eggs.
Ingredients
Directions
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