Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies are easy to make with crisp edges, with a soft, chewy center! With a few tips, you can create bakery-quality cookies!
Want pumpkin oatmeal cookies without chocolate chips? Give this glazed Pumpkin Oatmeal Cookies a try!
Table of Contents
Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies
Don’t get me wrong—I love a traditional puffy pumpkin cookie, but in my opinion, those recipes produce more of a thin, round cake than a crisp, chewy cookie.
The goal for these cookies was to create an actual cookie with a crisp bottom and edges and a soft, chewy interior. No cakey consistency here!
These cookies are perfection—thin and crispy with the ideal soft and chewy center! So, if you’ve been searching for a pumpkin cookie that isn’t cakey, this is your recipe!
Ingredients
- Unsalted butter: Ensure butter is at room temp for easy creaming with sugars.
- Sugars: Lightly pack brown sugar for accurate measuring, and adjust the total sugar amount to suit your taste.
- Canned pumpkin: Use 100% pure pumpkin for the best flavor and texture.
- Egg yolk: Save the egg whites for another recipe like meringues.
- Vanilla extract: Use pure vanilla extract for the best flavor.
- Baking Agents: Help cookies rise and spread.
- Spices: Adds warmth, enhances pumpkin flavor.
- Quick oats: Don’t substitute with old-fashioned oats, as they may alter texture.
- Flour: Spoon and level the flour when measuring to avoid compacting it.
- Chocolate chips: Mix different types of chips for varied flavor.
How To Make Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Prep: Preheat the oven and line a baking sheet.
- Cream: Beat room-temperature butter and sugars until creamy.
- Mix: Add pumpkin, egg yolk, and vanilla; mix well.
- Combine: Stir in spices, baking agents, oats, and flour; fold in chocolate chips.
- Chill: Refrigerate dough for about an hour. Don’t rush this!
- Shape: Roll into large balls and place on the baking sheet.
- Bake: Bake until edges are browned and centers are gooey. Let cool slightly on the pan.
Quick Tip
Chill the dough twice: first after mixing, and again after rolling into balls. This prevents the dough from being too soft initially and too warm after rolling. Cold dough balls in a hot oven create the perfect cookie texture.
Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookie Tips
- Roll the Right Size: Use 3 tablespoons (58 grams) of dough per cookie for the best texture.
- A Bit Soft: Keep cookies a bit soft for a chewy feel and strong pumpkin flavor. Look for firm edges and a slightly gooey top.
- Hit the Pan: After baking, hit the baking pan on the counter to flatten and avoid a cake-like texture.
- Push Edges In: Quickly push the edges in with a spoon or spatula right after baking for crispy edges and a chewy center.
- Garnish Tops: Press more chocolate chips into the tops for flavor and looks, and sprinkle with Maldon Sea Salt Flakes for a finishing touch!
- Use Room-Temp Ingredients: Let butter and eggs sit out for about 45 minutes for better mixing.
Favorite Cookie Baking Tools
- Silicone Liner: Bake cookies on a silicone tray liner for baking evenly and to prevent too-crispy bottoms.
- Food Scale: Use a food scale for the same cookie sizes and better flour measurements for better results.
- Mixer: A hand or stand mixer is important for getting the dough to the right consistency.
Storage
Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookie Storage
While most cookies taste best fresh from the oven, these taste even better at room temperature and have a richer pumpkin flavor the next day. Leave them not covered on a plate to keep them dry.
After baking, let them cool on a wire rack to stop the bottoms from getting soggy.
Use Leftover Pumpkin In One Of These:
- No-Bake Pumpkin Cheesecake with a graham cracker crust
- Pumpkin Spice Latte Steamer pumpkin spiced hot drink
- 7-Layer Pumpkin Bars with a yellow cake crust
- Pumpkin Creme Brûlée spiced creamy custard
- Pumpkin Cheesecake Bars with a caramel drizzle
Pumpkin Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies
Equipment
- large sheet pan,
- Parchment paper or a silicon baking mat
- Cooling Rack
Ingredients
- 12 tablespoons unsalted butter at room temperature, see note 1
- 1 cup light brown sugar lightly packed
- 1/2 cup granulated sugar
- 1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons canned pumpkin not pumpkin pie filling
- 1 large egg yolk discard or save the whites for another recipe
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
- 2 teaspoons pumpkin pie spice see note 2
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/2 teaspoon baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon salt
- 1-1/2 cups quick oats see note 3
- 1-1/2 cups flour
- 1/2 cup + 2 tablespoons miniature semi-sweet chocolate chips
- 1/2 cup milk chocolate chips or dark chocolate chips
Instructions
- Add room-temperature butter, brown sugar, and granulated sugar to a stand mixer with a whisk attachment. Beat until creamy, scraping the sides as needed. Add pumpkin, egg yolk, and vanilla, and mix to incorporate.
- Add cinnamon, pumpkin pie spice, baking soda, baking powder, salt, and quick oats to the mixture. Beat until combined. Add flour and mix until no streaks remain, then fold in both chocolate chips and mix.
- Cover and place the bowl of dough in the fridge for 1 hour.
- Roll chilled dough into large, 3-tablespoon balls or 58 grams (see note 4). Roll to be taller instead of wider and place on a parchment-lined tray. Batter should make 18–20 cookies. Chill dough balls in the fridge for 15–20 minutes. While dough balls are chilling, preheat oven to 350℉. Line a large sheet pan with parchment paper or a silicon baking mat.
- Add only 6 dough balls to a sheet pan at a time, spacing them out well. Bake 12–15 minutes or until lightly browned at the edges and slightly gooey in the center. These cookies are best slightly underbaked! Right out of the oven, bang the sheet pan on the counter a few times to flatten the cookies slightly.
- Optionally, right after banging the pan, quickly press cookie edges inward with the back of a spoon, then press a few extra chocolate chips on top.
- Let cookies rest on the pan for 5 minutes before transferring to a cooling rack. Repeat this process to bake all cookies. These cookies taste best at room temperature and even better the next day—the pumpkin flavor has intensified by then!
Video
Recipe Notes
Nutrition
Nutrition information is automatically calculated, so should only be used as an approximation.
These sound wonderful!
I feel like I have only had cakey pumpkin cookies. I would LOVE to try this!!
These cookies look fantastic, Chelsea! I love that you found a non-cakey version. Sounds so perfect for my pumpkin loving self!
Cakey or not, I love all forms of pumpkin oatmeal cookies
You have solved the age old problem of the pumpkin cookie, girl! I like cakey cookies sometimes but the best is a soft and gooey chocolate chip cookie! These are perfect!
I love pumpkin, chocolate, and cookies but I don’t love “cakey” cookies so I was THRILLED to see this recipe– can’t wait to try it this fall!! ๐
Yay!!! Hope you love these! ๐
Chelsea love that they are crispy in the outside and chewy in the inside!
I’m loving all your pumpkin recipes :)!
I do love a good cakey pumpkin cookie but I can totally get down with a chewy / crisp one too! The more pumpkin the better!
I canโt wait to try these once California accepts that fall is on itโs way and loses the 80 degree weather haha! ๐
You are so sweet; thank you Christine!! Oh gosh I can’t believe it is still so hot there!! Finally cooling down here ๐
Chelsea, would I be able to use whole wheat flour in these cookies instead of white flour? Trying to stay away from white flour.
Hey Joanne! I haven’t actually tried whole wheat flour in these so I can’t say for sure. I believe they would work okay, although the taste and texture will be quite different from white flour. Sorry to not be of more help!! I’d love to hear your results if you do try it ๐