Merken My sister called me in a panic the week before Easter, insisting we needed something more exciting than the usual sugar cookies for her kids. I suggested hiding something inside the dough itself—something that would make them gasp when they bit through the chocolate. That's when Cadbury Creme Eggs came to mind, and honestly, the moment those first cookies came out of the oven with that gooey surprise center still warm, I knew we'd stumbled onto something special. Now every spring someone asks me to make these, and I don't think I've ever said no.
I'll never forget watching my nephew take a bite at Easter brunch, his eyes going wide before he started grinning like he'd discovered buried treasure. Within seconds the whole table wanted one, and suddenly this felt less like a recipe and more like something I'd created that actually brought people together. That moment changed how I think about baking—it's not just about following steps, it's about creating little surprises that make someone's day a tiny bit better.
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Ingredients
- Unsalted Butter: One cup softened is your base for that tender, buttery texture that keeps these cookies from becoming dense or cakey.
- Brown Sugar und Granulated Sugar: The brown sugar brings moisture and a subtle molasses flavor, while the granulated sugar helps them crisp slightly at the edges.
- Eggs: Two large ones bind everything together and create that slight lift in the center while keeping the edges tender.
- Vanilla Extract: Two teaspoons might seem modest, but they're what keeps the cookie flavor from tasting one-dimensional.
- All-purpose Flour: Three cups gives structure without being too heavy; measure by spooning and leveling, not scooping straight from the bag.
- Baking Soda: Just one teaspoon for gentle rise and that slight chew in the texture.
- Salt: A half teaspoon that nobody notices but everyone tastes—it rounds out the sweetness.
- Semisweet Chocolate Chips: One and a half cups adds richness, though you can swap these for milk or dark depending on your mood.
- Mini Cadbury Creme Eggs: Twelve chilled ones are your treasure; chilling them beforehand stops them from leaking during baking.
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Instructions
- Warm up your oven and prep:
- Set your oven to 350°F and line two baking sheets with parchment paper so nothing sticks later. This takes two minutes but saves you from scrambling once dough is ready.
- Cream the butter and sugars:
- In a large bowl, beat the softened butter with both sugars until it's light, fluffy, and pale—about two to three minutes with an electric mixer. You'll notice the mixture goes from dense to almost cloud-like; that's when you know you've got enough air in there.
- Add eggs and vanilla:
- Drop in one egg, mix it in completely, then add the second egg and vanilla extract. The mixture might look separated for a moment, but keep mixing and it'll come back together silky and smooth.
- Combine dry ingredients separately:
- In another bowl, whisk together your flour, baking soda, and salt so everything's evenly distributed. This small step prevents pockets of baking soda tasting metallic in your finished cookies.
- Bring wet and dry together:
- Pour the dry mixture into the wet ingredients and mix just until you don't see white streaks of flour anymore—don't overwork it or your cookies will be tough. Stop as soon as it's combined.
- Fold in chocolate chips:
- Gently stir in your chocolate chips so they're scattered throughout without breaking them apart. A few crushed chips are fine, but mostly you want them whole.
- Encase the eggs:
- Scoop about two tablespoons of dough into your palm, flatten it into a thin disk, place a cold Cadbury egg in the center, then wrap the dough completely around it so no egg shows through. Press gently to seal the edges so nothing leaks while baking.
- Space them out:
- Place each stuffed dough ball on your prepared baking sheets about two inches apart because they'll spread slightly as they bake. You should fit about six per sheet.
- Bake until golden:
- Bake for twelve to fourteen minutes until the edges are golden brown but the center still looks slightly underbaked. This is the secret to keeping them chewy—they'll firm up as they cool.
- Cool with patience:
- Let them sit on the baking sheet for five minutes so they firm up enough to move without falling apart, then transfer to a wire rack. The egg center will still be warm and gooey inside, which is exactly what you want.
Merken There's a moment right when you bite into one of these cookies, still warm, where you taste the butter and chocolate and then suddenly hit that unexpected smooth creme center, and that's when you understand why people keep asking you to make them. It's not fancy, it's not complicated, but it's the kind of thing that makes someone remember your kitchen on a random Tuesday in June because they're craving what you made.
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The Secret to Keeping Eggs Cold Enough
I learned this after my first attempt when the eggs started leaking into the dough. The answer is simpler than you'd think: unwrap your Cadbury eggs and stick them in the freezer for at least thirty minutes before you even start making the dough. Some people keep them in a bowl of ice while they're wrapping, which also works beautifully. If your kitchen is particularly warm, pop your finished dough balls in the fridge for ten minutes before baking to give the eggs an extra buffer.
Serving These Warm is Not Negotiable
The magic happens when the cookie is still warm because that's when the egg center is at its most gloriously gooey. Cold cookies are pleasant enough, but a warm one fresh from the rack with that creamy center still flowing is something else entirely. I've found that serving them within an hour of baking gives you that perfect window where they're still soft but sturdy enough to hold together.
Why These Became My Easter Tradition
Every Easter someone asks if I'm bringing these, and I always do because they're the one thing that makes kids forget about plastic eggs hidden in the yard. They're fun to make, impossible to forget once you've tried one, and they taste like a celebration in cookie form. If you're looking for something that goes beyond the typical holiday recipe, this is it.
- Make an extra batch and freeze the unbaked dough balls for up to three weeks—bake from frozen, just add two extra minutes.
- Try swapping the Cadbury eggs for Cadbury caramel eggs in autumn for a completely different flavor experience.
- Double the recipe and bring them to your next gathering, because nobody ever leaves empty-handed.
Merken These cookies are proof that sometimes the best recipes come from listening to what someone needs and trusting your kitchen instincts. Make them, share them, and watch people's faces light up when they discover what's inside.
Fragen rund um das Rezept
- → Wie bleibt der Kern im Cookie flüssig?
Das Cadbury Egg wird vor dem Einwickeln gekühlt, sodass es beim Backen nicht komplett schmilzt und eine cremige Mitte behält.
- → Kann ich andere Schokolade verwenden?
Ja, milde oder dunkle Schokolade können die Schoko-Chips ersetzen, um den Geschmack nach Belieben anzupassen.
- → Wie lange sollten die Cookies abkühlen?
Nach dem Backen sollten die Cookies etwa 5 Minuten auf dem Blech kühlen, bevor sie auf ein Gitter gelegt werden.
- → Lassen sich die Cookies einfrieren?
Ja, ungebackener Teig mit gefüllten Eiern kann portionsweise eingefroren und bei Bedarf frisch gebacken werden.
- → Wie erreiche ich weiche Cookies mit knusprigen Rändern?
Die Backzeit sollte 12–14 Minuten nicht überschreiten, so bleiben die Ränder goldbraun und der Kern weich.