Chocolate Wafer Cookies Recipe - Smells Like Home (2024)

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Homemade chocolate wafer cookies: Ditch the store-bought Nabisco wafers and EASILY make your own for pie and cheesecake crusts, sandwich cookies, or icebox cakes.

Chocolate Wafer Cookies Recipe - Smells Like Home (1)

Since scratch baking is such an important aspect of what I do in my kitchen, it’s really no surprise that I should find and fall head over heels in love with a version of homemade chocolate wafer cookies that perfectly mimics the packaged and hard-to-find Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers (especially if you don’t live in the US!).

You already know my feelings on making graham crackers, Wheat Thins, and Oreos (to name a few) at home so to that end, I knew I would love making chocolate wafers at home too.

What are Chocolate Wafer Cookies?

Chocolate wafer cookies are thin, light, crispy, and intensely chocolatey cookies. They are often crushed up into cookie crumbs to make crusts for cheesecakes and pies, or layered with fillings to make icebox cakes and ice cream sandwiches.

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Ingredients for Chocolate Wafer Cookies

The ingredients for these cookies are just about as basic as basic gets for cookies. To make these cookies, you’ll need:

  • all-purpose flour
  • granulated sugar
  • dark unsweetened cocoa powder
  • baking soda
  • salt
  • unsalted butter
  • milk
  • vanilla

If you have a gluten-free flour you like to use for baking, I’m sure that would work fine here too.

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How to Make Chocolate Wafer Cookies

To make these delicious little cookies, you’re going to need a food processor. Here’s what you’ll do:

  1. Whir the dry ingredients around in the food processor until combined.
  2. Drop pieces of the butter in and pulse until large chunks of dough form.
  3. Drizzle a mixture of milk and vanilla in through the feed tube while the processor is running. Process until the dough comes together fully.
  4. Transfer the dough to the counter and knead it together for a few seconds.
  5. Shape the dough into a log, divide the log in half, and wrap each half in plastic wrap.
  6. Refrigerate for at least 2 hours or up to 1 week. Freeze for up to 2 months.
  7. When you’re ready to bake, slice the logs into 1/8-inch thick rounds, line them up on a baking sheet, and bake!

Slice and Bake Chocolate Wafer Cookies

These cookies are surprisingly easy to make into very thin cookies. Just like the slice and bake cookies you can buy in a tube in the grocery store, you will roll your homemade cookie dough into a log and chill it.

After 2 hours, the dough will be cold enough to slice into thin rounds. And it cuts like a dream! You’ll place the rounds on a parchment-lined baking sheet and bake them off for just a couple of minutes!

Easy peasy slice and bake chocolate wafer cookies!

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What can you make with chocolate wafer cookies?

Ground up in a food processor for a cheesecake’s cookie crust or the base of a peanut butter pie, you won’t be sorry you spent a few extra minutes making these slice and bake chocolate gems. I’ve also used them as a garnish crumbled up on top of a chocolate sheet cake.

Icebox cakes and cupcakes are usually made with chocolate wafer cookies too. And man do I love icebox cakes!

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For an icebox cake or icebox cupcake, you layer the chocolate wafers with a filling like whipped cream or pudding. These crispy chocolate cookies soften from the moisture in the filling and turn into thin chocolate cake-like layers.

You need to allow these crunchy wafer cookies to soften so that you can easily cut through the cake without the cookies flopping all over the place around the knife.

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You can also use chocolate wafer cookies to make ice cream sandwiches! YES!! Simply scoop some softened ice cream on top of one cookie and press another cookie on top of the ice cream.

Place the ice cream sandwiches on a parchment-lined baking sheet and freeze them for about 12 hours. Same as with the icebox cake, you want to let the cookies soften before you eat these ice cream sandwiches so the cookies don’t crumble all over the place.

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What kind of cocoa is best for chocolate wafer cookies?

The best kind of cocoa to make chocolate wafers with is dark unsweetened cocoa. This cocoa helps to make the cookie richly flavored and it gives the cookies a deep and dark chocolate color.

Since there is a fair amount of sugar in this recipe, you want to make sure you use unsweetened cocoa and not sweetened cocoa or the cookies will turn out too sweet.

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You can use either regular unsweetened cocoa or Dutch-processed. Either way, you want to use dark cocoa. I have used all of these cocoas and always have good results:

The price points for these types of cocoa vary from lowest to highest on the list but I like them all equally for these cookies.

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Freezing Chocolate Wafer Dough

One of the best things about slice and bake cookies is that you can make the dough and store it in the freezer for months and that goes for this chocolate wafer dough, too. Simply roll the dough into a log and wrap it tightly in plastic wrap.

Allow the dough to thaw in the fridge overnight before you slice it.

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Homemade Chocolate Wafer Cookies

Yield: about 6 dozen 1 ¼-inch (diameter) by 1/8-inch (thickness) cookies

Active Prep Time: 30 minutes

Dough Chilling Time: 2 hours

Bake Time: 12 minutes

Total Time: 2 hours 42 minutes

Homemade chocolate wafer cookies are THE best cookies for chocolate pie and cheesecake crusts, sandwich cookies, and icebox cakes. Ditch the store-bought, hard-to-find version and EASILY make your own!

Ingredients

  • 1 ½ cups (6.75 ounces) all-purpose flour
  • ¾ cup (2.4 ounces) dark unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 1 cup plus 2 tbsp sugar
  • ¼ tsp salt
  • ¼ teaspoon baking soda
  • 14 tbsp (1 ¾ sticks) unsalted butter, slightly softened
  • 3 tbsp whole milk
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract

Instructions

  1. In the bowl of a food processor fitted with the metal blade, add the flour, cocoa powder, sugar, salt, and baking soda. Pulse the ingredients a few times to combine thoroughly. Dollop the butter around the dry ingredients and pulse a few more times until the butter starts to incorporate and large chunks begin to form. Mix the milk and vanilla together in a small bowl. With the mixer running, pour the milk mixture into the feeding tube in a slow and even stream until the cookie crumb mixture starts to form together and ball up on the sides of the bowl.
  2. Transfer the cookie dough to a work surface and knead it a couple of times to fully incorporate all of the ingredients. Divide the dough in half and shape each half into a long and narrow log, about 1 ¼ inches to 1 ¾ inches in diameter. Depending on how large you want your wafer cookies to be will determine how thick to form the log. Wrap each log in plastic wrap and refrigerate for at least 2 hours or up to a week.
  3. Position the oven racks to the upper and lower thirds of the oven. Preheat oven to 350° F. Line baking sheets with parchment paper.
  4. Slice the dough logs into approximately ⅛-inch thick slices and lay the dough rounds on the baking sheets about 1 inch apart. I formed my dough into 1 ¼-inch diameter logs and was able to fit 24 cookies on each of my baking sheets.
  5. Bake for 10-12 minutes, rotating pans from back to front and top to bottom halfway through the baking time. The cookies will be finished baking about 1 ½ minutes after the puffed-up dough deflates so try to keep an eye on them. Cool the cookies on the baking sheets on wire racks for 5 minutes then transfer the cookies to the racks to cool completely – they will crisp up as they cool.

Storage: The cookies will keep for up to a week at room temperature if kept in an airtight container. Supposedly they freeze really well too but I haven’t tried it myself.

Notes

If you plan to use these cookies in place of store-bought chocolate wafer cookies for a chocolate cheesecake or pie crust, cut out 1 to 2 tablespoons of the suggested amount of melted butter in the crust recipe. These chocolate wafer cookies contain a fair amount of butter and too much added butter in the ground up cookies crumbs will yield an absurdly wet mass of crumbs.Trust me.

Nine ounces of these cookies (or about ⅔ of the recipe) will yield as much as 1 package of store-bought wafer cookies contain.

adapted from Pure Dessert by Alice Medrich via Smitten Kitchen

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Chocolate Wafer Cookies Recipe - Smells Like Home (2024)

FAQs

Why did Nabisco discontinue chocolate wafer cookies? ›

Nabisco Old Fashioned Chocolate Wafers have been a staple in our homes for generations. They are a key ingredient in scores of desserts. Unfortunately, Nabisco has "removed them from the product line to make room for new innovations." How is there not "room" for this beloved and much used cookie in their product line?

Is there a substitute for Nabisco chocolate wafers? ›

But they did recommend a substitute. “We have found that consumers have enjoyed swapping in Oreo Thins for many of the recipe uses of our Famous Chocolate Wafers,” said Jane Corcoan, a spokesperson for Mondelēz International, the parent company of Nabisco.

What are the ingredients in Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers? ›

INGREDIENTS: UNBLEACHED ENRICHED FLOUR (WHEAT FLOUR, NIACIN, REDUCED IRON, THIAMINE MONONITRATE {VITAMIN B1}, RIBOFLAVIN {VITAMIN B2}, FOLIC ACID), SUGAR, CANOLA OIL, COCOA (PROCESSED WITH ALKALI), HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, BAKING SODA, SALT, SOY LECITHIN, ARTIFICIAL FLAVOR.

What are the ingredients in Mr Christie chocolate wafers? ›

WHEAT FLOUR, SUGAR, VEGETABLE OIL, COCOA, GLUCOSE-FRUCTOSE, BAKING SODA, SALT, SOY LECITHIN, ARTIFICIAL FLAVOUR. Open Packet And Enjoy!

Does Nabisco still make famous chocolate wafer cookies? ›

Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafer Cookies are discontinued! Use this recipe to EASILY make your own for icebox cakes, pie/cheesecake crusts, or sandwich cookies.

Can Nabisco chocolate wafers be frozen? ›

A: Yes they can be frozen.

Can I substitute chocolate wafers for chocolate chips? ›

While chocolate chips and chocolate wafers are similar and can often be used interchangeably in recipes, there are some important differences between the two that affect their use in baked goods.

Are Nabisco Nilla wafers discontinued? ›

They stopped making them a few years back, around 2021. The US. They were discontinued in Canada. There is a comparable version at Bulk Barn called KinniKinnick gluten free vanilla wafers.

What aisle are chocolate wafers in? ›

First, to find the chocolate wafers, don't look on the cookie aisle. Many stores stock them on the ice cream aisle, along with the chocolate syrups and ice cream toppings. Second, if the recipe doesn't call for removing the Oreo filling, leave it in.

What are wafer cookies made of? ›

Wafers are formed from flour and water dispersions (batter) with small amounts of fat, sugar, salt and sodium bicarbonate, which are mixed and then confined in preheated moulds3.

What is the history of chocolate wafers? ›

While cookies and pastries containing cocoa have been produced for centuries, the commercial version of the chocolate wafer got its start back in 1924, when the National Biscuit Company (now simply known as Nabisco) began selling them in tins along with sugar wafers and ginger wafers.

What happened to Nabisco chocolate wafers? ›

Earlier this year, Nabisco discontinued its Famous Chocolate Wafers, one year short of the cookie's 100th anniversary. Makers of icebox cakes and chocolate crusts were incensed, and you know what happens when a bunch of bakers get outraged? They riot in the streets!

What are the ingredients in white chocolate wafers? ›

Ingredients: Sugar, Vegetable oil (palm kernel oil, hydrogenated palm kernel oil and cottonseeds oil), Non-fat dry milk, Milk, Milk glyceryl lacto esters of fatty acid, Soy lecithin, salt, Artificial flavour. Contains: Milk, Soy.

What's the difference between chocolate chips and chocolate wafers? ›

Chocolate Melting Wafers are small disk-like pieces of chocolate that are preferable for melting (over chocolate chips) because they have no stabilizers in them. These are great for dipping truffles and candy or whenever you need to melt chocolate for baking.

Will Nabisco bring back chocolate wafers? ›

Icebox cake fans and cookie pie crust lovers are in mourning: Nabisco Famous Chocolate Wafers are no more. Introduced in 1924 and responsible for popularizing icebox cakes, the cookies were “delisted” this year according to a representative from Mondelez International, Nabisco's parent company.

What happened to Nabisco? ›

In 1988 the Philip Morris Companies acquired Kraft, Inc., a large maker of cheeses and grocery products, and in 2000 it purchased Nabisco, maker of snacks such as Oreo cookies and Ritz crackers. All these acquisitions were merged under what eventually became Kraft Foods Inc.

What happened to Nabisco brand? ›

In 2000, Philip Morris Companies Inc. acquired Nabisco and merged it with Kraft Foods in one of the largest mergers in the food industry.

Why were chocolate chip cookies a mistake? ›

The chocolate chip cookie was created by accident.

In the 1930s, Ruth Wakefield, owner of the Toll House Inn in Whitman, Massachusetts, added broken chocolate bar pieces into her cookie batter thinking that they would melt. Instead, the classic dessert was born.

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