Best Vegan Pistachio Cream Chocolate Chip Cookies I’ve Made
These pistachio cream chocolate chip cookies hide a spoonful of creamy pistachio inside thick, chewy dough packed with dark chocolate.

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This recipe came together on a quiet night that only made sense afterward. Leo was already asleep with his stuffed dinosaur tucked under one arm, and Lin was negotiating for one more glass of water.
The dishwasher hummed. My husband sat at the table with a book, present enough to keep me company, distant enough to let the kitchen feel like my own. I had promised dessert without checking the fridge first, a familiar mistake.

There was no butter. No eggs. The baking drawer was empty where it usually matters. What I did have felt oddly precise: a half-open jar of pistachio cream from another project, two kinds of sugar that never seem to run out here, olive oil that moves easily between baking and cooking, and my kitchen scale still on the counter. This was the moment where habit either sends you out the door or keeps you grounded. I stayed.
Vegan baking has trained me to rely on structure instead of tradition. Olive oil works when you account for its liquid nature. Applesauce steps in when used with care, its pectin quietly doing the work eggs usually handle. These lessons come slowly, the same way I learned to fold pistachio hamantaschen without tearing the dough or churn pistachio ice cream until it lands in that narrow space between soft and scoopable.
I built the dough deliberately, tasting and adjusting until the sugars could carry dark chocolate without losing balance. Only then did I add the pistachio cream. Pistachio has followed me through years of baking, from pistachio cranberry cookies that mark colder months to holiday tables shaped by Middle Eastern flavors and memories of home.

The freezing step came after a few unruly trays where the filling escaped. Freezing the pistachio cream flat and sealing it into the dough solved that. The center stayed put. The cookies looked planned, though they came from knowing dough well enough to trust it.
Now these cookies sit alongside the pistachio recipes I return to again and again, part of the same ongoing story, written with flour on the counter and children waiting nearby.
Ingredients

- Unsweetened applesauce – The backbone of the dough. Applesauce replaces eggs, bringing moisture and structure through its natural pectin. I rely on it often in vegan baking because it behaves predictably and keeps cookies thick instead of crumbly. Mashed ripe banana can work in a pinch, though it will shift the flavor and soften the crumb more than applesauce does.
- Pistachio cream – Pistachio cream brings richness and depth that carries through the chocolate without getting lost. Many store-bought versions contain dairy, so checking labels matters. A homemade pistachio paste blended smoothly with a little sweetener can stand in if needed.
- Chopped dark chocolate – Chopped chocolate melts into uneven pockets, giving contrast from bite to bite. I avoid chocolate chips here because they hold their shape too well and do not integrate the same way. Any good-quality dark chocolate bar works. If needed, dairy-free chocolate chunks are fine, though the melt will be slightly firmer.
See the recipe card for full list and exact quantities.
How to Make Vegan Pistachio Cream Chocolate Chip Cookies

These pistachio cookies depend on a few quiet details, from how you mix the cookie dough to how you tuck in the pistachio spread. This is what to look for at each stage to make this recipe with the best texture, so every bite has crisp edges, a soft center, and a pocket of creamy pistachio:
Freeze the Pistachio Cream

You want it solid enough to cut or break into small pieces without smearing. If it is still soft, it will ooze out of the cookies in the oven instead of staying in the middle.
Emulsify the Wet Ingredients


The mixture should look glossy and cohesive, not separated or streaky. If you see oil pooling around the edges, keep mixing until it thickens slightly and looks like a loose caramel. This step sets up the structure for the dough later.
Bring the Dough Together


The dough should feel very thick and dense but still workable with a spoon. If it feels dry and crumbly or you see loose flour that will not mix in, add a small splash of non dairy milk and stir again. The goal is a heavy dough that clumps together easily without being sticky.
Fold in the Chocolate and Pistachios


If everything gathers in one spot, use your hands briefly to distribute them evenly, then stop so you do not overwork the dough.
Chill the Dough
Cover the bowl and chill for at least 30 minutes. When you check it, the dough should feel firmer and easier to roll into balls without sticking to your hands. If you skip or rush this step, the cookies can spread too much and the filling may escape.
Shape and Fill the Cookies


You should not see any green peeking through. Any cracks or gaps can open in the oven and leak filling. Place the filled dough balls on parchment-lined baking sheets with space between them, as they will spread slightly.
Bake Until Edges Are Set

This usually happens around the 11 to 13 minute mark. If the entire surface looks browned, they have gone too far and will be more crisp than chewy.
Let the Cookies Set and Cool

During this time, they will settle, the centers will finish cooking gently, and the pistachio filling will relax without becoming runny. Moving them too early can cause them to break or collapse.
Once they feel set enough to lift with a spatula, transfer them to a cooling rack. When fully cooled, the edges should feel crisp to the touch, the centers soft, and the hidden pistachio cream slightly gooey when you break one open.
Storage

Once the pistachio cream chocolate chip cookies are completely cool, transfer them to an airtight container. At room temperature, they keep their crisp edges and soft centers for about 3 days. If your kitchen runs hot or humid, layer the cookies between pieces of parchment so the pistachio centers do not stick together, and keep the container in a cooler spot away from direct sunlight.

For longer storage, these cookies freeze well. Arrange them in a single layer on a tray and freeze until firm, then move them to a freezer-safe bag or container with parchment between layers. This keeps the pistachio cream centers intact and helps prevent freezer odors from creeping in. They can be frozen for up to 1 month. To serve, thaw at room temperature until the centers feel soft again; there is no need to reheat, and the texture stays close to freshly baked.
Top Tips
Use a scale for consistent texture – this dough changes quickly with even small shifts in flour or oil. I get the most reliable results when I weigh ingredients instead of scooping. It is the difference between a dough that rolls easily around the pistachio cream and one that feels sticky or dry. If your first batch feels off, check your measurements before changing the recipe.
Test-bake one cookie first if you can – when I work with a new brand of pistachio cream or applesauce, I bake a single test cookie. Watch how it spreads, how the center sets, and how the pistachio filling behaves. If it spreads too far, chill the dough longer or make the next cookies slightly taller. If it barely moves, flatten the dough balls a little before baking.
Recipe
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Pistachio Cream Chocolate Chip Cookies
Thick vegan pistachio cream chocolate chip cookies stuffed with creamy pistachio and dark chocolate chunks
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Ingredients
- ½ cup / 120ml olive oil or neutral oil or a 50/50 blend
- ¾ cup / 155g dark brown sugar
- ½ cup / 100g granulated sugar
- ⅓ cup / 77ml unsweetened applesauce
- 1 tsp / 5ml vanilla extract
- 2 ½ cups / 300g all-purpose flour
- 1 teaspoon /5g baking soda
- ½ teaspoon / 3g salt
- ¾ cup / 120g chopped dark chocolate or dark chocolate chunks
- ⅓ cup / 40g chopped pistachios
- ½ cup / 120 pistachio cream
Instructions
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Spread the pistachio cream in a thin, even layer on parchment or in a shallow container. Freeze until firm. It should be solid enough to cut or break into small pieces without smearing on your fingers.
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In a large bowl, add the oil, dark brown sugar, granulated sugar, applesauce, and vanilla. Beat on low with a hand mixer for about 2 minutes. The mixture should look glossy and smooth, with no puddles of oil on top.
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Sprinkle the flour, baking soda, and salt over the wet mixture. Stir with a spatula until no streaks of flour remain. The cookie dough will be thick and heavy, but it should still come together in clumps. If it feels dry and crumbly, add 1–2 tablespoons of non dairy milk and stir again.
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Gently fold in the chopped dark chocolate and pistachios until they are evenly spread through the dough. Every scoop of dough should have visible pieces of chocolate and nuts.
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Cover the bowl and chill the dough in the fridge for at least 30 minutes. When you take it out, it should feel firmer and easier to roll into balls without sticking too much to your hands.
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Preheat the oven to 350°F (175°C). Line baking sheets with parchment paper so the cookies release cleanly and the bottoms do not brown too fast.
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Scoop about 2 tablespoons of dough for each cookie and roll into smooth balls. Press a deep well into the center of each ball. Add a heaping teaspoon of frozen pistachio cream into the well, then pinch the dough closed over it so the filling is completely sealed. You should not see the pistachio cream from the outside.
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Place the filled dough balls on the lined baking sheets with about 2–3 inches between them. They will spread a little as they bake.
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Bake for 11–13 minutes. Watch for lightly golden edges while the centers still look pale and slightly puffed. If the tops are deeply browned, they have gone a bit long and will be crisper.
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Let the cookies sit on the baking sheet for at least 10 minutes. They will settle and the pistachio center will thicken as they cool. When they feel sturdy enough to lift, transfer them to a cooling rack to cool completely.
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Once cool, store the cookies in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 3 days, or freeze for up to 1 month. Let frozen cookies thaw at room temperature so the centers soften again.
Nutrition
Serving: 50gCalories: 236kcalCarbohydrates: 31gProtein: 3gFat: 11gSaturated Fat: 1gPolyunsaturated Fat: 1gMonounsaturated Fat: 4gSodium: 135mgPotassium: 100mgFiber: 2gSugar: 17gVitamin A: 5IUCalcium: 30mgIron: 1.5mg





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