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Meet the chef who created the ‘ perfect’ chocolate chip cookie

BRITISH PASTRY CHEF RAVNEET GILL HAS AMASSED SOCIAL MEDIA FANS WITH HER UNCONTESTE­D RECIPE

- LONDON BY CHARLOTTE DRUCKMAN

Calling your chocolate chip cookie “perfect” is a bold move. But British pastry chef Ravneet Gill had no problem doing it. So far, no one’s contested her claim.

At the end of March, shewent live on Instagram to bake her “perfect chocolate chip cookies,” from her first cookbook, The Pastry Chef’s Guide: The Secret to Successful Baking Every Time, which was published by Pavilion in Britain in the spring.

People got to baking and shared their results on Instagram; the photos showing a cookie split in two, with an ideal wet- sand crumb surroundin­g a glossy pull of viscous molten chocolate.

Gill, 29, reposted them all on her account. Nearly six months later, she’s amassed 43,000 followers and “inadverten­tly caused a lot of people to start making cookies and cakes,” she said. “It just sort of kickstarte­d a lot of people into realising that this is so easy.”

PURSUIT OF PASTRY

Eight years ago, after completing an undergradu­ate degree in psychology, Gill decided to pursue pastry, her mind set on making “flawless patisserie,” or as she describes it in her book, “the stuff that looks unreal because it’s so gorgeous.” She secured an apprentice­ship at a restaurant, picked up work at a chocolate shop and began taking classes at Le Cordon Bleu in London. From there, she writes in the book, she “leapt into kitchen after kitchen.”

In 2015, Gill started as a pastry chef at St. John, the London institutio­n, where there were no elaborate compositio­ns, garnishes or out- of- season ingredient­s. In that kitchen, she discovered the flawlessne­ss of a plate of honeyed madeleines served unadorned, straight out of the oven, and of a syrup drizzled British steamed sponge pudding enhanced with Irish stout. Versions of both recipes are in The Pastry Chef’s Guide. “She is very good at passing on her knowledge and sharing her trade secrets,” said Alcides Gauto, who worked with Gill at the restaurant Llewelyn’s, via email.

THEORY 101

Gill wrote the book for home cooks to “understand what it is they were doing and not be scared,” she said, and for chefs “who had more pastry knowledge to get to grips with it.”

She emphasised the importance of focusing on theory, something she feels most baking cookbooks skip over. Hers begins with “Pastry Theory 101,” which explains the most basic elements of baking, like butter, sugar, gelatin and leaveners, and how they function within recipes. Then she expands into the building blocks of pastry. The chapter on chocolate distinguis­hes ganache from cremeux; the one on custard, creme anglaise from creme patissiere.

So while you won’t find a recipe for a lemon meringue pie in her book, you’ll learn how to make a crust in one chapter, lemon curd in another and Italian meringue in a third. Apply all three skills to make the pie you’d like.

Beginners who don’t feel up to the challenge of tripartite confection­s can start with banana cake, rice pudding or those “perfect” cookies.

The cookies initially came from a chef she worked with at a private member’s club, who scribbled the formula on a piece of paper for her.

RECIPES GO MISSING

Later, when the recipe went missing, she reverse- engineered them, running countless trials in order to put them on the opening menu at Llewelyn’s in 2017.

Gill shared the results with her co- workers, asking them which sugar they preferred in the cookies, which shape, which texture, bringing rigor and determinat­ion to perfecting the recipe. That applies to projects beyond the kitchen, too: In 2018, she founded Countertal­k, a network that connects and supports hospitalit­y workers, and promotes jobs in healthy work environmen­ts.

SECRETS OF SUGAR

She landed on a blend of dark brown and caster ( or superfine) sugars, and discovered that resting the dough in the refrigerat­or yielded a more substantiv­e cookie ( as opposed to a thinner, chewier one with its butter seeped out). Rolling the dough into balls right away, as opposed to chilling it first, gave her the gentle domes you like to see in the center of a chocolate chip cookie.

One surprising thing is the omission of vanilla, a given in most chocolate chip cookie recipes, starting with the standard on the Nestle Toll House bag. Gill didn’t give it a second thought.

Since vanilla has become so pricey ( it’s now the second most expensive spice in the world), she has stopped adding it to recipes unless she wants to showcase its flavour— in a panna cotta, for instance, where its presence would be heightened. “It was an everyday ingredient, and nowit’s not,” she said. “It’s like a special- treat ingredient.”

The recipes caused a lot of people to start making cookies and cakes, into a lot of people realising that this is so easy.”

Ravneet Gill | British pastry chef

WHEN BEST IS BETTER

You won’t miss it. You may even prefer your chocolate chip cookies without vanilla going forward. The result is something that tastes closer to cookie dough - you get the flavour of the raw stuff, but the warmth, structure and caramelisa­tion that comes with baking. “One is never enough,” Gauto confirmed.

“They are the best chocolatec­hip cookies, actually, I think I’ve made,” said Felicity Spector, a journalist who tested out some of the cookbook’s recipes. “I’ve made lots of other ones.” Many would argue that “best” is even better than “perfect.”

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 ?? New York Times ?? Ravneet Gill gently shapes the cookie dough before chilling it for 12 hours before baking, at her London home. Gill ran countless tests to arrive at her version of the classic recipe.
New York Times Ravneet Gill gently shapes the cookie dough before chilling it for 12 hours before baking, at her London home. Gill ran countless tests to arrive at her version of the classic recipe.

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