Alert: Dorie Greenspan has a new version of her most famous recipe
Her World Peace Cookies are icons. So why in the world did she mess with perfection?

Whenever something bad happens to someone I love, my first reaction is to bake. Not just any recipe, though. When I need to lift someone’s spirits or bring them a spark of joy, I always make Dorie Greenspan’s World Peace Cookies.
For many bakers (including plenty of those at King Arthur!) these cookies are legendary. “These are the chocolate-on-chocolate cookies of your wildest dreams,” raves my colleague PJ Hamel, a fellow World Peace Cookie enthusiast.
So when we flipped through Dorie’s new cookbook, Baking with Dorie, and saw she was debuting a new 2.0 version of her classic cookie, we were thrilled. I’m not ashamed to say I let out an audible yell. (Heads up: We only recommend the cookbooks that we, as bakers, truly love. When you buy through external links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission.)
As Dorie recounts to me, the original recipe for World Peace Cookies dates back decades, to when her friend, Parisian pastry chef Pierre Hermé, gave her his recipe for chocolate sablés. “And it was perfect,” she remembers.
After testing and translating the recipe for American kitchens, she renamed them World Peace Cookies when her neighbor suggested the name. From there, they became a beloved staple in many a baker’s kitchen, made around the world and tweaked to individual tastes throughout the years. “If I knew this was going to happen, or I knew how to make things that would have this kind of effect, I’d do it more often,” says Dorie. “But this is kind of magical.”
With a name like “World Peace Cookies,” these have to be good. And they are, almost surprisingly so given their fairly straightforward ingredients. “I remember being excited at how such a simple list of ingredients could come together to create such an astonishingly tasty cookie,” recalls PJ.
They start with creamed butter and sugar (including brown sugar for additional depth of flavor), then flour, cocoa powder, and a dose of salt are added to form a crumbly dough studded with chopped chocolate. The dough is rolled into a log, chilled, then sliced into thick rounds to bake.
Overall, nothing about this recipe jumps out as particularly groundbreaking, but the resulting cookies are so good you won’t be able to stop thinking about them. They’re deeply chocolaty, rich without being decadent, and more flavorful than sweet. They have a sandy, buttery texture, though it’s more soft than shortbread, with a slight chew thanks in part to the brown sugar.
These cookies make you appreciate the hallmark of a truly great recipe: simple, straightforward, and practical, with a result that’s way more than the sum of its parts. Dorie and I both agree that, against all odds, they really are worthy of such a lofty name.
So was it really necessary to mess with perfection?
As she explains to me, Dorie occasionally experimented with tweaks to the recipe throughout the years, trying everything from peanut butter chips to mint. But in the end, “There’s no point in changing what’s perfect,” she says. And she left the World Peace Cookies untouched.
So when her friend Charlotte Druckman approached Dorie about developing a new version for her book Women on Food, Dorie’s first reaction was no. “And I thought I meant it,” she says. But the idea nagged at her, and she found herself thinking about how she could make this cookie, familiar to bakers everywhere, surprising. “Then,” she says, “I got really excited about it.”
Building off Charlotte’s work, Dorie started brainstorming ingredients and flavors that represented the qualities she admired in women, including “rye flour for groundedness; cocoa nibs to represent strength; pepper for a touch of unpredictability; and raspberries for sharpness and verve,” as she writes in the accompanying headnotes in her book.
In the end, “These ingredients in this combination were worthy,” Dorie says. “Worthy of being part of the World Peace Cookie.”
Dorie says that developing a 2.0 version has since freed her to start playing around with the recipe in her kitchen. So can we expect a 3.0 version anytime soon? While she’s not making any promises, “The door is open,” she says coyly.
For now, we can bake and enjoy her World Peace Cookies 2.0 while we wait for a new 3.0 twist to come.
Cover photo from Baking with Dorie.
April 3, 2024 at 11:12am
Just made a batch of Dories original world peace cookies. Best cookies I’ve ever made. I recommend rolling out the dough and using a round cutter prior to freezing the dough. My first attempt were also a bit crumbly but could be shaped using the cutter and the back of a teaspoon while still hot out of the oven. Now I need to buy a freeze dryer to freeze dry raspberries!!! Baking can be dangerously addictive!
April 4, 2024 at 3:50pm
In reply to Just made a batch of Dories… by David Chambers (not verified)
Hi David! We are thrilled to hear how much you enjoyed them...they really are fantastic! Happy Baking
August 7, 2022 at 6:20pm
These are fantastic! Obviously, I love the World Peace Cookies, but adding rye and raspberries and pepper turns them into something amazing.
And if you have some spare ice cream, they make great ice cream sandwiches too...
March 30, 2022 at 3:24pm
I love this cookie and it’s history! You have to have patience with this recipe and they are all not going to look the same. I picked this recipe from bake from scratch Jan/Feb 2022 issue for our cookie exchange lunch we finally were going to be able to have. Of course I picked it before the war in Ukraine, now it was very appropriate, decorated bags with their colors of ribbon. Thank you Dorie!
November 30, 2021 at 10:43am
The dough was extremely crumbly and didn’t hold together. Not sure what I did wrong but more the half of the cookies broke into pieces.
December 1, 2021 at 6:03pm
In reply to The dough was extremely… by Brucello (not verified)
Sorry this recipe didn't work out for you, Brucello! This sounds like a great time to give our baker's hotline a call. They can be reached at (855) 371-2253 and are open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. seven days a week excluding holidays. We look forward to your call!
November 18, 2021 at 8:52pm
I would like to make these GF, what changes do I need? I do have King Arthur GF flour.
November 20, 2021 at 2:20pm
In reply to I would like to make these… by Ginny (not verified)
Hi Ginny, you can generally substitute our Gluten-Free Measure for Measure flour 1:1 for unbleached all-purpose flour in cookies, cakes, muffins and other non-yeasted recipes. However, this cookie recipe also calls for rye flour, which makes it a bit more tricky. Since the amount of rye flour called for is only 1/2 cup (53g), it should work fine to substitute an equal amount of Measure for Measure flour, although the flavor and texture of the cookies will definitely be a bit different. If you're baking for someone with Celiac disease or someone who is highly sensitive to gluten, then you should also be sure that your other ingredients are certified gluten-free. Baking time/temperature should be about the same, but sometimes gluten-free baked goods take a bit longer to bake.
November 14, 2021 at 12:10am
just give the recipe! Skip the rambling introduction. Most of us don't care.
I wanted the recipe but got bored. I guess I'll live without it.
November 14, 2021 at 11:56am
In reply to just give the recipe! Skip… by Vondi (not verified)
We're happy you're so eager to bake! If you want to dive right in simply head over to our recipe section (https://www.kingarthurbaking.com/recipes/world-peace-cookies-20-recipe) and start mixing!
Pagination