These Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Blondies are the perfect balance of chewy and cakey and are from my upcoming cookbook, Even Better Brownies. Loaded with both white & dark chocolate chips, these blondie bars are a fun fall treat to make for the entire family to enjoy!
When I was writing Even Better Brownies, I knew I wanted to include recipes that could be made any time of year, as well as seasonal treats. And come fall/October, I’m usually looking for a way to bake with pumpkin (that isn’t traditional pumpkin pie); since I already had a recipe for Pumpkin Swirl Brownies, these Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Blondies were the next logical conclusion.
If you’re looking for a classic moist, lightly spiced, chocolate chip pumpkin bar, square, or blondie, this is the one. It’s not too cakey, not too gooey, perfectly spiced, and perfectly chipped. It’s ideal for a coffee break, the lunchbox, after school, or just because it’s fall. I won’t pretend I haven’t eaten one for breakfast ?
For these Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Blondies, you need some pretty basic pantry ingredients:
Now, let’s make these blondies! For full details on how to make these pumpkin chocolate chip blondies, see the recipe card down below.
I wouldn’t recommend it. It’s doing more than lending a sweet flavor; it’s actually helping with the structure of the overall blondie. I promise the blondies themselves aren’t overly sweet, so just follow the recipe as is!
Technically, yes you can halve the recipe and bake it in an 8×8-inch pan… but it’s not ideal/you may have some ingredients go to waste. I developed this recipe so that it would use an entire can (15 oz) of pumpkin puree; so halving the recipe means you’ll have leftover pumpkin to deal with storing (although that’s not the end of the world). Additionally, this recipe calls for only one egg. In order to halve it, you’ll have to whisk the egg in a small bowl until the white and the yolk are combined, and then take two tablespoons of that whisked egg mixture and add it to the batter. Lastly, you’ll just want to watch the bake time. I’d start by checking for doneness around 28-30 minutes and every 2 minutes afterwards until you achieve moist crumbs on a toothpick.
If you used cup measures as opposed to weight measures, there’s a larger chance your blondies will come out dry. Why? As weird as this sounds, measuring cups aren’t as accurate as you think. For example, somebody who scoops the measuring cup into the flour will have way more than somebody who uses a spoon to scoop the flour into the same sized measuring cup. This is why you should really be measuring by weight with a kitchen scale instead—it’s much more reliable and completely eliminates any inconsistencies.
It sounds like you bought pumpkin pie filling instead of plain pumpkin puree! Pumpkin pie filling is a mixture of cooked, mashed winter squash that is blended with sweetener and spices… meaning you added spices and sugar to a mixture that was already spiced and sweetened. You’ll have to start over with the recipe and make sure to use plain pumpkin puree next time!
If you like what you taste/see here, be sure to preorder my cookbook! ?
Pumpkin Spice Cupcakes w/ Maple Brown Butter Buttercream Frosting
Pumpkin Swirl Brownies
Apple Cinnamon Muffins
Baked Apple Cider Donuts
Chai Spiced Cinnamon Rolls
Salted Caramel Swirl Cheesecake Bars
Spiced Maple Pecan Scones
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I was planning on trying the recipe however when i started to make them i noticed the majority is measured out in grams, or at least i think thats what the "g" ment behind the majority of your ingrediants. Sorry to say, it didnt happen. Not everyone measures ingrediants out like that. Wish there had been a recipe i could of followed, was looking forward to trying them.
Hi Tamatha! Actually, most of the world measures their ingredients using grams, the only countries who don't are Myanmar, Liberia, and the U.S. I post my recipes in grams as it’s the most accurate way to bake and it’s how I develop them; cups are not only inaccurate but they vary in volume worldwide! In any event, if you look at the recipe card underneath the ingredients list, you can click “US Customary” and it’ll convert to the less-accurate volume measures! Thanks for leaving a one-star review on a recipe you didn't make though!
I am really enjoying your recipes and can’t wait for your book! These blondies are so delish flavor wise. Mine are so dense though and seem a bit wet, not sure what happened, unless they are under baked? They just don’t have a crumb at all.
I just made these brownies - the second of your recipes I've tried. Wonderful! Your recipes are delicious, and the instructions are simple to follow. I will be purchasing your upcoming cookbook and recommending it to my followers and subscribers. Thank you! Can't wait to keep baking with you!