Can I make cookies without dutch-process cocoa powder?
Yes. Start with Natural Cocoa Powder at 1:1, but adjust leavening. If the recipe uses baking soda, switch to baking powder (3:1 powder:soda). Otherwise rise will fail.
Find substitutions that keep spread, chew, and browning close to your original cookie recipe. Small ingredient changes quickly affect cookie spread and texture, especially fat and sugar swaps.
Yes. Start with Natural Cocoa Powder at 1:1, but adjust leavening, then adjust liquid or bake time in small steps after a test batch.
Use 1:1, but adjust leavening
If the recipe uses baking soda, switch to baking powder (3:1 powder:soda). Otherwise rise will fail.
View full adjustment notes →On CupOrGram, 1 cup of dutch-process cocoa powder is treated as 118 grams. Use the conversion page if you want the original ingredient weight before choosing a substitute.
Dutch-Process Cocoa Powder cups to grams →Yes. Start with Natural Cocoa Powder at 1:1, but adjust leavening. If the recipe uses baking soda, switch to baking powder (3:1 powder:soda). Otherwise rise will fail.
Start with Natural Cocoa Powder (1:1, but adjust leavening) for the closest match.
Natural Cocoa Powder is the top pick here. Use 1:1, but adjust leavening and adjust only after a test bake.
Replace using 1:1, but adjust leavening, mix as usual, then tune liquid and bake time in small steps if needed.