Carrot Cake Bites

April 27, 2013 in Cakes and Cupcakes, Cookies, Hidden Veggies

These are the carrot cake version of brownie bites, with a similar cakey and slightly chewy texture. I don’t honestly know where the inspiration came from (maybe I was tired of working on nut-free, egg-free recipes for the book). But, these cake bites have the benefit of being portable, containing vegetables and of being sweetened with dates.  They are about the size of 2-bite brownie bites, but you could make them smaller if you want.  Picnic with the kids, anyone?

If you like chopped nuts or raisins in your carrot cake, I think that would be a great addition to these.  Probably about 1/2 a cup folded in to the dough at the end would be about right.

Yield: 2 dozen

Carrot Cake Bites (Grain-Free, Dairy-Free, Refined Sugar-Free) | The Paleo Mom

Ingredients:
1 cup grated carrot
3/4 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup chopped dates (5-7 Medjool dates)
1 1/2 cup blanched almond flour
2 Tbsp coconut flour
1 egg
1/4 cup unsalted butter or palm shortening
3/4 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp salt
1/4 tsp ginger
1/2 tsp allspice
1/2 tsp nutmeg
1/4 tsp cinnamon
pinch cloves

  1. Preheat oven to 350F.
  2. Pulse dates and walnuts in a food processor to form a paste.
  3. Add the rest of the ingredients and pulse to combine or mix by hand.
  4. Roll dough into 1″ balls and place on your cookie sheet.  Use your hand (or a spatula or the bottom of a glass) to flatten to 1/2″ thick.
  5. Bake for 14 minutes.  Enjoy!

 

Paleo Nut-Free Chocolate Sandwich Cookie Valentines

February 9, 2013 in Cookies, Nut-Free Baking, Treats

The thought process behind these cookies:  let’s take two delicious, sweet paleo cut-out cookies and make it ridiculously decadent by making a cinnamon white chocolate ganache to go in the middle!  It is Valentine’s Day after all!  The best part?  These cookies can go with your kid into a nut-free school!

White chocolate chips are very difficult to find without at least some milk ingredients.  Two brands to look for are Lieber’s Decorating Chips and VeganSweets White Chocolate Chips .  Both of these are available relatively inexpensively online.  Another option is to buy pure cocoa butter and make your own white chocolate (check out this cookie recipe for directions, you’ll probably want to triple or quadruple the batch), which is nice because homemade is definitely less sweet.  Another option would be to sub dark chocolate for the white chocolate (this is my favorite 80% soy-free chocolate bar–you would need two bars or about 7 oz to equal the 1 cup of chips).

Makes 20 cookies.

Paleo Nut-Free Sandwich Cookie Valentines | The Paleo Mom

Ingredients:

  1. Heat chocolate chips and coconut milk in the microwave on medium power (or do this on the stove top on low heat).  Heat for 30 seconds at a time and stir because white chocolate can seize more easily than regular chocolate.
  2. Add cinnamon.  Stir well.  Let cool slightly before assembling cookies (maybe 20-30 minutes… if you let it cool too much, the cookies will be hard to assemble).
  3. Assemble sandwich cookies by spreading the white chocolate filling over the bottom of a cookie and then placing another cookie over top (so the tops are both on the outside).  Repeat!

 

Dark Chocolate Shortbread Cookies (Sandies or Meltaways)

December 15, 2012 in Cookies, Nut-Free Baking

These dark chocolate shortbread cookies were actually an accident. They were one of the variations that I came up with (#3 to be exact) while I was trying to create my Decadent Double Chocolate Cookies (Nut-free, Coconut-free, Egg-free).  My first thought was complete disappointment that the texture was so crumbly and melty and shortbread like, even more “short” than the two variations previous.  Man!  This recipe has two eggs in it!  How can it make a shortbread!  I was frustrated (I was trying to develop a chewy cookie after all).  However, the flavor was so good that I decided to shelf that variation for future recipe development.  And this is the result!   A super luxurious dark chocolate shortbread cookie.  Drizzled with homemade white chocolate.  Perfect!

These are a dark chocolate cookie and they aren’t very sweet (but super chocolaty!).  If you want to make them sweeter, you can use semisweet chocolate instead of bittersweet.  You could also add a Mexican chocolate kick to these by adding some cayenne pepper and cinnamon.

The white chocolate drizzle is a modification of this recipe from Paleo Parents (the only real modification is that I use less sugar).  I used evaporated cane juice to sweeten the sugar wich gives it an almost caramel color.  If you want a whiter white chocolate (which would be good if you wanted to add coloring), I would suggest using white sugar.  You could also melt white chocolate chips ( Lieber’s Decorating Chips and VeganSweets White Chocolate Chips are dairy-free) or use dark chocolate instead or just leave the cookies plain.

For those with sensitivities, these cookies are nut-free and coconut-free!  The recipe doesn’t even use starches!

Yield: 1 dozen

Ingredients (Dark Chocolate Shortbread):

 

  1. Preheat oven to 375°F.
  2. Melt chocolate and palm shortening together in the microwave or on low heat on the stovetop.  Let the chocolate cool slightly (maybe 4-5 minutes) before adding the rest of the ingredients.
  3. Stir in vanilla and cocoa powder.
  4. Add eggs one at a time mixing very quickly as you add them so that they do not scramble.  Add the rest of the ingredients and mix thoroughly.
  5. Form cookie patties by spooning rounded tablespoonfuls onto a cookie sheet (it’s okay if the dough is still warm). Flatten with your hand or the back of a spatula or bottom of a glass, to about ¼” or slightly thicker.  These cookies don’t spread much while baking so whatever shape you make them now will be pretty much the finished shape.
  6. Bake for 9 minutes.  Remove from oven and let cool completely on cookie sheet or a wire rack.
  7. Once cooled, drizzle with paleo white chocolate.  You could also drizzle with dark chocolate or eat them as is!

 

Ingredients (Paleo White Chocolate):

 

  1. Blend sugar in a food processor or blender until it forms a fine white powder (I used a Magic Bullet).  Mix sugar with arrowroot powder and set aside.
  2. Melt cocoa butter in microwave or over low heat on stovetop.  This takes longer than you think, so keep setting the microwave for one more minute, stir and check, one more minute, etc.  I think it took about 3 minutes in total, but it would depend on how big your chucks of cocoa butter are.
  3. Once the cocoa butter is melted, mix in sugar and arrowroot powder a little bit at a time whisking thoroughly to help the sugar dissolve.  If you wanted you could add a few drops of flavoring (vanilla, orange oil, cinnamon…  peppermint oil would completely rock and be like a Girl Scout Thin Mint in reverse! See my White and Dark Paleo Mint Chocolate Bark bark recipe).
  4. Let the white chocolate cool until it is still warm enough to be liquid but thick enough to drizzle. Place your cookies on a plate or piece of parchment paper (not touching each other) and use a spoon and drizzle over dark chocolate shortbread.  Let cool until hardened.  Enjoy!

Paleo Gingerbread Cut-Outs

December 12, 2012 in Cookies, Holiday Treats

My husband and kids are in love with these gingerbread cut-out cookies.  Out of the oven, they have a crisp outside with a soft chewy middle (unfortunately the crispy outside goes away after a day), a perfect texture for cut-outs.  They also hold together extremely well, so I think they would even work if you wanted to make a gingerbread house with them (you’d have to adjust the cooking time for bigger pieces).

These are not too sweet (my husband describes them as “sweet enough, but not super sweet”), which is perfect if you want to add some sweeter decorations and great for those of us who have been eating paleo a while.

You could decorate with gluten-free cookie frostings, dried fruit, gluten-free candy, sugar decorations, melted and drizzled chocolate, or chocolate chips.  I decorated my little gingerbread men with Enjoy Life brand mini chocolate chips (thanks to Bill and Haley from Food Lover’s Kitchen for the idea, and here’s a link to their gingerbread recipe for anyone who wants to try a different version).  I simply placed the chocolate chips on the gingerbread fairly fresh out of the oven and still warm.  The chocolate chips melted just enough to stick to the cookies (these didn’t stack terribly well in a cookie jar though).  If you wanted to use something more like candies or sugar decorations, you can place those on the gingerbread men (or whatever shape you choose) before putting in the oven.

Yield:  2 dozen 3” gingerbread men

 

Ingredients:

 

  1. Preheat oven to 350F.
  2. Place all ingredients (except decorations) in a bowl and mix until thoroughly combined (or use a standing mixer).  Dough will be very stiff.  Let the dough sit for 20 minutes (room temperature is okay) before rolling out.
  3. Pour dough onto a rolling mat or piece of parchment paper.  Roll out to ¼” thick.  Cut with cookie cutters and use a pastry knife or scraper to move cookies onto a cookie sheet (unless you’re lucky enough to have them stick to the inside of the cookie cutter for transferring).  Repeat until all your dough is used up.  If your dough is being difficult, try chilling it before rolling.  If decorating with candies or dried fruit, do so before putting in the oven.
  4. Bake for 10 minutes.  Remove to a cooling rack as soon as they are out of the oven.  If decorating with chocolate chips, do so immediately.  If decorating with melted chocolate or frosting wait until they have cooled.

Hypothetical Gingerbread Man Decorating Frosting:  Okay, so I haven’t actually tried this.  But, I mapped out a recipe based on traditional sugar cookie frosting, basically subbing out the icing sugar for a mix of powdered regular sugar and arrowroot powder.  This would be something you could use to glue a gingerbread house together or do some pretty awesome cookie decoration.  I normally don’t share recipes I haven’t tested out, but I thought some of you might like to try this.  If you do, please comment and let me know how it works.  I think if any adjustment is needed to this frosting recipe, it will be the addition of another 1 Tbsp of arrowroot powder.

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup sugar (white sugar will give you the whitest frosting)
  • 1 egg white
  • 2 Tbsp arrowroot powder
  • Generous pinch of cream of tartar

Blend sugar in a food processor or blender for 2-3 minutes until if forms a fine powder.  Add sugar to rest of the ingredients.  Beat with a hand mixer for 7-8 minutes until stiff.  Add food coloring if desired.  Use a piping bag to decorate.  Store any leftovers with plastic wrap directly on the surface of the frosting.