Crispy low carb almond flour biscotti with a touch of cardamom and orange. This is a deliciously grain-free way to start your day!
I am in full-on cookie-baking mode. I’m all about the low carb Christmas cookie recipes right now and I don’t seem to want to make anything else. Sorry, kids, I forgot about making dinner again, I was too busy dreaming up Christmas cookie ideas. I didn’t actually develop this cardamom orange biscotti recipe for the holiday season, but somehow it still fits. The warm spices and the orange zest in a cookie you can dunk into your hot drink…yep, seems like a Christmas cookie to me! Truth is I was just craving biscotti one morning and want a new and different flavour. Cardamom offers such a unique taste which goes well in both sweet and savoury dishes, I am rather enamored of it.
I really do love the Christmas baking season, and the majority of my baking does focus on cookies. Cakes, pies and other desserts are all very well and good, but Christmas cookies are in my blood. They are part of my heritage. My mother used to make huge batches of her roll-out Christmas shortbreads and we kids would decorate for hours. No icing, just cut up dried fruit and little sprinkles and coloured sugar that we would press into the soft dough before baking. She would give them away like crazy and we’d still end up with dozens in the freezer that would last well into February. Not that we minded.
And on the other side of my family, my father’s wife also had her traditional Christmas cookies, the pecan crescents. These were also shortbread-like in nature, but shaped by hand into plump crescents and filled with finely chopped pecans. And then topped with a sweet white glaze and sprinkles. She made many other wonderful cookies, but those were my favourites. I actually attempted my own low carb version a few years ago and they were quite good, but not quite the same. I’ve actually gotten much better at low carb baking and I think I could try again and get an almost exact replica. I may get to that, I may not. I have way too many ideas for low carb Christmas cookies, and not nearly enough time.
Ah well…in the meantime, enjoy these not-quite-Christmas Cardamom Orange Biscotti!
Cardamom Orange Biscotti
Ingredients
Biscotti:
- 2 cups almond flour
- ½ cup Swerve sweetener or granulated erythritol
- 1 teaspoon baking powder
- ½ teaspoon xanthan gum
- 1 tablespoon orange zest
- ¾ teaspoon ground cardamom
- ¼ cup butter melted
- 1 large egg lightly beaten
- ½ teaspoon vanilla extract
Orange Glaze:
- ¼ cup powdered Swerve sweetener
- 1 ½ tablespoon freshly squeezed orange juice
Instructions
- Preheat oven to 325F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
- In a large bowl, whisk together almond flour, granulated Swerve, baking powder and xanthan gum. Stir in orange zest and cardamom.
- Stir together melted butter, egg, and vanilla extract until dough comes together.
- Turn dough out onto baking sheet and form into low, flat log, 10 x 4 inches. Bake 25 minutes, or until lightly browned and firm to the touch. Remove from oven and let cool 30 minutes. Reduce oven temperature to 250F.
- With a sharp knife, gently cut into 15 even slices. Place slices back onto baking sheet cut-side down and bake for 15 minutes, then flip each slice and continue to bake for another 15 minutes. Turn off oven and let sit inside until cool.
- For the glaze, whisk together the powdered Swerve with the orange juice. Drizzle over cooled biscotti and let set 30 minutes.
Notes
Saturated fatty acids: 2.65g
Total fat: 11.06g
Calories from fat: 99
Cholesterol: 8mg
Carbohydrate: 3.91g
Total dietary fiber: 1.79g
Protein: 3.75g
mary says
I made these and they were fantastic! Delicious. My first time making biscotti. Half of them went to my mother for Christmas.
DK says
The most unique and wonderful smelling baked treat ever ????tastes delicious and so easy to make. Thanks for sharing this divine recipe ????????
Leah says
These are absolutely incredible!! Thanks for this delicious recipe!
Georgia says
MAGIC – Love your recipe Carolyn, I switched the butter to coconut oil and the sweetener I hadn’t heard of ( in New Zealand) so I used Rapadura Sugar, I also tried them with Maple Syrup, Walnuts and Mixed (Dutch windmill biscuit spice to be precise) spice, all good. Lemon zest and mixed spice worked too. Next I’m going to try with crystalised ginger in them.
Served with roasted fruits and whipped coconut cream…. mmmm
Peggy D.... says
Hi Carolyn, I love your biscotti and have tried several variations. I just had a knee replacement and the dry biscotti is helpful with my pain meds. Which I hate to take but necessary right now. Helps with the nausea. And they are quite simple to make. I can mix up the dry ingredients and then rest before finishing if I need to. I have found i need to increase baking time for first and second baking usually leave in oven overnight or till oven is cool. Sometimes have to turn oven back on. Anyway, thanks for great recipes!
Carolyn says
You’re welcome. Glad to hear it helps with the pain meds too!
Elizabeth says
Wow, Carolyn, I followed your recipe exactly. They did not dry out and get crisp. They taste good and I will eat them, but they are more like a soggy shortbread than a biscotti. Also, how do you get the Swerve to dissolve in the orange juice to make the glaze? It does not dissolve. I’m just wondering what I did wrong . . . ?
Carolyn says
What brand of almond flour did you use? If it wasn’t the finely ground stuff, that might be the issue. Also, were you using powdered Swerve for the glaze?
alex says
Do I need to use xanthum gum? I have everything else in the house and they look good!
Carolyn says
No, you don’t need to. They will be a touch more fragile.
Pam says
Oh cardamom.. how I love it.. I miss German Stollen.. it’s the flavor of that for me.. I’m tempted to drag my very sick self into the kitchen and make these. 🙂 Nah.. better wait.. maybe I’ll ‘wheedle’ a little helper I can ‘instruct’ in making these (and maybe she will grow up to bake low carb, gluten and grain free).
Celeste says
Thank you, appreciate your help 🙂
Celeste says
This recipe is amazing, thank you!
I have been trying to find a website to order Almond flour cheaper than I can buy it at Costco and I saw your comment that you buy yours for 25 pounds for $30!!! I looked on the Honeyville website and it says it has 25 pound bags for $184… Was that a typo? I thought it sounded too good to be true as I’ve yet to find it for less than six something a pound anywhere :/
I’ve started substituting one quarter cup of coconut flour for each cup of almond flour in many of my baking recipes plus adding one extra egg for each quarter cup of coconut flour. Do you think the biscotti would hold together as well if I made that substitution? appreciate your thoughts! 🙂
Carolyn says
Must have been a BIG typo. At the time, it was $130 or so. I haven’t tried the biscotti with coconut flour, but in my experience, coconut flour makes thing chewier so I just don’t know that it would work that well for biscotti.
BethH says
Love your recipes! I have so many printed in a binder to try, now I need the time to test them out. 🙂 Thanks for inspiration.
Carolyn says
Thanks, Beth!
Jana says
I made these yesterday and I was very excited to try one this morning with my morning tea. I was not disappointed. Angels sang, world peace seemed attainable, and I felt as though someone was giving me a giant warm hug.
Pretty good for biscotti, no? 😉 You knocked this out of the park! Such a delicious combination of flavors and the texture was divine. Thank you!
Carolyn says
Okay, that is the BEST comment I’ve had in a long time. Thank you! 🙂
Jennifer says
wow, these are SO good! And really easy. Great recipe! I try to keep my FODMAPs low, so I subbed half the erythritol for Splenda and skipped the glaze. Definitely making again. Now if I can just resist eating the whole batch in a day!
Any suggestions for storing these?
Carolyn says
Yes, just store them on your counter in any sort of container. They stay crisp and good for about a week.
Amy Baum says
I made these last night and they are amazing! I didn’t do the glaze. They made the house smell wonderful and the only negative is I’m afraid I might eat too many of them. They would make great cookies too. I left mine in the oven all night after making them and had them with my coffee and cream this morning. Yum Yum! This recipe is a keeper! Thank you!
Marilyn says
OMG this looks incredibly delish! LOVE it! I’m celebrating my birthday with a recipe link up along with a giveaway for 4 oz of each of these spices: ground cardamom, ground chipotle pepper, ground ceylon cinnamon, whole cumin, granulated garlic, and oregano. I’d love for you to stop by and link up this recipe along with any other’s that use any of these 6 spices. TGIF!
marilyn
http://4you-withlove.blogspot.com/2013/04/the-birthday-party-begins.html
Nancy says
Can’t wait to try your recipe, Carolyn! Can you tell me where you find powdered Erythritol or do you make your own?
Carolyn says
I buy mine from Swerve http://www.swervesweetener.com/103.html It’s the best, IMO.
Nancy says
SWEET!! 😉 Thank you!
Regina says
I just made them with hazelnut extract and almonds…so good, my issue is when I make them I leave them out for quite a while after the 1 st bake because I always seem to have to run somewhere, but they end up still wet in the middle… This time I baked them at 300 degrees for 1/2 hour but they came out the same, they are even still wet after the 1st round of the 2nd set of baking is done…any ideas?
Carolyn says
No, I don’t have any ideas in this case. Very strange because I make biscotti all the time and it’s not wet in the middle. I am thinking you may need to leave the whole uncut log in your oven with the oven off after the first bake. That may help.
Gerri says
Fabulous flavor combination! Love cardamom.
Any hints to keep them from breaking? Mine broke when I ever so gently sliced the loaf & others broke when baked. Thanks for another scrumptious recipe.
Carolyn says
Hmmmm. Okay, for one you need to make sure they are completely cool before cutting. Secondly, do it with one sharp knife and don’t saw back and forth but cut straight down in one motion. That should help!
Gerri says
Sawing back & forth is what did it. Thanks, Carolyn.
marla says
Love this recipe! Will be linking back to this in my upcoming post 🙂
Maureen says
Wow! I just made these! SO GOOD!! I had never used cardamom, I now love it! Thanks for the awesome recipe!!