And then I received some lovely samples from Oh! Nuts. You may remember the Cashew Ginger Granola Bars I made with their gorgeous cashews. Well, they also sent me a bag of their blanched almond flour and when I finished off the last of my Trader Joe’s almond meal, I opened it up. I instantly noticed a difference. It was much, much finer and since it was ground without the skins, it was paler in colour. And when I baked with it, I was more than a little impressed. It baked differently and the final product had a much finer, more flour-like texture. Since it doesn’t have gluten, I still had to compensate for that and add more binders and leaveners, but ultimately, it made a huge difference to the quality of my baked goods.
Now that I finally see the difference, I decided to tackle chocolate chip cookies again. The thing about baking without sugar is that it is difficult to mimic some of sugar’s qualities. Replicating the sweetness is the easy part. In that holy trinity of baking, flour, sugar and butter, there is something magical that happens that allows cookies to spread and become crispy and chewy at the same time. I just haven’t found a way to to make anything low carb and gluten free that even compares. Until now.
These were originally conceived to be breakfast cookies, and I thought that the dried cranberries and walnuts would make them more hearty. But I tasted the batter partway through and it was wonderful but rich, so I thought I should make them smaller and more dessert-sized. This is not to say that you couldn’t eat them for breakfast, because I will confess that I did. It’s just that they seemed more like dessert to me. I also used some grain-sweetened chocolate chips I found at the grocery store as I didn’t have the time or the patience to make my own low carb chocolate chips and these had about half the carbs of regular semisweet chips. And at the last minute, I decided to make them with coconut oil in place of the butter.
The Results: These cookies are phenomonal (or were phenomenal, because they didn’t last long). I would be lying if I said they were just like conventional flour-and-sugar chocolate chip cookies. They don’t have the same texture at all, and they don’t spread and get all crispy/chewy. But they are rockin’ their own special thang and it is a very delicious thang indeed. Because of the coconut oil, they almost melt away in your mouth as you bite into them. And the cranberries give a sharp little tartness that offsets the richness of the almond flour, walnuts and chocolate.
If I had more than two thumbs, I would give these more than two thumbs up. They aren’t just great low carb cookies – they are great cookies all around! I will be making these again for certain. Now, the tough part is that unsweetened dried cranberries are hard to come by. You can make your own, as I did before Christmas, with the recipe HERE. And I had some left over, which is what I used in these cookies. But in place of that, consider using fresh cranberries chopped in small pieces. The juice may run a little but I think it would work just as well.
Cranberry Walnut Chocolate Chip Cookies
2 ¼ cups almond flour
¼ cup granulated erythritol
½ teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
½ teaspoon xanthan gum
1 large egg, lightly beaten
⅓ cup coconut oil, melted
½ teaspoon vanilla extract
16 drops stevia extract
¼ cup unsweetened dried cranberries (or fresh, finely chopped)
¼ cup chopped walnuts
¼ cup low carb chocolate chips (or chopped high % cacao chocolate)
Preheat oven to 350F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
In a large bowl, whisk together almond flour, erythritol, baking soda, salt and xanthan gum. Stir in egg, oil, vanilla and stevia until thoroughly combined. Stir in cranberries, walnuts and chocolate chips.
Form by hand into 1-inch balls, and place on baking sheet. Flatten with palm. Bake 7 to 10 minutes or until just starting to brown on top.
Let cool on pan for 5 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.
Makes 18 cookies. Each cookie has 8.2 g of carbs total, but only 5.2 g if you subtract erythritol.
Karen says
I love that you used real chocolate here instead of white chocolate! These look almost light and airy, but the chocolate must make them so decadent.
Good luck on your training!
Beth Michelle says
I always love a good cookie recipe and these look just wonderful! Beautiful photos too 🙂
The Addicted Baker says
Looking yummy! Totally want to eat these right now!
Cake Duchess says
Beautiful photos! Your cookies look so good. I love cranberries and walnuts. I wish you and your family a Happy Easter.
MelanieGreenbergPhD says
Looks healthy & delicious. A good way to get kids to eat cranberries and walnuts!
Audrey Ellen @ My Scene and Herd says
Cranberries and walnuts make me think healthy, could I get away with eating one for breakfast?
Jeanette says
Yum! These cookies look amazing. Love almond flour, dried cranberries, walnuts and chocolate chips. What a treat!
Marsha @ The Harried Cook says
Beautiful cookies! 🙂 I love the little red cranberries peeking out through the brown cookie… gorgeous! Thank you for sharing! 🙂
Thank you for stopping by my blog! 🙂
A Busy Nest says
I love the name of your blog! These cookies look fantastic. Cookies are my favorite to bake.
Katrina says
Those DO look great–healthy or not!
Foodiva says
These cookies look incredible! I always, always scroll down your ingredients list because I still can't quite comprehend how your baked goodies are always low-carb and gluten-free… They look totally sinful!
Diane says
I tried them…and they were really good! I think I skimped on the sweetener so next time I'll make sure to be exact…My DH really liked them and that's something! I even dried my own cranberries so it was pretty cool…I will definitely make them again but up the sweetener. This was my very first time using Almond Flour so YEAH! and Thank you!
cakewhiz says
yum! i like how the cookies have the reddish tinge coming from the cranberries…simply beautiful!
Lynn @ I'll Have What She's Having says
These sound great! I can see how the finer almond flour would perform better. I've made cakes with almond flour that was a little course, it really affected the texture.
kitchenarian says
I have some almond flour left over from another recipe and I love baking with coconut oil. I can't wait to try these. Thanks for the recipe.
Kate@Diethood says
Carolyn, as long as I have you, I could do a low-carb diet any time!! You have amazing recipes!
sara @ CaffeIna says
I had the same experience with almond meal. I tried TJ and I liked it a lot so I thought there was no reason to try a more expensive one but there are indeed huge differences. I still like TJ's one but if you want a less rustic texture you have to go for the finely grounded. You did an amazing job with these cookies. I need to go and buy some of that almond flour.
Lizzy says
You are such a fabulous resource for those who need gluten free/low carb food! I'm always amazed at what I find here…your treats are extraordinary!!! This cookie looks so yummy…brava~ Happy Easter wishes to you~
Lindsey @ Gingerbread Bagels says
What gorgeous cookies! These have all of my favorite flavors rolled into one cookie. 🙂
jessica says
Carolyn,
These look amazing! Great photos!