Almond flour cookies with the nutty crunch of pecans. |
Which brings me to Cheez Doodles and why you need to let go.Â
My grandmother was a saver. The type of woman who, if you gave her a pretty new night gown, she'd just stuff it in the closet and never wear it. She'd go on wearing her crusty pink K-Mart gown. The one with mysterious brown stains down the front of it.
If you asked her, Why don't you wear the new nightgown we gave you? she'd swat away your question and begin rummaging around her kitchen cupboards. Rooting for food objects. To give you. A prize to take home. A dented can of baked beans from the reduced shelf at Walgreen's. Candy canes from Christmas past. And yeah. Cheez Doodles.
One particular visit, on our way out the door, my grandmother turned in the February light that slatted through beige vinyl blinds and stared at my two sons- twelve and nine at the time.Â
You hungry? she barked. The boys shrugged. Take these, she told them, thrusting a giant bag of Cheez Doodles in their direction. The youngest carried the bag to the car. It was bigger than his head. We buckled in and drove off.
Can we open the Cheez Doodles?Â
Steve and I looked at each other. Well. It's risky, I warned. God only knows how long she's been hanging on to those.Â
Smell it first, offered the oldest. They tore the bag open in unison. And that's when it hit us.
The SMELL.
That is some serious heinous-ity, gasped my husband, rolling down the window for some air.Â
I think the expiration date expired, offered one son.
Smells so funky, said the other.
Close the bag, I yelled. Have mercy on us!
After airing out the car we rolled up the windows.Â
Why does she keep old stuff? my son asked. Yeah. What good are old Cheez Doodles? said his brother.
Exactly! said I.
A stack of sweet temptation. No Cheez Doodles in sight. |
Nutty Crunchy Almond Flour Cookie Recipe
Almond flour and brown sugar give these slightly chewy cookies an almost caramel flavor. Seriously good.
You'll need roughly 3/4 cup chopped pecans set aside.
Whisk together the dry ingredients:
1 teaspoon sea salt
In a separate bowl, cream together these ingredients:
1/3 cup plus 1 tablespoon light olive oil
1 tablespoon honey- or raw agave nectar
Add the dry ingredients to the creamed brown sugar mixture a little at a time and beat to combine until a dough begins to form.
Add-in:
Beat until a smooth cookie dough is achieved. Not too dry- not too wet. Somewhere in the middle.
Stir in by hand:
1/2 cup chopped pecansÂ
Cover the bowl and chill the dough for half an hour.
Preheat the oven to 350ºF. Ready your baking sheet. I use an Exopat liner*[2] on my baking sheet; but you could also line a baking sheet with parchment paper. *These handy liners keep gluten-free cookies from scorching on the bottom.
Option:
Add a sprinkle of chopped pecans to the topÂ
Bake the cookies in the center of a pre-heated oven for roughly 17 minutes (a bit longer if you chill the dough), until the cookies are golden, and fairly firm to the touch. Â Resist the urge to over-bake them. Do a test run, if you want to determine the exact baking time to your liking.
Delicious warm. Perfect for dunking.Â
This recipe makes 22Â cookies.
Recipe Source: glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com
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More gluten-free cookie goodness:
Source : http://glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com/2010/07/nutty-crunchy-cookies.html
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