Best Gluten Free Gingerbread Cookies
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Gluten Free Gingerbread Cookies Same great flavor and terrific texture but without the gluten!
I’ve been cutting back on our family’s gluten intake the past few months and so have been experimenting with more gluten free baking. During the Christmas season it’s always a tradition to make and decorate gingerbread cookies with our kids and I went for a gluten free version. Experimenting with different flours and ratios of ingredients I now have a gluten free gingerbread cookie recipe that I think you’ll agree is awesome.
You’ll note that the recipe calls for half butter, half coconut oil but you can use one or the other for the entire amount. Butter lends a great flavor while coconut oil does that as well but also has the advantage of contributing more moistness. Butter tends to dry out baked goods whereas oil keeps things moist. So I recommend either the combination of the two or using coconut oil entirely.
You’ll also notice that the ingredients don’t include typical gluten free ingredients like tapioca starch, potato starch and corn starch. Those are extremely high in carbs and spike blood sugar (pure starch!) and just aren’t necessary to get a great gluten free product. Neither is xanthan gum. These cookies use a combination of flours that all work together to create a great texture and flavor.
Gingerbread tastes bests after the flavors have had some time to meld so although the cookie dough is ready to use after 2 hours of chilling, it’s even better if you wait a full 24 hours or longer.
These cookies also freeze really well. Once they’ve cooled completely simply place them in a ziplock bag or in an airtight container and freeze them. Then let them thaw completely before frosting them.
If you do a lot of gluten free baking, or any baking, I highly recommend getting a good grain mill. Gluten free flours in particular are expensive and you can save a lot of money buying bulk whole grains and grinding your own flour. The other benefit is that you can enjoy extremely fresh flour. The natural oils in grains that contain so much of their nutrition lose their efficacy not long after they’re ground.
I buy my grains in bulk and grind them fresh as needed.
I use and LOVE my German-made KoMo Classic Grain Mill. A solid piece of German engineering with a 15-year warranty, this grain mill grinds grains as finely or coarsely as you want and it’s an absolute workhorse. If you’re looking for the highest quality grain mill that gives you full control over the outcome and produces stone-ground flour in a matter of seconds, I cannot recommend the KoMo Classic Grain Mill more highly. I use it nearly every day.
Happy baking!
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Best Gluten Free Gingerbread Cookies
Ingredients
- 1/2 cup gluten free oat flour
- 1/3 cup brown rice flour
- 1/3 cup white rice flour
- 1/3 cup buckwheat flour
- 2 tablespoons cornmeal
- 1 1/2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- 1 teaspoon ground ginger
- 1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
- 1/8 teaspoon ground cloves
- 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 3 tablespoons butter at room temperature
- 3 tablespoons coconut oil melted and slightly cooled (or 6 tablespoons coconut oil instead of butter)
- 4 tablespoons unsulphured molasses
- 1/2 cup packed brown sugar
- 1 tablespoon honey
- 1 large egg
- 1 teaspoon quality pure vanilla extract
Instructions
- Combine the dry ingredients in a bowl.In a separate large bowl, beat the butter, oil, molasses and sugar until combined then add and beat the egg and vanilla extract until combined.Add the dry mixture to the wet mixture and beat until combined. Form into a ball, wrap in plastic wrap, and refrigerate overnight. It's critical that the dough is thoroughly chilled while working with it.
- Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F and place the rack on the middle shelf.
- Roll out the dough to a thickness of 1/4 inch or slightly thicker (if it's too sticky, roll it between GF floured parchment or wax paper). Use a cookie cutter to cut out shapes and carefully transfer them to a lined cookie sheet using a knife or spatula.Bake for about 8 minutes. Let the cookies cool for a couple of minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely before frosting them. Store in an airtight container (or they'll get rock hard).
Haven’t tried this yet, but why oh why do chefs and cooks still use imprecise measures like cup of or small eggs, in particular in the above recipe calling for a packed cup (or was it half a cup) of brown sugar. How hard should it be packed? Why not just use grams?? Then if you have a scale (which every cook should have) you don’t even need to get a measuring cup dirty. Come on, is it that hard to weigh your ingredients when writing a recipe (tablespoons and teaspoons are fine).
I am conflicted about how to rate this recipe — the taste and texture are very good (although a little underspiced and overly sweet for my tase). But the dough is a sticky mess, even after letting it refrigerate for 24 hours. I would possibly make these again as drop cookies, not cutouts. If you are looking for a cutout, I do not think this recipe is worth the time and long ingredients list.
I was dubious about trying this recipe — as a long-time GF baker, I am done with fussy recipes that call for so many ingredients, but I am determined to find a great GF gingerbread cutout and was willing to try. I also question the 23 minutes recipe time — that is clearly not including the rolling out and careful effort required to get the cutouts to survive from sticky dough to baking sheet.
Good flavour but I would increase ginger and drop nutmeg from the spices. Crisp cookie with a soft middle or totally crisp if baked a few minutes longer. Like others I found this dough extremely sticky and difficult to work with, even after chilling 24 hours. Trick here was to keep the dough cold. Roll between parchment dusted with rice flour, chill, cut out shapes (metal cutters worked better than plastic), chill again, peel cookies off parchment, chill again, then bake. Lots of time needed….labour of love for my celiac and gluten intolerant friends. If someone has another recipe recommendation, I welcome it. I prefer not to use prepackaged gf flour mixes.