Gluten-Free Gingerbread House Contest

Have you heard about the gluten-free gingerbread house contest being held by Kim at Cook It Allergy Free? Kim is giving away the amazingly generous prize of a 4th generation iPod Touch. And, wouldn’t having one of those just make the day of your average 7 year old techno-geek, like my kiddo?

Honestly, I think that the prospect of getting to eat a whole bunch of candy was more enticing to my kiddo.

But, whatever the motivation, the kiddo and I had a grand time baking together and creating our first ever gingerbread house. He picked out the design. He helped make the dough. He supervised the rolling and cutting. He designed and created the snowman. (Totally his idea!) He came up with the decoration ideas on the house (based on ones he saw in the books we got from the library). I manned the pastry bag of frosting (it was too hard for him to squeeze it), but I put the frosting where he directed. He applied all the decorations.

Front View

Front View

He’s pretty proud of it.

Note the cool roofing design

Note the cool roofing design

He likes the doggy door and the “dog wall” in back the best.

Doggy Door

Doggy Door

We used the recipe from Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom, and though I haven’t actually eaten any, the boys in my life tell me that it’s delicious. It was certainly easy to work with and smells spectacular.

There’s still time to enter. Photos of your house must be mailed to Cook It Allergy Free by December 9th. Hop to it!

Posted in Blogger Community, Contests | Tagged , , , , | 9 Comments

Peanut Butter Peck Cookies for 12 Days of Christmas

It’s day four of 12 D12 Days of Christmas Cookiesays of Gluten-Free Christmas Cookies. I hope you’ve been enjoying it so far. Were you waiting anxiously to find out exactly what my cookie was? It’s a peanut butter peck cookie, of course! A peck cookie? Huh? Well, traditionally, this would be a kiss cookie. But, sadly, Hershey’s kisses, even the dark chocolate ones, contain dairy. So, no more kisses for me. But,  a peck is almost a kiss, right?

I did two variations of this cookie. The first is the “fool the gluten eaters” version. It’s full of sugar and makes liberal use of grains. Mostly whole grain, but grain, none-the-less. That’s okay, I make allowances for holidays and special events. But you know what? I don’t really want to eat those kinds of things on a regular basis. So, I decided to make a grain-free, refined sugar-free batch, too. Just for me. I gave the other ones away. Which version will you make?

The Decadent Version

The Decadent Version

Peanut Butter Peck Cookies (gluten-free, vegan version)

1/2 cup softened coconut oil
1 cup natural, fresh ground peanut butter (I tried using natural from a jar for this kind and it didn’t work as well)
2/3 cup palm sugar
1 T. ground flax seed mixed with 3 T. hot water
1 t. vanilla
3 T. almond milk (other non-dairy milk should work, too)
1 t. baking soda
1/2 t. salt
1 1/4 cups (156 g/5.35 oz) sorghum flour
1/4 cup (29g/1 oz) arrowroot starch
1 t. xanthan gum
1/4-1/3 cup cane sugar
Vegan chocolate non-pariels (I found a local brand, but you can find them online as well.)

Preheat oven to 375°. In a large bowl, beat the coconut oil and peanut butter until smooth and fluffy. Beat in the palm sugar, flax egg, vanilla, and milk.

In a small bowl, combine the baking soda, salt, sorghum and arrowroot. Whisk well.

Beat the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients.

Shape dough into 1.5 inch balls. Roll the balls in sugar. Bake for 10 minutes. Do not over-bake! Remove from oven and immediately gently press a chocolate nonpareil onto the top of each cookie. The cookies will crack. That’s normal. Don’t press too hard or you’ll end up with crumblier cookies.

The healthier (and I think tastier) version

Peanut Butter Peck Cookies (grain-free, vegan, refined sugar free)

1/4 cup (56 g) coconut oil, melted
1/2 cup natural peanut butter (this doesn’t have to be fresh ground – I only did this one with store bought)
1/3 cup palm sugar
3 T. flax seed mixed with 3 T. hot water
1 t. vanilla
1/4 cup sifted coconut flour
1/2 cup almond flour
1/2 t. xanthan gum
1/2 t. baking soda
1/4 t. salt
1/4 cup palm sugar
Homemade chocolate discs (see recipe below)

Preheat oven to 375°. In a large bowl, blend the coconut oil, peanut butter, palm sugar, flax egg, and vanilla. In a small bowl combine the dry ingredients, whisking well. Beat the dry ingredients into the wet ingredients. Shape the dough into 1.5 inch balls. Roll the balls in palm sugar. Bake for about 10 minutes. Do not over-bake! Remove from the oven and immediately top each one with a homemade chocolate disc, pressing down gently.

Homemade Chocolate Discs

6 ounces unsweetened chocolate
1/4 cup palm sugar
Pinch of powdered stevia

In the top of a double-boiler, melt the palm sugar and unsweetened chocolate. When fully melted, stir in the powdered stevia. Taste and add more stevia until it is as sweet as you like. (I left mine barely sweetened.) On a piece of parchment, spoon small circles of chocolate to make chocolate discs, or use commercial candy molds. (I made discs, molded Christmas trees, and molded rounds.) This batch makes enough for about 2 batches of peck cookies.

Don’t forget to check out days 1-3 of the 12 Days of Christmas Cookies:

Pistachio Cranberry Biscotti at Simply Sugar and Gluten-Free
Dairy-free fudge (and a giveaway) at Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom
Chocolate Peppermint Wafers at Gluten-Free Life with Jen

And for more Holiday favorites, check out Gluten-Free Holidays at the W.H.O.L.E. Gang.

Posted in Blogger Community, chocolate, cookies, peanut butter | Tagged , , , | 41 Comments

Vegan Chili Verde

Are you tired of all the fall dishes yet – pumpkin and apples and squash? After a while all those orange foods make me feel blue. But, I still crave warming, comforting food. So, what’s a girl to do? Get spicy!

So, here’s a quick and simple vegan chili verde recipe that I promise will make you forget all about your Thanksgiving leftovers and your yet-to-be baked Christmas cookies. It will soothe your over-shopped nerves, spice up your nights, and send those cold germs a’running. Heck, it might even cure world hunger. Nah, that’s going too far.

Comfort in a Bowl

Comfort in a Bowl

Vegan Chili Verde

1 T. vegetable or coconut oil
1 small onion, diced
1 t. ground cumin
2 cloves garlic, minced
3-4 large tomatillos, quartered
1 4 oz can chopped mild green chiles
1 cup veggie broth
1 can white beans (I used cannelini), drained and rinsed
2 T. chopped cilantro
Coconut cream and lime for garnish

Place a 2 quart sauce pan over moderate heat. Add the oil. When warm, add the onions and cumin and sauté until soft (about 5 minutes). Add the garlic, chiles, tomatillos, and broth. Simmer for the tomatillos are falling apart. Using a stick blender or food processor, blend the chili until thick and chunky. Add the beans and heat gently. Add the cilantro. Serve with a dollop of coconut cream and a squeeze of lime.

Note: I used a vegetable broth that contained salt. If yours does not, you may need to add salt to taste. Also, I used mild chiles for my kiddo. If you like heat, go for the hot variety!

For more tasty and healthy recipes, check out Slightly Indulgent Tuesday and The Hearth and Soul Blog Hop, and Gluten-Free Wednesdays.

Posted in beans, main dish, Mexican, soup, tomatillos | 24 Comments

12 Days of Gluten-Free Christmas Cookies!

Get ready for some amazing gluten-free cookies for this holiday season! Maggie, over at She Let Them Eat Cake is organizing a fantastic event that will make Christmas cookie swaps, parties, and school festivities so much easier for you this year!

12 Days of Christmas Cookies

12 Days of Christmas Cookies

For 12 days, starting December 1st, a different gluten-free blogger will share a favorite cookie recipe with you each day.  And on the last day, December 12th, Maggie will host a link-up for us all, so you too can join in and share your favorite gluten-free Christmas cookie with everyone!

The linky will be open until midnight EST December 12th.  So get your gluten-free cookie recipe ready, and if you need a little help, be sure to check out 12 Days of Gluten-Free Christmas Cookies for ideas!

And we’ve got fantastic give-aways!

Jen, from Gluten-Free Life with Jen and the mastermind behind the Gluten-Free Allergy-Free Expo is donating a 2-day pass worth $350.  Of course you’ll have to get to Chicago and arrange for your own hotel.

We also have some cookbook give-aways in the works…more on that soon.

12 Days of Gluten-Free Christmas Cookies will be brought to you by the following fabulous gluten-free bloggers:

December 1st – Simply Sugar and Gluten-Free
December 2nd – Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom
December 3rd – Gluten-Free Life With Jen
December 4th – The Mommy Bowl
December 5th – She Let Them Eat Cake
December 6th – Cook It Allergy Free
December 7th – Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom
December 8th – Simply Sugar and Gluten-Free
December 9th – Cook It Allergy Free
December 10th – Gluten-Free Life With Jen
December 11th – The Mommy Bowl

And here’s a sneak peek at what you’ll be seeing from me on December 4th. Be sure to come back for the recipe!

The First Mystery Christmas Cookie

The First Mystery Christmas Cookie

Posted in Blogger Community | 5 Comments

Walnut Pie (gluten-free, vegan)

In case you missed all the excitement, there’s been a flurry of Thanksgiving-related gluten-free posts this week. They’ve been prompted by none other than the Gluten Free Girl, herself, Shauna Ahern. I contributed a not-quite-perfect recipe to Shauna’s round-up. But, I couldn’t leave things like that. I need to follow up with a scrum-dilly-umptious recipe. Gluten-free, vegan walnut pie is just the thing.

What? You’ve never heard of walnut pie before? Okay, you got me. I hadn’t either. But, remember how I told you I have lots of walnuts right now? I decided that pecans shouldn’t get all the glory, and walnuts could be stars in the pie world, too.

This recipe is hardly original. Instead, I adapted from a couple of other recipes. The crust is a veganized version of Shauna’s classic gluten-free crust. Please read her blog for her detailed instructions and pictures. The only changes I made were to use Earth Balance soy-free spread in place of the butter, and coconut oil in place of the lard (though next time I’d use palm shortening), and a flax egg in place of the flax. I also tossed in 1 t. apple cider vinegar with the wet ingredients. My version did require a bit more water than hers – possibly because my flours were dried out from being in stored in the fridge.

The filling is an adaptation of a pecan pie recipe on Get Sconed.

Delicious Walnut Pie

Delicious Walnut Pie

Vegan Gluten-Free Walnut Pie

1 vegan gluten-free pie crust
3 cups whole California walnuts
1/3 cup brown rice syrup
2 T. sorghum syrup
3/4 cup maple syrup
1 T. cinnamon
1 T. vanilla extract
1/4 t. salt
2 t. arrowroot starch
3 1/2 T. ground flax seed
1/3 cup almond milk

Preheat the oven to 350°.

Mix the syrups, salt, and cinnamon in a small saucepan. Heat until simmering, and simmer for 5 minutes, stirring constantly. Remove from heat.

Blend together the almond milk, flax seed, vanilla and starch. Add the syrup mixture and blend well.

Add the walnuts and stir to combine. Pour into pie crust and bake 35-40 minutes, until crust is browned and filling is bubbling and set.

Find other slightly indulgent recipes at Slightly Indulgent Tuesdays.

Find more gluten-free goodies at Gluten-Free Wednesdays.

Posted in Blogger Community, desserts, flax seed, nuts, vegan | 16 Comments

Gathering Around Gluten-Free Baking

It’s been 11 months since I started eating gluten-free. That means this is my first year of dealing with gluten-free holidays. That’s no problem in my own house. But holidays inevitably mean gatherings, events, parties, socializing with food, food, and more food.

It’s a challenge for us gluten-free folk, and even more of a challenge when gluten isn’t the only intolerance.

So, when Shauna Ahern, better known as Gluten-Free Girl, put the call out for food bloggers to do a special post today about the holidays and gluten-free baking and cooking, I jumped at the chance. And, I knew…. I KNEW just what I wanted to post about.

See, we don’t always do the traditional Thanksgiving thing. There isn’t a set menu that gets repeated every year. And, we don’t even celebrate with blood relatives. We celebrate with our “adopted” family, and what’s on the menu is an amalgam of options, potluck style. But, what stays the same is that I bring the bread and the dessert – two of the traditionally most glutenicious offerings. The bread. I’d pretty much given up on bread.

Sure, sure, I’d come up with some passable bread options. But none of them really seemed worth the calories. They just didn’t do it for me.

And, then I won a copy of Shauna’s book, Gluten-Free Girl and The Chef, A Love Story with 100 Recipes.

Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef

Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef

To be honest, I haven’t done much cooking from the book. I just haven’t had the time. And, many of the recipes don’t fit my other dietary restrictions. (Hello, liberal use of butter and cream – you look spectacular, but you’d kill me.)

No matter. This is a book that is worth it for one recipe alone – the Crusty Bread That Even Those That Eat Gluten Might Like. They’re being too modest here. It should be Crusty Bread That No One Will Know is Gluten-Free, or Crusty Bread That Every Gluten-Free Girl Has Been Dying to Have, or how about just The Best Darn Crusty Gluten-Free Bread Ever. I kid you not.

One slight issue. It’s not vegan. While I’m not entirely vegan, it’s how I prefer to eat. But, here’s a tip. You can replace the egg in Shauna and Daniel’s recipe with a flax egg (1 Tablespoon flax + 3 Tablespoons hot water).  Spectacular.

Could I go one better? Could I take their technique, their ratios, and make a grain-free vegan crusty bread? Well, I could sure try. And, that’s exactly what I planned to do for this post.

Here’s the first attempt:

Vegan Grain-free Crusty Bread

Vegan Grain-free Crusty Bread

Looks pretty good, doesn’t it? It tasted pretty darn good, too. It wasn’t quite perfect – it was ever so slightly too moist in the center. Oh, and there was one fatal flaw. I didn’t write anything down about what I did. I thought for sure I’d remember. I usually do. I knew I needed to tweak the water amount anyway. But, I knew I was close.

That was a few weeks ago. I’ve made 4 loaves since.  Here’s the third attempt:

Whoa - flat bread.

Whoa - flat bread.

See, I had thought I’d gotten the water ratio tweaked correctly, but I wanted a slightly looser crumb, and I wanted to try some gar-fava flour. Um, no. Flat bread. That crumbled on the second day. Not good.

Here’s the fifth attempt:

Oh So Very Close

Oh So Very Close

And, I’ve STILL not gotten it quite figured out. Again, this one is a bit too tight. A bit too dense. The crust is great, but the crumb… it’s not doing it for me. And, I’m out of time for writing this post. *sigh*

So, I’m going to share with you an imperfect recipe. A recipe that needs your help. Can you improve this?

Not Quite Right Crusty Vegan Grain-free Bread

3 T. ground flax seed
3 T. hot water
4 ounces potato starch
2 ounces almond flour
2 ounces coconut flour
1/2 T. yeast
1 t. xanthan gum
1/2 t. guar gum
1 t. salt
3/4 cup + 2 T. warm water
2 T. olive oil
1 T. agave

Mix the ground flax with the hot water and set aside to gel.
Sift together all the dry ingredients.
Mix the flax egg with the rest of the wet ingredients.
Stir wet ingredients with dry ingredients.
Set dough in warm place to rise for 2 hours.
Slide dough out of proofing bowl onto a parchment lined baking sheet. Shape into a boule.
Preheat oven (with a baking stone) to 500°.
Cut 3 diagonal slices into the top of the boule. Slide off the baking sheet onto baking stone.
Turn oven down to 450° and bake for 30-40 minutes, until internal temperature is at least 180°.

__________

Now, don’t think I’ve given up. I don’t do that quite that easily. I’m not sure if I’ll get it figured out by Thanksgiving. But that’s okay. Because all I have to do is turn to page 180 of Shauna and Daniel’s book, and there’s a recipe right there that I KNOW will work.

Sorry. I’m not posting that one. Go buy the book. You’ll be glad you did. I swear. And, then bake from it for your next holiday gathering. The gluten-free folks in the crowd will love you for it. And, the gluten-eating folks will never be the wiser.

And in case the admiration of family and friends is not enough, here’s some more incentive – Shauna and Daniel are giving away a boatload of prizes if you participate in this round-up. Here’s the prize list:

3 copies of their cookbook.

a collection of gluten-free flours, including all the flours needed to bake from their cookbook

a care package of spices and ingredients you might need to make some of the recipes in their cookbook.

a collection of useful baking tools, such as a Silpat, jelly roll pans, a peltex spatula, and a tart pan to make the tarts from their cookbook.

and… wait for it:

a Kitchen Aid stand mixer.

Is that incentive enough for you? Go on over to Gluten-Free Girl and read all the details, check out all the Thanksgiving goodies everyone else has already linked up, and get your own recipe posted to enter to win!

Check out all these other great Thanksgiving gluten-free options, too!

More Gluten-Free Thanksgiving Dishes

Andrea’s Recipes | gluten-free pumpkin scones
Not Without Salt | gluten-free chocolate biscotti
Zest Bakery | warm pumpkin polenta with goat cheese
Smith Bites | gluten-free celery root soup with cashew cream
White on Rice Couple | Turkey Sloppy Joes on Rosemary Rolls
What’s Gaby Cooking | gluten-free molasses cookies
Food for My Family | Apple Pie Cheesecake
Kitchen Gadget Girl | gluten-free pumpkin strata
Rookie Moms | chocolate peanut butter brownies
Tiffin Tales | gluten-free Thanksgiving torte
Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom | gluten, dairy and egg free crescent rolls and cinnamon rolls
Eat the Love | Gluten Free Maple Sweet Potato Cheesecake with Gingerbread Bottom
Gluten-Free Doctor Recipes | gluten-free sourdough rosemary rolls and gluten-free mincemeat cookies
The Art of Gluten-Free Baking | gluten-free pumpkin pie
Sophisticated Gourmet | cranberry-almond-coconut macaroons topped with chocolate
Cook 4 Seasons | gluten-free pumpkin mousse
Cook It Allergy Free | Cornbread and (Shauna’s) Crusty Bread Stuffing
Lexie’s Kitchen | dairy-free, egg-free, gluten-free, no-bake pumpkin pie filling
Recipe Girl | an entire Thanksgiving menu, gluten-free
Two Peas and Their Pod | gluten-free apple cranberry crisp
Gluten-Free for Good | gluten-free cherry cobbler
My Madeleine | butternut squash soup.
The Sensitive Pantry | gluten-free brown sugar hand pies
Art and Lemons | gluten-free rustic squash tarts
Bellalimento | Gluten Free Pumpkin Roll with Mascarpone and Nutella Filling
Mom Food Project | an entire Thanksgiving, gluten-free
Gluten-Free Easily | candy carrot coins
Dish Towel Diaries | kale Caesar slaw
A Baking Life | gluten-free gingerbread cake
Glugle Gluten-Free | gluten-free pumpkin muffins
Wenderly | sweet and savory prosciutto cups
Cannelle Et Vanille | sweet potato and crabapple clafoutis
Who Ate My Tomato | gluten-free squash tart
What’s Cooking with Kids | gluten-free apple crisp
Blue Bonnets and Brownies | apple and pear cobbler
CakeSpy | turkey meatloaf cupcakes
Wasabimon! | gluten-free butternut squash pie

Posted in Blogger Community, grain-free, vegan | 39 Comments

A Healthier Holiday Through Hot Chocolate Moments

Can you feel it? It’s creeping up on me – that sense that there’s never enough time, that the lists are too long, that the holiday hassles are homing in. On. Me.

If you’re anything like me, you have high expectations of yourself in the holiday season. You’re crafty, you’re talented, you’re compassionate. You expect yourself to make, bake, and create the perfect gift for everyone on your list, to host the perfect cocktail/dinner/dessert party, to do it all within budget, on time, and while looking fabulous. Well, you do, don’t you?

And that, my friend, is a recipe for anything BUT a healthy holiday.

So, this year year, my goal is to slow down, let things go, and enjoy the simple moments – like hot chocolate with my kiddo. Because, really, aren’t the holidays really all about the ones you love?

I could go on and spend a long time writing some nostalgic post about my grandma’s hot chocolate made in the cast iron skillet. But, I have a date to read Box Car Children. You’ll have to survive with just a recipe. 🙂

Hot Chocolate with the One I Love

Hot Chocolate with the One I Love

Homemade Hot Chocolate

1 T. coconut oil
3 T. cocoa powder
2.5 T. agave syrup
2 cups almond milk
1 t. vanilla extract

In a small saucepan, melt coconut oil over low heat. Add cocoa powder and agave. Stir until smooth. Slowly whisk in almond milk. Turn heat up to medium and whisk while heating until hot chocolate is smooth. Remove from heat and whisk in vanilla.

Share with a loved one in your life.

This post is part of the Gluten Free Holiday 2010 series – installment 1 – Staying Healthy Through the Holidays.

Find more slightly indulgent recipes at Simply Sugar and Gluten Free – Slightly Indulgent Tuesday.

Posted in Blogger Community, chocolate, drinks | 10 Comments

Adopt a Gluten-Free Blogger: Lexie’s Kitchen

It’s time for another round of Adopt a Gluten-Free Blogger – a monthly carnival started (and this month hosted) by Sea from Book of  Yum. I love this carnival – I don’t have to think of a recipe and I get to explore the recipes of the spectacular gluten-free blogging community.

This month I chose Lexie of Lexie’s Kitchen. Lexie posts recipes that are free of gluten, dairy, eggs, and corn with an emphasis on natural and low-glycemic sweeteners. She came to her diet in an attempt to heal her son, Miles, of his intestinal and neurological health. You can read all about Miles on Lexie’s blog.

Anyway, I was asked to bring some gluten-free vegan brownies to a fund raiser event that was held last night. And, it just so happens that right after I said I would, Lexie posted 2 different brownie recipes: Hazelnut Brownies and Almond Butter Brownies. Woo hoo!

I made the Hazelnut Brownies the same day she posted them, but I did have to do a bit of substituting. I used a chocolate peanut butter (she said you could use any chocolate nut butter) and used pecan meal instead of hazelnut meal. So, um, yah, mine weren’t hazelnut at all. But, gosh darn they were goooood! Rich and fudgy and decadent – not overly sweet, but sweet enough to satisfy, we loved this test batch of brownies. (Another thing I love about Lexie – I posted my subs in her comments and added a question and she responded right away – while the brownies were still in the oven. How cool is that?!?)

So, then she posted the Almond Butter brownies, and I figured I better try those, too.

Almond Butter Brownies

Almond Butter Brownies

I’m telling you – these are rich, fudgy, and gooey. Oh oh. A little bit too gooey for handing out at fundraiser. I think it was my fault – I think I under-baked them just a tiny bit. No problem. I kept this batch for us (and our happy-to-help-eat-them neighbors), whipped up another batch of the hazelnut version with the same substitutions, and pleased the crowd at the fundraiser, as well.

So, head on over to her blog, and while you’re there, why don’t you pick out a recipe or two to try for the kiddos in your life?

I know which one is next on my list to try: Nutty Nola.

Thanks for sharing your food journey with us, Lexie!

Posted in Blogger Community | 3 Comments

Maple Walnut Butter

Remember the Blogher Pity Party -the online extravaganza where all of us foodie bloggers that didn’t get to go to the actual event tweeted like crazy, won prizes, and competed in contests? One of those contests was the Iron Chef-ish contest sponsored by California Walnuts. I love walnuts, and I have several walnut recipes already posted to my blog. There’s my standard breakfast bowl, a delicious walnut cake, and the recipe that I submitted, and that won the contest, muhummara, which is the featured recipe on California Walnuts website for the month of November. In addition to winning a Mollie Katzen cookbook (signed by the lovely author herself, no less), I also received five pounds of fresh walnuts. That’s a lot of walnuts! That’s okay, because I love, love, love walnuts. This is probably the first of many posts featuring my prize California Walnuts. I’m starting with a ridiculously simple one. Simple, but oh so good. Stay tuned for more to come!

Delicious creamy walnut butter

Delicious creamy walnut butter

Maple Walnut Butter

1 1/2 cups walnuts
1/8 t. sea salt
2 T. maple syrup
1 T. walnut oil (optional)

Place all ingredients in a food processor and process until creamy. The walnut oil will make for a creamier walnut butter with a more pronounced walnut flavor. But, you can do it without the walnut oil, if you prefer. (I wouldn’t buy walnut oil specifically for this. Although, we love it on green beans, too!)

Maple Walnut Butter - Delicious With Apples!

Maple Walnut Butter - Delicious With Apples!

Check out Wholesome Whole Foods for more real food recipes.

Posted in nuts, snacks | 9 Comments

Halloween Gingerbread Cut-Outs (vegan, grain-free, cane sugar free)

Ghosts and goblins and spooks. Oh my! Black cats and witches and bats. Oh my! It’s haunting season! I’m all about the ghoulish food – the witches fingers cookies and the peeled grape eyeballs and all of that. So, I was super excited to try to make vegan, grain-free, cane sugar-free gingerbread cookies with black sesame seeds. Black sesame seeds! What a perfect Halloween ingredient right?!? The dough was eerily black. Nice and spooooooky!

Unfortunately, black sesame seeds turn brown when baked. Ah well. They still taste good. And, it’s yet another entry into Ricki and Kim’s October SOS Sesame Challenge.

Meow!

Meow! (I should be a black cat.)

Halloween Gingerbread Cut-Out Cookies

1/2 cup black sesame seeds
1 T. chia seeds
2 T. hot water
1/4 cup (56 g) coconut oil
1/2 cup agave syrup
1/4 cup maple syrup
1 t. cinnamon
1/2 t. ground, dried ginger
1/8 t. ground cloves
1/8 t. allspice
1 t. vanilla extract
1 1/2 cups almond flour
1/2 cup sifted coconut flour
1/4 cup potato starch
1/2 t. sea salt
1 t. baking soda
1/2 t. guar gum (or xanthan gum would probably work, too)

In a coffee grinder or high-speed blender, blend the sesame seeds until you almost have a paste. (You’re not going for creamy tahini here – just all ground up.) Set aside.

Grind the chia seeds. Mix with hot water until a gel forms.

In a large bowl, beat the coconut oil until smooth and fluffy. Add the sesame paste and chia gel and beat well. Add the syrups and spices & vanilla and blend well. Add the rest of the ingredients and mix until well-incorporated. The dough will be very sticky. Put it in the fridge and chill it – the longer the better.

When the dough is well-chilled, heat the oven to 350°. Remove a small ball of dough and place between 2 sheets of parchment paper. Roll out to 1/4 inch thick. Remove top sheet of parchment paper. Cut with cookie cutters, dipped in potato starch or coconut flour. This dough is NOT easy to work with, and it gets worse when warm. So, work quickly and carefully. Place cut cookies on a parchment-lined cookie sheet.

When you get sick of fighting the dough, you can roll it in small balls and flatten it with the palm of your hand for a more traditional molasses cookie shape.

Bake for 12-15 minutes. Do not underbake – they will not hold together.

Like most gingerbread, these taste better after a day or two. They’ll soften slightly and the flavors will meld and they somehow taste sweeter….

The "I'm sick of rolling out dough" version.

The "I'm sick of rolling out dough" version.

For more slightly indulgent recipes, check out Slightly Indulgent Tuesday. For a host of healthy recipes, check out the Hearth and Soul blog hop.

Posted in cookies, Cooking Challenges, holiday, sesame | 22 Comments