The main ingredients I subbed were coconut butter for the traditional butter (any mild flavoured oils would also work well) and a mix of agave, stevia and rapadura (raw evaporated cane juice) for the refined sugar. It is worth noting here that the runnier the oil/butter is the easier it is to use as otherwise it can become more difficult to create a dough if the coconut butter is too solid- I had a few troubles here initially so I think it is very much down to getting a nice runny butter consistency and then mixing the ingredients together without delay!
I have been going a bit crazy recently trying to come with a way to make crunchy cookies without any (or much) granulated sugar. Typically granulated cane sugar provides the structure that creates the crisp crunch and chewy texture of cookies. Many of my earlier cookie experiments with agave just didn't have this elusive crunch! I'm still working on it and have a few more ideas up my sleeve. The recipe for the shortbread uses part granulated sugar but also supplements some of the flour for polenta which helps bring back the crunch, the coconut butter also creates the delicate texture.
....... Enjoy!
Ingredients
(makes approx. 20)
200g coconut butter (homemade
from coconut flakes- could use coconut oil also)
40g agave
40g rapadura (or other unrefined
granulated sugar)
¼ tsp stevia
2 tsp vanilla essence
40g ground almonds
40g ready to cook polenta
50g cocoa powder
150g wholemeal spelt flour
70g arrowroot
Method
Whisk melted coconut butter
with sugars and stevia and vanilla in a large bowl for a couple of minutes. Mix dry ingredients together and slowly add
to the wet ingredients until a thick but pliable dough is formed. Roll into a
cylinder approx. 6cm diameter and chill in the fridge for 30 minutes (may not
be necessary if stable enough). Cut into 1cm thick rounds (nice if they end up
a bit ‘squashed’ circle looking). Lay on parchment paper on a baking sheet and
bake for approx. 15 mins at 180C.
This is another versatile
recipe and you could add other spices, chocolate chips, nuts or dried fruit to
the mixture. I made a second batch with coarsely ground cranberries and cacao
chunks. You could also reduce the cocoa powder slightly and add up to 1 tsp
chocolate extract to make the cookie a richer chocolate taste if needed
(however I haven’t yet tried doing this).
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