The ‘Bitter Chocolate Thins’ were born.
Being semi-sweet they are very moreish and don’t feel too
naughty at all! You can easily increase the sweetness a tad if you prefer, but I
love this way…oh and wait till you see what else then happened!
If that wasn’t enough…it all got a little bit crazy and
somehow a dollop of thick and creamy chocolate frosting made its way in between two chocolate thins. Thus, Chocolate
Creams were born. These are even gluten free.
Seriously good, just wait for the moment that the crisp
chocolate biscuit crust cracks as you bite through it, so that the sweet soft
and creamy chocolate frosting fills your mouth. The perfect combo!
Recipe: Bitter chocolate thins
Makes approx. 20 biscuits
Ingredients
1/2 cup brown
rice flour
3/4 cup ground
almonds (if making your own do not over process so that oils are released)
2 tbs cocoa
powder
2 tbs tapioca
flour
2 tbsp ground
flax
1/2 tsp salt
1/2 tsp
bicarbonate soda
½ tsp cinnamon
3 tbs cacoa nibs
or dark chocolate chunks- quite finely ground
1 tbs water
½ tsp vanilla
extract
2tbs agave
nectar plus ¼ tsp stevia
1 tsp olive oil
Method
In a large bowl, mix together the dry ingredients. Add wet ingredients
and mix well with spoon. Knead dough with hands until it comes together. Place
ball of dough on parchment paper or a non-stick mat. Roll out dough until it’s
about 1/8th inch thick, or as thin as you can get it without ripping. With a sharp
knife, slice into squares.
Preheat oven to 180C and line a baking sheet with parchment. Bake for approx.
15 minutes until just beginning to brown
at the edges. Cool on baking sheet, then store in air-tight container once
fully cool.
These look amazingly delicious! I've been working on a vanilla version- but I love your idea of chocolate. Wonderful.
ReplyDeleteHi Karina, so pleased you popped by and thank you for your kind words!
ReplyDeleteHi Jo, do you think spelt flour will work instead of the rice flour, ground almonds and tapioca flour? Thank you :)
ReplyDeleteHi Nicola, I haven't tried with spelt flour, but i'm sure it would work in terms of consistency, I'm just not sure of the resultant 'crispness' since there is a high proportion of almonds compared to the other dry ingredients and so i'm not sure how that would affect the outcome. Let me know how you get on if you do try.
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