Sunday, December 30, 2018

Gluten Free Spice Cookies

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With a spice profile borrowed and tweaked from the great Alice Waters, these wonderful GF spice cookies will become a favorite. Use King Arthur GF All Purpose Flour, and you'll have perfect cookies for snacking, dunking, sandwiching or using in "sweet and sour" recipes.

Gluten Free Spice Cookies
Adapted from David Lebovitz and Alice Waters by My Little Blue Heron



David’s Lebovitz's blog is wonderful. From time to time he offers gluten free recipes or links to GF. This recipe is wasn't GF and was originally from Alice Waters (The Art of Simple Food). 

The spice profile is wonderful (thank you, Alice Waters!) The black pepper gives them a real zing, so if you want to de-zing them, reduce the black pepper. You can omit the black pepper and substitute with some allspice.

Spices are the playground area of baking. They won't effect the chemistry. Bundle up and go out and play! Reduce the black pepper, up the ginger, the cinnamon or down the cloves.  

I grind my cloves in an electric spice grinder. Buy an inexpensive coffee grinder and reserve it for spices.  I use two different varieties of ground cinnamon, both great. If cinnamon is fresh (less than a year old), it's perfect! Cassia or Ceylon - either will do.

GF flour (this is important): For this recipe, don't use a cup-4-cup blend or a blend that has added Xanthan or Guar gum. My favorite packaged blend in the U.S. is King Arthur Flour's Gluten Free All Purpose Flour (the one without 'gum'). It's not inexpensive. When you find it on sale, pick up a couple of boxes.

If you want your cookies to snap, make sure you bake these until they are quite brown. If you bake them light, they’ll be softer, more chewy. I like these chewy. In fact, if you throw in a cup of raisins, up the cinnamon and ginger and down the pepper, you'll have some lovely, chewy raisin-spice cookies* (variation below). Raisin cookies are comfort cookies.

Unbaked batter can be kept for a couple of days in the fridge or a month in the freezer. If they stick around, baked, they’ll keep in an airtight container for a week or more.. These freeze beautifully.

New Spice! New Year! Happy New Year!


Happy New Year
Happy New Year
May we all have a vision now and then
Of a world where every neighbor is a friend
Happy New Year
Happy New Year
May we all have our hopes, our will to try
If we don't we might as well lay down and die
You and I




peace and love,
jane



Ingredients:

4 c./480g. gluten free all purpose flour (King Arthur recommended) 
     (NOT "measure for measure" or "baking mix" or anything with added xanthan gum)
2 tsp. guar gum
2 1/2 tsp. baking soda
1/2 tsp. kosher salt
2 1/2 tsp. ground cinnamon
2 to 3 tsp. ground ginger
1 1/2 tsp.freshly ground black pepper 
1/2 tsp. ground cloves (freshly ground is best)
8 oz./225 g (1 cup) unsalted butter, room temperature 
1 1/2 c./227g. coconut sugar
1/4 c./80g. molasses 
1/2 tsp. vanilla powder or 2 tsp. pure vanilla extract
2 eggs, size large, at room temperature

*Variation:
Add 1 cup/160g. of (organic) raisins at the end of mixing. You might alter spices: reduce or omit black pepper and increase cinnamon and/or ginger. Increasing cinnamon and omitting pepper will produce a milder tasting cookie. Increasing ginger will give more zing. 

Procedure:

In a medium sized bowl, whisk together the flour, guar gum, baking soda, salt and ground spices. Set aside.

Using the paddle attachment of your stand mixer, whip together the butter, sugar and molasses. Add the eggs and mix until lightened in color. Add the vanilla powder or extract. (MLBH truc: coat inside of glass measure cup with flavorless oil for an easy pour!) 

Dump in flour mixture and mix until completely incorporated and the batter is well-combined.

Transfer to a smaller bowl and refrigerate for an hour or more until the batter is firm.

Pre-heat oven to 350º F. (175º c), racks in upper and lower third of oven; and line two baking sheets with parchment. 

Using a small cookie scoop, or a tablespoon, place dough on baking sheets. Each sheet should have a dozen balls. Using your fingers (you can dampen then slightly with cold water), depending on how crisp you desire your cookies to become, flatten the balls into disks (start with 1/4"). After one batch, you'll be in the driver's seat.

Bake until the cookies are uniformly golden to dark brown, rotating cookies half way through the bake. This should take approximately 10-12 minutes. Darker will make them crispier, lighter will be softer.

Cool briefly on sheets and then transfer to a wire rack to cool completely.





1 comment:

John K said...

Jane
I’ll be trying the oat pancake recipe very soon- need to shop!
John

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