I’m relieved to say there is a happy ending to my Apple Butter venture… :D
A very delicious ending.
Thanks for all your helpful comments yesterday! You sure know how to help a gal out. I loved reading everyone’s different methods for making apple butter.
After 4 more hours of slow cooking yesterday morning over medium heat (with the lid ajar), buttery apple bliss happened. The apple pieces all broke down and the sauce turned into a thick & dark butter, no post-blending required. I was a happy girl.
Five pounds of apples made about 1 & 1/4 cup of apple butter. Boy, does it ever cook down! Some of you mentioned that not adding a lot of sugar (I used 1/3 cup Sucanat as opposed to 4 cups white sugar) might prolong the cooking process, so maybe that’s why it took longer for me. It took about 19-20 hours in total.
If I thought I loved store-bought apple butter (Eden Organic has a great no sugar added one), homemade is a gazillion times better! I want to test it one more time before I post the recipe for you guys. I think we might go apple picking this week, so it will be a good opportunity to test it out again! I also want to make peach and pear butter too. I’m hooked. :)
Speaking of testing, I was on a mission to make vegan and gluten-free chocolate chip cookies to bring with us while we visit family this week. I adapted my Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookie recipe and tried out a few different gluten-free flours. I didn’t want to use any weird gums or other ingredients, but keep it as simple as possible.
I made 3 trials:
Trial #1:
I used 1 cup of brown teff flour and 1 cup of Bob’s Red Mill almond flour (everything else in my recipe was the same)
No dice. The teff flour gave them a gross sand-like and gritty texture! I have not had much success when using teff flour at all. There is nothing worse than a gritty texture in gluten-free baked goods.
Trial #2:
I used 1 & 1/4 cup Bob’s Red Mill almond flour and 1 cup gluten-free oat flour (I simply processed certified gluten-free oats in my Vitamix until a flour-like consistency)
These are the ‘picture-perfect’ cookie with a great thickness too! The taste was a million times better than using teff flour. The almond flour gave them a very prominent nutty and buttery taste that we all loved. However, I felt that the almond flour was a bit too pronounced in this cookie (over-powering the sweetness) and wanted to reduce the amount slightly.
Trial 3:
…made a classic thin & crisp cookie with a ton of chew.
I used 1 cup Bob’s Red Mill almond flour and 1 cup gluten-free oat flour.
By just reducing the almond flour by 1/4 cup, the cookie was much thinner, crisp, and chewy.
While I generally love a thicker cookie, these were by far everyone’s favourite! By reducing the almond flour, the sweetness was able to come through much more. We also loved how crisp and chewy they are.
The winning cookie profile:
- crisp yet chewy
- Nutty and strong buttery flavour (thank you almond flour)
- sweet, but not over-powering
- slight ‘taffy’ feel to them from the nut flour
- addicting!
- What they are not: Soft & doughy
Let’s review:
I’m guessing if you wanted a thicker cookie with the sweeter taste of the winning cookie, you could add a couple more tablespoons of almond flour along with a couple tablespoons of additional sugar. I also want to test these again using Sucanat sugar as a sweetener.
Vegan and Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies
Yield
18-20 cookies
Prep time
Rest time
10 minutes
Cook time
Total time
Thin, crisp, and chewy. While these aren't your typical soft and doughy cookies, we loved them anyways. The almond flour gives them a taffy/chewy texture and it was hard to eat just one. The cookies firmed up quite a bit by the next day, so I would suggest cooking them a bit less than 12 mins (which was what I did). Adapted from my Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookies.
Ingredients
- 7 tbsp Earth Balance + 1 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
- 1/2 cup packed brown sugar (I used organic)
- 1/4 cup organic cane sugar (or use white sugar)
- 1 flax egg: (1 tbsp ground flax mixed with 3 tbsp water)
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- 1/2 tsp baking soda
- 1/2 tsp kosher salt
- 1 cup gluten-free oat flour (I processed 1 cup certified gf rolled oats into flour)
- 1 cup Bob’s Red Mill Almond Flour (add 2 tbsp Bob’s Red Mill Almond Flour if you want a thicker cookie)
- 1/4 tsp cinnamon
- 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips
Directions
- Preheat oven to 350°F and line a baking sheet with parchment paper. In a small bowl, mix together the flax egg and set aside.
- With an electric mixer or in a stand mixer, beat the Earth Balance and oil until fluffy. Add the sugars and beat for 1-2 minutes until creamy. Beat in the flax egg and vanilla extract.
- Beat in the remaining ingredients and fold in the chocolate chips.
- With wet fingers, shape balls of dough and place on the baking sheet. The dough will be very sticky but don’t worry! No need to flatten the balls down! Bake for about 10-11 minutes until slightly golden along edges. Allow to cool for 5-10 mins. on the baking sheet and then transfer to a cooling rack for another 10 minutes.
By the way, I also called Earth Balance and they told me that all of their products are gluten-free. Nice!
Have a great Friday cookie monsters!
I loved the apple butter i made last year and i remember having tons of it even though i didn’t add sugar either? Hmmmm – i get lazy though and just buy it at the grocery store in the jam section but you are inspiring me to get going on some home made :)
Way to go creating a gluten- free chocolate chip cookie recipe: it’s hard work indeed! Lots of trial and error in my kitchen around GF baked goods :) So interring that the type of flour makes a huge difference in taste, size and texture!
YUM!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Ok I must make these NOW!
Seriously, your other, non-GF choc chips cookies have changed my life. I make them almost every toher day and everyone i know LOVES them!
glad to hear that! :)
Times like these I wish I had an oven to bake with!
i need one of these cookies, i need one so badly i may just have to make them as soon as i get home from work!
Can’t wait to try these! My niece will eat any kind of CC cookie.. but if it’s not choc chip forget it. It will be fun to give her one that actually tastes good!! Thanks! :)
Glad the apple butter worked out! Can’t wait for that recipe!!
BTW, I think the chocolate chip cookies with the almond flour and gluten-free oat flour (the winners) are more picture perfect than their counterpart! But I also love think cookies :)
Do you ship internationally?…yum!
have you ever thought of trying to use another flour besides oat flour? I have Celiacs and oats, even if they are certified gluten-free, still give me bad reactions and your baked good just look so tasty!
Thanks for your suggestion! I will have to try another flour sometime…any ideas on what gf flours might be good?
Quinoa flour makes delicious cookies! And brown rice flour.
oh good to know! Thanks :) Have u ever used sweet rice flour? I think I heard it was nice.
I’ve never used sweet rice flour, mostly because I prefer to use whole grain flours, but a lot of people seem to enjoy it. The challenge with gluten-free baking, in my opinion, is this – most conventional recipes use AP flour, which is always the same weight. Not all gluten-free flour mixes weigh the same (not all gluten-free flours weigh the same!) which is why you can’t substitute 1:1 volume-wise. If a recipe calls for 250g AP flour, then you need 250g gluten-free flours. I would use 100g quinoa flour, 100g brown rice flour and then 50g corn starch for instance. I hope this makes sense. Oh, and coconut flour is great, too, and great for you.
Thank you, and yes that does make sense to go by weight!
i too still have trouble with oats. :-( even certified GF ones. you are not alone!
as for which flours, i would ask manifest vegan or pure2raw gals, they are GF/vegan baking experts!
Wow, you really tested these and re-tested and took your time. Impressive!!!
But I guess there are worse jobs than taste-testing choc chip cookies, right? :)
Teff flour and grit. Yeah, no go.
And it’s interesting that just 1/4 c of flour can make that much difference in final product. That is why traditional baking is hard for me b/c I am such a tweaker and improviser, knowing that I really need to stick to the recipe at hand is always something I need to remind myself.
Lovely pics too!
Making pumpkin butter in the slow cooker now – almost done and tastes delish! Cannot wait to try your apple butter. I’m thinking hostess gifts throughout the fall! I also really want to try those choc chip cookies. I’m trying to give up gluten, but have been craving choc chip cookies. Maybe as procrastination from my master’s thesis this weekend I’ll whip up a batch!
Glad you made the pumpkin butter! It’s addicting :) Very yummy in oatmeal too.
These is the simplest gluten-free cookie recipe I’ve ever seen! Thank you thank you thank you for experimenting with GF on your blog – the Celiacs of the world adore you for it! I’m keeping this one in my Christmas cookie arsenal, and hope to wow my family with it over the holidays :)
Oh man, this is exactly what I want tonight! School is stressful…the answer is ALWAYS vegan/gluten-free choco chip cookies.
That last pic is priceless! I would love to try these with my latest obsession – peanut flour.
The cookies look great and that apple butter looks phenomenal!!
so wish i was there to help with the leftovers. not everyday there’s something GF and vegan baking. a dear friend and vegan/gf chef told me that teff is best when only used for about 1/3 of the flours in a recipe. i guess it’s just a little for nutrition.
aww that makes sense about teff!
the apple butter looks great! Glad it turned out! You must have LOTS of cookies at your house right now! Lucky Eric :)
Did somebody say…’cookie’? ;D -puts on blue, fuzzy costume w/ googly eyes- “COOKIE!” haha~ ^^
I will definitely have to make these one day.
I think I’ll make my own almond flour, however.
http://cupcakes-music-fashion.blogspot.com
:) I can hear his voice now!
I’m so psyched to try these!!!! Thank you!!!