
Lucky for you, patience is not my strong suit.
I made this recipe a while ago with grand plans to save it for the cookbook, but I really couldn’t keep it to myself any longer. Especially on Valentine’s Day. That would just be cruel.

It all began when I saw an incredible looking cookie dough fudge on Pinterest. I immediately knew that I had to try making some, with my own vegan spin on it.
However, I didn’t want to use confectioner’s sugar, butter, sweetened condensed milk, cream, white flour, corn syrup, or cups of sugar, so I decided to use my gluten-free chocolate chip cookie recipe as the base and tweak it from there. I knew with a bit of work, I could turn it into a more natural “fudge” recipe while maintaining the authentic cookie dough taste. After a quick search for vegan fudge online, I also came across Sarah, Katie, and Kate’s vegan fudge recipes and used those for a bit of inspiration, adding coconut oil and a banana to the recipe as well.

Here’s what I changed to my cookie recipe:
- I swapped the sugars for unrefined Sucanat sweetener
- I swapped soy-free Earth Balance for coconut oil and reduced it from 8 tbsp to just 3 tbsp
- I omitted the flax egg (not needed) and the baking soda (ditto)
- I increased the oats from 1 cup to 1.5 cups
- I added 1/3 cup mashed banana
- Added a couple tablespoons of almond milk

The first thing I did was heat the coconut oil, Sucanat, milk, and mashed banana on the stove top. I did this to melt the Sucanat so the fudge wouldn’t be grainy. Most of the cookie dough fudge recipes I came across called for icing sugar, but I figured I could cook down the Sucanat without having to resort to the processed white stuff. It worked beautifully!
A healthier caramel-like syrup was born!

I let this wet mixture stand on the stovetop, to cool slightly, while I prepared the dry ingredients.
For the dry ingredients:
1. Take 1.5 cups of oats and process it in the blender until a fine flour forms. Remove and scoop into a large bowl.
2. Now, add 1 cup of raw whole almonds into the processor and process just until a fine flour forms. It’s ok if a few pieces of almond remain. Be careful not to over process the almonds or it will start turning into almond butter and the flour will heat and clump together. If this happens, just use your fingers to push the clumps out. Or you can just use 1.5 cups store-bought almond flour.
Mix in a touch of cinnamon into the flours and now pour in the wet mixture on top and stir well until the clumps of flour aren’t visible anymore.
Heaven in a bowl!

The cookie dough batter will be gooey and warm (since the wet ingredients were heated on the stove top), which presented a bit of a problem for my first trial. When I stirred in the chocolate chips, all of them melted right into the batter. This may or may not be an issue for you, but I wanted the chips solid for texture/appearance purposes. For my second trial, I chilled the batter in the freezer for 30 minutes before stirring in the chocolate chips. Much better. I wanted them solid for a nice texture, however, some of them still did melt a bit. It ended up being mostly chocolate chips with some chocolate swirl…perfect!

Now all you do is spread this dough into an 8-inch square pan lined with two pieces of parchment paper. The dough will be very stiff and annoying to spread, so dip a spoon into water several times to help spread it out. You’ll eventually be able to spread it out smooth. Place it uncovered in the freezer for an hour and then it’s ready to rock your taste buds!
Very important tip: It needs to be kept chilled to stay firm, but trust me, neither of us seemed to mind.
Attention all cookie dough lovers! This fudge tastes just like cookie dough, but better. The sweet almond and oat base gives this dough a rich and buttery flavour, while doing without all the refined ingredients. I call this freezer fudge because it needs to be kept in the freezer to stay firm. Slice it up into squares, store in an air-tight container, and you have cookie dough “fudge” whenever the craving strikes. To make gluten-free, just swap the oats for certified gluten-free oats. Inspired by Pinterest along with Sarah, Katie, and Kate’s vegan fudge recipes.
Vegan Cookie Dough Freezer Fudge
Yield
16 large squaresPrep time
Cook time
0 minutesChill time
60Total time
Ingredients
Directions
Nutrition Information
(click to expand)
Serving it with some vegan ice cream is also highly encouraged!
With any luck, I can save the other versions for the book. :)

Happy Valentine’s Day!
Delicious! “Raw” cookie dough is such a treat.
I made my own raw batter with sunflower seeds, dates, goji berries, and cacao. You’ll want to lick it right off the spoon. Happy Valentine’s Day!
http://bread-n-chocolate.blogspot.com/2012/02/love-bites.html
Who needs a Valentine when you have cookie dough and fudge all in one pan? ;)
YUM.
The perfect V-Day treat!! Thanks for sharing :D
I seriously cannot believe that you posted this today! I was in the kitchen yesterday afternoon, and concocted a cookie-dough freezer fudge that has most of the same ingredients! Too cool!!! :)
Happy Valentines Day, and thanks for sharing!
Great minds think alike :)
Haha, love it! :)
I’m making your upside down carmel apple cake (the pear gingerbread one) this weekend for my mom’s birthday! Can’t wait to see how it turns out! It looks so yummy :)
Oh wow, this looks absolutely amazing. Thanks for such a great recipe! I’m excited for your cookbook, but very happy that you decided to share this early :) I wanted to tell you I really like that you post a picture of the ingredients you will be using in the recipe. I’m such a visual learner and for some reason that just really appeals to me. Also, I’ve never heard the trick of dipping a spoon in water to help spread out a stiff dough – will definitely try that out. Thanks! Happy Valentine’s Day :)
Thanks Stephanie!
Hi Angela! I love your blog, your story and your recipes. This looks fantastic and I can’t wait to try it. I’ve made several of your recipes, all with success. I wanted to share something I discovered. Coconut sugar! It is an unrefined, delicious healthy alternative to sugar and brown sugar, tastes like brown sugar, plus we all know how great coconut is for you. I never adjusted to the taste of sucanat so every time I see it I replace it with my coconut sugar. I did a little write up about it here: http://stylethatfood.com/?p=354
Just wanted to share in case you wanted to give it a try!
Happy Valentine’s Day :)
Hmm… I’m craving these squares right now! Too bad I have a midterm tomorrow so I can’t make them tonight. :(
Cookie dough > valentine :)
Holy moly that looks insanely good!! However, this girl has an island vacation in her near future so I should probably wait. If I had that in the house I would eat it for breakfast, lunch, and dinner…willpower is not my strong suit. Happy Valentine’s Day!
Yum!! Can’t wait to try it. And eat it. (Hopefully not all of it)!
Happy Valentine’s Day!
OMG! I am going to make these right now for a Valentine’s Day treat tonight!
Happy Valentine’s Day! I am going to go and make this right now for when Hubby gets home tonight! YOU ARE THE BEST!
I’ll be home alone tonight while the fiance is at work… this fudge might be my date. =P
Amazing!!! I cannot wait to try this and have it waiting for me in the freezer.
hi angela! question: do you always use sucanat as a substitute for sugar in recipes (I know it’s sugar, so that’s a a weird question)
also…remember in your chocolate chia pudding recipe last month…was that an adora calcium chocolate you had pictured as a garnish? :D
Nope, it was just some random chocolate I found in my pantry…not sure the brand ;)
I don’t always use Sucanat as a sub. It’s a bit tricky to work with sometimes as it can be “drying”…in this case, it worked wonderfully.
thanks! that’s really good to know angela, I know you are the queen of trying and testing and trying again so I am grateful you share your secrets…well, that is if others are sure to read all the details (until then, it’s my little secret—hehe I know I am so weird and quirky)
PS. I just started my training for marathon today! went well! i need to write a post about that progress!
This needs to happen in my kitchen! Do you think you can use a different oil in place of coconut oil?
I used coconut oil because it chills solid (which is what I wanted) so I’m doubtful that another oil would work. You might be able to get away with Earth Balance or even coconut butter.
you are a damn genius, woman!! i am making this today!!!!! :)
It looks and sounds fabulous! I love storing all my raw/nobake vegan dessert balls in the freezer so although I don’t know if they’re freezer “fudge”, some of them are close because they’re chocolate. I store things in the freezer because I cook in batches and that way I can just pull out a handful when the mood strikes. Or when I hear, Mommmmmm, I’m hungry. Can I have a snack. That way I have snacks on ice and 10 secs in the microwave cures all :)
Happy Valentine’s Day!
well these will just be my valentine today! Hahah they look amazing :D
These sound awesome! And I love that they are healthier. I hope you are having a wonderful Valentine’s Day!