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Posts Tagged ‘gluten-free cookies’

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Thursday, September 22nd, 2011

Gluten-Free Chocolate Chip Cookies

This is the original Toll House recipe, halved because I don’t want to make so many cookies. These are really delicious!

 

INGREDIENTS

a heaping 1 3/4 c rice flour, or flour mix

1/2 t xanthan gum

1/2 t baking soda

1/2 t salt

1 stick shortening, Earth Balance, or butter

1/2 c brown sugar

1/4 c white sugar

1 t vanilla

1 egg

1/2 package GF chocolate chips

nuts, optional

 

DIRECTIONS

1. Preheat oven to 375. Mix sugars and shortening or butter until creamy.

2. Beat in egg, then dry ingredients except chocolate chips and nuts, if using.

3. Once smooth, add chips and nuts, and roll into balls

4. Flatten slightly

5. Bake 8-10 minutes

6. Let cool on cookie sheets

7. Remove and eat or store in air tight container.

 

Note: You can replace the egg with egg replacer or applesauce to make them vegan.

Tina Turbin

www.GlutenFreeHelp.info

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Thursday, August 18th, 2011

Gluten-Free Cashew Flour Cookies

 

These cookies are light and sort of melt in your mouth. They are similar to the Almond Chocolate Chip Cookies.

I’ve also published GF flour mix variations that can be used within the below.

 

INGREDIENTS

1 c GF flour mix

1/2 c cashew nut flour

1 c ground/chopped cashews

1 c chopped pecans

½ c GF chocolate chips

1 tsp vanilla

1 tsp baking powder

1/8 tsp nutmeg

½ tsp cinnamon

2/3 sticks of butter

 

DIRECTIONS

1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

2. Mix all dry ingredients excluding chopped nuts and chocolate chips.

3. Add butter and mix.

4. Add nuts and chocolate chips.

5. On a non-greased baking ban, bake 6-7 minutes. Remove and cool at least 5 minutes.

Tina Turbin

www.GlutenFreeHelp.info

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Monday, May 9th, 2011

Throw Your Own Gluten-Free Baking Parties

     How do you increase gluten-free awareness and make your gluten-sensitive child feel special among his non-gluten-sensitive friends and relatives? Invite company over for baking gluten-free cookies.  His friends will enjoy the gluten-free cookies and can bring some home for their own families. The praise his friends will give over the cookies and the baking experience will make your child feel just like non-gluten-sensitive children. As part of my gluten-free advocacy activities, I host regular monthly cupcake parties, inviting gluten-free families from the community, usually mothers and their celiac or gluten-intolerant children. You can also host a gluten-free party and invite other families, allowing your gluten-sensitive child to meet and bond with other gluten-sensitive children.

Tina Turbin

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Tuesday, March 8th, 2011

Congratulations to the Recipients of the MI-DEL Giveaway

I’m very happy to announce the 3 lucky winners of the MI-DEL/GlutenFreeHelp.info giveaway of March.  Each of the below ladies received a package of chocolate chip cookies, vanilla sandwich cookies and chocolate sandwich cookies.

Caroline Schaffer, Jennifer Kay, Ashley Simper

They were all very excited about this great cookie giveaway.

Here is what Ashley had to say:

“I love the company reviews [at GlutenFreeHelp.info].  With so many products on the market and being a non-celiac myself, it makes it hard to taste test all of what is out there.  This section of the website provides feedback I can give my patients on gluten free products on the market.”

Ashley Simper, MS, RD, LDN,
Community/Outpatient Dietitian
OSF Saint Francis Medical Center

Congratulations to everyone and thank you for your support of my GlutenFreeHelp.info give-aways!

Tina Turbin
www.GlutenFreeHelp.info

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Sunday, February 13th, 2011

Gluten Free Sugar Cookie Cut-Outs – Valentine's Day Recipe

Below is a little teaser of a recipe from a soon to be released book, Gluten Free Cookies by Luane Kohnke. You will have an opportunity to read the review of many tested recipes we will be doing out of her book over the next two months. So check back soon!

Enjoy and Happy Valentines Day, Tina

Gluten Free Sugar Cookie Cut- Outs

Ingredients:

1 cup brown rice flour
1/3 cup potato starch
2 1/2 tablespoons tapioca flour
1/2 teaspoon xanthan gum
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon cream of tartar
1/8 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons almond flour
8 tablespoons (1 stick) unsalted butter,
room temperature
3/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 large egg

Makes 48 to 60 cookies

I developed this recipe for my friend Gail. She was diagnosed with celiac disease late in life, and really missed her
sweets. She told me that these cookies reminded her of the sugar cookies her grandmother made.

Directions:

In a medium bowl, sift together brown rice flour, potato starch, tapioca flour, xanthan gum, baking soda, cream of
tartar, and salt. Whisk in almond flour. Set aside.

In the large bowl of an electric mixer, combine butter and sugar. Set mixer speed to medium and beat until light
and fluffy. Add vanilla extract and egg. Beat until well combined, about 1 to 2 minutes. Reduce mixer speed to low.
Add flour mixture and mix until just incorporated. Divide dough into quarters, and wrap each quarter in plastic
wrap or wax paper. Chill for 1 to 2 hours, or overnight.

Preheat oven to 350°F. Line cookie sheets with parchment.

Roll dough, one quarter at a time, between sheets of wax paper, to 1/4-inch thickness. Cut with heart-shaped
cookie cutter, dipping cookie cutter in brown rice flour or all-purpose gluten-free flour to aid cutting.
Place cookies on prepared cookie sheets, spacing them about 2 inches apart. If dough becomes too soft to reroll
easily, return it to the refrigerator or place it in the freezer for 5 to 10 minutes, until it is firm enough to reroll.
Sprinkle cookies with granulated sugar, demerara sugar, or gluten-free sanding sugar. Bake until edges are pale
golden brown, about 10 to 12 minutes. Cool on cookie sheets for 5 minutes. Transfer cookies, still on parchment,
to wire racks to cool completely. Store cookies in an airtight container for up to 1 week.

Recipe taken from Gluten-Free Cookies by Luane Kohnke
(978-1-4162-0623-1; $18.95; Pub date: March 2011; Sellers Publishing; 50+ full-color photos, Hardcover)

Author Bio:

Luane Kohnke has been an accomplished gourmet cookie baker for more than 20 years. Her love for cookie baking began when she was nine years old, living on her family’s farm in Wisconsin, and she developed an interest in gluten-free baking about 15 years ago. Luane lives in New York City. For more information, visit www.luanekohnke.com.

Tina Turbin
www.GlutenFreeHelp.info

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Monday, January 24th, 2011

Encourage Your Celiac Child to Share his Gluten-Free Cookies

How do you increase gluten-free awareness and make your gluten-sensitive child feel special among his non-gluten-sensitive friends and relatives? Bake for occasions for which your child can share his gluten-free cookies with others. This will give children the pleasure of not only baking their gluten-free cookies but also of giving to others.  You should encourage your celiac child to share his gluten-free treats with his classmates and teachers. Contact teachers at the beginning of the holidays, and let them know your child’s dietary needs and ask if there will be any class parties that you and your child could prepare gluten-free goodies for. This way, your child can bring in cookies or other baked goods for the class and focus on sharing his own treats rather than on being excluded from others’ goodies. With the recipes that are available these days, there is no doubt that your child will impress his classmates with his gluten-free cookies. When going to relatives’ houses for dinner, bring along a plate full of your child’s gluten-free cookies that he baked for everyone to enjoy.

Tina Turbin

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Monday, January 17th, 2011

Finding Great Gluten-Free Cookie Recipes to Bake with Your Celiac Child

     Baking cookies goes back a long way in my family, and I was quick to establish it as a Turbin family tradition with my own kids. When I was diagnosed with celiac disease and adopted a gluten-free diet, I began accumulating gluten-free recipes for cookies and other baked goods so the tradition could carry on.

     I now publish a wealth of gluten-free recipes online, on my gluten-free website as well as on my gluten-free blog. There are plenty of straightforward, delicious gluten-free cookie recipes for everyone’s favorite cookies. Gluten-free doesn’t mean sugar-free, so the kids will enjoy the gluten-free alternatives as much as gluten-containing cookies. I recommend certain brands for gluten-free flour mixes as a substitute for gluten-containing flour: Bob’s Red Mill, Glutino, and Pamela’s Products. These brands have received rave reviews in the celiac community.

Tina Turbin

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Saturday, January 8th, 2011

Andean Dream- ONLY Gluten Free


Andean Dream’s Organic Quinoa-Rice Pasta cooks and tastes more like the “real” pasta I was used to eating before being diagnosed with celiac disease.
I had seven people test the pasta with me. We all agreed. We introduced the pasta to those not on a GF diet, and they couldn’t tell it was GF pasta—that’s final test that really convinced me that this was some of the best GF pasta we have ever had. Absolutely delicious.

Andean Dream also offers a line of Organic Quinoa Cookies, which are higher in protein, lower in sugar, and higher in fiber than most cookies. They run on dry side, but some people prefer that texture. The flavors are light and the cookies actually taste healthy, so you feel as if you can eat a few and it’s okay. They come in a box, each cookie individually wrapped to maintain freshness—a smart decision for boxed cookies, which all too often go stale before they are consumed.

Unique to this company is the source of their quinoa. Their royal quinoa is from southern Bolivia, close to a mineral-rich lake, lending to the nutrients of the soil to the quinoa and accounting for its exceptional taste over other quinoa.

YouTube Preview Image

My testers and staff feel the pasta was the product they’re all going convert to from now on. There were mixed feelings about the cookies, but of a large “taste party,” the cookies were well-received and loved by many.

http://www.andeandream.com

Tina Turbin
www.glutenfreehelp.info.

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Saturday, December 18th, 2010

Liz Lovely

I need to start out by letting you know that what I share with you in this review may just change your life! The subject at hand is cookies. Yes, cookies. Those delectable little (or large) morsels of “yum.” When it comes to gluten-free cookies, we celiacs tend to compromise and like our newfound cookies. The love affair we once had is shoved to the side in denial. The longing hidden behind in search for the taste we once could have.

Well, look no further, cookies fans. I found the company, the team, the gluten-free cookies: Liz Lovely! Yes, this is her name—the name of the creator and the name of my new treasured find, tucked away in the green mountains of Waitsfield, Vermont.

Liz Lovely carries an array of 1-pack cookies (2 per pack) weighing in at a dense and whopping 6.3 oz, various apricot, mango and ginger specialty items, and a beautiful gift box option of any assortment your heart desires.
When I bit into and gobbled up my first GF chocolate fudge cookie—well, I simply looked at my husband and noticed his large fudge cookie was gone, too. We both grinned in delight and agreed this was the moistest and most “true-to-chocolate” cookie we’d had in years.

I proceeded to look in the box and open another flavor, GF chocolate chip. Well, folks, this cookies is the epitome of a true chocolate chip cookie, with a dough we all know—yes, Tollhouse cookie dough. It took me back to the pleasure moments of eating that dough out of the mixing bowl as a child. Liz told me the secret is the way she bakes it.

With Liz’s love of sugar and her hubby Dan’s love of Liz, they have created a company that completely aligns with their basic beliefs. Their company bakes completely from scratch—no filler, flavoring, or shortcuts, with only socially responsible sources for their products and, as Liz says, “We accept nothing less than perfection.”

The future holds some exciting news for Liz Lovely’s: a factory tour, more cookies, and a print catalog. She shared the fact her hubby’s all into that King Arthur. In fact, it was Dan who suggested Liz delve into the GF industry after frequent calls about her original Liz Lovely (then non-GF) requesting GF cookies. She wasn’t into the idea until she found her secret flour blend. Though her facility is not a dedicated GF facility, she assured me she runs strict standards and that her GF is tested at less than 5 ppm.

Go to www.lizlovely.com and order some GF treats. I even suggest sending a box or two to your friends and family. I did, and they were thrilled!

By the way, these cookies last a full year in the freezer. It you’re not satisfied, just let King Arthur know, and he’ll take good care of you. I’m sure you will be quite satisfied, though. Happy Eating!


Tina Turbin

www.GlutenFreeHelp.info

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Wednesday, December 15th, 2010

Company & Product Review: Sweet Christine’s


www.sweetchristinesglutenfree.com

Safe to eat, healthy, gluten-free, and top-of-the-line yummy—that is how we are summing up Sweet Christine’s.
Oh my, folks, brownies that are the best ever, better than the best wheat brownies I’ve had in the past—no kidding!—donuts that taste like donuts should, and a truly decadent chocolate lava cake that oozed with chocolate as we fought over the last piece.

Sweet Christine’s is much more than delicious sweets. They whip up some incredible buns and breads that are just as good left alone as they are toasted.

Christine Ruggio has her dedicated GF bakery in Kennett Square, Pennsylvania, about 20 minutes outside Philadelphia. (We all wish you were here, Christine!) After years of troubles, pain, and misdiagnosing, she finally found the source of her troubles—she was celiac. This diagnosis came in 2005.

Just three years later she was destined to have a bakery; her days in the kitchen had become profitable due to the success of her baked creations. Who would have known that such a diagnosis could turn a busy wife and mother of three into such a wonderful entrepreneur?

Christine is proud to share that her products are all-natural, gluten-free, wheat-free, organic, fresh-baked, preservative-free, and always delicious.

You can easily order online at www.sweetchristinesglutenfree.com, or if you’re in her area, you can stop by her comfortable bakery for a light meal, beverage, or a delicious baked goodie.

When it comes to sweet confections, Sweet Christine’s is one of the best gluten-free companies we’ve tested in the past two years.

We wish Christine and her team nothing but success.

Tina Turbin
http://GlutenFreeHelp.info

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  • Tina Turbin

    About Me | see more

    Tina Turbin became extremely interested and involved in the subjects of gluten free, gluten sensitive and celiac disease a number of years ago as a result of...

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