Tag-Archive for » christmas dessert «

Gingerbread Cookies

I love gingerbread cookies. End of story…

…okay, not really. This year I wanted to do begin a few new Christmas traditions with my children as well as make a treat I could eat. That usually leads to changing a recipe I already had into a new one. So, several weeks before Christmas, I got down my gingerbread recipe and altered it, and the kids and I got to work cutting out and baking cookies.

These gingerbread cookies have sucanat and honey as the sweetener. I replaced honey for some of the molasses because the sucanat already has the molasses in it. They were super yummy without frosting, and I’m embarrassed to say how many of the little guys I ate myself through the following week or so…

You can use this recipe to cut into any shape you desire. I haven’t tried it as a gingerbread house recipe, but I bet it would work well for it. One batch makes several dozen small to medium gingerbread cookies.

Gingerbread Cookies

  • 1 cup Sucanat
  • 3/4 cup Molasses
  • 1/4 cup Honey
  • 3/4 cup Butter
  • 1/2 cup Hot Water
  • 2 large Eggs
  • 6 cup Whole Wheat Flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon Sea Salt
  • 1 teaspoon Cinnamon
  • 1 teaspoon Baking Soda
  • 1 1/2 teaspoon Ginger

In a large bowl, cream together sucanat, molasses, and butter. Add in hot water until smooth. Stir in eggs. In another bowl, combine flour, baking soda, salt, cinnamon, and ginger. Stir into batter to make a soft dough. Add more flour if really sticky still and sticking to the side of the bowl. Add just enough that it doesn’t stick to the sides of the bowl. (I double the recipe and use my bosch mixer.) Cover and refrigerate for at least an hour or until firm.

Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Roll out dough to 1/4 inch thickness on parchment paper or waxed paper (a floured surface will also do). Cut into desired shapes. Place onto ungreased baking sheets (I use parchement paper), and bake for 10 minutes or until cookies appear dry in the center. Decorate as desired after cookies have cooled.

Chocolate Almond-Coconut Balls

This recipe is an adaptation from the original by Bryanna Clark Grogan.  I don’t know why she calls the recipe Bryanna’s Carob Fudge.  It certainly isn’t fudge.  It is rich however, and very dark chocolate-flavored.  I was just going to call them dessert balls, but my sweet friend, Julia gave me a new name for them.  Thanks, Julia!  You could use all raw ingredients and impress your raw-food friends or use maple syrup instead and call them vegan!  This is the altered recipe for the dessert I made last night for the Christmas Party with my closest friends:

Chocolate Almond-Coconut Balls

Chocolate Mixture:
1/2 c. each:
Peanut Butter (I used fresh ground)
Honey*
Cocoa Powder
Chopped Almonds*
Sesame Seeds
1/4 c. Quick Oats*

Used a large spoon or your hands to mix it together.

Rolling Mixture:
1/4 cup Chopped Almonds*
1/4 cup Unsweetened Shredded Coconut*
2 Tbsp. Powdered Sucanat* (powdered in the blender)

Mix above ingredients in a separate bowl. Wet your hands a little then take small pieces of the chocolate mixture and roll into balls.  Roll into rolling mixture.  Place on plate and serve.

The balls would be a little sweeter if you used maple syrup instead of honey and almond butter instead of peanut butter. Using almond butter would make it more almond-flavored too! Substituting maple syrup for the honey will make it vegan as well.  The original recipe called for carob powder, but I like the cocoa better…not as bitter. You could put some coconut inside the ball mixture too if you wanted.

* I’ve been asked where to purchase items like sucanat and unsweetened shredded coconut. My answer is: from a health food store or food co-op. Good Earth, Whole Foods, and Kitchen Kneads are in my area in Utah. Azure Standard does monthly orders with local drop points. To be raw, all ingredients need to be truly raw, not just uncooked by you. To get real raw almonds you need to purchase them through a reliable source and/or food co-op that guarantees the almonds have not been heated.  Update: Quick oats are not raw.  If you buy the oatmeal in the store, it’s been cooked.  I recommend buying your own oat groats and a grain roller to roll your own raw oats.

Original recipe found at: VegSource.com