The Ultimate Gluten-Free Cookie Book (13 page)

Read The Ultimate Gluten-Free Cookie Book Online

Authors: Roben Ryberg

Tags: #food.cookbooks

I was introduced to Chinese Marble Cookies at a beautiful dance pavilion in
Maryland, thanks to Steve, a great dance instructor. These cookies have
chocolate “marbling” throughout a very light-colored cookie base. These cookies
taste like a cross between a sugar cookie and shortbread, with dark chocolate
thrown in for good measure. The character of the cookie changes entirely if
butter is substituted, so stick with shortening. I love butter,
but not in these cookies.

cup shortening, 70 grams
½
cup sugar, 100 grams
1
½
cups brown rice flour, 185 grams
1 egg
2 teaspoons baking powder
½
teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
½
teaspoon vanilla extract
1
½
teaspoons water
1 square (1 ounce) unsweetened chocolate
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease a cookie sheet.
In a medium-size bowl, combine the shortening and sugar. Beat well. Add the brown rice flour and beat well. Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl at least once during mixing. Add the remaining ingredients, except for the chocolate, and mix well. The cookie dough will form large clumps, but will not quite come together to form a ball; this is okay.
Melt the chocolate in a microwave-safe bowl or cup in a microwave on HIGH for about 1 minute. Pour it over the dough and stir it in with a few swirls of a fork just until a marbled effect occurs (do not overmix).
Roll out the dough to ¼-inch thickness and cut it with a 2½-inch round cookie cutter (or other cookie cutter of your choice).
Bake the cookies for 9 to 10 minutes, until they have the slightest hint of color. The tops will be dry. Let cool on wire racks before serving.
Chocolate Butter Cookies
brown rice flour
MAKES ABOUT 50 COOKIES
It is almost unbelievable that such a cookie can be made using brown rice flour
as the base. Gluten-free just gets better and better! Choose your favorite
chocolate to drizzle over the top. This cookie flavor is best at room temperature;
it is more buttery when warm.
½
cup butter, 110 grams
½
cup sugar, 100 grams
1¼ cups brown rice flour, 155 grams
¼
cup unsweetened cocoa powder, 20 grams
1 egg, plus 1 egg yolk
¼
teaspoon baking soda
½
teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 tablespoon water
 
TOPPING (OPTIONAL):
2 ounces chocolate
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Very lightly grease a cookie sheet.
In a medium-size bowl, combine the butter and sugar. Beat well. Add the brown rice flour and beat well. Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl at least once during mixing. Add the remaining ingredients and beat well. Continue beating until the dough comes together; it will be soft and almost creamy.
Place the dough in a pastry bag and pipe the cookies onto the prepared pan. Bake for about 12 minutes, until the edges begin to brown and the cookies lose their sheen. Let cool on wire racks.
For the topping, break up the chocolate into a microwave-safe cup or bowl. Melt, stirring often, in the microwave on HIGH for up to 1 minute. As the container may be very hot, use care as you dip the tines of a fork into the melted chocolate and drizzle it over the cookies.
Chocolate Graham Crackers
brown rice flour
MAKES 10 TO 12 LARGE GRAHAM CRACKERS
It’s funny to use the word graham in the name of this cookie as graham flour is
wheat flour, but no matter, it is the very description you need to visualize this
cookie style. This wheat-free graham cracker is richly chocolaty and not too sweet.

cup shortening, 70 grams
1 cup brown rice flour, 125 grams
½
cup brown sugar, 100 grams

cup cocoa, 30 grams
1 egg white
Scant
½
teaspoon baking soda
½
teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
¼
teaspoon vanilla extract
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease a cookie sheet.
In a medium-size bowl, combine the shortening and brown rice flour. Beat well. Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl at least once during mixing. Add the remaining ingredients and beat well. Continue beating until the dough is thick and heavy. Continue beating for an additional 30 seconds to 1 minute for additional dough stability.
Roll out the dough to ⅛-inch thickness. Using a pizza cutter, cut the dough into 5 by 2¼inch rectangles and place them on the prepared pan. Lightly score each cracker with a lengthwise and a crosswise indentation (to quarter each cracker), not cutting all the way through. Prick the tops of the crackers with a fork.
Bake for about 9 minutes. As the crackers crisp during cooling and it is hard to tell what browning is taking place under that cocoa color, the proof is in the cooled cracker. I suggest you bake one as a test to determine the exact, best baking time—not enough leaves a slightly soft (although delicious) cookie; too much leaves an overly crisp cracker. Let cool on wire racks before serving.
Chocolate Meringues
MAKES 35 TO 40 COOKIES
Most meringue recipes call for cream of tartar to stabilize the meringue
structure. In this recipe, we are able to omit it. These cookies are light and airy
on the outside and almost a little fudgy on the inside. A fat-free winner!
2 egg whites, 65 grams (at room temperature)

cup sugar, 75 grams
½
teaspoon vanilla extract
¼
cup unsweetened cocoa powder, 20 grams
Preheat the oven to 300°F. Lightly grease a cookie sheet.
In a medium-size bowl, beat the egg whites, sugar, and vanilla until the whites form stiff peaks (This takes several minutes, depending upon the strength of your mixer. It also takes longer for stiff peaks to form with the inclusion of the sugar than if the egg whites were beaten alone.) The batter will look like marshmallow cream. Sprinkle the cocoa on the batter and gently fold it in. The dough will then look like whipped cream.
Using a piping bag with a large star tip, pipe large stars of dough onto the prepared pan, or just drop rounded teaspoonfuls of dough onto the pan. Bake the cookies for 15 to 20 minutes, until the bottom edges just begin to brown (which is hard to tell on this chocolate version) and the tops appear dry. Let cool on wire racks before serving.
Chocolate Pinwheel Cookies
brown rice flour
MAKES ABOUT 25 COOKIES
A spiral of two tender cookies that complement each other well. What could be
better than both chocolate and vanilla in a not-too-sweet cookie?
½
cup butter, 110 grams
½
cup sugar, 100 grams
1¼ cups brown rice flour, 155 grams, plus 2 tablespoons, 15 grams
1 egg, plus 1 egg yolk
¼
teaspoon baking soda
½
teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½
teaspoon baking powder
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder, 10 grams
Preheat the oven to 350°F. Lightly grease a cookie sheet.
In a medium-size bowl, combine the butter and sugar. Beat well. Add the 1¼ cups of brown rice flour and beat well. Scrape down the sides of the mixing bowl at least once during mixing. Add the egg, egg yolk, baking soda, salt, xanthan gum, and vanilla, and beat well. Continue beating until the dough comes together; it will be soft and almost creamy.
Remove half of the dough (220 grams) from the mixing bowl and set it aside in another bowl. To the dough remaining in the bowl, add the remaining 2 tablespoons of brown rice flour and the baking powder and mix well. Set aside. To the other half of the dough, add the cocoa and mix well. Set aside. Both batches of dough may be refrigerated for 30 minutes for easier handling.
Pat the lighter dough on a lightly greased surface (waxed paper is nice) to form a 12 by 6-inch rectangle. Top the lighter dough with the darker dough, creating one rectangle with two layers. Roll the dough into a long log, rolling from the longer side, to create a spiral effect. Refrigerate the log until firm, about 30 minutes.
Slice the dough into ⅓- to ½-inch slices and place them on the prepared pan.
Bake the pinwheels for 10 to 12 minutes, until the edges begin to brown. Let cool on wire racks before serving.
Chocolate Wafer Hearts
sorghum flour
MAKES ABOUT 24 COOKIES

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