Gluten Free Cookies

Category: About Gluten Free


This  gluten free gingerbread  man cookie recipe can also be used to make other shapes, such as a star, when they could be called “Star Cookies’, or ‘Birthday Cookies’ if you are making them for a child’s birthday.  Children just love the traditional gingerbread man, though: these are hard to beat.

Preheat your oven to 150C

  • 65 ml of olive oil or grape seed oil
  • 2 tbsp treacle
  • 150 gm of chick pea flour
  • 50 gm of rice flour
  • 50 gm of arrowroot or tapioca flour
  • 50 gm of soy flour
  • 100 gm caster sugar
  • 2 tbsp powdered ginger
  • 1 large beaten egg
  • pinch of salt

Method: Gently warm the treacle and oil. Stir with a wooden spoon. Remove from heat and add the beaten egg and the ginger. Mix well, then add the chick pea flour and the white rice flour. Stir well in.

Add the salt and the soy and arrowroot flours, this time kneading the flours in with the hands.

Roll out on a lightly floured board which has been floured with a sprinkling of rice flour. Cut into the desired gingerbread shapes, and place carefully on a greased oven tray.

Cook for just 10 minutes in the center of the oven. If your oven is not very ‘hot’, then you may need to pre heat the oven to 170C, or leave the cookies in for slightly longer.

Leave on the tray to cool, and then ice with your favorite icing, and decorate using currants for eyes and a dab of a cherry for a nose. A smiley mouth can be drawn in the icing, or a wee sliver of orange peel can be placed on the icing to form the mouth.

So you think you are gluten sensitive, or that you may have coeliac disease. Don’t despair. There are many foods which do not contain gluten. Your health will start to pick up within a couple of weeks of eating non-gluten foods.

In the beginning of treatment, it is a good idea to also exclude sugar and dairy foods from the diet. However, many people who are sensitive to gluten do not have a problem with dairy foods and sugar in moderation.  

Once you have noted improvement after following a gluten-free diet, dairy-free, sugar-free diet,  you could try our gluten free cookies for a treat.

The main groups  of gluten-free foods which you can freely use unless you have another food intolerance, or specific dietary needs, are:

DAIRY PRODUCTS : These are gluten-free. Cheddar cheese, colby cheese, pure butter, cream and milk are all gluten-free. Avoid processed cheeses which may contain wheat.

SOY MILK should be gluten-free, but check for additives to make sure.

MEATS, FISH, CHICKEN AND EGGS:

All animal protein is gluten free. Of course, it is preferable to eat chemical-free, free-range meats if you can: this is better for your own health, and it should mean that the animal has had a better existence compared to the one which has been caged-up all its life.

Beef, chicken, pork, lamb, mutton and fish are all gluten-free.

 All fish is gluten free, whether it be from fresh water or from the sea. All shell-fish, crab, lobster, shrimp, mussels, oysters, abalone, are all gluten-free.

AVOID sausage-meat and other processed meats and cheeses, as these usually are bulked out with wheat and other grains.

EGGS are gluten free. Eat free-range, preferably organic eggs.

ALL GREEN VEGETABLES, whether cooked or raw, are gluten-free, but avoid jerusalem artichokes, as these contain some gluten, according to one source.

Leafy greens are all o.k. That means that you can eat any amounts of:

Broccoli

Brussels sprouts

Cabbage

Kale

Silver beet (not too much at a time, because silver beet contains oxalic acid, which can deplete the body of calcium)

Spinach (again – not too much at a time, as spinach is high in oxalic acid)

All the following green vegetables are   gluten-free:

Artichokes  (globe artichoke):

Asparagus

Green beans

Green peas

ROOT VEGETABLES are gluten-free

Beetroot

Carrot

Kumara (sweet potato)

Parsnip

Potato

Salsify

Swede

Taro

Turnip

Yam 

VEGETABLE-FRUITS such as avocado and tomato are gluten free. Avocado is a useful protein and fat source, especially good for the vegetarian.

PUMPKIN AND SQUASH are gluten free. All types of MELON are gluten- free.

NUTS and SEEDS: All nuts and seeds such as sunflower seeds and sesame seeds are gluten free. Almonds are especially good for the person recovering their health. Almonds are also good for people on vegetarian diets. Hazelnuts contain high amounts of selenium and are therefore a healthy addition to a diet.

Almond flour is very useful in baking: combined with other flours such as rice and soy or buckwheat, it is a great substitute for wheat or rye flour.

ALL FRUITS  are gluten free: This means all PIP fruits such as apples and pears, and STONE  fruit such as plums, nectarines, peaches and apricots. Paw paw, mango, pomegranate, grapes, passionfruit, tamarillos, and kiwifruit are all gluten free.

GLUTEN FREE  GRAINS, and FLOURS for baking:

Almond flour

Arrowroot Flour

Cornmeal groats

Cornflour – make sure that this is the real thing and not wheat flour disguised as white cornflour.

Linseed, whole or ground

Millet

Oats: oats actually contain a small amount of a type of gluten – this is tolerated by many people who are sensitive to  the gluten found in wheat, rye and barley; however, if you are unsure, it is better to be safe and avoid oats, especially in the beginning of treatment)

Rice, both brown and white. The whole grain or the flour is used. Brown rice is more healthy, because it contains the nutrient-rich outer part of the grain. But white rice has its uses for people who are gluten sensitive, as it can be used as a flour.

Sunflower seed

Sunflower-seed flower

Soy, both beans and the flour are gluten free.

Potato, which is not a grain, can be made into a flour for use in cooking. It is especially useful in scone and muffin baking.

VEGETABLE OILS are gluten-free. You can use any of these oils:

Avocado oil

Grape-seed oil

Olive oil

Safflower oil

Sunflower oil

  • 175g butter
  • ½ cup sugar
  • 2 tbsps golden syrup
  • 3 tbsp cocoa
  • 1/3 cup rice flour
  • 1/3 cup chick pea flour
  • 1/2 cup fine yellow cornmeal
  • 1/3 cup soy flour
  • 2 cups rice flakes
  • Chocolate icing and walnuts to decorate

Note: The original post used cornflakes  in the recipe. However, it has been pointed out by a reader that cornflakes  often have malt extract added to flavor them:  malt has gluten in it. If you can  find a brand  of cornflakes which has  pure and unadulterated corn in it, then you could use cornflakes instead of rice flakes.

Gently melt butter, sugar, golden syrup and cocoa together. Remove from heat and stir in the various flours, using a wooden spoon. Mix and shape into balls. Pat out spoonfuls of the gluten free cookies mixture onto a greased baking tray (use olive oil or butter smeared thinly over the tray).

Bake 180C for 15 minutes. Run a sharp knife under the cookies and let cool on the tray for 5 minutes before removing onto a wire cooling tray. Ice with chocolate icing and put a walnut, or a cherry,  in the center of each.

WELCOME TO GLUTEN FREE COOKIES.

Even if you are not sensitive to gluten,you will find that gluten free cookies are great fun to make. Substituting gluten free, easily digested, nutrition-rich flours for the wheat flour we normally use gives our digestion a treat as well as the taste buds. If you are vegetarian, then the gluten free cookies  which we tell you how to make will help provide protein and other nutrients to your diet.

WHAT IS GLUTEN?

Gluten is a type of protein found in wheat and rye. Many people have problems digesting the protein which we call gluten. Some people have coeliac disease with a gut that is not performing its digestive function properly. This coeliac condition  usually improves once wheat and rye are omitted from the diet. If these grains are  not omitted, then the small bowel becomes damaged even further. This leads to malnutrition: the small intestine is challenged by the gluten contained in the wheat. This causes  food to be rushed through the intestines, the result being that the vitamins, minerals, proteins and fats in your food are not processed. You might notice that your stools are pale and smelly, or not formed properly, or that you have diarrhea.

The other thing which happens with coeliac disease is that with the continued bombardment of  undigested gluten-rich wheat or rye flour into the intestines, toxins and mucous are produced  which further damage the walls of the intestines. This is because the intestines are not capable of treating the undigested mixture of food which they are presented with. Some of these toxins are then reabsorbed back into the blood stream, which most surely makes you feel unwell.

Some people have a sensitivity to the gluten in wheat flour without the typical signs of bowel damage associated with the coeliac person. But damage to the bowel is the likely result if gluten, contained in wheat, is a continued part of the diet. You could make yourself into a coeliac sufferer by continuing to use wheat and rye  in the diet.

The good news is that, unless you are unfortunate enough to have sensitivities to sugar and dairy as well, in which case you will need to learn how to cook without these ingredients,then you can still eat cookies such as the recipes we have posted onto this site. (look at the “Pages” column for our recipes) We simply substitute other grains which don’t have gluten in their make-up.

GLUTEN-FREE ALTERNATIVES TO WHEAT FLOUR

Wheat is a handy baking substance, as the gluten contained within the wheat helps to make your baking rise. Nothing else is quite as light as wheat-flour baking, but some good results can be used by substituting other  flours from other grains. These are:

Rice flour

Yellow cornmeal flour (or maize)

Tapioca flour

Arrowroot flour

Buckwheat flour

Soy flour

Millet

Oats

Of course, some people have specific allergies to some of the above-mentioned grains and their flours, but generally speaking, these flours are good substitutes for wheat and rye. Oats actually do contain a type of gluten, but this is a relatively small amount. Many people are able to digest the type of gluten found in oats: a medium helping of oatmeal porridge daily, or oats eaten in gluten free cookies should be a safe amount for most people.

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