Gluten Free Chocolate Lace Cookies


These deliciously delicate chocolate lace cookies will be the hit of your next party – and they just so happen to be accidentally gluten-free! 

gluten free chocolate cookies

Have you ever thought about trying a gluten-free diet?

Like Atkins in the 90s, the idea of “going gluten-free” has swept America (and beyond). If you haven’t tried a gluten-free diet, chances are you know at least one person who has.

There are people who adopt this diet out of necessity (Celiacs). And then there are those who try it simply because they’re curious. I have a friend who falls into the latter group: She’s been avoiding gluten for the past two months, and she swears it’s made her feel better.

I don’t know if my friend is really gluten-intolerant, or if it’s the placebo effect working the magic on her. But my job isn’t to judge; my job is just to be a supportive friend. And so I support her the best way I know: with lots of love… and food! (My Italian grandmother would be so proud.)

For more recipes: Over 100 Healthy Gluten Free Recipes

gluten free cookies

The following recipe is the definition of “experiment.”

I had absolutely no idea, when I threw a bunch of random ingredients together, what would come out of my oven!

flourless chocolate cookies

Luckily, these gluten free cookies were a huge hit when I shared them this past Saturday night, and my gluten-free friend was so appreciative she wasn’t left out of dessert for once.

To be honest, the cookies aren’t my personal favorites. They turned out too crispy/chewy for my liking, and I much prefer softer cookies like my Peanut Butter Cookie Dough Cookies.

But some of my friends loved the flourless chocolate cookies so much that I’m posting the recipe anyway. If you like your cookies to be chewy (as opposed to soft), this is a recipe for you!

chocolate lace cookies

flourless cookies

healthy cookies

Chocolate Lace Cookies

Very loosely based on my Fudge Babies Recipe.

  • 1 cup raw almonds
  • 2 tbsp cocoa powder
  • scant 1/4 tsp salt
  • level 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • packed 1/4 cup pitted dates (45g)
  • 1 cup chocolate chips (170g)
  • 1 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 2 tbsp unrefined coconut oil

Blend first five ingredients until almonds and dates are finely pulverized. In a separate bowl, combine vanilla, oil, and 3/4 c of the chocolate chips. Melt (I microwaved 1 minute, then stirred). Pour the dry ingredients, as well as the remaining 1/4 cup of chocolate chips, into the wet. Stir until evenly mixed, making sure to break up any big clumps. It’ll seem dry at first, but keep stirring until it all looks dark and shiny.

Bake at 355 F for 7-8 minutes. (Take out when still a bit undercooked, as these continue to cook as they cool.)

 

Link Of The Day:

flourless chocolate chip cookies

Flourless Chocolate Chip Cookies

What do you think of the gluten-free trend?

I know this is a polarizing subject: some people believe everyone can benefit from adopting a gluten-free diet, while others think the idea of eating gluten-free by choice is ridiculous.

Personally, I don’t think I’m qualified to judge. I don’t have Celiac Disease and I’ve never tried a gluten-free diet (nor will I, unless it becomes medically necessary to do so). But I do think that if someone wants to give up gluten and thinks it helps him/her feel better, all the more power to that person. It’s really not my place—or anyone else’s—to tell others what diet works best for their bodies.

Meet Katie

Chocolate Covered Katie is one of the top 25 food websites in America, and Katie has been featured on The Today Show, CNN, Fox, The Huffington Post, and ABC’s 5 O’clock News. Her favorite food is chocolate, and she believes in eating dessert every single day.

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183 Comments

  1. Alyson says:

    I have been weaning off of gluten and dairy, basically to follow an anti inflammatory diet at my doctor’s suggestion because I have MS which I have been trying to manage med-free for 15 years. My 3 year old son also has a host of food allergies that we are trying to manage, among them a wheat allergy and most dangerously, peanuts, cashews and walnuts. From what I have read, most holistic health educators would have us believe that no one really NEEDS gluten, most especially those of us with inflammatory diseases, but I know it is arguable that if you removed it completely, unnecessarily, you can create problems where there weren’t any. In my house, we call it gluten-lite. I stopped using wheat flours and buying bread. With the exception of trying out GF crackers or chips, we don’t do many processed foods so what I store in my home is gluten free, what he eats at school is gluten free, when we are out we are more flexible to what is available. That has been working for us so far.

  2. Becca says:

    I like it raw better than baked! Thank you so much Katie. ^^

  3. Amanda says:

    I just wanted to throw out a bit of information on wheat. I’m doing a masters in the field of agriculture and have colleagues who are working on wheat projects – so many wheat projects, tons of wheat projects!! The problem with wheat now is that the amount of gluten has been drastically increased through selective breeding and genetic modification. Wheat used to be diploid like us, with 2 sets of chromosomes, now they have varieties that are hexaploid with 6 sets of chromosomes. It used to be about 4 feet at maturity, now we have dwarf wheat that’s 2 feet tall with crazy big reproductive structures. And most of this has happened in the last 50 years, which is why your grandparents never knew anyone who was celiac, it didn’t really exist back then! Gluten levels have increased 80 to 100 fold. Objectively you can’t change something that much and not expect it to cause a change – maybe negative, maybe positive, but a change for sure!

  4. Sushma says:

    Thanks Katie! These are incredibly yummy!!! Next time though, I think I will omit oil because the cookies are a tad too oily.
    Everyday I visit your website and have been making some recipe of yours.
    Next I want to make cookies by slightly modifying your German chocolate fudge bites (probably add some almonds to the food processor). Will let you know how they turn out.

  5. Jen @ The Well Read Fish says:

    So. . . what do you do between the stirring and baking?
    Squish them down flat? Roll them?

    1. Chocolate-Covered Katie says:

      Form cookie dough balls, but no need to flatten.

  6. Linda says:

    Read ‘Wheat Belly’ by William Davis, MD. The wheat grown nowadays has been so modified to increase yield and resistance to disease that it’s molecular structure actually makes it addictive. it’s why we’ve got such high percentages of diabetic, obese, insulin resistant population. Quite dangerous, actually, as these conditions lead to other serious health issues and shorten lifespan. Many who cut out wheat have clearer thinking, more energy, lots less gas and bloating, and more.

  7. Cecilia says:

    Hi Katie!! 😀

    I loooooooove your blog! Unfortunately I’m allergic to almonds and nuts (coconut works though) and I’m wondering what I could possibly use instead in your recipes? Sunflower seeds? Pumpkin seeds? 🙂

    Hope you get a nice christmas!

    1. Chocolate-Covered Katie says:

      Unfortunately, it very much depends on each recipe. I’ve only tried all the recipes as written, so anything else will have to be an experiment :).

  8. Julia Smith says:

    Om nom nom… these are amazing!!! Yummyyyy! 🙂 I don’t like crispy cookies either, but mine were soft because I accidentally melted the whole cup of chocolate chips because I din’t read the directions carefully enough and they were great! So yummy and they had little crunches from the almonds! Thank you so much for so many amazing recipes! 🙂

    1. Chocolate-Covered Katie says:

      Thank you so much for trying them!

  9. Monica says:

    I really appreciate you adding the GF recipes.. As for our lives, it’s not just a “thing to try” or new “health food craze”. My husband was diagnosed with Celiac Disease back in 2008, but we now know he has had it way before them, once we realized the symptoms. “cheating” on his GF diet is NEVER an option. The effects of gluten when he is even cross-contaminated are horrible, not to mention the long term effects to whole body on various levels.
    Keep the healthy GF recipes coming! WE LOVE THEM and appreciate them very much!!!

  10. Kate says:

    The gluten free diet has defininetly helped me. It wasn’t that I would get stomach pain after eating wheat, I would get after eating the meal after, sort of like the wheat ruined my stomach and then my stomach freaked out and thought it was my salad or whatever. I got tested and I do have an inflammatory reaction. I think everyone would be better off not eating wheat! Did you know that eating a slice of whole wheat toast raises your blood sugar more than a tablespoon of sugar? There’s a load of reasons to not eat wheat, including the fact that heirloom wheat has less than half the chromosomes of traditional gm wheat. There is also some sort of reason why wheat makes you age faster. If you’re really interested you should read the book wheat belly, it’s really dense though so I don’t understand everything lol