Healthy Chickpea Cookie Dough Dip

4.97 from 556 votes
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Here it is, the internet famous original healthy chickpea cookie dough dip recipe!

chickpea cookie dough recipe
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This is one recipe that everyone should try, if you somehow haven’t already!

With multiple celebrity fans and thousands of food bloggers posting their own versions of the secretly healthy cookie dough dip, it is definitely worth all of the hype.

Currently with over one hundred million views and shares, this famous chickpea cookie dough dip recipe has been featured by Cooking Light, Bon Appetit, CNN, Shape, Glamour, The Philadelphia Inquirer, Fox, ABC, the TODAY Show, and The Huffington Post.

You’ll be shocked at how much it really does taste like actual cookie dough!

You may also like this Brownie Batter Dip

Healthy Cookie Dough Dip Recipe With Chickpeas

But will “normal” people like it?

This was my question after first creating the recipe all the way back in 2011.

While I luckily have adventurous friends and family to taste test recipes, they all know by now that anything I ask them to try will be healthier than traditional desserts.

We fell in love with this chickpea dessert dip, making me wonder if the general population not used to healthy desserts would love it too.

My main goal with all of my recipes is not just for people to say they are good, for a healthy dessert.

I want the recipes to be good, for any dessert!

The following is directly from my page About Chocolate Covered Katie.

I refuse to believe one must give up delicious food in order to be healthy. Healthy food can taste incredible when it’s prepared the right way.

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Above: Watch the video of how to make the healthy dessert dip

Chocolate Covered Katie Chickpea Cookie Dough Dip Recipe

I brought the chickpea cookie dough dip to a party, not telling anyone it was healthy or that it was mine.

I simply set the dessert dip down on the table amidst the other classic party snacks.

Something amazing happened…

People tried the dip.

They went back for seconds.

Then thirds.

Everyone kept asking, “Who brought the cookie dough dip? I need this recipe!

And I constantly overheard statements like, “Ugh I need to stop eating this stuff” or “Where are my fat pants?”

Healthy dessert lovers also enjoy Avocado Chocolate Mousse

chickpea cookie dough dip

When I finally revealed the secret ingredient, no one could believe it.

Therefore, this chickpea cookie dough dip recipe is absolutely a winner.

It’s like an unbaked form of the popular Deep Dish Cookie Pie.

I don’t know about you, but when I make that chocolate chip cookie pie, quite a bit of the raw dough gets consumed in the process.

So I figured, why bother baking it at all?

Whether in winter or summer, this easy chickpea cookie dough dip is a great way to quickly get your chocolate chip cookie fix without turning on the oven.

Chickpea Cookie Dough Dip

Serving suggestions

For the party, I served the healthy chickpea cookie dough dip with graham crackers and pretzels. Sliced bananas, strawberries, apples, or other fresh fruit are also lovely.

If you are serving it at a holiday event, ginger snaps are a festive dipping option.

Many readers have even written in to say they use it as frosting for pancakes, waffles, cupcakes, or a double layer Vegan Chocolate Cake.

You can of course eat this healthy cookie dough dip by the spoonful.

Or try dipping in any of these Healthy Cookies Recipes.

The recipe calls for chickpeas or white beans, pure vanilla extract, chocolate chips, oats or almond flour, nut butter or an allergy friendly sub, milk of choice, and a pinch of salt and baking soda.

You may use chickpeas (also known as garbanzo beans), navy beans, great northern beans, cannellini beans, or butter beans.

Since you will be draining the can and rinsing the beans very well, it is fine to buy either no salt added beans or a can with salt.

If you wish to substitute cooked white beans for the canned beans, the recipe calls for about one and a half cups of cooked beans.

Want to use black beans? Try this surprisingly delicious Chocolate Hummus.

Adding peanut butter will give the recipe a tasty peanut butter cookie dough flavor. If you prefer a more neutral cookie dough taste, go with almond butter, cashew butter, Coconut Butter, or regular butter or vegan butter.

Thicken the recipe with quick oats or oat flour, almond meal or almond flour, or ground flax seeds. Regular flour will also thicken the dip, although it is currently debatable as to whether raw flour is safe to eat.

Why baking soda?

One of the most common questions I receive about this dip is why baking soda is included in a no bake dip.

The short answer is that I had initially intended to bake the mixture the first time I came up with the recipe.

But even more importantly, baking soda adds a slightly salty “cookie dough” flavor to the dish. You can absolutely leave it out if you prefer.

In fact, why not try it both ways to see for yourself, it really does add something extra!

Vegan chickpea cookie dough dip

This cookie dessert dip is easily vegan as long as you use dairy free chocolate chips and plant based milk, such as almond milk, soy milk, or coconut milk.

It can also be gluten free if you choose almond flour, flax meal, or certified gluten free oats or oat flour.

The Best Healthy Chocolate Chip Chickpea Cookie Dough Dip Game Day Recipe

2015 edit: When I asked readers to vote for their top 5 absolute favorite recipes from the blog to include in the new Chocolate Covered Katie Cookbook, this chickpea cookie dough dip won by a landslide!

4.97 from 556 votes
How to make the original healthy chickpea cookie dough dip recipe that will shock everyone who tries it!
Prep Time: 10 minutes
Total Time: 10 minutes
Yield: 3 cups
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Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups chickpeas or white beans (1 can, drained and rinsed very well) (250g after draining)
  • 1/8 tsp salt
  • just over 1/8 tsp baking soda
  • 2 tsp pure vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup nut butter of choice or allergy friendly sub
  • up to 1/4 cup milk of choice only if needed
  • Sweetener of choice (see note below)
  • 1/3 cup chocolate chips or sugar free chocolate chips
  • 2-3 tbsp quick oats or almond flour or flaxmeal as needed to thicken

Instructions 

  • Sweetener Notes: I used 2/3 cup brown sugar when I first made this for the party. Liquid sweeteners (agave, maple, etc.) are fine as well. You can get away with less sugar – some people will be perfectly fine with just 3 tbsp for the whole recipe! See the following link for: Sugar-Free Cookie Dough Dip.
    Add all ingredients (except for chocolate chips) to a good food processor, and process until very smooth. Then mix in the chocolate chips. (Some commenters have had success with a blender, but I did not. Try that at your own risk, and know the results will be better in a high-quality food processor such as a Cuisinart.) If made correctly and blended long enough, this should have the exact texture of real cookie dough!
    View Nutrition Facts

Video

Notes

Be sure to also try these Black Bean Brownies!
 
Like this recipe? Leave a comment below!
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More About The Cookbook

Low Carb Cheesecake Recipe

Keto Cheesecake

How To Make Vegan Brownies

Vegan Brownies

The Best Easy Buffalo Cauliflower Bites

Buffalo Cauliflower Wings

Easy Coconut Ice Cream Recipe (Vegan, Dairy Free, Egg Free)

Also, if you want to make your own homemade vegan cookie dough ice cream, try stirring spoonfuls of the cookie dough into my Coconut Ice Cream or the following four ingredient Keto Ice Cream.

Your life might never be the same again…

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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Recipe Rating




2,059 Comments

  1. Alina says:

    But why to put baking soda at all?

  2. Bri says:

    How much does this recipe make?

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      2 cups maybe?

  3. bianca bowman says:

    I’m so lucky to have found this. You are so generous to share this recipe. I have been looking for years for a dessert hummus recipe. It just seemed like the perfect medium for a sweet dip like this. I had no idea where to start. I looked online many months before I just gave up. Today, on a whim I looked it up again and found this and your Brownie Batter recipe. I couldn’t be more pleased. Thank you so very much for sharing this with the world. It is about time.

  4. Lisa says:

    Hi Katie! What kind of oats are best for this recipe? Quick oats, old-fashioned oats, steel cut? Does it matter what kind you use? Thanks!! 🙂

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      Quick oats are definitely best because they will give it the best texture. Rolled will work. I’m not sure about steel cut.

  5. Sarah says:

    Katie! I’m obsessed with this dip and it’s now my go-to for pretty much any event where I’m contributing a dish. I was planning on making it this weekend for a football tailgate and realized I have a friend attending who is allergic to nuts…do you think subbing tahini or sunflower butter for the nut butter would be okay, or would it completely throw off the flavor?

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      I personally love it made with coconut butter. I think readers have used sunbutter as well successfully.

  6. D says:

    Katie! I just watched a 2017 episode of Shark Tank. A girl was there to pitch her dessert hummus dip. My husband hadnt heard of it a thing and I naturally brought up your recipes. The lady was asked how did you invent this concept? She pretended she did and basically regurgitated your story! Was so mad!

  7. Lauren says:

    Hi Katie,
    Thank you for your recipes. Recently, given that it’s the pumpkin-flavored everything time of year, I attempted an egg-free, edible pumpkin cookie dough. I used white flour, and amended a few recipes I had found online. I thought I’d make a suggestion to you to possibly consider making a pumpkin version of your edible cookie dough. If you have already, I apologize for the suggestion. If not, I’m sure you could create one! Maybe an unbaked version of your pumpkin pizookie, perhaps, scaled back inside. Again, I apologize if this has been done.
    Kindly, Lauren

  8. TR Fobia says:

    This might have been asked already. But can you use butter instead of peanut butter?

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      It would be an experiment, but be sure to report back if you try!

  9. Victoria says:

    I’m not sure why this didn’t work out for me. I could still taste the bean flavour. I used white kidney beans, and I thought I rinsed them a lot. I used (natural) peanut butter and cane sugar. Added a bit extra peanut butter too. I added the sugar to taste since it said that some people are fine without any sugar at all. I think I probably added 1/2 a cup of sugar in total. Eventually added some maple syrup because I thought that would help mask the flavour. In the end, I’m pretty sure people could tell it wasn’t real cookie dough. They may have liked it, but they knew it was something different.

    Is this supposed to taste exactly like cookie dough?

  10. Melissa says:

    I wonder if this would work with white kidney beans. I have made this many times with chickpeas and it’s amazing. I have a craving for a sweet treat and no chickpeas! Boo.

    1. Jason Sanford says:

      It does work with white beans!