Category Archives: Fast Food Gluten Free

quick and easy gluten free

Mini Black & White Cookies, GFCF



As a small child, there was no better way to spend Saturday morning than to go to the market with my mom followed by a trip to the infamous Snowflake Bakery.  There we would finish up the shopping with purchasing a freshly baked coffee cake and a dark rye bread, still slightly warm.

My mom let me pick out my favorite cookie and I would manage to eat it all on the way home.  Half Moons were huge cookies, almost five inches across and slathered with both chocolate and vanilla glaze. These giant cake-like cookies were better known everywhere else as Black & Whites.

Years later, long after the bakery was gone and I’d moved to the west coast where Black & White Cookies are virtually nonexistent, I learned how to bake them at home for my children.  Now I make them gluten-free in a mini version for my grandsons.

This kid-sized version of the recipe is both gluten-free and dairy-free.

Don’t save them for special occasions – make today a mini Black & White Cookie day at your house.

Gluten Free, Casein Free Mini Black & White Cookies

Makes about one dozen 2 inch cookies

Cookie Batter

  • 140 grams gluten free flour (100 grams Bob’s Red Mill GF Oat flour, plus 25 grams Bob’s Potato Starch, plus 15 grams Bob’s Almond Flour) (about 1.5 cups)
  • 45 grams sugar (about ¼ cup)
  • 8 grams Spectrum solid shortening (1/4 oz. or about 1 skimpy tablespoon)
  • Pinch of kosher salt
  • 1/ 2 teaspoon baking powder
  • 1 whole large egg plus 1 large egg white
  • 1 scant tablespoon Almond Milk (Diamond)
  • ½ teaspoon GF Vanilla Extract
  • ¼ teaspoon pure lemon extract (available at most grocery stores)

Glaze

  • 1 cup organic confectioner’s sugar (1/2 cup in each bowl)
  • 1 tablespoon unsweetened cocoa
  • hot water
  • splash of vanilla
  • tiny drop of organic corn syrup (optional)

Preheat oven to 350.  Line a baking sheet with parchment or silpat.

In a stand mixer bowl, weigh out the flours and sugar, and add the baking powder and salt.  Mix on low for about 15 seconds to incorporate the flours.

Add the shortening and on medium low, mix until it resembles coarse sand.

Add the egg and mix again for about 15 seconds.

Add the Almond Milk and mix again for a few seconds.

That’s it.  Using a spatula, scrape the sides and cover the bowl and let it rest for about 20 minutes.  GF mixtures benefit from a short rest before baking.

Scoop by tablespoons (I use a small ice cream scoop) onto the prepared baking sheet taking care to make sure the scooped dough stays round.  Using a spoon or a small offset spatula, flatten the dough using a circular motion to keep the shape as round as possible.

Bake about 9 minutes and rotate the pan.  Bake about 6 minutes more or until the bottoms are slightly golden.

Cool completely.

Glaze Directions

In two separate small bowls sift about ½ cup of organic powdered sugar into each.  In one bowl add a scant tablespoon of unsweetened cocoa, sifted to remove lumps. Whisk to incorporate.

Add 2-3 teaspoons of hot water to each bowl stirring until the mixture looks like a thick glaze.  Add a splash of vanilla to each bowl and stir.  Add a drop of organic corn syrup to each bowl and stir.

If the mixture is too thick, add drops of hot water.  If it is too thin, add tiny amounts of powdered sugar (sifted – you don’t want lumps). The ideal glaze will be on its way to being thick but still drippy.

Apply the glaze on the flat side or the bottom.

Using a small offset spatula or a very small spoon spread the vanilla glaze on half of each cookie.  Let them dry a bit on the cooling rack.  By the time you finish with the vanilla, the first cookies you glazed should be hardening.  Do the same with the chocolate side.

Hint:  Don’t glaze the cookies over the rack where they are drying – or over the bowls.  I’ve dripped chocolate on vanilla in both circumstances.  Now I slather on the glaze over a small plate which catches the drips.

Let the glaze harden for about an hour.  And enjoy.


GF Ratio Rally: Bisconies, Actually


This month’s GF Ratio Rally is brought to you by the little treat called Scone.  Our host is Lauren of Celiac Teen.  Please visit the other GF Ratio Rally participants listed at the end of this post to enjoy a whirlwind tour of some great GF scone recipes using Ratio baking.  For my account of scone-ville, read on.

Once upon a time, I didn’t know much about scones.  In our universe, breakfast pastry was called cheese Danish.  But one day, thanks to Julia Child and PBS, that all changed. Continue reading

Got Yolks? Make Double Chocolate Pots de Creme




Whenever there are leftover yolks from some egg white adventure (Pavlova Bowls) I think not of cookies or pudding.  I think chocolate pots de creme.

After all, chocolate is a food group, yes?

I had so many leftover yolks, some were sent off to the arctic (freezer) as Sable Cookie dough.  And the remainder went on a  balmy cruise to chocolate-world floating in a small sea of warm water morphing into tiny little pots de creme. Continue reading

Canteen Gluten Free Flaky Biscuits, Really



Herb biscuits

A proper conversation during a long road trip should always center on food.  It should include some great new food ideas and of course some animated discussion (read: pig-headed opinionated aloud musings sprinkled with appropriate hand gestures).

The topic this most recent road trip was light, flaky GF biscuits.  The debate: biscuit ratio and cream biscuits v. shortening biscuits.  By the time we were almost to Bakersfield from near San Francisco, we’d decided to stop at Gelson’s and round-up some GF flours, butter, buttermilk and cream to make some test biscuits in our hotel room – which was equipped with a small kitchen.

Too bad it took until we’d opened the bottle of wine and laid out the ingredients to notice that the kitchen only included a giant dishwasher, microwave, tiny cook top and refrigerator.  No oven.

We were that tired. Continue reading