Magical cookies made with almond butter, maple syrup, oats, buckwheat flour, and plenty of chocolate. Though these cookies are gluten-free, vegan, refined sugar-free, and contain no weird ingredients, they look and taste surprisingly like classic chocolate chip cookies!
These cookies are downright magical. Instead of the usual cookie ingredients (butter, sugar, and eggs), they use a base of almond butter, maple syrup, and coconut oil. With some gluten-free flours added in, plus oats and chocolate, they bake up into thick and chewy cookies that taste and feel shockingly close to classic chocolate chip cookies, only with loads more flavor. They're also undetectably gluten-free and vegan.
I love this cookie formula so much, I've used it to make other delicious gluten-free & vegan cookies, including:
- Vegan Paleo Chocolate Chip Cookies with Cashew Butter
- Vegan & Gluten-Free Oatmeal Tahini Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Paleo Tahini Chocolate Chip Cookies
- Gluten-Free Vegan Matcha Cookies
I got inspired to make these gluten-free and vegan cookies from a few different sources. First, Dana "Minimalist Baker" Shultz's beautiful gluten-free, vegan cookies packed with chocolate and peanut butter. Second, Heidi's vegan peanut butter cookies, loaded with whole grain flour and sweetened with maple syrup.
I decided to combine the two, trading the olive oil in Heidi's recipe for coconut oil, using milder almond butter in place of the peanut, and keeping the flours gluten-free.
I whisked together almond butter, coconut oil, maple syrup, and vanilla, then moved on to the dry ingredients.
Since buckwheat goes so well in chocolate chip cookies, I decided to use it in conjunction with sweet rice flour, which is naturally sticky and adds chew to baked goods. And inspired by these oatmeal cookies from Flourishing Foodie, I added not one, but two kinds of oats: quick oats to absorb more moisture and keep the cookies thick, and old-fashioned rolled oats for hearty flecks and a bit of chew.
I stirred in a ton of chopped chocolate, scooped the dough into balls which I topped with flakes of salt and more chocolate, and baked them into chewy pillows of cookie love.
Then I made them three more times because, hey, it was raining. Also, I keep giving them away to all the gluten-free and vegan people I know, which is a lot.
I never thought I'd be able to make a good cookie that was both gluten-free and vegan, so I'm thrilled with the results. The texture is indistinguishable from conventional cookies: thick, chewy, soft, and moist. Sweet rice flour and protein-rich almond butter help to take the place of gluten, and they also let the robust flavors of chocolate, buckwheat, and maple shine through. The oats give you something to sink your teeth into, and the occasional burst of flaky salt makes them utterly addictive.
I love the whiff of earth and spice that buckwheat flour adds to these cookies but if you don't have any on hand, you can likely trade both flours for a gluten-free all-purpose blend, or wheat flour if gluten isn't an issue. Do be sure to use oats that are certified gluten-free for those cookie-eaters who are severely gluten-intolerant, and seek out chocolate that is vegan. Bittersweet chocolate doesn't usually contain dairy, but refined sugar can be processed with animal bone char which is a no-no for vegans.
And be sure to have a tall glass of something milk-like to wash down gooey, warm-from-the-oven chocolate chip cookies. Because that is one of life's little pleasures.
*Bojon appétit! For more Bojon Gourmet in your life, follow along on Instagram, Facebook, or Pinterest, purchase my gluten-free cookbook Alternative Baker, or subscribe to receive new posts via email. And if you make this gluten-free vegan chocolate chip cookie recipe, I’d love to see. Tag your Instagram snaps @The_Bojon_Gourmet and #bojongourmet.*
Almond Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies with Oats
Print Recipe Pin RecipeIngredients
- ½ cup sweet rice flour (mochiko) (2.75 ounces / 80 grams)
- ½ cup buckwheat flour (2.5 ounces / 70 grams)
- ½ cup old-fashioned rolled oats, plus an extra handful for the tops (1.75 ounces / 50 grams)
- ½ cup quick (baby)oats (1.5 ounces / 40 grams)
- 1 teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon fine sea salt (or 1/4 teaspoon if your almond butter is salted)
- 1 cup smooth, unsalted almond butter (8 ounces / 225 grams)
- ¾ cup plus 2 tablespoons maple syrup (8.5 ounces / 240 grams)
- 6 tablespoons melted but cool coconut oil (2.5 ounces / 70 grams)
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- 1 ½ cups coarsely chopped bittersweet chocolate (preferably 65-70% cacao mass), plus some extra chunks for the tops (8 ounces / 225 grams)
- flaky salt such as Maldon, for the tops (optional)
Instructions
- Position a rack in the upper and lower thirds of the oven and preheat to 375ºF. Line two or three cookie sheets with parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the sweet rice and buckwheat flours with the old-fashioned and quick oats, baking soda, and sea salt.
- In a large bowl, stir together the almond butter, maple syrup, coconut oil, and vanilla. Add the flour mixture and stir until combined, then stir vigorously for 20 seconds. (This helps create a chewy texture.) Stir in the chocolate.
- Form the dough into 1 ½-inch balls (either with two teaspoons or with a #40 spring-loaded ice cream scoop) and place at least 2 inches apart on the lined baking sheets. If you like, top each cookie with a few flakes of flaky salt, a few oats, and a chocolate chunk or two.
- Bake the cookies, rotating the pans from front to back and top to bottom after five minutes, until the cookies are puffed and slightly cracked on top, and set around the sides, 8-10 minutes. (They will seem underdone, soft, and fragile at first, but will firm up as they cool.) Let the cookies cool completely, then store airtight at room temperature. They will stay soft and chewy for up to 3 days.
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