These lightly sweet Paleo breakfast cookies are packed with healthy fats and protein. Send your family off for the day the right way!
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A satisfying busy morning breakfast
I don't know about you, but I'm all about the make-ahead breakfast for weekday mornings. Well, I do know about some of you, that you're all about that too since I've been offering gluten free breakfast ideas on the blog forever and a day.
I need to fill my children up with something that will keep them going all morning long, plus I don't want to fight first thing in the morning, nor do I want to beg (“please just eat because we have to GO!”). And I'm just not waking up any earlier to make a hot breakfast at 6:00 a.m.
Enter Paleo Breakfast Cookies: make-ahead, packed with protein, fiber, good fat and vitamins, with no refined sugar. And they're just sweet enough to overcome any I'm-just-not-hungry-this-morning objections. School morning breakfast. Done.
These breakfast cookies are, indeed, Paleo. But to me, Paleo is just shorthand for no gluten, no grains, no dairy, and no refined sugars. I'm into these breakfast cookies for the taste, health, and nutrition, not for the purism of Paleo.
Of course, scrambled eggs are just as much of a Paleo breakfast as these breakfast cookies. But these cookies can be made ahead (they freeze amazingly well), and also have tons of protein and healthy fats, too. Plus, my kids love these lightly sweet cookies—plus the fact that they're eating cookies for breakfast doesn't hurt.
Ingredients and substitutions
If you've never tried baking with coconut and almond flours, these Paleo breakfast cookies are an easy place to start. Here are a few more recipe notes to help you navigate the world of Paleo flours in general, and this recipe specifically:
Almond flour
This recipe calls for finely ground, blanched almond flour. Blanched almonds are raw almonds that have had their skins removed. Finely ground almond flour is not the same as almond meal, which is usually made from whole almonds that haven't been blanched and is much more coarsely ground.
In baking, especially in Paleo baking, you'll need the finely ground, blanched kind of almond flour, and never almond meal. Much like baking with superfine white rice flour in conventional gluten free baking, for the almond flour to mix completely with the other ingredients in a baking recipe, it must be finely ground.
If you can't have almonds, you can try cashew flour. Cashews don't have skins, so they don't have to be blanched. Just raw cashew flour that's been finely ground will work in place of almond flour. If you can't have nuts at all, you can try sunflower seed flour, but it tends to react with baking soda and baking powder to give baked goods a green color. It's not harmful, though!
Nuts and seeds
You can use any combination of nuts and seeds you like. If you can't have nuts, and are making these cookies with sunflower seed flour, try using seeds and coconut flakes.
Coconut flour
Coconut flour is made from the pulp of the coconut that's been dried and ground. It's very soft and powdery, and it may look like other baking flours. But it's entirely unique and has no known 1:1 substitute. There are only 3 tablespoons of coconut flour in this recipe, but they give the cookies a lot of structure and fiber.
Coconut palm sugar
A dark, granulated unrefined sugar, coconut palm sugar has a relatively distinctive, deep taste. It's more analogous to refined brown sugar than the granulated sugar in flavor, but it's dry like granulated sugar. You can replace it in this recipe with white granulated sugar if you don't mind using a refined sugar.
Coconut oil
Coconut oil is a soft solid at room temperature, and can be easily replaced with Spectrum brand nonhydrogenated vegetable shortening if you prefer.
Eggs
Since there are only two eggs in this recipe, each should be able to be replaced with one “chia egg” (1 tablespoon ground chia seeds + 1 tablespoon lukewarm water, mixed and allowed to gel). I haven't tried it, though, so you'll have to experiment.
Honey
Since maple syrup is much thinner than honey, it isn't necessarily the perfect 1:1 substitute in this recipe for honey, but it's your best bet if you can't have honey. You might have to adjust the moisture balance of the recipe with another 1/4 teaspoonful of coconut flour, for example.
Paleo Breakfast Cookies
Ingredients
- 1 ¼ cups (150 g) raw nuts and seeds (I used a combination of cashews sliced almonds and raw pumpkin seeds), roughly chopped (can substitute an equal amount, by weight, of another raw nut)
- 1 cup (80 g) raw coconut flakes
- 1 ½ cups (168 g) blanched finely ground almond flour (See Recipe Notes)
- 3 tablespoons (2 g) coconut flour
- ¾ teaspoon baking soda
- ½ teaspoon kosher salt
- 2 tablespoons (24 g) coconut palm sugar (can substitute an equal amount granulated sugar)
- 4 tablespoons (48 g) virgin coconut oil melted and cooled
- 2 (100 g (weighed out of shell)) eggs at room temperature, beaten
- 4 tablespoons (84 g) honey
- 2 teaspoons pure vanilla extract
- 3 ounces dairy-free chocolate chips (optional)
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 300°F. Line a rimmed baking sheet with unbleached parchment paper and set it aside.
- Place the raw nuts and coconut flakes on a separate rimmed baking sheet in a single layer and place in the preheated oven. Bake until lightly toasted, about 10 minutes.
- Remove from the oven and set aside to cool briefly.
- In a large bowl, place the almond flour, coconut flour, baking soda, salt and coconut palm sugar, and whisk to combine well.
- Add the melted coconut oil, eggs, honey and vanilla, and mix to combine well. The dough will be very soft.
- Add the toasted nuts and coconut flakes, and mix until they are evenly distributed throughout the dough.
- Allow the dough to sit until it begins to firm up so it will be easier to handle (about 5 minutes).
- Divide the dough into 12 equal portions, each about 4 tablespoons in volume, about 2 inches apart from one another.
- With wet hands, shape each portion into a ball, return to the baking sheet and then press into a disk about ½ inch thick.
- Scatter 5 or 6 of the optional chocolate chips on top of each disk and press gently to help them adhere.
- Place the baking sheet in the center of the preheated oven and bake until the cookies are puffed, pale golden all over and brown around the edges, about 12 minutes.
- Remove the cookies from the oven and allow to cool on the baking sheet until firm (about 10 minutes) before transferring to a wire rack to cool completely.
Notes
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Thanks for stopping by!
Hi, I’m Nicole. I create gluten free recipes that really work and taste as good as you remember. No more making separate meals when someone is GF, or buying packaged foods that aren’t good enough to justify the price. At Gluten Free on a Shoestring, “good, for gluten free” just isn’t good enough! Come visit my bio!
Carolyn Edmond says
Hi Nicole,
These are a new favorite in my home!! I had a coarsely ground almond flour that I ground further in my blendtec, but had to be careful not to over blend into almond butter, but the results were perfect. I replaced the eggs with aquafaba. These cookies were light, just sweet enough and the combination of nuts and coconut, and a handful of oats that I added made a great breakfast or anytime cookie. Thank you for this awesome recipe!
Nicole Hunn says
No worries, Carolyn. I fixed this original comment to refer to me by the right name, mostly because I find it hysterical (I have a weird sense of humor) but I didn’t want to confuse anyone else. Glad you enjoyed the cookies with all those subs!
Sonja Reitmeier says
Hi Nicole,
This recipe sounds great! But, i did buy the Bob’s blanched almond flour, why will this not work in the recipe? It said on the front label that its from blanched almonds. Please advise, because i am excited to try these…
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Sonja, Bob’s almond flour is quite coarsely ground, and doesn’t bake like flour, I’m afraid. You can try it in this recipe, but I can’t promise results!
Yvonne M. Ketola Dodge says
Hello Nicole! Thanks for this delicious recipe! Can you confirm the baking temp? I tried the 300 which was for toasting the nuts, but it didn’t seem sufficient for actual baking. I’m guessing 350′? Thanks! (Smells wonderful in here!) Yvonne
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Yvonne, As I explained in the comments below, the recipe is correct as written. Almond flour has a tendency to burn very easily.
Marie Jennings says
Oh my Heavens! These are simply amazing!! I didn’t have enough honey so I used half pure maple syrup and half honey. So tasty, these will be fun to wake up to each morning. :) Thank you!!
Maureen Sutherland Weiser says
Am I crazy or did you change this recipe? I think the original had pepitas and pecans and I have searched high and low and can’t find the recipe (which happens to be my very favorite)!
Help!!
Maureen
Nicole Hunn says
You are most definitely not crazy, Maureen. See the final paragraph of the recipe. : “This recipe was first published on the blog in 2013. I have updated the recipe and method, and added new photographs.” But you can still use whichever combination of nuts and seeds you like!
Anne Lairmore says
Photo taken just now:
Nicole Hunn says
Looking good, Anne!!
Anne Lairmore says
Completely amazing!!! We are paleo at our house and can’t decide if this is breakfast or dessert!
Angela says
Hi Nicole! Are the cookies meant to be baked at 300 degrees?
Nicole Hunn says
Hi, Angela, The recipe is correct as written. Almond flour has a tendency to burn very easily.
Angela says
Thank you :) And thank you so much for all the hard work you do for us! I’ve made a ton of your recipes and they always turn out so delicious!!