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    Jules Shepard
    Jules Shepard

    Wedding Cookies / Snowball Cookies (Gluten-Free)

    Reviewed and edited by a celiac disease expert.

    Sometimes called “Wedding Cookies,” these balls of crumbly, nutty, powdery yumminess are a traditional favorite you shouldn’t have to miss just because you’re eating gluten-free. No one will miss the gluten in this delicious treat!

    Ingredients:

    • ½ cup confectioner’s sugar (plus more for dusting finished cookies)
    • ½ cup pecans
    • ¼ cup sweetened, flaked coconut (optional)
    • ½ cup butter or non-dairy alternative, room temperature (e.g. Earth Balance Buttery Sticks)
    • 1 tsp. gluten-free vanilla extract
    • 1 tsp. orange zest or peel (optional)
    • 1 cup Jules Gluten Free All-Purpose Flour
    • ¼ tsp. salt

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    Directions:

    Using a large food processor, pulse the confectioner’s sugar, pecans, and coconut until the pecans are finely chopped and tossed well with the sugar.

    Using an electric mixer or the food processor, beat together the butter and pecan mixture until fully integrated. Beat in the vanilla and the orange zest. Slowly add the flour and salt, beating or pulsing until blended and a soft dough is formed.

    Cover the dough tightly and refrigerate until cold and firm, not sticky – at least 2 hours.

    Preheat oven to 325° F (static).

    Scoop cold dough into large teaspoon-sized balls and roll between your palms to form a round ball. Place each formed ball onto a parchment-lined cookie sheet 1-2 inches apart. Bake for 15-20 minutes, or until the edges begin to brown slightly. Remove to cool on a wire rack for 5 minutes.

    Sift approximately ½ cup confectioner’s sugar into a small flat-bottomed bowl, then gently toss each cookie in the bowl to lightly coat with sugar and serve.

    Yield: 2 dozen cookies, depending on size.



    User Feedback

    Recommended Comments

    Guest Amy

    These flattened out in the oven and were not the right consistency. There is not enough flour in this recipe. The normal gluten recipe calls for at least 2 cups. I didn't have Jules gluten-free flour, so not sure if that was the difference. I used Bob's Red Mill All Purpose gluten-free flour, which I usually substitute in all these recipes without issue. I found another recipe on this site for Russian Tea Cakes that seems better which I'll be trying now.

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    Guest Jules
    These flattened out in the oven and were not the right consistency. There is not enough flour in this recipe. The normal gluten recipe calls for at least 2 cups. I didn't have Jules gluten-free flour, so not sure if that was the difference. I used Bob's Red Mill All Purpose gluten-free flour, which I usually substitute in all these recipes without issue. I found another recipe on this site for Russian Tea Cakes that seems better which I'll be trying now.

    Hi Amy, sorry the recipe didn't work for you, but you are right that the flour made the difference. Just like any key ingredient, changing the composition of the flour can make alter the recipe altogether. My flour mixture is completely different from others like Bob's. The grain/starch ratio has been tested in every kind of recipe with great success and it contains the binding agent xanthan gum, which many like Bob's do not. Using the ingredients called for in any recipe will ensure they succeed as described and as pictured.

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    Guest sjmccarthy

    Posted

    I am very frustrated with recipes that require "someone" premixed flour substitute. I don't always have access to those and I am tiered of missing the moment to bake. Why can't the recipe's say 1/2 cup tapioca flour, 1/2 cup masa, etc. Why do these have to be a self-promotion?

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    Guest Rachel

    Posted

    I made these cookies in China using a rice flour - I had to add a lot more flour as well to make them not sticky before I put them in the over. Otherwise they worked out. I rolled them in flour before cooking them to keep consistency... and they flattened out also... but they were tasty.

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    Guest ruby

    Mine flattened out in the oven!!!! So sad!!!

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    Guest Christina

    Posted

    I'm worried these might be too sweet. I looked at "normal" wedding cake cookie recipes and they call for double the flour and butter, but the same amount of sugar... yikes. I've already mixed some of my ingredients, just waiting for the butter to soften, so now I'm wondering what I should do? Add more flour and butter so I don't get an overly sweet cookie?

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    Guest Christina

    Posted

    Well I made them, with a little bit of modification....

     

    I used 2/3 cup quinoa flour, 1/3 cup tapioca starch + 1/4 cup tapioca starch to make up for the lack of xanthan gum... also added 2 tsp chis seeds to the food processor... Since my kids don't do nuts, I added 1/4 cup roasted pumpkin seeds and 1/4 cup sunflower seeds. Forgot to add the lemon zest and vanilla (whoops). But they are great, did not flatten and just crunchy enough. Oh yeah, I did not chill the dough, rather form the cookie balls first THEN chilled them, then baked.

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    Guest Jessica

    Posted

    Well I made them, with a little bit of modification....

     

    I used 2/3 cup quinoa flour, 1/3 cup tapioca starch + 1/4 cup tapioca starch to make up for the lack of xanthan gum... also added 2 tsp chis seeds to the food processor... Since my kids don't do nuts, I added 1/4 cup roasted pumpkin seeds and 1/4 cup sunflower seeds. Forgot to add the lemon zest and vanilla (whoops). But they are great, did not flatten and just crunchy enough. Oh yeah, I did not chill the dough, rather form the cookie balls first THEN chilled them, then baked.

    You should make a recipe website. Thanks for the tips. :)

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    Guest Tina

    Ewww mine were flat and nasty. Didn't like at all!

     

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  • About Me

    Jules Shepard

    Atop each of Jules Shepard’s free weekly recipe newsletters is her mantra: “Perfecting Gluten-Free Baking, Together.” From her easy-to-read cookbook (“Nearly Normal Cooking for Gluten Free Eating”) to her highly rated reference for making the transition to living gluten free easier (“The First Year: Celiac Disease and Living Gluten Free”), Jules is tireless in the kitchen, at the keyboard and in person in helping people eating gluten free do it with ease, with style and with no compromises.
     
    In the kitchen, she creates recipes for beautiful, tasty gluten-free foods that most people could never tell are gluten free. As a writer, she produces a steady stream of baking tips, living advice, encouragement and insights through magazine articles, her web site (gfJules.com), newsletter, e-books and on sites like celiac.com and others. Jules also maintains a busy schedule of speaking at celiac and gluten-free gatherings, appearing on TV and radio shows, baking industry conventions, as well as teaching classes on the ease and freedom of baking at home.
     
    Her patent-pending all-purpose flour literally has changed lives for families who thought going gluten free meant going without. Thousands read her weekly newsletter, follow her on Twitter and interact with her on FaceBook.  


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