Jump to content
  • Welcome to Celiac.com!

    You have found your celiac tribe! Join us and ask questions in our forum, share your story, and connect with others.




  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A1):



    Celiac.com Sponsor (A1-M):


  • Get Celiac.com Updates:
    Support Our Content
    eNewsletter
    Donate

Classic Christmas Cookies-need Recipes!


Katester

Recommended Posts

Katester Enthusiast

I'm looking for classic christmas cookie recipes. Easy, recipes with less than 5 flours?

In particular:

Gingerbread

The peanut butter cookies with Hershey kisses in them

Potato Chip Cookies

Cookie Press Cookies

Fudge

Does anyone have any other Christmas cookie recipes that are simple to make and simply delicious? Anything can help!!!


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



happygirl Collaborator

We use this recipe for peanut butter blossoms. Substitute your regular flour mix (I've used BRM or BB)

Open Original Shared Link

Wonka Apprentice
I'm looking for classic christmas cookie recipes. Easy, recipes with less than 5 flours?

In particular:

Gingerbread

The peanut butter cookies with Hershey kisses in them

Potato Chip Cookies

Cookie Press Cookies

Fudge

Does anyone have any other Christmas cookie recipes that are simple to make and simply delicious? Anything can help!!!

Just made these the other day:

Spritz Cookies TNT from Karen in NewYork

1 cup butter or margarine

3/4 cup sugar

1 egg

1 teaspoon vanilla

2 1/4 cups gluten-free flour mix (I use Hagman's gluten-free blend)

2 teaspoons xanthan gum

1/4 teaspoon baking powder

Cream shortening and sugar well. Beat in egg and vanilla. Sift dry ingredients and add. Fill cookie press and form cookies on ungreased cookie sheets. Sprinkle with coarse colored sugar or sprinkles if desired. Bake at 375 degrees for 10-12 minutes (at 9 minutes, mine were perfect).

*Note from Mireille: doubled it, but I made a mistake, I added 2 lb of butter instead of 2 cups, so, I had to re-double the rest of the ingredients to end up with a quadruple recipe.

But it works and they are very very good at least.

I have made about the half of my batter and put the rest in my cold solarium, as I was to tired and fed up with cookies.

I'll warm the batter in the microwave at defrost and continue this morning.

My battery cookie press is working fine. I had to warm the dough a little in the microwave for it to come out, but it's working pretty well.

I haven't tested these out yet but heres the recipe anyways (it looks good to me):

Gingerbread Cut-Out Cookies

From "Nearly Normal Cooking for Gluten-Free Eating" by Jules E.D. Shepard

Ingredients

3/4 cup Earth Balance vegan shortening (alternatively, unsalted butter or margarine)

1/4 cup molasses

1 cup brown sugar

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 1/2 cups Nearly Normal Gluten-Free Flour Mix ™ (recipe below)

1 cup rice flour

1/2 cup buckwheat or brown rice flour

pinch salt

2 teaspoons ground cinnamon (I reduced it to one teaspoon)

2 teaspoons ground ginger

1 teaspoon cloves (I reduced to ½ teaspoon)

3 teaspoons baking powder

1/2 cup water

cornstarch for rolling out dough

Method

In a large mixing bowl, beat shortening, molasses, brown sugar and vanilla with an electric mixer until well combined and creamy.

In another bowl, combine flours, salt, cinnamon, ginger, cloves and baking powder. Gradually fold in dry ingredients into shortening mixture, adding water as necessary. The objective is a moist dough ball. Divide dough in half, wrap in plastic and chill for at least one hour. Dough should be very cold before rolling out.

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.

Liberally dust work surface and rolling pin with cornstarch. Roll out one half of dough into a rectangle shape about 1/2 inch thick. The thinner the dough, the crispier the cookie.

Cut out into shapes and place onto a baking sheet lined with parchment paper. You may need a pie server or thin flipping spatula to help lift dough off work surface onto baking sheets.

Sprinkle with coarse sugar or decorate with dried fruit, jimmies or whatever strikes your fancy.

Bake for 25 minutes, or until lightly browned. Allow to cool on baking sheet for five minutes before transferring to a cooling rack.

Makes about 2 dozen 2-inch cut-out cookies, or 1 dozen 4 inch gingerbread people.

Dough may be frozen for later use.

Nearly Normal Gluten-Free Flour Mix

Ingredients

1 cup white rice flour

1 cup potato starch (not potato flour)

1 cup cornstarch

1/2 cup corn flour (may also be sold/labelled as whole grain cornmeal; Bob's Red Mill is one brand)

1/2 cup tapioca flour or tapioca starch

4 teaspoons xanthan gum

Method

celiac-mommy Collaborator

Peanut Butter cookies-super easy

Open Original Shared Link

instead of adding the chocolate chips, flatten a bit and use a Kiss

Fudge, base recipe, lots of variations possible-nuts, marshmallows, candies, cookies, etc...

Open Original Shared Link

Gingerbread-more than 5 ingredients, but yummy

Open Original Shared Link

Katester Enthusiast
We use this recipe for peanut butter blossoms. Substitute your regular flour mix (I've used BRM or BB)

Open Original Shared Link

This recipe looks great!!! What is BRM or BB though?

JNBunnie1 Community Regular
This recipe looks great!!! What is BRM or BB though?

'Bob's Red Mill' and 'Better Batter' are two brnds of flours available. Be careful with BRM mixes, they tend to have bean flour which a number of people find distasteful unless it's covered by a very strong flavor. For example, the BRM chocolate cake mix has bean flour but is delicious, you totally can't taste it. Whereas the BRM choc chip cookie mix you CAN taste it, for me, not so yummy.......

Sientara Newbie

So many different ways to make the peanut butter chocolate cookies . . . and they all looked different than the one I have used so here's one more:

12oz peanut butter chips

1 can sweetened condensed milk

chopped nuts

chocolate kisses

Melt peanut butter kisses and sweetened condensed milk until smooth. Pour into greased square pan and cool until it can be handled. Roll into one inch balls (it will be sticky) and then in the nuts. Press unwrapped chocolate kiss into middle of ball.

These always disappear fast in my family.


Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):
Celiac.com Sponsor (A8):



Celiac.com Sponsor (A8-M):



AMQmom Explorer

The current "Living Without" magazine also has lots of yummy looking Christmas cookie recipes in it! I'm giving a bunch of them a try later this week!

Katester Enthusiast
Just made these the other day:

Spritz Cookies TNT from Karen in NewYork

1 cup butter or margarine

3/4 cup sugar

1 egg

1 teaspoon vanilla

2 1/4 cups gluten-free flour mix (I use Hagman's gluten-free blend)

2 teaspoons xanthan gum

1/4 teaspoon baking powder

Cream shortening and sugar well. Beat in egg and vanilla. Sift dry ingredients and add. Fill cookie press and form cookies on ungreased cookie sheets. Sprinkle with coarse colored sugar or sprinkles if desired. Bake at 375 degrees for 10-12 minutes (at 9 minutes, mine were perfect).

*Note from Mireille: doubled it, but I made a mistake, I added 2 lb of butter instead of 2 cups, so, I had to re-double the rest of the ingredients to end up with a quadruple recipe.

But it works and they are very very good at least.

I have made about the half of my batter and put the rest in my cold solarium, as I was to tired and fed up with cookies.

I'll warm the batter in the microwave at defrost and continue this morning.

My battery cookie press is working fine. I had to warm the dough a little in the microwave for it to come out, but it's working pretty well.

I tried these the other day and they came out very, VERY crumbly. I'm not sure why but most of them fell apart when I tried to take them off the cookie sheet. The ones that did survive fell apart as soon as I took a bite. Does anyone have an idea as to why this happens?

Wonka Apprentice
I tried these the other day and they came out very, VERY crumbly. I'm not sure why but most of them fell apart when I tried to take them off the cookie sheet. The ones that did survive fell apart as soon as I took a bite. Does anyone have an idea as to why this happens?

Did you leave out the xanthan gum by accident? How did you measure your flour? I always fluff up my flour and spoon it into the measuring cup. If you use the measuring cup to scoop up the flour, you can get way more than the recipe calls for , making the mix too dry and crumbly. I'm not sure what the answer is, mine stayed intact and none were crumbly.

Katester Enthusiast
Did you leave out the xanthan gum by accident? How did you measure your flour? I always fluff up my flour and spoon it into the measuring cup. If you use the measuring cup to scoop up the flour, you can get way more than the recipe calls for , making the mix too dry and crumbly. I'm not sure what the answer is, mine stayed intact and none were crumbly.

I did add the xanthan gum. I used the measuring cup to scoop the flour. I've never heard of that being a problem but I can definitely see how that would change the measurements! Thanks for the tip!!! The taste was great with the cookies. =)

Katester Enthusiast
Fudge, base recipe, lots of variations possible-nuts, marshmallows, candies, cookies, etc...

Open Original Shared Link

I tried the fudge recipe yesterday. Turned out delicious!!! Very rich and decadent. Perfect recipe, easy and extremely yummy!!!

celiac-mommy Collaborator
I tried the fudge recipe yesterday. Turned out delicious!!! Very rich and decadent. Perfect recipe, easy and extremely yummy!!!

I'm glad you liked it. It's one of my favorites and it's fun to add a bunch of different stuff to it--my kids love almonds and mini marshmallows! We had a Christmas party last night and I made chocolate fondue with a bunch of dippers-fruit and cookies-anyway, I made a large pan of brownies and apparently didn't let them cook long enough, because when I tried to cut them, every piece from the middle was a big gooey mess, but tasted GREAT, so I rolled them all into truffle sized balls and dipped them into Wilton peanut butter melts. They were a bigger hit than the fondue! So, i guess if you end up making something that tastes good, but falls apart or looks inedible, save it because there's always another use for it ;)

Wonka Apprentice
I'm glad you liked it. It's one of my favorites and it's fun to add a bunch of different stuff to it--my kids love almonds and mini marshmallows! We had a Christmas party last night and I made chocolate fondue with a bunch of dippers-fruit and cookies-anyway, I made a large pan of brownies and apparently didn't let them cook long enough, because when I tried to cut them, every piece from the middle was a big gooey mess, but tasted GREAT, so I rolled them all into truffle sized balls and dipped them into Wilton peanut butter melts. They were a bigger hit than the fondue! So, i guess if you end up making something that tastes good, but falls apart or looks inedible, save it because there's always another use for it ;)

What a great save, very ingenious.

Wonka Apprentice
I did add the xanthan gum. I used the measuring cup to scoop the flour. I've never heard of that being a problem but I can definitely see how that would change the measurements! Thanks for the tip!!! The taste was great with the cookies. =)

Baking really is science. Exact measuring will give you the best results. I really like a recipe that gives me weight measures. I use my scale and have never had a failure with that type of recipe. Failing that I always spoon in my flours so that I don't end up with too much.

JNBunnie1 Community Regular
Baking really is science. Exact measuring will give you the best results. I really like a recipe that gives me weight measures. I use my scale and have never had a failure with that type of recipe. Failing that I always spoon in my flours so that I don't end up with too much.

Crap! Warning to everyone: I scoop my flours, so if you use one of my recipes, do that.

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A19):



  • Member Statistics

    • Total Members
      131,991
    • Most Online (within 30 mins)
      7,748

    ZENken
    Newest Member
    ZENken
    Joined

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A20):


  • Forum Statistics

    • Total Topics
      121.5k
    • Total Posts
      1m

  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A22):





  • Celiac.com Sponsor (A21):



  • Upcoming Events

  • Posts

    • Wheatwacked
      Have faith, you will survive. I get mine from Pipingrock.com.  500 capsules of 10,000 IU for $22.  That is almost two years worth for me.  250 caps 5000 IU for $6.69 if you only take 5,000 a day.  It's like half the price of Walmart.
    • Wheatwacked
      Testing can't alone be trusted.  Else why would it take so many years of testing and retesting and misdiagnosis to finally be told, yes you have Celiac Disease. As to what to eat, I like pre 1950 style food.  Before the advent of TV dinners.  Fresh food is better for you, and cooking from scratch is cheaper.  Watch Rachel Ray's 30 Minute Meals for how to cook.  Keep in mind that she is not gluten free, but her techniques are awesome.  Just use something else instead of wheat, barley, rye. Dr Fuhrman is a ex cardiologist.  His book Eat to Live and Dr Davis' book Wheatbelly were instrumental in my survival.
    • Scott Adams
      If you have DH you will likely also want to avoid iodine, which is common in seafoods and dairy products, as it can exacerbate symptoms in some people. This article may also be helpful as it offers various ways to relieve the itch--thanks for the tip about Dupixent, and I've added it to the article:  
    • Scott Adams
      I just want to clarify that what I posted is a category of research summaries we've done over the years, and nearly each one shows that there is definitely a connection to celiac disease and migraine headaches. The latest study said: "the study did indicate some potential causal associations between celiac disease and migraine with or without aura, as well as between migraine without aura and ulcerative colitis...this study did not find evidence of a shared genetic basis..." Anyway, there is definitely a connection, and you can go through more of the articles here if you're interested: https://www.celiac.com/celiac-disease/celiac-disease-amp-related-diseases-and-disorders/migraine-headaches-and-celiac-disease/
    • SusanJ
      Two months ago, I started taking Dupixent for dermatitis herpetiformis and it has completely cleared it up. I can't believe it! I have had a terrible painful, intensely itchy rash for over a year despite going fully gluten-free. See if your doctor will prescribe Dupixent. It can be expensive but I am getting it free. When the dermatitis herpetiformis was bad I could not do anything. I just lay in bed covered in ice packs to ease the pain/itching and using way too Clobetasol. Dapsone is also very good for dermatitis herpetiformis (and it is generic). It helped me and the results were immediate but it gave me severe anemia so the Dupixent is better for me. Not sure if it works for everyone. I cannot help with the cause of your stress but from experience I am sure the severe stress is making the celiac and dermatitis herpetiformis worse. Very difficult for you with having children to care for and you being so sick. Would this man be willing to see a family therapist with you? He may be angry at you or imagine that your illness is a psychosomatic excuse not to take care of him. A therapist might help even if he won't go with you. Also do you have any family that you could move in with (with the kids) for a short time to get away? A break may be good for you both.
×
×
  • Create New...

Important Information

NOTICE: This site places This site places cookies on your device (Cookie settings). on your device. Continued use is acceptance of our Terms of Use, and Privacy Policy.