Pinwheel Cookies
- 1/2 cup whole wheat spelt flour (65g)
- 1/3 cup almond flour (50g)
- 2/3 cup oat flour (87 g)
- 1 chia egg (1 tbsp ground chia seeds mixed with 3 tbsp water)
- 3 tbsp melted coconut oil (42 g)
For the chocolate dough:
- 1 tbsp cocoa or cacao powder
- 2 tbsp date syrup or any other dark syrup of your choice (40 g)
For the vanilla dough:
- 1 generous pinch pure vanilla powder (could sub for 1 tsp vanilla extract)
- 2 tbsp brown rice syrup or any other light syrup of your choice* (40 g)
How to:
1. Make the flour blend by mixing all the flours together with a fork. If you have to make flour of your oats and/or almonds, place the oats, almonds and spelt flour in a food processor and process until you get a well-ground flour.
2. Divide the flour mix into two different bowls. Transfer about 1/2 tbsp of flour from one bowl to the other. To this bowl, add the vanilla powder and to the other bowl (the one with less flour in it), add the cacao or cocoa powder and mix well.
3. Make your chia egg by mixing/whisking the ground chia seeds with 3 tbsp of water. This will swell pretty quickly if you're using ground chia seeds but if not, let the seeds swell for a couple of minutes before proceeding.
4. Melt the coconut oil and pour half of it into the chocolate bowl and the other half into the vanilla bowl. This is much easier if you have access to a kitchen scale so that you can tell when half of it has gone in. Also add chia egg into two and add one half into each bowl.
5. To the chocolate bowl, add the date syrup and stir until you have a thick dough. Repeat with the vanilla bowl but add brown rice syrup instead. *Note: Since brown rice syrup isn't as sweet as other syrups, you may want to add 1/2 tbsp of coconut sugar as well but that is completely up to you.
6. Wrap the doughs in cling film and chill for about 20 minutes in the fridge or until they're fairly firm.
7. Make one rectangle out of each dough by rolling it out with a rolling pin to 1/8-inch thickness. Put one on top of the other and roll lengthwise to create the swirl. Once again wrap the dough in cling film (reuse the old ones!) and place is in the freezer for about ten minutes.
8. Remove the dough from the freezer and slice into separate cookies (1/4-inch thick). At this stage I like to press down on the cookies using the bottom of a glass to flatten them out a little.
9. Bake in the oven (175C) for 18-20 minutes and let cool completely. Store in a cookie jar!
Thank you for reading the article about Pinwheel Cookiesin blog Mrs.Garuda If you want to redistribute this article please include a link as Source, and when this article useful please bookmark this page in Your Internet Web Browser, by pressing Ctrl + D on your keyboard keys.