Tips For Making Gluten Free Cookies (2024)

Published: by Cinde LittleThis post may contain affiliate links2 Comments

Here are my top 10 Tips for Making Gluten Free Cookies. I didn’t learn them all the first year I cooked gluten free (or the second or third) but over time I stuck with it because I love cookies! This cookie flour blend helped me recreate several of my favourite cookies but there was more to it than a blend.

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Tips For Making Gluten Free Cookies (1)

With my cookie flour blend I made gingerbread cookies, cappuccino cookies, pumpkin spice cookies and cinnamon snickerdoodles. But I make more cookies than these.

Before I found this blend I made cookies using a combination of individually measured flours. The best melt-in-your-mouth shortbread and perfect sugar cookies so good that I'm not going back to try and find a recipe that uses either my everyday EGFG flour blend or the cookie flour blend. I'm set up to measure flours and for me it's worth the effort.

I've got cookie recipes from every stage of my gluten free journey and I'm okay with that. My peanut butter cookies and chocolate chip cookie pizza are both made with quinoa flour. I also have Chocolate Chip Cookies with teff flour added to the base made with my EGFG flour blend.

There's no right or wrong way to bake gluten free. Just get in the kitchen and bake. Now on to the tips!

1. Choose Gluten-Free Recipes

Recipes written with gluten free ingredients should already have adjustments to make up for the flours and starches that don’t absorb liquid and fat the way wheat flour does. Pass over recipes that require several substitutions for your diet. Not every recipe you try will be a winner but there are plenty of recipes on the web and this will increase your chance of success.

2. Learn About Gluten Free Flours

No single gluten free flour or blend will work in every recipe. Be open to buying new ingredients, trying new techniques, and learning. Read the ingredient label of store-bought flour blends or cookie mixes. Pay attention to what you like and refer to this chart with 11 Gluten Free Flour Blends to help you see what other cooks are using.

If you’re interested in a deep dive into flour join my virtual cooking class called Understanding How To Use Gluten Free Flour. You can attend for free if you subscribe to my email list and tell me you read about it here.

3. Use a Binder

Binders like xanthan gum and guar gum provide structure in gluten-free baking to make up for the missing gluten. This prevents cookies from being too crumbly plus it also helps with freshness.

4. Adjust Sugar and Fat

Because gluten-free flours don’t absorb liquid and fat like wheat flour does we need tricks to make our recipes work. We can decrease the fat slightly and add back the richness with a little cream or melted white chocolate. Letting cookie dough rest, sometimes overnight, is another trick to help with absorption. This is a trial-and-error process, because there are so many different flours involved. Trust me, it's worth it.

An excellent resource is America's Test Kitchen cookbook, How Can It Be Gluten Free Collection; 350 Groundbreaking Recipes For All Your Favourites. They explain the changes they made and what made each recipe work.

5. Chill the Dough

High fat cookie dough will get soft and sticky the longer it sits on the counter. Adding too much sprinkling flour can result in a gritty taste to your finished cookies. Learn to keep the dough cold by working with one piece at a time, leaving the rest in the fridge. Put your cookie dough, already rolled dough or even an entire cookie sheet with cut cookies on it in the fridge when it’s too soft. This helps cut cookies hold their shape and overall decreases spreading during baking.

6. Use Parchment Paper or Reusable Baking Sheets

Line your baking pans with parchment paper or reusable baking sheets to prevent sticking. Gluten-free cookies can be more delicate, and this makes it easier to move them from the pan to a cooking rack.

7. Cooling Cookies

The cooling time is important for all gluten-free baking as the structure continues to strengthen as baked goods cool. Feel free to taste all your baking and see what you learn. Gluten-free cookies can be delicate so be sure to cool completely before storing them in airtight containers.

8. Storing Cookies

Gluten-free baked goods go stale faster than gluten filled baking. This may not be as noticeable with cookies but it’s a good practise to develop the habit of storing your cookies in proper containers as soon as they’ve cooled to room temperature.

9. Precise Measuring

Baking requires precise measuring. Use proper liquid and dry measuring cups and spoons for best results. Use a kitchen timer and record what works for you in your oven, in your kitchen. Then you can adjust if needed and repeat your successes.

10. Get The Tools

All bakers need the right tools.Metal portion scoops in various sizes speed up the process, ensure your cookies are a uniform size to cook more evenly. I have three sizes and use them for all kinds of jobs in the kitchen.

Realcookie sheets (without sides) are made for cookies and the parchment paper easily slides right onto a cooking rack with all the cookies. For a cookie baking spree I also use my baking sheets (the ones with sides) and I have two of them strictly for baking (no garlic allowed).

If you’re a cookie lover, or cook for one, challenge yourself to try making a new kind of cookie every month. You might have to try more than one recipe but by the end of the year you’ll have a handful of recipes worth repeating.

Making A Cookie Flour Blend on YouTube

If you want to try my cookie flour blend, you’ll find this PRINTABLE recipe page within the post that has three different quantities you can make. I have that page taped to the outside of the container I store this flour in and it’s in my freezer right now.

As always, let me know if you have any questions, what you learned or how your cookies turned out.

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New here? Subscribe and get your FREE resource, the tips I wish I knew when I started cooking gluten free.

Looking for more help with gluten-free cooking? Check out our Cooking Classes.

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Baking Tips to Minimize Cross Contact

My friends over at Porch asked bloggers around the web for tips to share for this article, From Oven to Enterprise: Expert Tips for Home Baking Safety. You can find a long list of questions and answers including mine about how to minimize the risk of cross-contact with allergens in a busy household.

A Podcast Episode for Cookie Lovers

Podcast listeners can listen to my conversation with Sue Jennett on A Canadian Celiac
Podcast, Episode 43: Baking Gluten Free Cookies. If you're not a podcast listener you should be. It's the best way to keep up on all the changes in the gluten free space.

More Tips, Tools & Techniques

  • How To Use Citrus Fruit and Zest
  • Gluten Free Baking By Weight
  • Gluten Free Breading Help
  • Gifts for a Gluten Free Kitchen

Reader Interactions

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  1. Jorge Bizarro

    I have noticed that GF batters or doughs made with distinct GF flour blends (I use mostly rice flour, oat, corn and starches) tend to:
    1-absorb less fat than wheat flour, but once the grains are coated with fat, liquid absorption becomes more difficult for these flours.
    2-usually absorb more liquid during baking, so they need a higher hydration starting point then wheat based products and because of that stay longer in the oven.
    So, usually each time I try to adapt a wheat baked good to a GF version, I start with similar flour amounts but reduce the fat on the original recipe and use a bit more of liquid. Also (for cakes especially) I prefer to add at least some of the liquid before going in with the fat content So, I wonder why you seem to have not tried to diminish the fat content of cookies, before trying other blend? - I'm really curious.

    Reply

    • Cinde Little

      Hi Jorge! You're right, GF flours don't absorb fat and liquid as well as wheat flour. Over the years I have tried all kinds of cookie recipes, some made with individual flours (like quinoa flour) and some with a blend. In 2018 I was trying to learn more about cookies and that's when I found the cookie flour blend. In those recipes I did decrease the fat from my original recipe or sometimes used 2 fats to help with that problem. Melting the butter to help with absorption is another trick I learned from America's Test Kitchen. The Cookie Flour Blend worked perfectly in some recipes but not in others. A reminder that there's a lot of trial and error in making cookies. GF bakers are used to that!
      One final comment about different flours and flour blends: In my cooking classes I talk to GF bakers who also have other dietary restrictions; some can't tolerate potato starch, corn, nuts or even rice flour. So although I use my EGFG flour blend for the majority of my baking I create lots of different recipes and my kitchen is set up to easily bake like that.

      Reply

Tips For Making Gluten Free Cookies (2024)

FAQs

Is there a trick to baking with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

What holds gluten-free cookies together? ›

Binding agents (such as xanthan gum, guar gum, or flax) help give gluten-free baked goods the elasticity needed to create structure — so if your favorite gluten-free flour mix doesn't contain one, you'll probably want to add one.

How do you improve the texture of gluten-free cookies? ›

Add some almond flour: Using a small amount of almond flour in your baking can enhance the taste and texture dramatically. Due to the high moisture and fat content, it can also add moisture, and will help your baked goods to brown.

How to make gluten-free cookies not crumbly? ›

You need a binding agent in your gluten-free cookies recipe; otherwise, your cookies will fall apart. Some flour blends may already contain a binding agent, so double-check the list of ingredients. If it doesn't, you can add flaxseeds, xanthan gum, or guar gum.

Does baking time change with gluten-free flour? ›

Remember, baking times for gluten-free foods vary greatly, and it's important to keep a constant eye on your creation to monitor for the colors and textures that indicate doneness. These recipes often call for longer baking times at a lower temperature compared to traditional recipes.

Why is it challenging to bake with gluten free flours? ›

Baking without gluten (as found primarily in wheat-based flours) can be challenging because gluten contributes important properties to various types of baked products like cookies, cakes, pastries and breads.

Should you chill gluten free cookie dough before baking? ›

5- Chill your dough well before baking.

But it's a good idea in warm kitchens, if you're working with browned or warmed butter, or if you're rolling the dough. It reduces stickiness of gluten free doughs and also can enhance the flavor, but again, it's not necessary with gfJules Flour or Cookie Mixes.

What is the best flour for gluten-free cookies? ›

Oat Flour. With its creamy, earthy flavor and delicate texture, gluten-free oat flour is a staple of my gluten-free baking recipes. It bakes up soft and smooth, adding necessary starch to many GF baked goods and keeping them moist and tender due to its high fat content and stable protein structure.

How to stop gluten-free cookies from spreading? ›

Learn to keep the dough cold by working with one piece at a time, leaving the rest in the fridge. Put your cookie dough, already rolled dough or even an entire cookie sheet with cut cookies on it in the fridge when it's too soft. This helps cut cookies hold their shape and overall decreases spreading during baking.

Should I add xanthan gum to gluten-free cookies? ›

Using xanthan gum helps provide some of the stickiness that gluten free goods lack, replacing some elasticity. Xanthan gum mimics some of gluten's most essential properties by sticking to flour and its moisture. This helps create moist goods that hold their shape after being baked.

What makes gluten-free cookies grainy? ›

Gritty texture in GF baked goods comes from not having the right balance of moisture and fats/oils to flour. Also, a coarse grind of flour or a blend of flour that contains too high a ratio of brown rice flour will contribute to coarseness.

Why are my gluten-free cookies so dry? ›

You used a starchy gluten free flour blend.

Some starchy blends need more flour because the starch softens when the liquid ingredients are added. This also happens with the Cup4Cup flour blend due to the dried milk powder. You used too much butter. This sort of goes hand in hand with using too little flour.

How do you make gluten-free cookies less cakey? ›

Use a Mix of Flours

A cookie made with just rice flour will be too cakey, while one made with only almond meal with be too dense. To mimic wheat flour, you will need to mix flours of different densities with a bit of tapioca or potato starch to lighten it up; the recipe below is a good place to start.

How to tell when gluten-free cookies are done? ›

While visual cues like the toothpick test and pressing the top of the cake will still help, the best way to determine if your baked goods are perfectly done is with a timer and oven thermometer. This is because gluten-free treats often look underdone and slightly wet inside after baking.

Why are my gluten-free cookies gummy? ›

Why your toothpick may be lying. With gluten-free baking, we use a combination of gluten-free flours, starches, and a binder (like xanthan gum). These ingredients take longer to set than regular gluten-containing flour, meaning they may remain slightly “gummy” or sticky until they have cooled.

How to substitute gluten-free flour for all-purpose flour? ›

This can be tricky because gluten free flours react differently in pretty much every recipe. But in general, use in place of all purpose or whole wheat flour in a 1:1 ratio. For extra binding (since there is no gluten) you can add a pinch of xanthan gum depending on the recipe, but I don't find it necessary.

Does gluten-free flour rise the same as regular flour? ›

While all-in-one baking blends can be used in yeasted baked goods, avoid substituting them into a recipe created with regular flour. Too many variables would need to be changed to get the same rise that gluten provides.

What can I add to gluten-free flour to rise? ›

Extra Leavening: Sometimes you may find that adding a bit more baking powder will help, when converting a recipe to gluten free. So, if a muffin recipe calls for 1 teaspoon baking powder, for example, I'd go ahead and add 1/2 – 1 teaspoon extra.

Does gluten-free flour taste different in baking? ›

Baking with gluten-free flour will produce some slight differences in taste or texture. Millet flour tends to have a mild flavor while buckwheat flour lends itself to a more earthy taste. In addition, quinoa flour has a nutty flavor and bean flour can actually sometimes taste like beans.

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