I’d like to start this post by apologising to my followers- two cookie recipes in a row might seem excessive. Rest assured, these recipes are pretty different. The papaya and coconut biscuits which I posted yesterday are firm and slightly crumbly, with tropical flavours. These are closer to an American cookie, softer and cakier, with crunchy nuts and caramelised chocolate chunks.
I used what’s known as ‘blonde’ chocolate in this recipe. It’s a white chocolate which has a lovely caramel appearance and taste. I actually used a bar which already had almonds and hazelnuts in it, which made the prep for these cookies very easy. I found this in my local supermarket, but you could always replace the chocolate and nuts with your own preferences.

I tempered the sweetness of the chocolate and added a depth of flavour with a little coffee extract. This paired really well with the chocolate and the nuts. You may be able to find this in the supermarket, online, or in baking shops. A little goes a long way, and I didn’t want coffee to be the dominant flavour, so I used it as I would use a vanilla essence.
In this recipe I tried a few tricks from the blog Meaningful Eats. I’m not very practised in biscuits so I thought a bit or prior research wouldn’t hurt!
These biscuits turned out a bit pale (happens a lot with gluten free baking) but they’re soft and tasty with a great biscuit to chunk ratio!

Nutty chocolate chunk cookies (makes 12)
210g gluten-free plain flour
30g ground almonds
110g brown sugar
55g white sugar
110g butter
1 egg
1 tbsp milk
2 tsp vanilla extract
2 tsp coffee extract
1 tsp baking powder
135g nuts and chocolate, roughly chopped
- Mix the flour, ground almonds and baking powder together.
- Melt the butter.
- Mix the sugar, egg, milk and extracts into the melted butter. Add this mixture to the dry mixture and stir to combine.
- Cover the bowl and leave to sit for half an hour. This will allow the dough to firm up a bit.
- In the meantime, preheat the oven to 160 degrees and line two oven trays with baking paper.
- I used an ice cream scoop to measure out the dough into equal portions. The dough isn’t terribly firm and may be a bit sticky but do your best to wrangle it into a circle. My cookies didn’t spread too much so you can put them close together.
- Bake for 12-15 minutes until they’re lightly golden and not sticking to the paper.








