The other night I set out to bake a cinnamon-y treat with hints of nutmeg and cardamon--mostly hoping to fill the house with warm spices and homey vibes. A snickerdoodle! I remember a version of this cookie resembling a flat, all white flour sugar cookie, light on cinnamon, heavy on sugar. If there ever was an easy-bake-oven kind of re-entry into this world again, this cookie is it. I try to keep the number of left over cookies to a minimum, so I bake smaller batches lately vs "recipe makes 24 cookies" because no one around here will want the same cookie for two months.
In attempting to not succumb to sugar comas, I prefer less sugar--loving coconut sugar lately--and definitely less all-purpose flour, rather blending flours mostly using combos of rye, sorghum and oat. Rye being a favorite.This recipe can be doubled, or just made straight with white flour and white sugar...but why do that when the options are endless? Coconut sugar is used here with a bit of the regular stuff. I tried subbing some of the other "no sugar" types in my baking over the years... just no. Especially no to erythritol. (Look it up.) I spend most of my grocery shopping reading labels, then searching on google for descriptions/warnings...sometimes falling into a black hole of fear in the middle of the baking aisle.
Vegan Snickerdoodle
*makes around 12 cookies
1 1/4 c. flour
1/2 t. baking soda
1/2 t. cream of tartar
1/4 t. ground cinnamon
1/8 t. ground cardamom
1/4 t. salt
1 stick vegan butter
1/2 c. plus 2 T. Florida Crystals sugar
1/4 c. coconut sugar
1 stick vegan butter
1/2 t. vanilla extract or vanilla paste
1 t. ground flax mixed with 2 T. water
*2 T. of sugar plus 1/4 t. cinnamon and dash of nutmeg for rolling cookies before baking
**powdered sugar for an extra pretty add-on
Preheat oven to 375. Prepare cookie pan with parchment or light spray.
Sift together dry ingredients. Set aside. In another bowl, blend butter, sugar, vanilla and flax "egg". Add dry mixture to wet and blend until no dry flour remains. Shape into small walnut-sized balls, roll one side in a bit of the sugar. Bake for approximately 8-10 minutes. Allow to cool before sprinkling a few of the cookies with powdered sugar.
And then this...It's been a minute. And for what it's worth, it hasn't even felt as long as nearly four years. I'd wanted to jump in here again on and off over the years. Some pithy comment on this or that accompanied by a yummy recipe or two but the pull of other priorities fills the day and "poof"...day over. There's always tomorrow. Well, we're all good here. A few more wrinkles and grey hairs, but thankfully, healthy and still able to dress ourselves.
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