This grain-free, gluten-free, SCD snickerdoodles recipe is made with almond flour and unrefined sweetener, making it delicious and nutritious.
If you’ve used my recipes or browsed my site, you may have come across this cinnamon cookie recipe. Using a similar ratio of ingredients and a slightly different baking time and temperature it magically transforms into a Snickerdoodle cookie—a crunchy, chewy butter cookie rolled in cinnamon and sugar.
I successfully tested this recipe with honey and maple syrup as the cookie sweetener. The maple syrup/butter batter is a bit wetter than the batter with coconut oil and honey or maple syrup, but both bake the same. I do have a preference for the cookie sweetened with maple syrup, but it’s just my taste buds talking.
For the cinnamon coating I ditched the refined granulated sugar and tested maple sugar and coconut palm sugar, and found no discerable difference in texture or flavor. Maple sugar is more expensive than the coconut palm sugar, if that’s a consideration. If you don’t or can’t eat either of these granulated sugars, just leave it out and lightly dust the cookies in ground cinnamon.
This cookie recipe is egg free, and while I know some of you may be tempted to toss an egg in there when you think the dough seems to crumble before your eyes, keep the faith and press the dough together. The honey and fat will keep things together, and rolling it into small balls will secure the flour granules as well.
Snickerdoodles {almond flour}
Ingredients
- 2 cups blanched almond flour
- 1/4 teaspoon baking soda
- 1/4 teaspoon salt
- 3 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted (or coconut oil, softened)
- 1/3 cup honey or maple syrup
- 1 tablespoon vanilla extract
- 1 tablespoon ground cinnamon
- 1 tablespoon maple sugar or coconut sugar (leave out for SCD)
Topping
- 2 tablespoons ground cinnamon
- 2 tablespoons maple sugar, coconut sugar, or other granulated sugar
Instructions
- Preheat your oven to 350°F (175°C or gas mark 4).
- Whisk together the almond flour, baking soda, and salt in a bowl.
- In a separate bowl, cream the butter, sweetener, and vanilla.
- Add the flour mixture to the butter mixture and blend well. If the batter is a bit soft to handle, chill it for 10 minutes.
- Line baking sheets with a nonstick mat, parchment paper, or another nonstick material.
- Blend the ground cinnamon and maple sugar together in a shallow bown or plate. Use the palm of your hands to roll a tablespoon or so of dough into a ball. Roll the dough ball in the cinnamon mixture to fully coat. Place the dough balls on the cookie sheet, spaced about an inch (2.5 cm) or so apart, and flatten with the underside of a jar or glass, or with the palm of your hand.
- Bake the cookies for 8 to 10 minutes. Cool for at least 10 minutes.
- Store in a sealed container at room temperature for a few days or in the freezer for a few months.
Nutrition
This is a great recipe! Thank you so much.
Thank you!
These are amazing! The chewy texture is such a nice treat.
Thank you! So great to hear 🙂
After looking for about 4 years, finally a wheat-less cookie recipe which product tastes GREAT! I substituted Truvia at 1 1/4 TEASPOON Truvia for every Tablespoon of maple sugar or coconut sugar to make it almost sugarless (I did use quality maple syrup). Comfy Belly is my new “go-to” website for wheat-free/sugar-free recipes.
After looking for about 4 years, finally a wheat-less cookie recipe which product tastes GREAT! I substituted Trivia at 1 1/4 TEASPOON Truvia for every Tablespoon of maple sugar or coconut sugar to make it almost sugarless (I did use quality maple syrup). Comfy Belly is my new “go-to” website for wheat-free/sugar-free recipes.
That’s awesome! Thank you
I have made these before and really had a craving for them tonight, but I don’t see the directions/ temp/ baking time anywhere… help!
Thank you for calling this out for me. Fixed and ready to use! Best wishes.
Hooray! Thank you so much. My kitchen will smell great today!!
I know! I guess and overcooked by about 2mins
These are seriously AMAZING!!! I have been eating these non-stop for months I love them SO much. Tonight I added in some grain free pumpkin granola to the mix with out the cinnamon and it was also delicious!
wow, great idea! I’ll have to try that 🙂
I LITERALLY can not have enough of these! I have been searching for a recipe on the SCD diet that would satisfy my craving for sweets. Well this is it and I can not keep these long enough in the house I just eat all of them. Thank you for the recipe 🙂
Wow, thank you! They are great. You might also like my cinnamon cookies, which these are based on. Cheers!
I made these but added a heaping tablespoon of ground flax seed to them and they were so yummy! I made them yesterday and they were delicious and when I had one today they were chewy inside and crunchy outside. Thank you for sharing your recipe!
Mine keep sticking to the bottom of the glass. I tried coating the glass (and I tried plastics too!) with oil and it still doesn’t help. Any ideas?
Yes, it’s a bit tricky, especially when the dough gets warm. Either put it in the freezer for several minutes, or add some flour to the outside of the dough.
Wait, I was just coming here to say the opposite. 2 cups of almond flour weigh 8 ounces. 2 cups of water weighs 16 ounces.
These look great! Any chance that these could be prepared with whole wheat flour..?
yes, I suggest checking some popular baking sites or cookbooks.
hi is this one or two cups? as says 2 cups but then 8 oz in brackets – thanks
Wow, thanks for that great catch!! I changed it – it’s 2 cups.
I never post comments on blog-type recipes but this recipe was awesome. I was skeptical at first because it only contained almond flour…no coconut flour like the rest of the recipes I googled. I decided to make it for its simplicity (no “hard to find” ingredients like guar gum, xantham gum, sorghum flour, evaporated cane juice, etc.) and hoped that it would come out great. I made the recipe with honey and butter instead of coconut oil and maple syrup. These were so yummy…soft and perfect. Just the right amount of cinnamon. My toddler loved them, my gluten free, egg free husband loved them and I basically ate the whole batch only leaving a handful for my family ;o)
Best part, you can get all of the ingredients at Trader Joe’s…and their almond flour is a bargain!
Thanks, Jennie! Did Trader Joe’s start selling blanched almond flour or did you use almond meal? Just curious. Interesting that they came out soft – I bake them until they’re browning around the edges and when they cool they’re crunchy on the edges and soft in the middle.
Who knew something so basic could be so delicious! Love them!
Maple sugar and coconut palm sugar are not available in my area, and I’ve never heard of Muscovado. Any ideas what I could use in place of those?
you can use any granulated sugar, really. It’s up to you, or leave it out, or order it online.
Just made these for my diabetic husband (who has a sweet tooth!). These are delicious and very low carb. I only used 1/4 cup maple syrup and they were still plenty sweet. There were less than 4g carbs per cookie!
I ran out of local honey (so good) and didn’t have any maple syrup (can be pricey)but I did pick up some black strap molasses! I substituted that for the honey and omg they are so good! I did add an egg though I must admit.
Im loving the molasses though, it is good for you and good for paleo!
Its a win win.
nice, so good to know it works well with molasses!
they ate all 27 cookies yesterday. i am making more now. i promise i won’t leave a comment every time i make them.
i’m kind of excited.
good news. I love comments 🙂
vanilla in with the butter and sugar, right?
i have them in the oven. they’re smelling superfine.
This is a 4-5g CHO cookie–WOOT! I am making these immediately—perfect on a rainy day with a to-do list that fills me with dread. Thank you. I am glad Ann sent me here.
Hi! Say hello to Ann for me!
Going to make these tomorrow. Can’t wait to have a snickerdoodle again. I bought your cookbook too. That should be here Monday!
Thanks! Hope you like both 🙂
Without the sugar to add to the mix, just rolling it in cinnamon is a bit overwhelming to the flavor, I found. I think I’d just dust one side of the pressed cookie next time.
Thanks Susan! I can see it being too much if you cover the entire surface. I’ll add that to the notes.
I’m eating a slightly warm one as I type this! My hubby and I both loved these. Mine were a little too runny to roll, so I chilled the dough for 30 minutes in the fridge. I probably could have chilled them a little longer because they spread quite a bit, but they still taste great!
Good to know. I haven’t had my batters runny, but the maple syrup/melted butter can be much softer. Yes, chilling is a great idea if the batter is runny.
Any chance that stevia could be used? I am on a mostly sugar free diet. 🙂 Looks GREAT!
Most probably, with enough liquid to compensate for the honey’s liquid.
Hi Amy. Did you ever test this recipe with stevia? I’m going to try to use it but curious to know if you got it working. Thanks!
I made these this morning. I do not think they will last through the day! My daughter said they were so good they could pass as cinnamon roll cookies! Yep! I think these passed the test! Thank you for such a great recipe!
How funny. Darn, I could have named them cinnamon roll cookies :).
I have a version of these yummy cookies too! Cinnamon + almonds = a great combination. I made them for a gluten-free friend, but ended up eating far more than I expected to (I’m not a big sweets person, so that’s a good sign I think). Here’s my version: http://cowenparkkitchen.com/almond-snickerdoodles/
Could I use coconut flour instead of almond flour?
The ratio of ingredients would be way different, so unfortunately no.
Exactly what I was looking for! I really wanted snickerdoodles, but only had almond flour on hand. Thanks!
Great! You’re set. This recipe actually has fewer ingredients than the traditional Snickerdoodle.
I love all of your recipes. Can’t wait to try this one–my kids love your cinnamon cookie recipe already 🙂
Thanks! Yes, I will leave that one to rest :).
Can I use Earth Balance in place of the unsalted butter? Thanks!
I don’t see why not but I haven’t tried it.