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Monday, October 11, 2010

The Perfect Imperfect Chocolate Chip Cookie

I wanted to find the perfect 10 recipe for a low-glycemic chocolate chip cookie. This sounds like an oxymoron, but I thought I could figure this out. So I started modifying my mother’s favorite recipe. I had to take out the Crisco, most of the sugar, and most of the white flour. Then replace them with healthier choices. Plus, I added garbanzo bean flour for more nutritional value.

We were having dinner guests that evening, so I prepared two different recipes – a low-glycemic brownie and the chocolate chip cookies. My plan was to have my guests do a taste test.

I mixed up a batch, had the oven set to 375 degrees and started baking. Luckily I now line my cookie sheets with parchment paper or I would have had more of a mess. When the baking time was complete per the recipe, I opened the oven to the biggest baking disaster I’ve ever had.

Now let me tell you, when I was 16 years old, I was a junior winner for Colorado to the Pillsbury Bake-Off with a recipe I created from scratch. I definitely have put in my Gladwellian 10,000 hours of baking. (per Malcolm Gladwell author of The Outliers.)

The test batch of cookies were runny, flat, and browning way too much. They had spread into each other so I had sheets of flat cookies landscaped only by the small mounds of chocolate chips and nuts. And they were still running. Then I noticed that someone somehow had turned the oven off. I turned it back on to 375 degrees and waited five to ten minutes, checking with dread every minute or so through the oven glass window. Then I couldn’t take it any longer.

Out came the cookies. They looked awful. The only way I could get them off the parchment was to break them in pieces. Just before I threw them in the trash, I thought I should at least taste them. I did. And I kept tasting. They were utterly delicious. The crispy part tasted like a buttery toffee. The nuts and chocolate chips were like taste and texture treats. So…

I served them anyway. All eight of us at the dinner table ate them and kept on eating. Even as we played the fantastically funny game, “Telestrations.” (You will love it, too.) At the end of the evening, my guests took home doggie bags of broken shards of cookies.

Now here’s what’s really weird. Just a couple weeks ago we were in Madrid at the popular evening spot, Mercado. And they were selling a cookie that looked exactly like my cookies. They didn’t taste as divine, but I wanted to show you the picture so you know what to expect when you bake them.

I’m baking them again on Thursday to take to an Art Gallery opening for the Utah Watercolor Society. And if the guests can overlook the weird appearance of the cookies, they’ll be standing by the dish all evening. I want to share the recipe with you: Chocolate Chip Lace Cookies, Yield: 36 cookies

Each serving has: 108 Calories 2g Protein 10g Carbohydrates 1g Fiber 7g Fat 3g Saturated Fat Glycemic index: low Glycemic load: 3

[2/3] cup butter
1 cup sugar
1 large egg
1 tsp. vanilla
1 cup almond flour
2 TB. corn starch
2 TB. garbanzo bean flour
[1/2] tsp. salt
1 cup chocolate chips
[1/2] cup walnuts

1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper.
2. In an electric mixer, cream butter and sugar. Add egg and vanilla and mix well. Fold in almond flour, corn starch, garbanzo bean flour, and salt. Stir in chocolate chips and walnuts.
3. Drop by spoonfuls onto baking sheets, leaving plenty of room for cookies to spread. Bake 15 to 20 minutes until browned and cooked throughout. Enjoy.

Have a terrific Halloween,

Lucy Beale, author The Complete Idiot's Guide to Glycemic Index Weight Loss Version 2, The Complete Idiot's Guide Glycemic Index Cookbook, The Complete Idiot's Guide to Eating Well on a Budget

www.Lucybeale.com, http://lucybeale-weight-loss.blogspot.com/