Too soon for gingerbread cookies? I hear everyone who put up their Christmas tree this weekend shouting, “No!” These are for you, my cinnamon candle-burning, Nat King Cole-playing friends. I appreciate your enthusiasm.
I usually get all bah-humbug Christmas baby this time of year, since the holiday completely overshadows my December 25th birthday if I’m not careful. I’m already planning my 30th birthday celebrations (with help, thankfully!) and have resolved to embrace the holiday cheer this time around. I might even put up a Christmas tree. A tiny one, with white Christmas lights. That sounds lovely.
I’ll probably make more batches of gingerbread cookies to share with friends this year, too, now that I’ve perfected the recipe. They’re so fun to make! I made a few simple substitutions to turn classic gingerbread cookies into healthier gingerbread cookies, without sacrificing flavor.
The result is a dough that is remarkably easy to make (no mixer required) and manage (it might as well be Play-Doh!).
How to Make Healthier Gingerbread Cookies
My substitutions include swapping coconut oil for butter, coconut sugar for brown sugar and whole wheat pastry flour for all purpose. All of those ingredients are becoming more mainstream now as their health benefits become more apparent.
Whole wheat pastry flour is one of my favorite subtle nutrition upgrades. It possesses all of the health benefits of whole wheat flour, but it’s more finely ground, lighter in taste and produces marvelously tender whole grain goodies.
It’s a great substitute for all-purpose flour in cookies, pie crusts and in many recipes that call for baking powder and/or baking soda for leavening. (You don’t want to use whole wheat pastry flour in yeasted recipes, like pizza dough. It just won’t work.)
These cookies turned out perfectly with 100 percent whole wheat pastry flour. I don’t think anyone would be able to tell that these cookies are made with whole grain flour! They’re crisp, spiced and delicious.
Molasses & Spice Notes
You can control the level of spice and flavor intensity by carefully choosing your molasses. I tried a lighter molasses and blackstrap molasses. The light molasses produces cookies with lighter color and flavor, naturally. If you’re making these cookies for kids with sensitive palates, you might want to choose light molasses and maybe even use half of the spices specified below.
If you want dark, intense cookies with an almost dark chocolate-level of richness, use blackstrap molasses and the full amount of spices. Blackstrap molasses offers greater nutritional value as well, since both the flavors and minerals present in molasses are more concentrated. Who would have guessed that a by-product in sugar production could be so high in potassium, iron, Vitamin B6, calcium and magnesium?
How to Decorate Your Cookies
You also have a few options when it comes to decorating your cookies. You could enjoy them plain, of course. They are not overtly sweet, though, and they look more festive with some decoration.
Options include sprinkling the cookie dough shapes with sparkling turbinado (raw) sugar or dusting them with additional coconut sugar before baking. You can ice them with the lemony icing offered below, which requires some powdered sugar (here’s how to make your own with less refined sugar) and/or sprinkle them with powdered sugar, which looks like snow. You could use a traditional royal icing, which calls for raw egg yolks and completely hardens on the cookie. Or, you could melt chocolate chips and drizzle chocolate on top. It’s up to you!
PrintHealthier Gingerbread Cookies
- Author:
- Prep Time: 30 mins
- Cook Time: 10 mins
- Total Time: 40 minutes
- Yield: 32 cookies 1x
- Category: Cookie
- Method: By hand
- Cuisine: American
Here’s a healthy version of your favorite classic gingerbread cookies! This gingerbread cookie recipe is healthier because of a few simple substitutions—I substituted whole wheat pastry flour for all purpose flour, coconut oil for butter and coconut sugar for brown sugar. See notes provided in the paragraphs above for tips and suggestions on choosing your molasses and decorations. Recipe yields around 32 cookies, depending on their size.
Ingredients
Cookies
- 3 cups (310 grams) whole wheat pastry flour*, plus more for work surface
- 2 teaspoons ground ginger
- 2 teaspoons ground cinnamon
- ¾ teaspoon kosher salt
- ½ teaspoon ground cloves
- ½ teaspoon finely ground black pepper
- ½ teaspoon baking soda
- ¼ teaspoon baking powder
- ½ cup melted coconut oil
- ½ cup unsulphured molasses (use regular molasses for lighter, somewhat spicy cookies or blackstrap molasses for very spicy, intensely flavored cookies—or a mixture of both)
- ½ cup packed coconut sugar
- 1 large egg
- Powdered sugar, for dusting (optional)
Lemon icing (optional)
- ½ cup powdered sugar (here’s how to make your own)
- ¼ teaspoon lemon zest (optional, for intense lemon flavor)
- 2 ¼ teaspoons lemon juice
Instructions
- In a medium mixing bowl, combine the flour, ginger, cinnamon, salt, cloves, pepper, baking soda and baking powder. Whisk until blended.
- In a small mixing bowl, combine the coconut oil and molasses and whisk until combined. Add the coconut sugar and whisk until blended. (If the sugar is gloppy and won’t incorporate into the mixture, warm the mixture for about 20 seconds in the microwave or over low heat on the stove, just until you can whisk it all together.) Add the egg and whisk until the mixture is thoroughly blended.
- Pour the liquid mixture into the dry and mix just until combined. (If it seems like you don’t have enough liquid, just keep mixing!) Divide the dough in half. Shape each half into a round disc about 1 inch thick and wrap it in plastic wrap. Place both discs in the refrigerator and chill until cold—about 1 hour, or up to overnight.
- Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit with racks in the middle and upper third of the oven. Line two large baking sheets with parchment paper. Lightly flour your working surface and roll out one of your discs out until it’s ¼ inch thick. If the dough is very hard or crumbly, just roll it as best you can and then let it rest for a few minutes to warm up. Repeat until you’ve successfully rolled the dough to ¼ inch thickness.
- Use cookie cutters to cut out cookie shapes and place each cookie on a parchment-lined baking sheet, leaving about ½ inch of space around each one (this dough just barely expands during baking). Combine your dough scraps into a ball and roll them out again, repeating until you have used up all of your dough. Repeat with remaining disc. (If you’d like to decorate the cookies with granulated sugar like turbinado or extra coconut sugar, sprinkle it onto the cookies now.)
- Place baking sheets in the oven, one on the middle rack and one on the upper. Bake for 8 to 11 minutes; for softer cookies, pull them out around 8 minutes and for more crisp cookies, bake for up to 11 minutes. The cookies will further crisp as they cool. Place the baking sheets on cooling racks to cool.
- If you’d like to ice the cookies and/or sprinkle them with powdered sugar, wait until they have completely cooled to do so. To make the icing, in a small bowl, combine the powdered sugar, optional lemon zest and the lemon juice. Whisk until thoroughly blended. Transfer the icing into a small Ziploc bag, squeeze out any excess air and seal the bag. Cut off a tiny piece of one of the lower corners and squeeze icing through the hole to decorate the cookies as desired. The frosting will harden eventually, but it won’t ever be as indestructible as royal icing.
- If you’d like to sift powdered sugar over the cookies, do it now. Wait until the icing has firmed up (about 1 hour) before carefully stacking the cookies in a storage container. Cookies will keep for up to 1 week at room temperature.
Notes
Recipe adapted from Martha Stewart, on Smitten Kitchen’s recommendation. Recipe updated 12/17/18 to remove whole wheat flour as an option—it doesn’t work well. My sincere apologies to anyone who was disappointed by their cookies.
*Flour notes: This recipe works great with whole wheat pastry flour. You can find generally whole wheat pastry flour at well-stocked grocery stores, as well as health food stores. All-purpose flour will also work. The dough tends to be hard and crumbly when made with regular whole wheat flour so I don’t recommend it. Also, to measure your flour properly, spoon the flour into your measuring cups and level off the top with a knife.
Make it vegan/egg free: I haven’t tried, but based on other recipes, I think you could successfully substitute a flax egg in this recipe, or maybe even use 3 tablespoons applesauce instead of the egg.
▸ Nutrition Information
This post was created in partnership with Bob’s Red Mill and I received compensation for my participation. Opinions are my own, always. Thank you for supporting the sponsors who support C+K!
Mandy
YAAAAASSSS! I love ginger and super spicy gingerbread, these are going on my “to make” list.
I feel you on the bah-humbug, my birthday is December 24th. When I was little, my parents would compensate by celebrating my half birthday on June 24th, which is also my big sis’s birthday!
★★★★★
Kate
We used to celebrate on my half birthday, too! Every year, I tell my friends that I want to throw myself a pizza pool party, but somehow it never happens. Funny that you and your sister are six months apart!
Claire
That last picture really makes me smile. ;)
Can’t wait to try these.
Jerilyn
Beautiful pictures as always! They inspire me to make your recipe instead of my usual one. I feel for you having a Dec. 25th birthday, but another way of looking at it is you gave your mom the best Christmas gift ever, you!!! I bet that is how she felt when you were born! I was born the day before Mother’s Day in May, so based on each new calender year my b-day sometimes falls on Mother’s Day, so I feel your frustration of not being able to have your own day to celebrate the birth of you!
Kate
Well, I have heard my mom say that! Thank you, Jerylin!
haley @cupcakes and sunshine
Wow, these are ADORABLE! Love, love, love them!! On my Christmas Cookie list!
Erin@WellPlated
My giant (though as of yet unlit) Christmas tree, pine scented candle, Pandora holiday playlist and I are very, very ready for these cookies. Love that they are whole-wheat too! Also, I’m going to need to hear about your 30th birthday festivities. Selfishly, I need all the party planning help I can get, and I am sure that yours will be a beautiful and much deserved celebration!
Kate
Thank you, Erin! xo!
Allyson
We have the same birthday! I just got unreasonably excited about this, probably because not many people KNOW what that means. I usually celebrate after Christmas, and I hope your birthday celebration is magical, and free from friends not being able to attend because of holidays/combined presents/always being called the Christmas baby/all the compromises that happen.
In cookie news, these are the gingerbreads that I’ve been looking for and am going to try out TODAY, because it’s snowing and beautiful and cold outside.
Kate
You know!!! So refreshing. I hope you have a marvelous birthday this year, Allyson, and that your cookies turned out well!
Rachel
Could I substitute regular cane sugar for the coconut sugar? If so, should I use white or brown sugar?
Kate
Yep! Brown sugar would be best. Same amount.
Maeve
Hi Kate
I live on the beautiful Gold Coast in Australia, so while you guys are in winter we enjoy summer for Christmas. It can be quite hot at Christmas so many recipes do not suit. However I love your recipes and comments, I have to search out some ingredients like the “pastry flour” we do not have that here, for all your Aussie fans I discovered that wholemeal plain flour is the same. I have printed many of your recipes and noe have a separate folder. I became a vegetarian some years ago and now find I am really enjoying cooking again, thank you for a great website.
May you have a very “Happy Festive Season”
Cheers Maeve
Kate
Thank you for your note, Maeve! I’m glad you appreciate my site, even if the seasons are backward. :)
Rachel
These look amazing, can’t wait to make them with my kids. Like Maeve I live in Australia but we are in Melbourne (Maeve if you are interested it might be worth googling to find your local organic or health food store which may well have pastry flour i.e. cake/biscuit flour). Happy holidays!
Kate
I hope you all love the cookies, Rachel!
Jessie @ Chasing Belle
Wow these do look super healthy! What a wonderful alternative to gorging on refined sugar and flour over the holidays. So simple and festive too. Definitely your style :) Thanks for sharing!
Kate
Thank you, Jessie! :)
Margot D
I raise you a bah-humbug with a January 2nd birthday ;) These look awesome!
Kate
Haha! I bet everyone’s tuckered by the time your birthday rolls around. I’m sorry!
Kari
These look delicious! I love gingerbread cookies!
Linda | The Baker Who Kerns
Yay! I’m so happy to see a healthy gingerbread recipe! I really want my Christmas cookies this year and it’s create that coconut oil and sugar can save the day. Also who knew about molasses? My jar of it is just sitting in the back of my cabinet all neglected! Gotta get that out!
Heather
These are absolutely lovely, Kate! My birthday is New Year’s Eve (turning 31 this year), so I totally get it. I don’t mind though, this is such a great time of year for celebrations of all kind. Happy holidays, and thanks for such a great recipe!:)
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Kate
Oh man, holiday birthdays are tough! At least everyone’s in the mood to get out and celebrate on yours! Happy early birthday, Heather.
Heather
I’m a 12/25 bday too! When I was young it was the worst. Now that I’m late 30s and a mom we decorate Black Friday and are first to turn on the outside lights! I admit I still get disappointed when I get a “for your December/Christmas birthday” card; thanks hallmark. The cookies look delicious and I’ll report back when I make them. Happy Birthday!
Kate
Hello, fellow Christmas baby! I’m glad you’ve embraced it now. I’ve never gotten one of those cards—I didn’t know they existed! Why??
Rachel
These look fantastic, even if usually in my book ‘healthy’ and ‘Christmas’ are not words that are supposed to belong in the same sentence together!
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Medeja
Crispy healthier gingerbread cookies sound great and look just irresistible :)
taylor @ greens & chocolate
Bring on the blackstrap molasses! I love a good gingerbread cookie and also love that you made a healthier version. I am putting together my holiday baking list today and am definitely adding these!
Kate
Hope they turn out great for you, Taylor! xo!
Siobhan @ There You Are Sibby
These look so great!
Siobhan
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Kari
I am so excited to make these… yummers. I love love love that you take the classics and make them healthier. Even just the sugar substitute is so important. So much sugar around the holidays, I try to stick to honey/maple/coconut!
★★★★★
Kate
Thanks, Kari! I hope they turn out marvelously for you!
Nicole ~ Cooking for Keeps
Oh man, that’s a tough one. December 25th birthday?! I hope the people around you get a good slap on the wrist if they try to combine your birthday with Christmas. BIG NO NO!
I want to try these guys, you have a knack for lightening things up, I have your healthier banana bread in the fridge now, and I can’t get enough!
Kate
Haha, yep, that’s how it goes! So glad you’re enjoying the banana bread. Hope you’re well! Just read that your baby will be hear in a week or so, yay!!!!
Christina
I can’t wait to try out these cookies!
Do you think I can use Sprouted Spelt flour instead of the Whole Wheat flour?
Kate
Hi Christina, I think so, but I’m not entirely sure. I know the moisture content in spelt is a little different from whole wheat flour.
Gaby Dalkin
The bear shaped gingerbreads are so sweet! This is definitely a recipe I’ll be utilizing and sharing!
Kate
Thanks, Gaby! I hope the cookies turn out great for you. I found the bear cookie cutter in Target’s holiday section this year.
Issie
I cannot wait to make these! I absolutely love gingerbread but have never got round to making my own. This year I’m going to make a big batch of these. I really love the spicey, warm flavours with a sweet, crunchy cookie.
Ooh I’m feeling all festive now!
Issie x
concealerandkale.blogspot.co.uk
Kate
I hope you love the cookies, Issie! Please let me know how they turn out.
Allie
These looks so delicious! I just received a yoga cookie cutter and now I have a recipe to go along with it – yay!
Thanks for sharing, have a great day!
Kate
A yoga cookie cutter? I want one!
Drumles Den Haag
Isn’t coconut sugar a little less sweet then regular (brown) sugar. If you replace it for regular sugar, should you put less sugar in the mixture?
Kate
Hi Den! That may be true. I just swapped coconut sugar for the brown sugar in a classic gingerbread cookie recipe, so I don’t think you need to worry about it.
Scarlet
Hi!!! Your cookies looks so good!
I’m from Chile, and I can’t find molasses here, can I replace it for maple syrup? Or something else?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Scarlet! I think maple syrup would be the best substitute, but I’m not 100% sure how they’ll turn out. They won’t taste the same as mine, but maple cookie would be so good, too!
Pre
Here are a couple of links, both with great info, about subbing for molasses. Good luck!
http://frugalliving.about.com/od/makeyourowningredients/qt/Molasses_Sub.htm
http://www.myrecipes.com/how-to/cooking-questions/substitute-for-molasses
Cindy
In Brazil, we visited a Cachaca distillery, a rum like alcoholic liquor made from cane sugar. Molasses was a by product of Cachaca, and we purchased some. It was most like blackstrap molasses, and very delicious. Would you let Scarlett in Chile know this? Maybe it is available in Chile under another name.
Scarlet
After looking for something look like molasses, I find something called “Chancaca”, but it’s a little dificult to use because it has a really hard structure. Its like a block of caramel, so I have to disolve it in water to achieve the consistancy.
★★★★★
Chris
Do you know if these freeze well? Want to get started baking for Xmas day family party. I so love your blog, make so many of your recipes, and love your dog!!!
Kate
Hi Chris! Cookie says hi. The cookies do freeze well. You might wait to frost them until the day you plan to serve them, since the cookies might get a little knocked around in the freezer.
Hayley
Hi, Kate. Plan to make these for a holiday event this weekend…I have been avoiding coconut oil due to cholesterol…I know there is controversy over the benefits and downsides of coconut oil but I am just playing it safe. Can olive oil be substituted, do you think, or will they have a weird taste?
Pre
I have not tried this recipe yet – but I have subbed olive oil in place of coconut oil in cookies before without issue (and also avoiding a bit too strong of a coconut flavor). I’d suggest making a 1/2 recipe test batch to see how it goes.
Kate
Hi Hayley, that’s a good question, and I’m sorry I didn’t answer you in time for the weekend. The spices and molasses flavor (especially blackstrap) are pretty strong, so they might just cover up any hint of olive oil. I couldn’t taste any coconut in mine, so I’d say it’s entirely possible. Please let me know if you try.
Rachel
These are so good! Made a batch today and my son and I devoured half of them in one morning- he kept saying “come on , just one more star..”I too live in Australia and couldn’t find pastry flour so just used my usual wholemeal spelt and they turned out just fine.I love it that they are not too sweet- just how I like my cookies- I used blackstrap molasses and we loved the taste but my daughter not so much so I will try your suggestion of using regular. It was a happy coincidence that I had put molasses down as something to try and feed my son( as he has decided to become vegan so I am looking for every vegan source of iron I can find )when your recipe arrived. I also made a big batch of your wonderful granola to go in my freezer today. Thank you so much for all your wonderful recipes -hope you have a fabulous christmas and birthday.
Rachel
★★★★★
Kate
Rachel, I’m so glad you and your son loved these cookies! Happy holidays to you and your family!
Viki
The timing on this is perfect. I was almost resolved to making my mother in laws traditional corn syrup filled gingerbread cookies. I really didn’t want to since I am trying so hard to make healthy foods for my family, but couldn’t see Christmas with out gingerbread. I found your site today after a mention on the Ambitious Kitchen blog. Getting ready to try this now. Cheers!
Kate
Thank you, Viki! I hope they turned out great for you, and I’m glad you found my blog! Thanks for saying hello!
Brian @ A Thought For Food
Absolutely loving this variation on the gingerbread cookie. I’m a big fan of texture when it comes to baked goods and I always find that whole wheat flour gives it a little extra umph. Hope you’re having a great holiday season!
Kate
Thank you, Brian! Happy holidays!
Pre
Thanks for the recipe – look forward to trying this healthier version.
I get the late December birthday thing… my sister’s birthday is on the 27th which is probably why birthdays are such a big deal to her (mine is in the Spring and I really don’t care much about celebrating). So even though I’m not big on birthdays, I know my sister is, and every year a couple of weeks before her birthday when everybody is all about Christmas, I always make it a special point to bring up her birthday and ask her if she wants to do anything special (or even non-special) each year. I’m the only one in my large family who does that, despite my encouraging others to do so, and I hope she appreciates it. As for the “dreaded combo gifts”, any time I do that it is not because of proximity to Christmas… I do the same whether a family member’s birthday is in June or December… and I only do it if I want to give something I could never afford to be a single-holiday gift.
Kate
Thank you for sharing those resources, Pre! I have no doubt that your sister really appreciates you asking. I went eight years without a proper birthday celebration and it really started to get to me after a while! Now I just have to be really proactive about planning early, and like I said, I have some great help this year. They are so appreciated. :)
Kate
P.s. I think your double gifts are totally fair when you’re combining birthday/holiday funds like that.
Maura
Tried this recipe this past weekend and they were a hit! I used the dough for cookie decorating with my friend’s three-year-old daughter who also loved them! The cookies had a great gingerbread taste that wasn’t too much (I used the regular molasses) and the texture of the cookie was perfect for decorating…and eating after. I had to sub in brown sugar (that was all I had) but used coconut oil and whole wheat flour. I added a little more oil since the original dough was a touch dry, and it turned out great. Thank you for this! Ps – I also suffer from a late December birthday…I mandate the two holidays be as separate as possible!
★★★★★
Kate
Maura, thanks for letting me know! I’m so glad these turned out great for you. Happy early birthday! :)
Emma {Emma's Little Kitchen}
Hooray! I adore gingerbread cookies, but my attempts at a healthier version have never come out quite right yet. Can’t wait to try these!
Kim
These were really yummy! We just used whole wheat flour and brown sugar as we didn’t have coconut sugar. They were a little challenging to roll out as they kept cracking, but we kept at it and they cut into shapes just fine. I think they taste every bit as good as white flour cookies and maybe even better!
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Kate
Thank you, Kim! I’m glad they turned out well for you! I bet the dough cracked because the coconut oil needed a little more time to warm up (it can be brittle when cold).
zahra
I made these today.I expected these cookies to turn out great,based on other recipes that I’ve made from your blog and all were great..but they turned out to be better than great! thay are the BEST cookies I’ve ever eaten! so so delicious and full of warm flavours.definitly will make them again soon..maybe tomorrow?! cause they are all gone!
I used regular whole wheat flour,cause neither whole wheat pastry flour or white whole wheat flour can be found where I live(just out of curiosity.. what is the difference between those two?)and also used brown sugar cause I can’t find coconut sugar here :(
I live in a muslim country,and we do not celeberate christmas here.but I see all these food blogs that are making christmas cookies and I can’t just watch!so I’ve been making a lot of cookies lately(trying the healthier ones) and this was the best.thank you very much for your amazing recipes.
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Kate
Zahra, I got a little nervous as I started reading your comment, but I’m so glad these turned out great for you! Hooray!!! Thank you for letting me know. I’m glad to hear your cookies turned out with regular whole wheat flour, especially since another reader just asked and I haven’t gotten a chance to try myself yet. Let’s see, whole wheat flour is made from red wheat berries, which have a more nutty flavor and darker color. I love whole wheat flour’s flavor, but sometimes I don’t want it to interfere with the other flavors, so I’ll use white whole wheat flour. White whole wheat flour works just the same as regular, but it’s made from white wheat berries that are lighter in color and flavor. Whole wheat pastry flour is made from soft white wheat berries. It’s very finely ground and has a lower protein content than the other two, so it doesn’t lend as much structure to the finished result. Sometimes it works great, but I’ve had trouble with muffins not rising as high when I use the pastry flour, and it definitely doesn’t work in recipes that call for yeast (pizza dough was a disaster). Hope that helps!
zahra
Thanks for your explanation.I just knew that they are lighter than regular whole wheat flour,but didn’t know how exactly.I hope soon they will be available here too.
Maisie
I’ve made these twice now for 2 different parties and everyone loved them! All of the cookies were eaten both times. I really like that they are a little healthier than regular cookies. I love your site – thanks for the great recipes.
Kate
Thank you very much, Maisie!
Kim
I just realized I have whole wheat flour, not the pastry flour. Is that gonna work? Sounds like they will just be higher gluten and maybe more dense? Thx!
Kate
I’ve heard whole wheat flour works well for these!
Arden
Could you substitute gluten free flour?
Kate
Yes, I think an all-purpose GF blend should work here.
Tracy
Help! Our dough is super tough like a rock. Any suggestions? Let it sit overnight in fridge
Kate
I’m sorry, Tracy, I just found your comment. Did the cookies work out for you? The dough just needs time to warm up until it becomes more malleable again.
Samantha
I’m allergic to coconut; is there something I can use instead of coconut oil ?
Kate
Hi Samantha, butter would work, if you aren’t avoiding dairy.
Serene
Success! My first time making gingerbread cookies. My kids gave 2 thumbs up! They normally don’t care for gingerbread cookies and neither do I, because the commercially made ones taste horrible. I love baking with coconut oil and so glad I found your recipe, thank you! Our cookies turned out perfect with a few small tweaks, using ingredients we had on hand: 2,3/4 cups whole wheat flour and brown sugar in place of coconut sugar. I also changed up the spices a bit (1 tsp ginger, ommitted black pepper, added 1/2 tsp all spice) for the kids’ palates. Some readers have experienced rock hard cookies and it may help if they use less flour and/or decrease the baking time. We baked ours for 8 min and they were crispy on the outside and slightly soft on the inside, just the way we like them.
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Kate
Thank you, Serene! I’m so glad these turned out well for you.
Nella
I love that this is yet another recipe that I can make with my son.
We just finished measuring and mixing everything together and are patiently waiting for the dough to be ready.
Thanks! I’m sure these will be a hit!
Malena
Great recipe kate! I really want to cook those cookies but molasses and coconut sugar aren’t common in my country (argentina) so i cant make them. Any replacements? Maybe honey for the molasses and regular or mascabado sugar for the coconut one?
Thank you so much! Keep making those amazing recipes of yours.
Malena.
Kate
Hi Malena! I think your ideas will probably work. The cookies won’t taste the same without molasses, but I think honey will taste really nice!
Valerie
Kate! This Recipe was amazing. I replaced the egg with apple sauce like you suggested to make them vegan! My 2 and 5 year old girls had a blast decorating with icing and rainbow sprinkles of course! Thanks! Merry Christmas! Santa will love these. Valerie
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Kate
Thank you, Valerie! I’m so glad the applesauce worked for you!
Lisa
These were so good and easy to make. Also, we used a flax egg and they turned out great. Thanks!
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Marie
These are awesome cookies!! I’m no baker, either. My creations usually burn, are undercooked, stick to the pan, etc…
These turned out tasty and perfect!
I was looking for a healthy cookie recipe for my husband who has to watch his cholesterol. Now he can treat himself on Christmas without the guilt!
Thanks!!
Kate
Thank you, Marie! So glad to hear it!
Tiffstitch
These turned out well for me too, thank you for a great recipe. I found I needed to add a little oil as they stayed in the fridge for 2 days before I worked with the dough.
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Kate
Thank you! So glad you enjoyed the cookies.
Tia
HI Kate,
Thank you for sharing recipe. The picture on your blog looks amazing, but unfortunately mine turned terrible bad. My dough was too sticky and wet. I don’t have cup measurement so I convert Cup to Millilitre. I pour about 120 ml Molasses and 120 ml Melted Coconut Oil (which I found on other blog about conversion).
Please advice.
Thanks.
Kate
Hi Tia, I’m so sorry your cookies didn’t turn out well. Your conversions for the molasses and coconut oil are correct. It sounds like you needed more flour.
Marbella
Hi Kate! We made gingerbread cookies for the first time this year and they turned out delicious! Thank you for your easy to follow and healthy option :-) Have a great New Year!
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Kate
Thank you, Marbella! I’m so glad the cookies turned out well for you. Happy New Year!
solstice
Would it be possible to substitute black treacle for molasses?
Kate
I’m sorry, I’m not sure!
Tarin
Mine are too crumbly what do I need more of?
Thanks!!
Kate
Have you given the dough time to warm up a bit? The coconut oil can be a little brittle if it’s too cold.
Daniel
It doesn’t matter that Christmas is over; I made these cookies yesterday and they are delicious! I will make them year round. Thanks for this wonderful recipe.
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Denissa
OH NO :-/ something went wrong… my dough is flaky, when I roll it it falls apart. I put it back in the fridge and now it’s really hard. How can I save it?
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Home Ec Teacher
I rarely take the time to comment, and only came back to this site because I realized that one of my favorite recipes comes from it.. (THIS RECIPE). I altered it a little. Instead of 1/2 cup mollassas and 1/2 c sugar, I used nearly 3/4 c. mollassas and nearly 3/4 c. honey. I LOVED it. Plus, I upped the spices. I had literally tried at least 4-5 other gingerbread recipes and tried to make them healthy…to no avail. I am so grateful for this one. Thank you!! You help my Christmas expectations come to life! Thanks for the tip on the icing toping to keep in the moisture. I also added candied ginger for fun and because I had some on hand. If you like this recipe and are health conscious, you might also like ‘Whole Wheat Ginger Snaps’ on allrecipes.com submitted by MRSDAYCARE. DONT USE BLACKSTRAP MOLASSAS. I used Briar Rabbits.
★★★★★
Andrea
Making these right now! Letting it sit in the fridge for an hour. Aghh can’t wait! Also, I’m in super healthy mode right now so I didn’t put brown sugar so I replaced it with organic agave syrup. Also, had a mix of millet flour & buckwheat! Will comment again on how it tastes!
Andrea
Also, I replaced the molasses with pure honey!
My thoughts, it’s really good! Not your average gingerbread cookie but considering its gluten-free, sugar-free and vegan (replaced mine with flax egg), its really good! Try it out :) Thanks for the recipe!
Kimberly
I’m just wondering if these cookies would freeze well? Not the dough, but the actual cookies once baked? I love gingerbread and so does my toddler but no one else in the family does and I don’t want to make a whole batch and have them go to waste! Thank you!
★★★★★
Kate
Yes, they do!
Kimberly
I’ve just made the dough but it is SO dry and crumbly I could barely get it into a ball, I added a little vegetable oil to try and moisten the mixture up but no luck… I’ve got it sitting in the fridge at the moment but am considering just tossing it because I know it won’t roll out… I measured everything exactly, what did I do wrong?
Kate
Oh no! I’m sorry to hear that happened. It sounds like your batch perhaps had too much flour in it. That can happen if you measured your flour differently than I did. I use the spoon and swoop method—spoon flour into the cups, then level off the top with a knife. If you scooped the flour into the cups directly, you could end up with almost twice as much flour.
Dr Seine
Why would you use coconut oil in lieu of butter?
It has LOADS more saturated fat (89% to butter’s 51%) and not the good kind of saturated fat. Most of the saturated fat in coconut oil is low-density lipoprotein (the choleasterol that clogs arteries) with only trace amounts of high-density lipoprotein (the good cholesterol).
There’s a lot of fiction on the internet that says coconuts are natural and not processed so must be good for you – WRONG!, ask any dietician or doctor.
You may as well use butter…
★★★★
Kate
Hi Dr. Seine, I wouldn’t recommend swigging coconut oil or butter, but I think coconut oil is a healthy fat. Its saturated fat is composed of nearly 50 percent lauric acid, a relatively unique fatty acid that offers anti-viral and anti-bacterial benefits. (Lauric acid is why coconut oil lasts so long at room temperature before going rancid). It also has the potential to raise HDL levels (the good kind of cholesterol), but some experts are still skeptical given the saturated fat content.
Dr Seine
Thanks for your reply…
Indeed. Many think that coconut oil is a healthy fat due to misleading claims by (surprise, surprise) coconut oil manufacturers.
Lauric acid is a medium-chain fatty acid that aids absorbsion of nutrients and not always the good nutrients. Research is still on-going as to how lauric acids interact with the body to raise LDL cholesterol in the blood, but they do know that coconut oil indeed does raise LDL levels. The levels of HDL cholesterol is incosequential as it is readily absorbed by the liver anyway; raising LDL cholesterol is bad regardless of how much HDL cholesterol you get.
A lot of the confusion regarding health benefits of coconut oil are either fact twisting or not put into the correct context.
For example you comment regarding lauric acid and it’s anti-bacterial/viral effect: While it is true that your ‘skin’ could be better off by the application of lauric acid (used in soaps and cosmetics) the usefulness of those properties in food are almost pointless.
Still, out-of-context claims like this are used by oil producers to keep consumers confused and let them fall back on the ‘it’s natural so it must be good’ argument, which is false.
Don’t take my word for it though (or the word of coconut oil producers for that matter). Go read what many scientific studies have said regarding coconut oil.
M
Hi there! So I really NEVER take the time to post on peoples Blogs, however, this needed a special comment.
I actually made these cookies. I was a bit skeptical….but doubt be gone! They are AMAZING! They totally taste like regular gingerbread made with butter! I couldn’t believe it. They were unbelievably easy to roll and cut, and baked up perfectly! I did leave the dough in the fridge over-night, and I doubled up on the spices, as I like mine spicy. For anyone who is thinking about making this recipe…I say, go for it!
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you, M! I really appreciate it! Delighted to hear that the cookies turned out great for you.
Kay
I wanted this to be great. It was a pile of dry goop. This is my 3rd try on this site, and I guess the last.
★
Kate
Hi Kay, really bummed to hear you’ve had trouble with my recipes. I can try my best to troubleshoot if you provide more details. The coconut oil hardens in the refrigerator, but loosens up again once it warms up a bit.
lani
looks so yummy!
Katie
I tried your recipe this year after bookmarking it last year! Came out *very* good! The texture, flavor, and sweetness came out perfect. Is it because of the coconut oil? Also I loved that this was simpler and healthier than typical gingerbread recipes. Simpler is best in my opinion! These cookies will be xmas gifts and I’m positive they will make their recipients happy. :) Thanks for sharing your recipe!
★★★★★
Karen
I am trying to make these cookies, the dough is way too dry. I’ve added extra oil and an extra egg and its still a sand like consistency. I cant roll it or shape it at all. Though I like the ingredients involved, will not use this recipe again.
★
Linda M
Amen Karen!
Danie
Has anyone tried to make this with a flax egg? Did it work well? I made these last christmas (super yum), but I have since gone vegan.
★★★★
ellie
EEk! I’m making these right now and the dough is SO crumbly! Is there a way to put more liquid in? I’ve been mixing and mixing to no avail.
Nicole Fresa
Thank you for sharing the recipe! I bookmarked it and will make it for Christmas this year :D
★★★★★
Amanda
How many cookies does this recipe make? ?
Dumpling Love
Hi Kate! Thanks for your great recipes – love your banana bread! I just made the dough for these gingerbread cookies, and it was really crumbly. After shaping it into discs, there were lines through it as if it would just break off in pieces…chilling it now but just wanted to know if you have any other tips? I used 310g whole-wheat flour and heated the coconut oil…=(
THANKS!
Yoanna
Can we use honey instead of molasses?
Will Larche
Made these three times now. They turn out great but I’ve always had to add extra liquids.
Flax egg works great to make them vegan.
Will Larche
Now it’s 5 times. Can’t get enough.
★★★★★
Hanna
I’m so excited about these cookies, but I just made the dough and after mixing and mixing, it is barely coming together. I added more oil and a few drips of water, but still it barely holds. Hopefully the fridge will do the trick?!
Daria
Hi Kate!
Just made this recipe- They are delicious! I had to substitute two things: the coconut sugar for dark brown sugar, and also wheat flour instead of wheat pastry flour… but they still taste great. I the lemon icing – it really helps balance out the wheat flour. Thanks for sharing!
★★★★
Susan
So good! Made these with my 2 year old and it was’t too spicy or too sweet. Just perfect.
Jana
Hi Kate,
as always, a perfect recipe. My whole flat smells like gingerbread from last night’s baking.
Thank you! They beautifully kept shape and the one I tried was deliciously crunchy.
Thank you! And Merry Christmas!
Jana xx
★★★★★
Kate
Thank you so much, Jana! Happy holidays!
dre
very good cookies! thank you! we made mini cookies, like animal cracker size and they were a big hit. I filled 4 cookie trays with them.
the icing didn’t stand up for me so I added vegan butter as I was making a vegan version of this. Yummy.
Irene
Best results ever. Just what I wanted for a gingerbread man recipe, good natural ingredients, straightforward clear directions, delicious results. I only got 16 cookies out of this batch (I have the same cookie cutter set as in the photos). I probably could have rolled them a little thinner but they are perfect for decorating without falling apart. Definitely saving and sharing this one.
★★★★★
Abygail
I made these over the weekend for the festive season to give to friends but unfortunately found them to be rather dry once cooked but were really greasy when rolling altgough cracked a lot! They also lacked any real flavours so more spices needed I think. Also the icing makes a small really thin amount so I doubled this and added more sugar to make it thicker but once cooled and left it made the cookies look unappealing as it had turned a weird colour. Not sure where I went wrong with this recipe but didn’t really work well for me.
★★★
Stephanie Clark
Any thoughts on subbing honey for the sugar?
Kate
Sorry, I don’t think honey will work well since it adds so much moisture and changes the texture. Coconut sugar is a natural, minimally refined sugar that works great here.
Karen McGuire
Chemically, coconut sugar is not significantly different than white or brown sugar. It is not safe for a diabetic.
Erin
Dough is crumbly and dry (before I even put in fridge). Throwing it all out…what a waste of time.
★
Linda M.
Yaaaaassssssss Erin!
Ellie
Hi Kate!
Can’t wait to try these tomorrow! Can I sub maple syrup for molasses?
Kate
Sorry for the delayed response—you could, but you’d miss out on the characteristic gingerbread flavor.
Leslie Mihelich
These gingerbread cookies turned out great! We were very excited and our dairy eating friends enjoyed them too!!
★★★★★
Tatjana
I think I will try to do a gluten free version of this tonight. =) Great for a Christmas Eve dessert!
Camille
Thank you sooooo much for coming up with this recipe! I will be making is asap. Thank God there are people like you who know what healthier means in a recipe.
★★★★★
sam
was looking forward to making these for my Christmas party but the dough is completely crumbly and falling to pieces, i let it sit overnight and i can’t make it into dough at all….
★
Kate
Hi Sam, it probably just needs to warm up a bit. Coconut oil can be brittle when it’s too cold.
Linda M.
Sam- same thing happened to me. The dough was just unusable.
Wendie
Made dough and just took out of fridge one day later to make cookies with my toddler and the dough is really, really hard. I’m letting it sit out to warm but worth letting others know to plan for this. Hoping it will be soft enough to roll eventually. Any other tricks?
Dianna
Since I ran out of Trader Joes gingerbread men, and they wont be out for another year….I had a strong craving for gingerbread the last couple of weeks, I went to my go to healthy recipe site and was so happy to find the recipe. I just made these and they are wonderful. I didn’t want to use wheat flour so I used 2 cups of almond flour and 1 cup of brown rice flour. I also used a regular egg as eggs are fine on my diet. I just made round cookies as it didn’t roll out after an hour and too weak to wait till tomorrow. I was so pleased with how they came out. My husband and my 21 year old son loved them as well. This recipe will be my regular. Thanks so much Kate!!
Kate
YES these are great for cravings outside of the holiday season! So glad the family enjoyed them.
Sylvia
Well I tried them and they taste so good but the dough split and I couldn’t shake it I just made rounded cookies and my kids loved them
Can u tell how to make the dough come together next time
Thanks
Kate
Hi Sylvia, it sounds like your dough needed to rest a little longer in a warm environment. When it’s too cold, the coconut is solid and can cause the dough to split rather than roll out smoothly.
Tiffany
Hello, these look great… do you think a gluten free flour mix would work with these?
Thank you!
Kate
Hi Tiffany – I haven’t tried them yet, gluten free. But, I know that the Bob’s Red Mill gluten free all purpose flour has worked well as a gluten free substitute in the past. Let me know how it goes if you give it a try!
Krista
We made these last year and they were delicious! Was wondering if I could freeze the dough a couple weeks ahead of time?
★★★★★
Kate
Hi Krista – I haven’t tried freezing the dough for these, but it should work. For thawing, I would recommend thawing in the fridge and bring the dough to close room temperature before using to make it soft enough to handle. Let me know how it goes for you!
Claire
Hi, Kate!
My toddler and I love your healthier cookies and muffins, and bake together frequently! I was wondering if I could substitute maple syrup for the coconut sugar? I only have maple syrup and honey on hand as sweeteners…. I would prefer not to use sugar if possible.
Thanks!
Kate
Hi Claire, I’m sorry, liquid sweeteners won’t produce cookies with the same texture as you see here. Coconut sugar is minimally processed, so it’s about the same as using maple syrup or honey.
Karen
Yum! Perfect, thank you.I love making gingerbread each Christmas as gifts, and these taste perfect. Great texture too. And so easy to make!
★★★★
Kate
What a fun idea, Karen! I am happy this recipe made the cut. Thanks so much for the review!
Sallie berg
Is it possible to use all purpose flour instead of whole wheat flour?
Tara Arnst
Made it with honey instead of coconut sugar. Worked great. It’s a bit more moist so I added extra flour during rolling out stage. It’s perfect!
★★★★★
Kate
I am happy it worked, Tara and that you liked them so much! Thanks for your review.
jodi
Thanks for the recipe. I am at the rolling stage and my dough is quite dry, suggestions?
Ashley
I tried this recipe and it failed miserably. It was a crumbly mess from the start, even with adding 3 extra eggs and a quarter cup of water. Biggest down side of cooking with coconut flour.
Kate
I’m sorry to hear that, Ashley! Unfortunately, coconut flour isn’t a 1-1 substitute here. It will soak up all the moisture and doesn’t have the same adhering properties.
Ashley
Yes, I learned that the hard way. I did get everything I need to try the recipe again, without the coconut flour. My mom’s chickens will love their gingerbread biscuits and that’s a plus! The learn experience will now be turned into eggs.
Rachel
We love this recipe-I have to hide these cookies otherwise they don’t last an hour in our house:)
★★★★★
Kate
I know what you mean, Rachel! Thanks for the review.
Rachel Yakar
These were delicious. Made them with my kids. Used white whole wheat flour, as that’s all I had. Baked at 350 for 8 minutes. Yummy!!! Thank you.
★★★★★
Kate
Great! Thank you, Rachel.
Linda M.
We just kept mixing and then we just rolled the best we could and the best we could get was gingerbread granola.
★
Kate
I’m sorry to hear that, Linda. As you can see in the comments, these cookies turn out beautifully for most but not all. I’m investigating to see if I can determine what goes wrong for some. I stand behind my recipes and truly hate to hear that you’ve been disappointed by one of them.
Jaime
I tried this recipe and would not recommend it at all. The dough was very crumbly and after refrigeration for 1 hour it could not be rolled out even after leaving it at room temp for 30 minutes. I ended up scraping the whole thing. I followed the directions exactly as written. I would not waste my time and ingredients again. Such a shame as I regularly use C&K recipes and never had any issues prior to this one.
★
Kate
Hi Jaime, I’m so bummed you had trouble with the cookies. I’ve heard from some other commenters with similar issues but have not been able to reproduce them to figure out what might be going on! As you can see in my photos and from other comments, they can turn out great. I’ll remake them this weekend to try to figure it out. I hope you’ll continue cooking from Cookie and Kate and would love to hear how your other recipes turn out.