

Coconut flour is so much fun to play with! It's so much easier to measure out versus grinding up almonds each time I want to bake. Get some and I promise you'll be hooked on the richness of this gluten-free, low carb "flour."
Interjection to share some science nerdiness. Check out this study on LDL in heart attack patients. Who knew that lower LDL is associated with increased mortality? And more of the low LDL patients were diabetic. Curious, very curious...
Remember these brownies? They're delicious when undercooked, but turn cakey and dry if you leave them in the oven a minute too long. I know how annoying it is to waste these expensive natural ingredients on recipes full of fail, so I am sorry if you have been caused grief by moisture-sucking overcooked brownies. This new and improved version of sugar-free low carb coconut flour brownies is MUCH less temperamental, and pretty much foolproof in terms of the baking time. Thanks to Buffy at Low Carb Friends for bringing this inspiring recipe to my attention! These brownies are not gooey or chewy, but fudgy and dense. They're more milk chocolate than most chocolate treats I've made, which is refreshing. If you enjoy these brownies as much as my roommates do, you'll want to stockpile coconut flour for many more batches!
A note about ingredients: Use the highest quality pastured butter you can find for optimal results. I bought a bunch of Kerrygold butter on sale, and have found that it lends such a pleasant buttery taste to everything I use it in. So worth the not-on-sale price! I'll be using Kerrygold in the recipes you see here from now on. When baking with no sugar and no flour, it's recommended to use the best of the ingredients we CAN work with! Also, for those of you who don't use erythritol, I'm pretty sure these brownies would work with 1/4 cup raw honey and 3/4 teaspoon of stevia. This will add 68 grams net carbs to the recipe, making each brownie about 9.5 grams net carbs. Be aware that with the honey/stevia combo, they won't be as sweet as traditional brownies.
Remember to keep your mitts off of these for a full night in the fridge. I don't know why, but it seems that baked goods made with coconut flour take a full night to "settle" into their full decadent yumminess. Just make up a batch, toss 'em in the freezer, and go to bed. Or watch SVU reruns on USA all night. Or read Good Calories, Bad Calories under the covers. Just do something to avoid cutting into this chocolately goodness until it achieves its full potential!
Then wake up and grab yourself a delicious and nutritious sugar-free low carb brownie. For breakfast. You know you want to!
Healthy Coconut Flour Brownies
Serves 12-16
Ingredients:
4 ounces cream cheese, softened
1 1/2 sticks salted organic butter (3/4 cup), softened
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
4 large eggs
1 cup sifted coconut flour
3/4 cup erythritol or xylitol OR 1/3 cup honey
1/2 teaspoon good tasting pure stevia extract (increase to 1 teaspoon if using honey)
1/4 teaspoon sea salt
1/4 teaspoon aluminum-free baking powder
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1/3 cup organic heavy cream
1/2 cup chopped pecans or walnuts
Preparation:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.
Brush both sides of an 8" by 8" (or 11" by 7" for thinner brownies) pan with coconut oil, or spray with extra virgin olive oil cooking spray. Place a cut square of parchment paper in the bottom of the pan.
Beat softened cream cheese with electric mixer until smooth. Beat in butter, vanilla, and sweetener. Whisk together dry ingredients. Add eggs one at a time to cream cheese mixture, and beat until incorporated. Add dry ingredients and heavy cream. Fold in nuts. Pour chocolate mixture into prepared pan, and smooth top with a spatula. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes (40 minutes for the wider pan), until toothpick inserted in center comes out clean, and top feels firm to the touch. When done, place pan on wire rack and cool completely. Cool pan of brownies overnight in the refrigerator. Slice into 12-16 squares, and serve. Store in the refrigerator in an airtight container, or freeze cut brownies, individual wrapped in plastic and aluminum foil.
~4g net carbs per 1/12th of a recipe


27 comments:
MMMMM! These look delicious Lauren. I think I may try to make these tonight after work with a few substitutions. I'm going to try to make them dairy free. :)I'll have to let you know how they turn out if I do. Thanks, as always, for all of the delicious recipes! :)
Yum. I recently got a hold of Kerrygold butter from Trader Joe's for $2.69/half pound. It is so delicious. Reminds me of when I was in Ireland.
Lauren, I am wondering if you have issues with erythritol. Not digestive issues, but a feeling of thirst from eating it. I have tried it and find that I feel very thirsty when I eat eryhtritol-sweetened treats.
These sound amazing. I love that you added cream cheese. Clever:) I can't wait to try them...and not change anything!
Get out. Just yesterday I was having some pretty serious brownie cravings. Lauren to the rescue!!! Oh man I'm making these this weekend. Thanks as always for your excellent work!!!! High-quality LC sweets...mmmmmmm
Sounds divine! I love coconut flour and oil. Did you know the oil is almost half lauric acid, which is incredibly anti-bacterial and anti-viral? They even sell it in capsules for when you get sick. We love the "Monolaurin" brand. Isn't food science *fun*? :-)
Cheers, Kelly
(the spunky coconut)
Looks good!
I'm into coconut flour too lately.
If I were to use agave syrup or maple syrup instead of the sweeteners you use, which quantity would you suggest?
Thanks ;).
Wow, it's a dairy extravaganza! These look amazing! Do you have any suggestions for dairy free or low fat?
bless your cotton socks, lauren! I've been dying for brownies!
Wow, those do look great, Lauren!
Shirley
It looks really fudgy and yummy!
I am glad that you are posting coconut flour recipes - I have some but wasn't sure what to do with it all! Now 2 good recipes to try!
Katie, please share what results you have with making these dairy free! You are very welcome. :)
Shannon, so glad someone else shares the Kerrygold love! I do not have issues with erythritol unless I have multiple servings in one sitting, which I don't tend to do. :) Have not experienced the thirst, but I'll make of note of it next time I eat something with E! Thanks for sharing your experience.
Ann, thanks! The cream cheese makes them good and rich. :D
Synesthetic, you are so welcome! It's so nice to see YOU leave a comment here. :D Hope you like the brownies!
Kelly, thanks for sharing that info on coconut oil! It's great stuff, isn't it? I added you to my blogroll :)
Alchemille, I'd try 1/2 cup, but I'm not familiar with that sweetener so it's just a guess. Try tasting the batter as you go along!
Meagan, I'm working on it! ;) Will share results if they work out.
Ms. V, what a cute comment!
Shirley, thank you!
Pigpigs, they ARE fudgy. Try 'em. :D
Laura, check the side bar for more coconut flour recipes. The red velvet cake is pretty great, too. :)
I tried this yesterday and it smelled so good and put it into the refrig after cooling. And per your directions had one for breakfast and it was good. I used the Hersey Special Dark Cocoa and they were delish. Will be serving this to my lc DH for dessert this Memorial weekend-with whipped cream. I think he'll like it. Thanks so much for all your experimentaion. Anne
Lauren,
I made these last night.... had one today for Breakfast.... they are amazing! A definate keeper!
Thanks Lauren!
do you know if coconut powder is the same as coconut flour? cus thats all i can find in my rubbish country!
Made these today, more for DH and MIL since I'm not a huge brownie fan. They both liked them and I thought they were pretty authentic. I'm not in love with them, no surprise, but I plan to make them for DH and freeze them individually so he has his sweet treats. And I won't be driven to consume them to excess like I do every other one of your recipes!
So anyway, thanks for this one!
(Mandy/palmtreegal)
Anne - You are welcome! Happy to hear these worked, even with that dark cocoa. Hope your weekend went well!
Sweetdreams - SO glad you enjoyed the brownies. :D
Divalou - I am not sure what coconut powder is! As long as it is defatted ground coconut, it will work similarly. If it is just ground up, it won't work the same in recipes!
Mandy - Glad DH was a fan of these! Freezing them in individual portions is such a smart tactic--great tip. I will definitely be doing that for these! :)
Hello! I must say, first - I'm addicted to your website! Thanks for ALL of the fabulous looking recipes you've posted! :) I'm actually looking forward to the holidays so I can bake more! :)
Now - as it is July 4th, I decided to make these coconut brownies - and I put your cream cheese frosting on the top. I must say I really like them! Hopefully the rest of the family will too (what? sugar-free? really?...)
I know that I really liked them though. A lot. :)
Thanks!!
I made these! The first GL/SF recipe I've tried. They are good, but not what I expected. Mine didn't seem chocolately enough. I could still taste the coconut "essense" from the flour. I think I need to use a better cocoa. I just used plain Hershey's unsweetened cocoa cause it's what I had on hand.
Also, mine didn't really end up that dense. Mine are pretty light and more cakey. I used a 9x13 pan for approx 30 minutes and I ended up leaving out the nuts. Perhaps one of those factors had something to do with it!
Keri-Ann - So glad you and your family enjoyed the brownies! Putting the cream cheese frosting on top sounds fantastic.
Kayla - Did you spoon the cocoa straight from the container, so that the spoonfuls were pretty packed in? Did you lightly spoon SIFTED coconut flour into a measure cup, and level the top with a knife? These are not even close to being cakey--they're brick-like and heavy, quite dense. Perhaps it's the larger pan you used? What kind of coconut flour? If you used all the same ingredients, that may have been a factor.
I also couldn't really tell whether these were to be cooked on 350 or 325. You say to preheat to 350, but to cook at 325. And the original recipe says 350. I was confused!
I sifted the flour and packed the cocoa like a good girl (I'm such a lazy baker)...and I got dense fudgy brownies! Thanks Lauren! Even the cakey ones were great, though.
although i love them, mine were also pretty cakey. i was loving the smell of the dry ingredients together, and decided to add a great amount of cinnamon. esp with the added cinnamon, the flavor of the brownies was remarkable, but the texture somewhat of an issue. i tried them a second time using ricotta instead of cream cheese, and adding a handful of dark chocolate chips with the nuts. this provided a more "conventional" fudge like texture, but both ways were really tasty.
Mine turned out cakey, too. I did sift the coconut flour, and spooned the cocoa out of the container. WIll leaving them in the oven a couple minutes too long make them cakey? My timer went off and I couldn't get to the oven in time. I will try again, I so want dense, fudgey brownies.
Hi Lauren
Is there a way to make these with chocolate chips instead of the nuts?
Hey! I made these and they are AWESOME!!! My husband loves them, which is saying a lot because he is usually so-so about my low-carb creations. Nice going!
For y'all who are getting cakey brownies--try subbing 8 ounces of sour cream in for 4 ounces of butter. That should get them more moist in fudgey if you want 'em like that. :)
Lynn, you can definitely replace the nuts with chips! Enjoy!
Amber, I am SO glad you like the brownies. They are my favorite chocolate treat!
Post a Comment