When I was growing up in Tulsa, Oklahoma, there was a wonderful store in Utica Square called Petty‘s Fine Foods. They had an in-store bakery that made the best cookies in town! One of my favorites was their Frosted Chocolate Drop Cookies. They only made them once a week, so you had to make sure you got there early enough in the day to grab a bag. Sadly, Petty’s is no longer in business, but the memory of those cookies have stayed with me all these years. Recently, I was experimenting with a cookie recipe, trying to make it lower in oxalates by not using almond flour. Macadamia nuts are much lower in oxalates than almonds, but finely ground macadamia nut flour is not available commercially. Instead, I took raw macadamia nuts and quickly processed them in my blender to make macadamia nut butter, which I then used as a base for my cookie dough. If you don’t want to go to the trouble of making your own macadamia nut butter, you can purchase it or substitute cashew butter in it’s place (although be aware that cashew butter is higher in oxalate). The result was spectacular! The cookies were light, soft and cake-like, just like the Chocolate Drop Cookies I remember!
Keto Chocolate Drop Cookies
Makes 20 cookies
Cookie Ingredients:
1 cup macadamia nut butter (homemade, store bought or substitute cashew butter)
¾ cup powdered erythritol-based sweetener (such as LaKanto Monkfruit sweetener or Swerve)
2½ tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
2 tablespoons unsweetened peanut butter powder
1½ tablespoons oat fiber powder (not oat flour!)
1 tablespoon coconut flour
1 tablespoon unflavored whey protein powder
1 teaspoon baking soda
2 large eggs
1 tablespoon salted butter, melted and cooled a bit
1½ teaspoons vanilla extract
1 - 2 tablespoons water, as needed
½ cup pecans, chopped
Chocolate Frosting:
½ recipe of my Best Low Carb Chocolate Fudge Frosting (see separate recipe here)
OR use your favorite store-bought sugar free chocolate frosting (I recommend Birch Benders, see below)
1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Line a rimmed baking sheet with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper.
2. In a large mixing bowl, combine all of the cookie ingredients, except the water and chopped nuts. Using an electric mixer, mix until the ingredients are well combined and a thick, sticky, but cohesive batter is formed (what you are looking for is a thick cake batter, slightly looser than a dough). If needed, add water 1 teaspoon at a time until the proper consistency is reached. The amount of water necessary will depend on the nut butter that you have chosen to use. Homemade macadamia nut butter is very runny, but commercially available macadamia nut butter is often mixed with cashew butter to make it thicker and spreadable. If you are using store-bought macadamia nut or cashew butter, you may need to use the full 2 tablespoons of water suggested in the recipe, or maybe even a little bit more, to achieve the proper consistency. The dough should not be stiff. It should be like a thick, gooey cake batter.
3. Fold in the chopped pecans. Using a 1½ tablespoon cookie scoop (size 40), drop the thick cookie batter onto the lined cookie sheet, about 1½ inches apart. The cookies really do not spread much as they bake.
4. Bake in the preheated oven for 9 to 11 minutes, begin checking on them at 9 minutes. Bake until they are slightly cracked and the tops are just firm and bounces back slightly when touched. Remove the baking sheet from the oven and allow the cookies to remain on the baking sheet for a few minutes. Remove the cookies to a wire rack to cool completely before frosting.
5. You can make your own low carb, sugar free chocolate frosting following this link (click here), or you can substitute your favorite store-bought chocolate, sugar free frosting. Store-bought, sugar-free frosting is convenient, but they are not all created equal! Please be sure to look at the list of ingredients and, if it includes maltitol, sorbitol or mannitol, put it back on the shelf! These offending sugar alcohols can cause uncomfortable digestive problems for many people. I recommend Birch Benders brand. It does not include any unfavorable sugar alcohols and I find the taste and consistency is very good. Stir to restore creaminess before spreading on the cooled cookies.
Nutritional Information per cookie (no frosting): 111 calories, 4.1 g carbohydrate (2 g dietary fiber, 0.8 g sugars, 1 g sugar alcohols), 11 g total fat (2.1 g saturated fat, 0 g trans fat), 20 mg cholesterol, 75 mg sodium, 15.4 mg calcium, 67 mg potassium, 1 mg iron, 14 IU Vit A, 2.3 g protein. Net carbs (not counting frosting): 2.1 grams
Photos and recipe by Kathy Sheehan, copyright 2022
All rights reserved. Please do not duplicate without the author’s permission.