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I am trying to make a few cookie recipes and want to reduce their carb content and make it suitable for a low carb consuming person. Most of the cookie recipes call for all purpose flour.

In one of the recipes which specifically knead the dough with butter and no moisture (so as not to form gluten) I substituted almond flour 1:1 but haven't had great results (the dough is crumbly, cant be rolled, etc). Even 1.5:1 and still was the same. I added a pinch of xanthan gum and was able to get the dough to bind. However I wanted to ask here how people have gone about replacing all purpose flour with almond flour.

My next attempt is going to include some Vital Wheat Gluten along with the almond flour.

Edit: I have used Erythritol(powdered) as a sweetener. One of the sample recipes : https://www.archanaskitchen.com/shrewsbury-cookies-recipe-butter-cookies

from https://www.archanaskitchen.com/shrewsbury-cookies-recipe-butter-cookies

The other one is a video recipe : https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aU4U0M8JZG8&ab_channel=CookingShooking - I did mention my findings to the chef in the comments - but he's clearly a big enough celebrity to ignore a novice such as me.

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  • The recipes I've seen call for a 4:1 replacement of almond flour to plain flour.
    – GdD
    Commented Oct 21, 2020 at 7:02
  • What sweetener did you use? It would also help if you provided the full recipe you tried, so we know how much moisture is included.
    – NSGod
    Commented Oct 21, 2020 at 20:47
  • @NSGod - Updated question. Added two recipes I was trying to lower carb on. Used powdered eythritol. Commented Oct 21, 2020 at 21:13
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    What do you mean with "so as not to form gluten"?
    – Davidmh
    Commented Oct 22, 2020 at 8:35
  • 3
    @happybuddha I was asking because gluten is a protein present in wheat, you don't "form" it. What I think he was referring to is a "gluten network", the connections between different strands of gluten.
    – Davidmh
    Commented Oct 22, 2020 at 11:58

3 Answers 3

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There is no general replacement. Almond flour has very little in common with all-purpose flour, and behaves very differently in baking.

Your idea of adding gluten is very interesting - many flourless recipes are actually made with the intent to be gluten-free, which is a very difficult restriction to work around. It is certainly something to have in your toolbox.

However, you cannot just find some kind of mixture which will behave as a good substitute in different circumstances. Rather, you will have to redesign each recipe separately, and some things (e.g. laminated dough) may not be possible at all. For others, you would probably need to learn what the flour's role is in each, and experiment how to match it well - here, food science books will be helpful. It is quite an interesting project!

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In addition to totally lacking gluten, almond flour contains way more fat than AP flour, around 50 times as much. That's another reason it's popular in vegan/gf baking, it adds plant-based fat. So you will need to cut down on the fat elsewhere in the recipe. You will also need to adjust your expectations of what the finished product will be like.

I suggest that instead of starting your low-carb baking project by attempting to substitute almond flour for AP flour in recipes written for AP flour, try some recipes that are written specifically for almond flour. You'll get a better idea of the textures you can expect to get from baked goods which rely on it without the variable of your own modifications.

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  • Sorry, I had to give a downvote. The fat in the almond flour behaves nothing like fat added during the baking, so attempts to cut down the fat elsewhere will usually make the recipes work worse, not better.
    – rumtscho
    Commented Oct 22, 2020 at 11:57
  • @rumtscho : still a way better suggestion to start with a recipe that's designed for almond flour, though.
    – Joe
    Commented Oct 23, 2020 at 18:57
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So an analysis of the original recipe gives the following (I've omitted baking soda & salt for brevity):

2 cups AP flour           100.00%   250.0 g
½ cup sugar                24.00%    60.0 g
80 grams butter            32.00%    80.0 g
1 egg                      20.00%    50.0 g
3 Tbsp milk                18.40%    46.0 g
water(b:13g,e:38g,m:40.3g) 36.52%    91.3 g

As you can see from the baker's percentages, the sugar and butter are quite low for a cookie (cookies usually tend to have at least twice as much sugar and butter as specified here). A cookie with a relatively high sugar content (say, 80%+ of the weight of the flour) has a crystalline structure and the sugar plays an important part of holding things together (see this answer for more info). In this recipe, though, with the lower sugar and butter levels and added moisture in the form of milk, it's likely that the gluten network and starches play a somewhat larger role in also providing structure.

Translating this recipe to almond flour and powdered erythritol gives the following analysis.

2 cups almond flour           100.00%   224.0 g
½ cup powdered erythritol      37.05%    83.0 g
80 grams butter                35.71%    80.0 g
1 egg                          22.32%    50.0 g
3 Tbsp milk                    20.54%    46.0 g
water(b:13g,e:38g,m:40.3g)     40.76%    91.3 g

Right off the bat, I can see there's several problems you're going to run into. Almond flour has very little built-in structure-building properties when compared to wheat flour, so it will need to rely on other ingredients. While erythritol can provide structure, it'd likely need to closer to 80% (180 g) to do so. While you could do that, that would likely alter the taste quite a bit. The second issue is the milk. While I'm sure it plays an important role in making the original cookie what it is, it will only hurt things here by watering down the egg proteins. Mixing the milk with almond flour will have no effect like it would with regular flour. At 40%, the liquid level is pretty high, and since the binding power of the egg has basically been cut in half, it's understandable why you had a crumbly mess.

The sugar in the original recipe is hygroscopic (water-loving) and will help retain some of that extra moisture from the milk. Both erythritol and almond flour are "moisture-neutral": they don't really hold onto moisture during baking. So that extra moisture has nowhere to go and evaporates. While doing so, it tends to push the butter fats out with it, leaving a greasy puddle under the baked cookies (though it may not be as bad here because the amount of butter is pretty low).

Your best bets to create an adaption that retains most of the characteristics of the original are as follows: First, since erythritol is roughly 75% the sweetness of sugar, you could consider increasing it to 110 g, which might help provide better structure. Alternatively, you could use xanthan gum as you found. Inulin may also help provide structure and sweetness, though can cause digestive issues if you're not used to it. Vital wheat gluten would be interesting to test. You might also try unflavored gelatin to provide structure once the cookies have cooled.

EDIT

So I did a small scale test using 0.5% xanthan gum and some of my other suggestions and it worked fairly well. Scaled up, the recipe would look like this:

2 cups almond flour           100.00%   224.0 g
3/8 tsp xanthan gum             0.50%     1.1 g
~⅔ cup powdered erythritol     50.00%   112.0 g
¾ tsp baking soda               1.54%     3.5 g
1 g salt                        0.45%     1.0 g
80 grams butter                35.71%    80.0 g
1 ½ large eggs                 33.93%    75.0 g
water(b:13g, e:57g)            31.25%    70.0 g

You'll notice I left out the milk: after adding the egg to the mixture, I found it had the right consistency as it was then. Adding milk at that point would probably have been too much moisture. I upped the powdered erythritol to 50% which helped provide some structure when cooled. You could probably try to see how low you could push the egg while starting to incorporate some milk, while trying to keep the moisture level about the same.

EDIT 2:

Regarding the role of an egg: they really are a versatile kind of magical ingredient if you will. In a general sense, they are a structure-builder, a source of moisture, an emulsifier, a drying agent (the egg white proteins), and act as an edible glue. It can act as a leavening agent when it's used in higher quantities (not like in this cookie recipe).

Cookies tend to have very low moisture content (from say, 15% - 40% moisture by weight compared to the weight of the flour). In most cookie recipes, eggs serve as a primary source of moisture. They are also a structure builder in that once the egg proteins reach a high enough temperature, they "set" and keep their shape. In this Almond Flour adaption cookie recipe in particular, it acts as a kind of sticky glue that holds everything together before baking (and somewhat after baking as well). Egg and milk are quite different in that regard: when it comes to almond flour, milk has little gluing power compared to an egg. As a result you'd need to use gums or other polysaccharides or proteins to do the job of the egg.

While I love baking with flaxseed meal, a flax egg here would be out of place. An egg is very neutral in terms of flavor and texture, and a flax egg is anything but. Psyllium husk powder is somewhat similar to the soluble fiber in flaxseed meal and is a more neutral taste, though too much of it can cause the texture to suffer. I would probably try upping the xanthan gum to maybe 1.5% (3.4 g) and add milk slowly to see if you can get things to come together. It'd also be interesting to see if vital wheat gluten could work. So after doing another test, I'd try the following to start with:

~1 ¾ cups almond flour         90.18%   202.0 g
~2 ½ Tbsp vital wheat gluten    9.82%    22.0 g  
1 1/8 tsp xanthan gum           1.50%     3.4 g
~⅔ cup powdered erythritol     50.00%   112.0 g
¾ tsp baking soda               1.54%     3.5 g
1 g salt                        0.45%     1.0 g
80 grams butter                35.71%    80.0 g
52 g milk                      23.21%    52.0 g
water(b:13g, e:47g)            26.68%    60.0 g

(By the way, I'm also interested in these results, as I've experienced similar issues trying to adapt a Boterkoek (Dutch butter cake) recipe to use almond flour).

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  • Thank you very much ! I I had to make this egg free, you reckon I could just up the (full fat) milk quantity? Or? I dont like subbing flax eggs unless am making cake. I don't fully understand what an egg does really to a baked product. Google-fu says its a leavening agent - provides texture. What if I didn't care about texture, wouldn't the 'taste' still be the same? Commented Oct 24, 2020 at 0:28
  • As an aside, how did you like the cookies ? A bakery in India sells 250 kilos of this on a Saturday! That too at a premium price. When I was there 20 years ago I had to elbow my way in to lay me hands on a kilo of them. timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/pune/… Commented Oct 24, 2020 at 2:08
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    @happybuddha: updated the answer with some eggless suggestions.
    – NSGod
    Commented Oct 26, 2020 at 20:47
  • I gave the first Edit a go. Made a batch of cookies and they were no where close to what I was expecting - taste wise. Not faulting your construction - just reporting the result. I also put in a single egg and a tea spoon of milk. I have never baked with egg - the resulting cookies were very eggy in taste. I will give the Edit 2 a go when I can lay my hands on VWG - as its not sold in stores in Australia. Commented Oct 29, 2020 at 2:03

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