Paleo Chocolate Chunk Cookies

If you’re baking for Christmas this week, Paleo Chocolate Chunk Cookies are one of my family’s favorite sweet treats! They’re free of grains, gluten, dairy and refined sugar. But still so full of flavor and delicious chocolatey goodness. My whole family LOVES them.

I’m really sensitive to sugar and if I eat it on an empty stomach I have a sugar headache in less than five minutes (a sign of the havoc its creating on my blood sugar levels & endocrine system). So when I bake sweet treats I use healthful sweeteners like raw honey, pure maple syrup or coconut palm sugar, and I like to balance the sugar with protein from nuts, nut flours, nut butters or my favorite plant based protein powder, to reduce the glycemic impact. Enjoying sweet treats (in moderation) AFTER a healthy meal rather than on an empty stomach also helps to reduce the disruption to our endocrine system.

Paleo Chocolate Chunk Cookies

If you’re hosting or attending holiday celebrations this month, you don’t have to eat perfectly. But I highly recommend making or taking a healthy dish or two that you can enjoy and fill up on completely guilt free. I also always take a sweet treat I can enjoy, and these Paleo Chocolate Chunk Cookies fit the bill. You won’t feel the slightest bit deprived or tempted by all of those holiday treats with health harming ingredients!

Easy Nutty Energy Bites

Hello Friends, Happy Monday! I wanted to share a really quick and easy recipe my family has been enjoying this summer. These tasty and easy nutty energy bites are a healthful sweet treat that I’m sure will be making their way into my kiddos lunch boxes as they head back to school this week.

You know I love my chocolate and sweet treats, but I want to make them in the most healthful way possible–with wholesome ingredients that won’t sap my energy or derail my health and with sweetness that is balanced by protein and fiber to avoid a blood sugar spike or crash.

Easy Nutty Energy Bites

I love this recipe because its so flexible. This is one of my favorite combinations, but you can use any combo of nuts, seeds, oats, unsweetened coconut flakes, chocolate chips, raisins or other dried fruit for endless variations to suit everyone in the family.

And if you’re short on time or don’t feel like rolling out all of the bites, just grab a spoon and eat it right out of the bowl like you would cookie dough, its that good!

XO,  Kristi

PS – Speaking of school, its that time again! Make sure to check out my blog post Real Food School Lunches in Under Ten Minutes a Day for my favorite healthy lunchbox options and tips for making packing healthy lunches a breeze. Well as much of a breeze as packing lunches every day can be!

Print Recipe
5 from 1 vote

Easy Nutty Energy Bites

These make a perfect, healthful treat to satisfy your sweet cravings without the blood sugar crash and without derailing your health.
Calories: 3046kcal

Ingredients

Stir together:

Add in:

  • 1/3 c chopped walnuts
  • 1/3 c raw pumpkin seeds
  • 1/3 c mini chocolate chips we use Enjoy Life brand allergen free chocolate
  • OR 1 cup total of any combination of nuts seeds, oatmeal, unsweetened coconut flakes or dried fruit you prefer

Instructions

  • Roll the "dough" into small bite sized balls. You may need to adjust the amount of almond butter, honey and protein powder slightly as there is a lot of variation in the thickness of different brands of almond butter and raw honey. If your dough is too sticky to roll out, add a bit more Complete or just put it in the fridge for an hour or so. If its too dry, add a bit more honey or a bit of nut, coconut or olive
  • oil. Adjust as needed, you can't mess these up!
  • Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and enjoy! These freeze well if you want to save them longer.

Notes

A quick note about protein powders. I used to be a firm believer that protein powders aren't real food. Most aren't. I avoid anything with whey (a highly inflammatory and unhealthful byproduct of the dairy industry), processed or artificial sweeteners, colors, preservatives or additives. Juice Plus Complete is the only protein powder I've found that meets my definition of real food--minimally processed, nutrient dense, whole food, plant based protein from chemical-free, non-GMO legumes. grains, seeds and even mushrooms, one of the only food sources of Vitamin D--and its low glycemic and actually tastes really good! If you're interested in purchasing Complete I'd love to help! Just follow my link or shoot me a message.

Double Chocolate Buckwheat Waffles

You all know I love my chocolate, and I also love buckwheat. And these Double Chocolate Buckwheat Waffles, well, they’re pretty magical!

So when my son and I went on a date to a local coffee shop where they sell the most amazing gluten free, chocolate waffles (warm chocolate-y goodness that reminded me of my Buckwheat Brownies) we had to come home and try to recreate them.

After trying out the few recipes I found on Pinterest, none of them were really what we were looking for. So we started experimenting. At least a dozen batches later, my tasters finally said this one was the winner. It’s not quite Honey + Moon’s chocolate bubble waffles (which I highly recommend trying if you’re local), but they’re just as delicious! We don’t have a bubble waffle iron, but if you do please try these out in it and let me know what you think.

Double Chocolate Buckwheat Waffles

If you’re interested in some of the healthful properties of buckwheat, you can read more about that (and get the recipe for Matteo’s Buckwheat Pancakes) here.

Or just dive right in to making these! They’re part healthy breakfast, part dessert, and 100% delicious. They will make the perfect Valentine’s Day breakfast for all of your loves!

XO,

Kristi

Double Chocolate Buckwheat Waffles (gluten free, dairy free, refined sugar free)

Delicious, healthful, chocolatey goodness in these gluten, dairy and refined sugar free waffles. Egg free/vegan option.
Calories: 2093kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 1/2 cups Buckwheat flour
  • 3/4 c. raw cacao (I like Navitas Organics Raw Cacao)
  • 1 tsp. unrefined sea salt
  • 1 tsp. baking soda
  • 1 tsp organic cinnamon (optional)
  • 1 1/2 c. vegan "buttermilk" (1 T apple cider vinegar or lemon juice + unsweetened, unflavored almond milk, or your favorite plant based milk, to fill a 1-1/2 cup liquid measure; let sit for a few minutes to sour)
  • 2 farm fresh or organic eggs
  • 1/2 c. pure maple syrup
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • 1/2 c. melted coconut oil
  • 1 c. Enjoy Life Dark Chocolate Morsels

Instructions

  • Whisk together dry ingredients in a mixing bowl.
    In a separate bowl, whisk together the buttermilk, eggs, maple syrup & vanilla. Stir buttermilk mixture into the dry ingredients, then add the coconut oil. (This prevents the coconut oil from solidifying if your milk and eggs aren't at room temperature.) Stir until well combined.
    Stir in the chocolate chips. Let the batter sit for a few minutes for the buckwheat to absorb the wet ingredients and the batter to thicken up a bit, If your batter is too thick, add a tiny bit more almond milk. Meanwhile, heat your waffle iron.
    When waffle iron is hot, scoop about 1 cup of batter onto your waffle iron and cook according to your waffle maker's directions. With my waffle iron, the indicator light comes on well before the waffles are actually done. I found setting a timer for 4-5 minutes worked perfectly. If your waffles don't come cleanly & easily out of the waffle maker, you probably need to cook them longer.
    Carefully remove waffles from waffle maker, place on a plate, and keep warm in a 200 degree preheated oven, if desired, while you make the rest of the waffles.
    We enjoy these waffles plain or with berries or banana slices. Feel free to serve with pure maple syrup if you wish! These will keep well in a zip lock baggie for 2-3 days (although I can't say any of ours have lasted that long!) or they freeze well. To reheat, place on a sheet pan and warm in the oven or pop in the toaster.
    Enjoy!!    

Notes

MAKES APPROX. 6 FULL SIZE WAFFLES (24 QUARTERS) OR 9-12 SERVINGS
You can substitute an equal amount of coconut palm sugar in place of the maple syrup if you prefer. I've tried both and it works great.
I haven't tried this recipe with flax eggs, but I think it would work fine for a vegan/ egg free version. If you try it, please let me know!
I'm a dark chocolate girl, so I love the dark chocolate morsels, but we also tried this recipe with Enjoy Life milk chocolate mini chips and they work just fine too.

Chocolate Crisp Rice Protein Treats

Hello Friends! I promised you I would post this Chocolate Crisp Rice Protein Treats recipe this week, so here it is!

Chocolate Crisp Rice Protein Treats

I can’t really take the credit for this one. I originally got this recipe from my friend and mentor Bonnie Schnautz, ND of BRenewed Wellness Center. But it is so deliciously addictive and is a regular at our house so I have to pass it on to all of you!

I make these with Juice Plus Complete, my favorite whole food, plant-based protein powder. When it comes to protein powders, I’m extremely picky. Plant-based is a must. I avoid anything with whey (a highly processed by-product of the commercial dairy industry loaded with hormones and antibiotics) or any artificial flavors, colors, sweeteners or other questionable additives. Complete contains 15 different plants including nutrient dense legumes, ancient grains, broccoli sprouts, pomegranate, spirulina and even mushrooms. It is also high fiber, low glycemic, non-GMO and is NSF certified to be free of chemicals, heavy metals and any other contaminants or fillers.

Chocolate Crisp Rice Protein Treats

Try these for a delicious treat or (don’t tell my kids) they could even be a high protein, nutrient dense breakfast bar. Just don’t eat the whole pan at once!

Chocolate Crisp Rice Protein Treats

Ingredients

  • 1/2 c. all natural organic peanut butter (make sure to buy a brand with no sugar added. We use Aldi's Simply Nature brand)
  • 1/2 c. raw honey
  • 1 scoop 1/3 c
  • Chocolate Complete
  • or your favorite whole food plant-based protein powder
  • 1-1/2 to 2 c. gluten free crisp rice cereal (I use
  • Barbara's Organic Brown Rice Crisps
  • )

Instructions

  • Stir together the peanut butter, raw honey and Chocolate complete. Mix in the crisp rice cereal. I start with 1-1/2 cups and then add more as needed. It really varies depending on your brand of peanut butter and how runny or thick your honey is.
  • Press into an 8x8 pan and cover tightly. I keep ours in the refrigerator. If you like them softer, room temperature is fine too. Enjoy!

Buckwheat Brownies

Happy Monday, friends!

As we head into this hectic holiday season I have to confess, I am already worn out! In the past three weeks we have had Halloween (thankfully the kiddos all took it pretty easy on me on their costumes), celebrated 4 birthdays, the end of the soccer season, wrestling, hours of Nutcracker rehearsals, a traveling husband, a teething toddler and then said toddler also had a cold (which means neither toddler nor mama have slept much in the past couple of weeks).

I can only imagine how poorly I would be functioning right now if I wasn’t fueling my body with real whole foods. During these especially hectic and sleep deprived phases of life, we need the nourishment that comes from plants even more. Which is why I take my Juice Plus religiously and do my best to get my green smoothie in every single day, even when I am so tired I can barely see straight. The phytonutrients from all of those fruits and vegetables provides more nourishment and sustained energy for my body than all of the caffeine in the world ever could.

But, after all of that talk about plant nutrition, I hope you will forgive me for sharing a brownie recipe today. Because once in a while we need chocolate too, don’t we?

Buckwheat Brownies

My son has been gluten and dairy free for six years now and his baby sister and I have since joined him. In the last six years I have tried a LOT of brownie recipes. When I bake, I like to use the most healthful ingredients I possibly can. But I have to be honest–the recipes I’ve tried with black beans and other mystery ingredients just don’t cut it for me. Neither have any of the other gluten and dairy free variations I’ve tried, whether healthy or not. None have ever measured up to the perfectly moist, rich, chocolatey, chewey not cakey, dense but not too dense, gooey but not too gooey brownie I have in my head.

That is, until these. It turns out buckwheat–one of my favorite flours–is the perfect solution! You can read more about the health benefits of buckwheat (and get our favorite pancake recipe) here. No one will ever know these brownies are gluten free unless you tell them. They are moist, amazing, and unlike many gluten free baked goods they stay moist and keep well (tightly wrapped) for up to a week.

Buckwheat Brownies

I use Nutiva coconut sugar, which is still sugar and should only be eaten in moderation as a special treat. But it is more healthful than conventional white sugar, which is heavily processed, bleached and almost always made from GMO sugar beets. Nutiva’s coconut sugar is organic and non-GMO. It is unrefined, which means that unlike white sugar which is completely empty calories devoid of any nutrition, coconut sugar retains some small amounts of nutrients from the coconut. According to Vani Hari, the Food Babe, coconut sugar has 10,000 times the potassium, 20 times the magnesium and 20 times the iron of conventional white sugar. It also contains inulin fiber, which slows the absorption into the blood stream. It also has just over half of the glycemic load of white sugar, which helps you avoid that blood sugar/insulin spike and crash.

I also like baking with Nutiva Shortening, which is a blend of coconut oil and red palm oil. Both are naturally solid at room temperature (so no hydrogenation, the process which turns Crisco shortening and margarine into toxic trans fats), minimally processed, healthful fats. It makes a close to perfect substitute for butter. But if you can have dairy, real organic butter works great here too.

Buckwheat Brownies

I may have mentioned it before, but its worth repeating: When baking with gluten free flours, use a scale! Baking by weight is so much more accurate than volume and allows you to substitute flours or make adjustments to a recipe with a lot more success!  You can buy a good, inexpensive scale from Amazon. I have this one.

Buckwheat Brownies

You may be wondering why a health coach who preaches the evils of sugar is sharing a brownie recipe. But I love chocolate and I’m completely fine with an occasional treat when it’s made with the most healthful ingredients possible.

My personal rules for sweet treats and desserts (that I follow most of the time) are:

1) Make them out of the most healthful ingredients I can (and avoid artificial colors, flavors & sweeteners, high fructose corn syrup, trans fats and unpronounceable preservatives and additives as much as humanly possible).

2) Enjoy sweet treats after a healthy meal, never on an empty stomach. This helps to avoid the blood sugar spike & sugar headache I get from eating sweets on an empty stomach. And if I have already enjoyed a satisfying meal, one treat should be sufficient to satisfy my chocolate or sweets craving.

3) When you eat a sweet treat, make it a good one and enjoy it mindfully. I try not to eat treats that aren’t worth it and I never eat them on the run. It’s so easy to get in the habit of grabbing something to munch on anytime you walk by the pantry or as you sit in the car or at your desk. Try to get out of the habit of mindless snacking. This will make a huge impact on your health. Choose your snacks wisely–fruits and vegetables as much as possible, and when you do choose to eat a sweet treat, sit down and savor every bite!

Buckwheat Brownies

Enjoy and Happy Thanksgiving, friends! I hope you are all surrounded by loved ones this week and take the time to count your blessings! I am thankful for YOU and for the commitment you make to your health and the health of your family with the choices you make every day!

XOXO,

Kristi

Best Ever Buckwheat Brownies (gluten, dairy & refined sugar free)

No one will know these moist, amazing brownies are free of gluten, dairy and refined sugar and are made with nutrient dense buckwheat flour.
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time22 minutes
Total Time32 minutes
Servings: 16 Brownies
Calories: 10426kcal

Ingredients

  • 6 oz. Enjoy Life semi-sweet chocolate chunks (or 5 oz. Enjoy Life dark chocolate morsels)
  • 8 (Approx 175 g) T. Nutiva shortening (or organic butter, if you can have dairy)
  • 1 c. Nutiva coconut sugar
  • 2 farm fresh eggs
  • 1/2 tsp. Vanilla extract
  • 87 g approx. 2/3 c. Buckwheat flour
  • 1/2 tsp. Baking Soda
  • 1 tsp. Sea salt
  • 1/2 c. Enjoy Life chocolate chips or chopped walnuts optional add-ins

Instructions

  • Pre-heat oven to 325 degrees. Grease a 9 x 9 baking pain.
  • In a double boiler over medium high heat (or in a heat-proof bowl sitting over a saucepan with an inch or two of water in it) melt the chocolate and shortening and stir together. Let cool and then whisk in the coconut sugar. Whisk in the eggs, one at a time, making sure they are completely incorporated. Then add vanilla.
  • In a separate bowl, whisk together the buckwheat, baking soda and sea salt.
  • Add the flour mixture to the chocolate mixture and stir until combined.
  • Stir in the chocolate chips or walnuts, if desired,
  • Smooth batter into prepared pan and bake a 325 degrees for 20-22 minutes. Do not overbake! If you use a glass or an 8x8 pan you may have to adjust the baking time a bit. Let baked brownies cool and enjoy!
  • These brownies keep well, wrapped tightly, for several days and up to a week or freeze well for several months.

Notes

*I'm usually a dark chocolate girl, but I actually prefer semi-sweet chocolate in these. If you want a lighter brownie with a bit of a caramel taste, cut back to 5 oz of the semi-sweet chunks. If you like a darker chocolate brownie, by all means use the dark chocolate morsels instead.
**If you don't use Enjoy Life chocolate chips (which I highly recommend!) please use a good quality chocolate. It really does make all the difference in these brownies. I've tried them with a common grocery store brand of chocolate and they were just not the same.
***I honestly can't decide whether I like these better with chocolate chips or walnuts. So you choose! They're delicious either way!

Salted Caramel Almond Clusters

I love chocolate. I blame my mom (sorry, mom). And the days when she or one of my sisters or I would make a pan of brownies and my family would inhale the entire pan in record time. I am blessed to have a mom who loves to bake and our home always smelled of homemade bread, cookies and brownies.   

Now as a health coach and mom who works hard to feed my family nourishing foods that promote health, I still have absolutely no problem with a treat once in a while. But these days I try to choose my treats wisely. I try to choose treats that are delicious (never waste a treat on something mediocre!) and that completely satisfy my chocolate cravings or sweet tooth with healthful, real food ingredients and without harmful ingredients that sabotage our health like sugar, white flour, artificial flavors or colors, high fructose corn syrup, artificial sweeteners, trans fats, processed oils and chemical preservatives.

These Salted Caramel Almond Clusters fit the bill perfectly.

Salted Caramel Almond Clusters

My family all loves these salty sweet treats but lets be honest:

I make them for me.  

Salted caramel, almonds and chocolate. Three of my favorite things all in one delicious little bite.

And the best part?

It’s all real food with just a very small amount of sugar in the chocolate chips. So you can enjoy them completely guilt free. As long as you don’t eat 10 or 12 at once. But I have to warn you they are pretty addicting so that is not out of the realm of possibility.

Almonds contain lots of healthy fats, fiber, protein, magnesium and vitamin E. The health benefits of almonds include lower blood sugar levels, reduced blood pressure and lower cholesterol levels. You don’t need to fear the fat content of almonds, as they actually reduce hunger and promote weight loss.

Raw honey is a far healthier sweetener than processed white sugar. It doesn’t cause the same blood sugar spike or increase in insulin levels, and the glycemic effect is moderated even more when it’s paired with a healthy protein like in these little treats. According to Dr. Josh Axe, raw honey contains 22 amino acids, 27 minerals and 5,000 enzymes. Raw honey contains vitamins B6, thiamin, riboflavin, pantothenic acid and niacin. The bee pollen in raw honey helps improve immune function, fight infections and ward off seasonal allergies. Raw honey promotes antioxidant activity and a bit of raw honey at bedtime even improves sleep. You never want to heat raw honey as this destroys most of the health benefits.  

Dr. William Sears and Dr. Josh Axe both list dark chocolate as one of the top 10 highest antioxidant foods. Dark chocolate has an ORAC Score (Oxygen Radical Absorption Capacity) of 21,000, and Dr. Axe places it third on his list of highest antioxidant foods behind only Goji berries and wild blueberries. Hooray!! We can enjoy a small piece of dark chocolate or a few dark chocolate chips as a healthful treat every single day. Milk chocolate obviously has more sugar added and fewer health benefits, which means we need to eat it in moderation and as a once in a while treat.

If you love your chocolate like I do, its also important to choose the purest and best quality chocolate you can. I personally love Enjoy Life chocolate chips, chunks and baking chocolate. Enjoy Life products are free of gluten, dairy, soy, peanuts and fillers. Perfect for those of us with food allergies. But even if we suddenly didn’t have food allergies, this chocolate is so good I doubt I would ever be able to switch back to anything else!                

Salted Caramel Almond Clusters

These healthy little treats are amazing and satisfy your sweet tooth and chocolate cravings without any harmful ingredients! Enjoy completely guilt free!!
Prep Time10 minutes
Cook Time5 minutes
Total Time15 minutes
Servings: 36 Clusters
Author: Kristi Cirignano

Ingredients

  • 1/4 c raw honey
  • 1/4 c almond butter (make sure you use pure 100% almond butter with no sugar or other added ingredients. I prefer the fresh ground almond butter available locally at Fresh Market or at many natural grocery stores. I also sometimes order Kirkland Almond Butter from Amazon)
  • 1/2 tsp unprocessed sea salt
  • 1/2 tsp. vanilla extract
  • 1-1/2 c whole almonds (I usually use roasted and salted almonds from Aldi in this recipe, if you use raw or unsalted Almonds I would increase the sea salt to 1 tsp.)
  • 1/2 c Enjoy Life chocolate chips

Instructions

  • In a small bowl, stir together the honey, almond butter, sea salt and vanilla.
  • Add almonds and stir until they are all coated.
  • Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. Using two spoons, drop spoonfuls of the caramel almond mixture into the parchment paper. I usually get about 36 clusters.
  • Put your baking sheet in the freezer while you melt the chocolate for the topping. 
  • In a small saucepan over VERY low heat, slowly melt the chocolate chips until the chocolate is smooth and will spread easily. Stir often to prevent burning. If your heat is too high, your chocolate will become thick so its important to use very low heat and be patient. As soon as your chocolate is melted, remove it from the heat.
  • Use a spoon to spread a bit of the melted chocolate onto each cluster.
  • Return the baking sheet to the freezer for 1-2 hours to let the clusters harden. Store Salted Caramel Almond Clusters in the freezer until you are ready to enjoy, as they will get soft and gooey at room temperature. 
  • Try not to eat them all at once! 

Notes

This recipe is adapted from Elana's Pantry . I have probably made these a hundred times since I found Elana's delicious Macadamia Caramel Clusters and have tried a dozen variations and methods. This is by far my favorite and the only way I make these delicious little treats now! Thank you for the inspiration, Elana!

 

Sources:

draxe.com/the-many-health-benefits-of-raw-honey

https://authoritynutrition.com/9-proven-benefits-of-almonds/

Sears, W., & Sears, M. (2010). Prime-time health: A scientifically proven plan for feeling young and living longer. New York: Little, Brown and Co.

http://draxe.com/top-10-high-antioxidant-foods/