Current:Home > MarketsIt's holiday cookie baking season: Try these expert tips to make healthy cookies. -Quantum Capital Pro
It's holiday cookie baking season: Try these expert tips to make healthy cookies.
View
Date:2025-04-16 03:38:11
We’re officially in the holiday season, and that means it’s time to get your stand mixers and oven mitts out for cookie baking.
Among USA TODAY’s holiday cookie baking tips: Come up with a baking strategy, choose at least one recipe from each of these five categories and separate strong flavors and milder cookies before putting them into a cooking box.
But if you have health goals or are worried about your habits falling to the wayside this holiday season, here are a few tips to make your holiday cookie baking a bit more nutritious.
What are the healthiest holiday cookies?
You can look at a healthier approach to holiday cookies from two perspectives.
If traditional baking is your thing, licensed dietitian nutritionist Abra Pappa recommends spending a little extra time searching for the best quality ingredients. Look for high-quality baking flour, sugar and butter.
If you’re a little more experimental in the kitchen, try out a different kind of flour, which Pappa says can upgrade the nutritional density of your cookie. Options like almond, cassava or oat flour often have more protein, vitamins and minerals than white flour.
You also may have an easier time with moderation. Cookies, like other desserts, are hyper-palatable foods, meaning their combination of fat, sugar, sodium and carbohydrates makes them addictive and artificially rewarding to eat.
“You’re getting, I think, a more satisfying experience,” Pappa says, of cookies made with alternative flours. “Because there’s more fat, there’s more protein, it is inherently more satiating.”
For example, 100 grams of all-purpose flour contains 13.3 grams of protein, 3.3 grams of fiber and 0.33 grams of fiber, as well as a touch of iron. The same amount of almond flour has 21.4 grams of protein, 14.3 grams of fiber, as well as more calcium, iron, magnesium and potassium.
You can also change your traditional white sugar out for something different. Pappa recommends honey, maple syrup or coconut palm sugar, a one-to-one sugar swap that adds “layers of flavor,” she says.
While white sugar has a “place in our diet,” Pappa says, coconut palm sugar is nutritionally superior. It’s a low glycemic food, so it’ll have less of a blood sugar impact than regular sugar, according to an analysis in the International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health. It also contains minerals like zinc, iron, potassium, phosphorus and phytonutrients with antioxidant properties. Cane sugar has little to no nutritional benefit.
Pappa also recommends searching for recipes that use whole food sources, like dates, bananas or sweet potatoes, instead of sugar or alongside sugar. You’ve probably used bananas as a supportive sweetener in banana bread – it often doesn’t replace sugar or other sweeteners completely, but it makes it so that you don’t have to include as much.
“They will have an impact on your blood sugar but very, very different than white sugar,” she says.
But if you’re partial to the taste of regular sugar in baking, you can make your cookies a bit healthier by decreasing the amount of sugar you add.
Eat healthy this holiday season:Here are 8 expert tips to follow
How to make healthy cookies
If you’re game to try any of these nutrient-dense swaps, there are a few things you need to know from a culinary standpoint.
First, it’s not an exact one-to-one swap. If you’re baking for gluten-intolerant family members, you can find some gluten-free flours that are exact substitutes for all-purpose flour, but many alternative flours are not. Instead of trying to reinvent the proverbial chocolate chip cookie wheel, Pappa points to developers who create recipes that match the flavor and texture profile of those flours.
“When we lean into some of these alternative flours, what I recommend is finding a recipe specifically using those flours because it is a very different ratio,” Pappa says.
You can also experiment with flour combinations, like this Authentic Linzer Cookie recipe that uses both all-purpose and almond flour.
Adding in more nutritional options doesn’t mean you have to get rid of your holiday traditions.
“My mother bakes typically 12 different kinds of cookies every Christmas and she will kick me out of the kitchen if I even show up with a tablespoon of almond flour – not happening,” Pappa says.
Baked goods around the holidays are important cultural, social and family traditions; ascribing shame or guilt to them may lead to an unhealthy relationship with food. Instead, Pappa recommends swapping in one new recipe each year that has more whole-food sources in flour or sugar.
“Usually the resistance is around (the) fear that it’s not going to taste good,” Pappa says. “I’m always interested in expanding people’s palates to better understand that these health food products are fantastic (nutritionally) but absolutely delicious.”
How to save money on holiday dinners:'You don't need to make a butter board'
Discover more health tips for your daily diet:
- Healthiest fruit: This one has cognitive and cardiovascular benefits
- Healthiest vegetable: Check out these great nutrient-dense options
- Healthiest nut: Add these two daily for cognitive benefits and more
- Healthiest beer: Consider these factors before you crack open a cold one
- Healthiest sugar substitute:Does one exist? Here’s what to know
- Healthiest ice cream:What to know before grabbing a “healthy” ice cream
- Healthiest snacks:Try these combos next time the hunger hits
- Healthiest alcohol:Low-calorie, low-sugar options to try
- Healthiest fats:You should be consuming more of this essential fat
- Healthiest Starbucks:Hacks to know at the order counter
- Healthiest diet:Why the answer encompasses more than just food
- Healthiest chips:The salty details about baked, fried and homemade
- Healthiest candy:Don’t get tricked by these treats
- Healthiest Thanksgiving side dishes:Fill the table with these options
Just Curious for more? We've got you covered
USA TODAY is exploring the questions you and others ask every day. From "How many federal holidays are there?" to "Is V8 juice good for you?" to "Which state has the most national parks?" – we're striving to find answers to the most common questions you ask every day. Head to our Just Curious section to see what else we can answer for you.
veryGood! (644)
Related
- Tarte Shape Tape Concealer Sells Once Every 4 Seconds: Get 50% Off Before It's Gone
- House Republicans request interview with Hunter Biden ally, entertainment lawyer Kevin Morris
- Refugees who fled to India after latest fighting in Myanmar have begun returning home, officials say
- Greece fines local branches of J&J and Colgate-Palmolive for allegedly breaching a profit cap
- The Daily Money: Spending more on holiday travel?
- Antonio Banderas Reflects on Very Musical Kids Dakota Johnson, Stella Banderas and Alexander Bauer
- 'Aaron's a big boy': Jets coach Robert Saleh weighs in on potential Rodgers return from injury
- Black and Latino students lack access to certified teachers and advanced classes, US data shows
- Chuck Scarborough signs off: Hoda Kotb, Al Roker tribute legendary New York anchor
- US Coast Guard searches for crew member who fell from cruise ship near Puerto Rico
Ranking
- The 401(k) millionaires club keeps growing. We'll tell you how to join.
- Authorities in New York say they’ve made largest-ever seizure of knock-off goods - more than $1B
- German authorities raid properties linked to group suspected of promoting Iranian ideology
- Browns QB Deshaun Watson done for the season, will undergo surgery on throwing shoulder
- Dick Vitale announces he is cancer free: 'Santa Claus came early'
- 'I just want her to smile': Texas family struggles after pit bull attacks 2-year-old girl
- How to change margins in Google Docs: A guide for computer, iPad, iPhone, Android users.
- Quincy Jones, Jennifer Hudson and Chance the Rapper co-owners of historic Chicago theater
Recommendation
Taylor Swift makes surprise visit to Kansas City children’s hospital
TikTok and Meta challenge Europe’s new rules that crack down on digital giants
Has Colorado coach Deion Sanders ever been to Pullman, Washington? Let him explain
Has Colorado coach Deion Sanders ever been to Pullman, Washington? Let him explain
Intel's stock did something it hasn't done since 2022
US Regions Will Suffer a Stunning Variety of Climate-Caused Disasters, Report Finds
Rage rooms are meant for people to let off steam. So why are some making it about sex?
Senators to VA: Stop needless foreclosures on thousands of veterans