Hey everyone, it’s John, welcome to my recipe page. Today, we’re going to make a special dish, healthy dark chocolate oatmeal cookies. One of my favorites. For mine, I am going to make it a bit tasty. This is gonna smell and look delicious.
Healthy Dark Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies is one of the most favored of current trending meals on earth. It is easy, it’s fast, it tastes delicious. It’s appreciated by millions every day. They’re fine and they look fantastic. Healthy Dark Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies is something which I have loved my whole life.
These delicious dark chocolate oatmeal lace cookies are light, crisp and chewy, sandwiched together with melted dark chocolate. Dark Chocolate Oatmeal Lace Cookies Made with basic ingredients like oats, flour, butter, sugar and spices. If you're baking cookies for Holiday parties, or just to leave Santa, these are a must! These one-bowl homemade oatmeal cookie bars with dark chocolate chunks and a sprinkle of flaky sea salt are the perfect way to end the week.
To begin with this recipe, we must prepare a few components. You can have healthy dark chocolate oatmeal cookies using 17 ingredients and 9 steps. Here is how you cook it.
The ingredients needed to make Healthy Dark Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies:
- Take 1/2 cup butter
- Take 3/4 cup brown sugar
- Make ready 1/2 cup cane sugar
- Get 3 eggs
- Prepare 1 tsp vanilla extract
- Make ready 1 tsp caramel extract
- Make ready 1 tsp hazelnut extract
- Get 1 tsp pumpkin extract
- Prepare 2 tbsp maple syrup
- Prepare 2 tsp ground cinnamon
- Prepare 1/2 tsp sea salt
- Make ready 1 1/2 cup Whole Wheat Pastry Flour
- Get 1 tsp baking soda
- Make ready 1 1/2 cup dark chocolate morsels
- Get 3 cup Oatmeal (quick or old fashioned, uncooked)
- Get 1/2 cup chia seeds
- Make ready 1/2 cup flaxseeds
Do you ever crave a healthy dessert? With plenty of melty chocolate, chewy oats, and a sprinkle of sea salt, these dark chocolate chunk oatmeal cookies are guaranteed to be your new favorite cookie variety. They're extra buttery and soft with slightly crisp edges and a touch of cinnamon and molasses for classic oatmeal cookie flavor. Oatmeal chocolate-chip cookies made a whole lot healthier with no flour, no butter, very little sugar, and healthy fats such as coconut oil and dark chocolate.
Instructions to make Healthy Dark Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies:
- Heat oven to 350°F.
- In large bowl, beat butter and sugars on medium speed of electric mixer until creamy.
- Add eggs and vanilla extract, caramel extract, hazelnut extract and pumpkin extract; beat well.
- Add combined whole wheat pastry flour, baking soda, maple syrup, ground cinnamon and sea salt; mix well.
- Add oats, chia seeds, flaxseeds and chocolate morsels; mix well.
- Cover the bowl in aluminum. Put it in the freezer for 4 hours.
- Drop dough by rounded tablespoonfuls onto parchment paper (Make sure to put parchment paper on the pan). Optional…. (you can butter the pan or spray it.)
- Bake 8 to 10 minutes or until medium brown. Cool 1 minute on parchment paper; remove to wire rack. Cool completely. Store tightly covered.
- Makes about 4 dozen cookies.
They're extra buttery and soft with slightly crisp edges and a touch of cinnamon and molasses for classic oatmeal cookie flavor. Oatmeal chocolate-chip cookies made a whole lot healthier with no flour, no butter, very little sugar, and healthy fats such as coconut oil and dark chocolate. Beat butter, granulated sugar and brown sugar in large bowl until light and fluffy; blend in eggs and vanilla. Far better is a healthy oatmeal raisin cookie WITH CHOCOLATE. I love my oatmeal cookies fully loaded, which is why to go along with the raisins, you'll find melty dark chocolate chips and chunky toasted nuts too.
So that’s going to wrap it up with this special food healthy dark chocolate oatmeal cookies recipe. Thanks so much for reading. I am confident you can make this at home. There is gonna be interesting food in home recipes coming up. Remember to bookmark this page on your browser, and share it to your family, colleague and friends. Thank you for reading. Go on get cooking!