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Foodizen: A Simple Kwanzaa Cookie Recipe

Kwanzaa cookies line a baking sheet, with a spatula to the right

Photos by Tonya Hopkins

Kitchen scene shows a baking sheet full of Kwanzaa cookies, with a black Santa standing to the right.Making delicious, nutritious Kwanzaa cookies can be a guilt-free and fun family tradition. I chose this recipe for its simplicity (just five main ingredients) and because a whole bunch of healthy buzz words come with them too: all natural, higher in fiber and protein than most cookies, lower-glycemic, grain-free, paleo, vegan … naturally gluten-free. And they’re satisfyingly delicious!

Luckily these days we have many more options beyond bleached, white cake or pastry flour, with choices made from things like corn, rice, beans (like garbanzos), nuts (like almond or walnut) and tubers (like cassava, manioc, yucca, tapioca), as well as flours made from African “superfood” grains like sorghum, millet or fonio—which all just happen to be gluten-free without even trying.

RELATED: Philly boasts one of the longest-running celebrations of the African-inspired holiday that runs from December 26 to January 1. This episode of our food history podcast explores what it means.

These more nutrient dense and higher-fiber flours common in food cultures throughout the African diaspora help support a reclamation of African-heritage ingredients. Swapping out sugar (and high fructose corn syrup in many store bought cookies) for lower glycemic and more nutritious options (like date sugar, coconut sugar crystals, raw honey, molasses, maple syrup, xylitol) is something to seriously consider (and implement) within and for a community plagued with diabetes… especially during the holiday season when sugary sweets seem to surround us all.

Kwanzaa is the perfect time to empower yourself and your loved ones with better food choices—without feeling deprived.

HOW TO MAKE KWANZAA COOKIES

Ingredients

Steps

Creative Customization:

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