Baking With Agave Nectar – Chocolate Chip Cookies




Chocolate Chip Cookies

Baking with agave nectar (instead of granulated sugar) is as easy as pie, if you adjust to a few simple facts.

  • Agave is 1.4 times sweeter than sugar
  • It adds additional liquid to the recipe
  • It browns quicker than a recipe with sugar
  • It also makes the batter a bit stickier

Let’s look at a standard chocolate chip cookie recipe and see what we need to change if we want to bake it with our natural sweetener.

3/4 cup sugar
3/4 cup packed brown sugar
2 sticks (1 cup) butter, softened
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)

First, we want to replace the 1 1/2 cups of refined sugar, of course. I recommend using 1 cup (it’s sweeter than sugar, remember?) of amber agave to compensate a little for the loss of the brown sugar flavor.

Secondly, we need to re-thicken the batter because of the extra liquid from the agave syrup. So, let’s increase the flour to 2 1/2 cups.

Next, turn down the oven temperature by 25 degrees. Cookies are normally baked at 375 degrees F, but since agave sweetened baked goods brown faster, we want to bake them in a slightly “slower” oven.

And finally, make sure your cookie pans are lined with parchment paper and sprayed well.

Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe With Agave Nectar

1 cup amber agave nectar
2 sticks butter, softened
2 large eggs
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 1/4 cups all-purpose flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
3/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups semi-sweet chocolate chips
1 cup chopped pecans or walnuts (optional)

I’m sure you know the procedure for mixing a cookie dough, but just in case…

1. Beat the agave, butter, eggs and vanilla by hand or in an electric mixer until creamy and fluffy.

2. Sift together the flour, soda, and salt, and blend it thoroughly with the creamed mix.

3. Fold the chocolate chips and optional nuts into the batter.

4. Bake it off at whatever size you like. (I prefer 8-inch cookies. But, I’m a glutton!) Check your oven after 8 minutes or so. It shouldn’t take much longer than 8-10 minutes.

Chocolate Chip Cookies
Photo Credit. Thanks!

Note: Baking cookies with agave nectar will result in a softer, moister end product.

One last tip: If you want to avoid all white sugar in your diet, use unsweetened or malt-sweetened chocolate chips!

Agave Nectar For Easy And Healthy Fruit Desserts




Strawberries with Agave Nectar

Agave nectar has the wonderful quality of enhancing the natural flavors of foods it is used with. This comes in handy when creating simple and healthy dessert recipes.

Seasonal fruit alone is actually the healthiest dessert I can imagine. A crisp and tartly-sweet apple slice, a plump cherry bursting in my happy mouth, a juicy bite off a perfectly-ripened pear…who doesn’t relish such divine memories of nature’s wonderful gifts?

Wild strawberries…oh my God! I remember the long-gone days when grandpa took me to the nearby forest to collect some of the sweetest morsels I’ve ever eaten. It seems like they don’t grow them like that anymore; for sure not in the inner city of Austin, Texas. Nostalgia…

Back to the here and now. Mass-produced berries are often picked a bit too early so they hold up better for shipping. These berries didn’t get a chance to develop their optimal flavor, and sometimes they taste bland and boring.

A few years ago, when I first drizzled some agave nectar over a bowl of raspberries, I was stunned by the result. The agave seemed to have awakened the natural raspberry flavor to a full “bloom”. The degree of sweetness was just right and the remaining juice tasted like a true nectar of the gods. It was unbelievably good.

One time at a Central Market store in Dallas, Texas, we had a sample event for my own product – Agasweet flavored agave nectar. The produce department provided us with fresh blueberries, so the customers could try the agave-sweetened fruit. I decided to macerate the blueberries with my almond-flavored agave. It was a revelation! These two flavors go extremely well together. But using an unflavored nectar would result in an equally delicious dessert.

Whichever fruit you prefer or have handy in your fridge, this low-glycemic, alternative sweetener will elevate it to a quick and easy, healthy and wonderful dessert dish. You don’t even have to use much of the agave syrup, because it is 1.4 times sweeter than sugar. A tablespoon or two per serving of fruit is probably all you need. The amount, of course, depends on your personal taste.

Cut up your fruit however you like it, leave small berries whole, or make a colorful fruit salad. Add some agave nectar (and maybe a few drops of lemon juice)…stir…ready. Enjoy!

Strawberries with Agave Nectar