Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe

Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies Recipe

These Keto chocolate chip cookies use almond flour as the main ingredient and are sweetened with your choice of Keto brown sugar and your favorite white sugar substitute. They turn out amazingly soft yet a little crunchy and are super hard to stop eating. You’ll wonder how you ever survived before finding this recipe!

Woman holding a single Keto chocolate chip cookie in her hand zoomed in closely with two more distantly in the background.
Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies

Truth be told – the Keto diet can be hard to stick with so one of my hacks is that I make a batch of these keto cookies every so often and pull one out of the freezer whenever I just really need something sweet.

This keeps me from eating an entire batch and really helps to satisfy my craving.

Ingredients

Ingredients in white bowls - butter, keto brown sugar (such as Swerve Brown or Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Brown), granulated or crystallized monkfruit/allulose blend (such as Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Crystallized), egg yolk, whole milk, vanilla, almond flour, coconut flour, salt, baking soda, stevia-sweetened chocolate chipsIngredients in white bowls - butter, keto brown sugar (such as Swerve Brown or Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Brown), granulated or crystallized monkfruit/allulose blend (such as Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Crystallized), egg yolk, whole milk, vanilla, almond flour, coconut flour, salt, baking soda, stevia-sweetened chocolate chips
The ingredients

OK. OK. I know the list of ingredients is a little long but if you have been doing Keto for long at all, these should be totally familiar to you and the little of this and little of that helps so much with helping them taste like the real deal.

  • Butter – softened but not fully melted. I prefer unsalted because I want to be able to control the amount of salt and use Real Salt *.
  • Keto brown sugar – If you haven’t tried Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Brown, I highly recommend it. It tastes great and doesn’t give me a sugar high.
  • Keto white sugar – such as Besti Monk Fruit Allulose Blend Crystallized sweetener
  • Egg yolk – this helps to bind them and rise
  • Whole milk – just a bit cause you need a little liquid. I didn’t test all the options, but any milk substitute should work fine.
  • Vanilla – this is a lot of what gives chocolate chip cookies their unique flavor
  • Almond flour * – this is the main ingredient and a staple in Keto baking. It’s high in protein and since it is just ground-up almonds, it has hardly any carbs but has the benefits of a little fiber. I do not recommend any substitutions.
  • Coconut flour * – just a little to give them some lift and smooth them out.
  • Stevia-sweetened chocolate chips – aren’t these the best?
  • Flaky sea salt, for topping – once you buy this stuff, you will find yourself putting it on way too many things. It’s just so good and the complement of the sweet and the salty is unbeatable. I just can’t get enough of it. It looks pretty too. . .

How to make

FAQ

Can I eat a chocolate chip cookie on Keto?

We’re talking regular, mainstream cookies. First of all – can you stop at just one? Second, are you sure how many carbs are in that one cookie? They can have a range of 10 to 20 or more carbs in that one cookie. Third, your brain gets a taste for “regular” sugar and just wants more. You are trying to train your brain that it doesn’t need sugar. Bottom line – don’t do it. Especially when there are so many good substitutes like these cookies out there.

What are the best chocolate chips for Keto?

I prefer ChocZero’s dark chocolate chips (linked to in the recipe) since they are sweetened with monkfruit but some people report a problem with their blood sugar after eating them.
If that’s you, try some cacao nibs since they aren’t sweetened at all.

Is it OK to eat Keto desserts?

Desserts are fine to eat on the Keto diet as long as you are staying under your total carb limit for the day or week – whichever way you keep track.
As with everything, moderation is key. One of the reasons I like to indulge in a Keto dessert from time to time is so I feel satisfied and don’t go crazy every once in a while and eat 300 carbs worth of desserts in one sitting since I can’t take it anymore and just have to have something sweet.

Can I freeze these?

Yes! They don’t taste quite the same but they are almost as good and are my favorite thing to do.
It not only keeps me from eating too many when I first make them, but I also don’t have to make them so often and I can easily pull out a quick treat whenever I want one.
I just unthaw it on the counter in the bag with it open for about half an hour and that does the trick.
They are really good if you put them in the toaster oven and bake them on 300 for a few minutes to just warm them up and make them nice and soft.
To freeze them, if I’m feeling ambitious, I’ll put parchment paper between them and put them in quart freezer bags. Or wrap them individually in plastic wrap. Sometimes I’ll put them in freezer bags without anything between them and sometimes they are fine but sometimes they stick together so it’s a bit of a gamble.

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