Gluten-free Cookies | Baking Processes | BAKERpedia (2024)

How they are made

To formulate gluten-free cookies, it is important to understand the functionalities of gluten and wheat starch during mixing, forming, and baking of conventional wheat-based cookies.

Ingredients that can replace the structural-setting functionality provided by wheat proteins in gluten-free cookies include:2

Typical formulation of chocolate chip gluten-free cookies (extrusion forming)

IngredientTrue % (based on formula weight)
Stage 1 (creaming)
Sugar (refined, granulated)15.0
Shortening, butter20.0
Soy lecithin1.0
Stage 2 (liquids addition)
Liquid whole eggs6.0
Honey2.0
Molasses1.0
Vanilla extract0.4
Stage 3 (drys)
White rice flour15.0
Brown rice flour15.0
Resistant starch2.5
Tapioca starch2.5
Salt0.5
Baking powder0.3
Inclusions
Chocolate chips20.0–30.0

Processing

Given the absence of a viscoelastic network normally provided by gluten, most gluten-free cookies are made to have a short and fluid rheology, with particular spread responses. These two conditions are best suited for extrusion and wire-cut forming.

  • Ingredients scaling
  • Mixing (multi-stage method)
    • Creaming
    • Addition of liquids
    • Add in dry ingredients
    • Addition of chocolate chips at low speed until full incorporation
  • Forming
  • Baking. Bake the product in a batch-type, gas-fired oven at 392°F / 200°C for 6 to 7 minutes. Baking times and temperatures are usually consistent with those used to bake wheat-containing counterparts.
  • Cooling. Cool cookies for at least 1.5 times the baking time.
  • Packaging

Application

Gluten-free cookies are relatively easy to formulate given the non-essential role of gluten in such food matrices compared to other baked products. In wheat-based cookies, gluten development is very limited due to the prevalence of sugars and fats and reduced level of water required for hydration of flour solids. These conditions allow for a greater diversity of ingredient options that can be used in gluten-free cookies production.

Recommendations for product design

  • Simple trial and error using test versus control experiments
  • Run statistically designed experiments to identify and optimize ingredients and processing steps to replace wheat flour
  • Use texture assessment tools like hardness, color (Hunter L, a, b), height and spread as KPI for formula optimization
  • Apply the spread factor for formula and process optimization. This is key for testing alternative flours and starches, balancing sugar/shortening ratio and establishing optimum baking conditions (e.g. damper settings for steam extraction).
  • Alternative dry and/or liquid forms for sugar and eggs can always be used. Amount of total solids and water provided by each ingredient form must be taken into account when balancing total formula absorption.

References

  1. U.S. Food and Drug Administration (FDA), Questions and Answers on the Gluten-Free Food Labeling Final Rule, Content current as of 07/16/2018, Questions and Answers on the Gluten-Free Food Labeling Final Rule. Accessed 11 April 2020.
  2. Casper, J.L., and Atwell, W.A. “Gluten-Free Bakery Product Formulation and Processing.” Gluten-Free Baked Products, AACC International, Inc., 2014, pp. 49–67.
Gluten-free Cookies | Baking Processes | BAKERpedia (2024)
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