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If you are unsure whether this High Fiber Cookies recipe is suitable for your personal diabetic diet,
please consult your doctor or a qualified nutritionalist.
| “Every country possesses, it seems, the sort of cuisine it deserves, which is to say the sort of cuisine it is appreciative enough to want. I used to think that the notoriously bad cooking of the English was an example to the contrary, and that the English cook the way they do because, through sheer technical deficiency, they had not been able to master the art of cooking. I have discovered to my stupefaction that the English cook that way because that is the way they like it." | | ~ Waverly Root (1903-1982) |
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Cookie Recipes
High Fiber Cookies Recipe
Recipe Ingredients:
1 cup Oat bran 1 cup Rolled oats 1 cup Fiber one cereal 1 cup Kellog's bran flakes 1 cup Seedless raisins 1 cup Chopped english walnuts 3/4 cup Sugar 3/4 cup Brown sugar 1 cup Margarine (2 sticks) 2 Large egg whites 2 tsp Vanilla 2 cup All purpose flour 1 tsp Baking powder 1 tsp Baking soda 1/2 tsp Salt 1/2 cup Water at room temp
Recipe Instructions:
Place oat bran, rolled oats, Fiber one, bran flakes, raisins and walnuts in a bowl. Mix lightly and set aside. Place sugars and margarine in mixing bowl and mix at medium speed until light and fluffy. Add egg whites and vanilla and mix lightly scraping the bowl before and after adding the egg whites. In a separate bowl combine flour, baking powder, soda and salt and mix at low speed about 1/2 min to blend well. Add flour mixture and water to sugar mixture and mix at medium speed only until flour is moistened. Add bran mixture and mix at medium speed until well blended. Drop by heaping tablespoonfuls onto a cookie sheet that has been sprayed with cooking spray or lined with aluminum foil. Bake at 375 for 12-14 minutes or until lightly browned. Remove from oven and let sit for 1 minute. Remove cookies to wire rack and cool to room temperature. Author's Note: These cookies, which provide 2 grams of dietary fiber each, aren't terribly sweet. We like them this way, but if you prefer them sweeter, you can add 1 tbsp Weight Watchers dry substitute when adding the other sugars and this will not change the nutritive values. Nutritive Value per cookie: CAL 121; CHO 15 gm; PRO 2 gm; FAT 6 gm; NA 107 mg; Source: The New Diabetic Cookbook
Servings: 4
| “That's something I've noticed about food: whenever there's a crisis if you can get people to eating normally things get better.” | | ~ Madeleine L'Engle (1918--) American author. |
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Important Note: This High Fiber Cookies
recipe was located in the public domain.It is suitable' for
diabetics and low carb diets solely because someone, somewhere,
decided to publish them as such. I am not qualified in medicine
or nutrition, so please use your own common sense when deciding
which are appropriate for your particular diet.
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This
High Fiber Cookies recipe is located in our Cookie Recipes
section.
Use this site as your online diabetic cookbook.
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This High Fiber Cookies Recipe may
also be ideal for anyone following the Atkins diet, or seeking
to reduce their carbohydrate intake for other reasons. |