Almost too good to share: These keto chocolate chip cookies are the perfect combination of soft chewiness with a crunchy edge. You'll never guess they are sugar free! Perfect for gluten free and low carb diets.
"These cookies kept me on the straight and narrow when I needed something sweet. Best of all, they didn’t spike my blood sugar. Will definitely be making more." (Jo)
I first published this keto cookie recipe in September 2016, and it has been a reader favourite ever since, with tons of 5 star reviews.
It is also a recipe that I make regularly at home because my whole family loves it. My husband jokingly calls it the lovechild of my keto sugar cookies and these keto chocolate cookies!
I have just republished the post with new details to bring it up-to-date and help you make the best low carb chocolate chip cookies EVER. I have also shot new images to show you how they turn out with various ingredient tweaks.
The basic recipe remains the same because it was perfect the way it was.
Here is one of the original images, where I used chopped dark chocolate instead of chocolate chips:
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Why These Are The Best
Easy and quick: This is an incredibly easy recipe that you can make without a blender. All you need is a fork, a bowl and 5 minutes prep time.
Rich and delicious: The recipe contains a secret ingredient that makes the taste and texture richer, creamier and infinitely more yummy: cream! This is a trick I learned from my mum (who learned it from her mum!)
Versatile: I have made this recipe so many times that I have tried and tested all variations possible - from dairy-free to egg free, from soft to crispy. Whatever your requirements are, I've got the solution.
Low carb: One cookie contains just 1.7g net carbs. It is the perfect sweet treat to enjoy while keeping blood sugar levels stable.
Ingredients
Here are the ingredients you'll need to make low carb chocolate chip cookies:
- Almond flour - I used a super-fine almond flour. If you're using ground almonds, just add an additional 2 tablespoons.
- Butter. This must be very, very soft so you can mix it easily. It is also possible to melt the butter and cool it.
- Egg. I used a medium egg in this recipe.
- Heavy cream - That's double cream in the UK. It is my secret ingredient!
- Sugar substitute- I used a granulated erythritol monk fruit sweetener blend.
- Vanilla extract
- Sugar-free chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate. When I first made this recipe, I used chopped 90% dark chocolate by Lindt. As you can see in the current images for the post, they look even prettier with sugar-free chocolate chips. ChocZero or Lily's are good options and are easily available in the US. Another possibility is to make your own sugar free chocolate chips.
See the recipe card for full information on ingredients and quantities.
Instructions
It is super easy to make keto chocolate chip cookies. Here are the basic steps, illustrated with images.
For detailed instructions and nutrition info, scroll down to the recipe card.
Preparations
Start by preheating the oven to 180C / 350F electric or 160C / 320F fan-assisted.
Next, line a cookie sheet with parchment paper. This is the best way to prevent cookies from sticking to the baking sheet. It works much better than greasing the sheet with butter or oil.
Make The Dough
STEP 1: Add the almond flour, egg, cream, butter, vanilla extract and granulated sweetener into a large mixing bowl.
Mix everything with a fork - it comes together really easily.
Let the batter sit for a few minutes for the flour to absorb the moisture.
STEP 2: Fold in sugar-free chocolate chips or chopped dark chocolate.
Now's a good moment for a little taste - adjust your sweetener if you wish 🙂
STEP 3: Roll the batter into cookie dough balls (or portion them with a cookie scoop) and place them on the baking sheet. The dough will still be a tad soft and sticky.
The mixture makes 10 cookies with a diameter of around 6 centimetres. (I tried so much of the dough we only ended up with 9!)
STEP 4: Flatten the low carb chocolate chip cookies with your hand. They should be about ½ centimetres thick.
Bake
STEP 5: Bake the cookies in the oven for around 13 minutes or until the edges are golden brown.
Let them cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes. After that, you have the option to carefully transfer them onto a cooling rack to cool fully.
Katrin's Top Tip
Keto cookies are really soft and fragile when fresh out of the oven. Let them cool fully before eating them. They firm up as they cool down.
As almond flour does not contain gluten, low carb cookies are always softer than their wheaten counterparts. The browned edges still have a lovely crunch though.
Crispy Vs Chewy
Crispy Cookies
There are a few options to make low carb chocolate chip cookies crispier:
1. Replace the cream with more butter.
2. Flatten them more! The thinner your cookies are, the crispier they will end up.
3. Bake them for longer. You want the edges to be golden-brown. Consider placing aluminium foil over the cookies so they don't burn and add another few minutes to the oven time.
4. Turn off the oven when they are done and prop the door open with a wooden spoon. Then you leave the cookies in for longer. The air circulating around them will help them to continue crisping up.
Chewy Cookies
1. Don't miss out on the cream! It helps with the chewiness.
2. Make the cookies larger and thicker. This way, the centre stays lovely and chewy.
3. Watch out that your cookies do not brown much. Take them out as soon as the edges start to turn golden!
4. Consider replacing the erythritol with xylitol or allulose. Especially allulose is great for soft baked goods.
Variations
Using Cream Vs Butter
In the image above you can see the difference between a cookie made with cream and butter (on the left) versus one where I have replaced the cream with more butter.
I had them both in the oven for exactly the same time (13 minutes). The butter-only cookie browned more than the one that also contained cream. It also spread more.
Here are more ideas on how you can change up the recipe. All tweaks have been tested by myself over the years.
Coconut flour chocolate chip cookies: Use 40 grams or ⅓ cup of coconut flour instead of almond flour. Coconut flour absorbs a lot more moisture than almond flour, that's why you need less of it. You may want to add ½ a teaspoon of xanthan gum to make them a little firmer.
Extra fluffy cookies: Add ½ teaspoon of baking powder or ¼ teaspoon of baking soda.
Dairy-free: Use coconut oil instead of the butter.
No egg: This low carb chocolate chip cookies recipe also works without the egg! The end result is crispier (but also more fragile when hot). Add an extra splash of cream to loosen the dough.
Pinch of sea salt: Adds even more flavor to the cookie dough.
Make them nutty: Add ¼ cup of chopped walnuts, pecans or hazelnuts to the dough. If you decide to do this, keep the cookies larger and thicker so they don't fall apart.
Macadamia nut flour: A reader just told me that she makes this cookie recipe with macadamia flour instead of almond. She said they were delicious. This tweak is on my to-try list!
Recipe FAQs
If the cookie dough is too soft, simply put it in the fridge for 10 minutes to let it firm up. This helps the butter to solidify.
The recipe works best with a medium egg. If your egg is large, increase the amount of extra fine almond flour by 2 tablespoons.
For crispy cookies, always use erythritol-based sweeteners. This can be either pure erythritol or erythritol blends that also include monk fruit or stevia. I also recommend trying golden erythritol in the recipe. This is a brown sugar alternative. It adds a lovely caramel flavor.
Use coconut flour as mentioned in the Recipe Variations above, or replace the almond flour with a 50/50 blend of sunflower seed and sesame seed flour.
Storage
I recommend storing the cookies in a cookie jar at room temperature for up to 5 days or in an airtight container in the fridge for 7-10 days.
You can also freeze almond flour chocolate chip cookies! They stay fresh for up to 3 months. I freeze them in a single layer and then transfer them to a freezer bag. This way, they don't stick together.
Related Recipes
Here are more keto-friendly cookie recipes to try:
- Low Carb Keto Peanut Butter Cookies15 Minutes
- Low Carb Keto Shortbread Cookies41 Minutes
- Sugar Free Keto Macaroons20 Minutes
- The Best Keto Coconut Flour Cookies20 Minutes
Tried this recipe? Give it a star rating below!
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Recipe
Low Carb Keto Chocolate Chip Cookies
from Sugar Free LondonerNote: The servings slider only changes the first amount in each line and not any subsequent amounts. Please make your own calculations where necessary.
Ingredients
- 1 cup almond flour 100g (to my UK readers - ground almonds work well here, just add another 2 tbsp)
- 1 medium egg not large
- 2 tablespoon double/heavy cream
- 2 tablespoon butter unsalted, VERY soft
- 3 tablespoon granulated sweetener
- 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
- ⅓ cup chopped dark chocolate 50g (85% cocoa solids minimum or sugar free), or sugar free chocolate chips
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 180 Celsius/350 Fahrenheit.
- Combine all ingredients apart from the chocolate with a fork. Let the dough sit for a few minutes so the flour can absorb the moisture.
- Chop your chocolate and stir into the dough.
- Form dough balls with your hand or spoon the mixture on a baking sheet lined with baking paper. Press down into the desired shape (cira ½ cm thick).
- Bake for circa 13 minutes or until the edges are golden. The cookies are soft when straight out of the oven but firm up as they cool down.
Catherine
Hi Katrin!
These cookies look amazing and i'd love to try them.
Unfortunately at the moment i can't have dairy (excluding butter & ghee) so i'm wondering what i could replace the heavy cream with?
Cheers
Katrin
You could either replace it with coconut cream or simply use a little more butter 🙂
Susan
Hi! I tried making these tonight but for some reason the batter came out super watery, is not doughey as in the video, and the cookies came out with a very weird consistency as if they were made with coconut zest. Help please!
Katrin
Ok, let’s try and figure it out. If you measured all ingredients using either scales or cups, the only wild card would be the egg. I used a medium egg, so if you used an extra large egg, for example, your dough would be more runny. It’s good you checked the consistency and compared it with the video- in your case, I would have added additional almond flour. As for the coconut taste, I’m stumped. There’s no coconut in the recipe! Maybe more vanilla extract would work for you?
Susan
Hi! I noticed in my ingredients that I actually used a large egg instead, how much flour would you recommend adding to make it more consistent? And I think the coconut zest texture was related to some bigger chunks I had left in my flour after using the strainer, I’ll try again tonight using only the finer flour and correcting the amount of flour as well!
Katrin
I would try adding an additional 2 tablespoons of almond flour/ground almonds. You could also chill the dough in the fridge for a while to make it easier to handle.
Rea
Hi katrin, can I use powdered sweetener instead of granulated? Thanks
Katrin
Yes, of course you can!
Katja
I have just made these cookies and oh my goooooodness they are quite literally amazing!!!! Perfect for a quick sweet treat but still keeping in my macros! Thank you so much!
Lucy Mcalister
I just made these as I've been craving biscuits all week and I'm doing keto. They really hit the spot! I made 14 thin cookies (as I wanted something firmer.) I also halved the double cream as I'm small and find it easy to go over on my fat macros. I used salted butter as I like a hint of salt with my sweet. They tasted indulgent - (the chocolate goes a long way!) and had a good texture. Nicely filling too so you're not tempted to scoff the lot.
Katrin
Thanks for sharing all your tweaks - and so happy you liked the recipe 🙂
Lucy
You’re welcome. They have become my ‘Breakfast Biscuits’. I have 3 late morning and then I’m not hungry until about 2pm. Such a tasty way to start the day. Thanks for the recipe! 🙂
Constance
Hi, i was thinking of adding some chopped hazelnuts or pecans into this cookie recipe- do you think I'd need to adjust for the temperature or timing if i do so ? Thanks !
Katrin
No, I think it will need the same amount of time 🙂
ray
Hi Katrin, for some reason mine keep coming out as one big blob, and really soggy..once they've cooled and almost hardened they do taste amazing but I'm wondering if I need more baking powder or ?
I'm scrupulously using the same measurements as provided, with almond flour, erythritol etc..
Katrin
Hi Ray, are you using metric measurements/ a scale or US cups?
ray
US cups...and a set of tbsp/tsp measures too
Katrin
Hi Ray, I'm thinking what it could have been. If your butter was too liquid that could have affected the dough and made it sticky and difficult to handle. In that case, you can just put the dough in the fridge for half an hour and it will work well.
iris Reyes
Katrin, OMG. My first time making ur almond flour sugarfree chocolate chips cookies last night 5-25-2019. And am in love!!!! they taste soooooooo good... am in a low carb, sugar free, sodium free and anything that's healthy for me. I thank you so much. I can't wait to try more delicious recipes. #1 FAN!!!!! ❤❤❤ ps next will be the chocolate chip muffins.
Katrin
Hi Iris, so glad you found my website and happy you like the recipe!!
Pauline
Love love love this recipe - tackles my sugar cravings and keeps me on my keto diet track. Weight loss continues.....Thanks a million!
Katrin
Oh, that's so good to hear!!! I'm glad you like the recipe 🙂
Rebecca
OMG, these are soo good! They taste very close to the real thing. I used Swerve erythritol and Lilly's dark chocolate baking bar. I doubled the butter and added more vanilla. Fantastic.
Katrin
Awesome!! Glad you like the recipe 🙂
CS
Hi. Can I add gluten (I’m more concerned with low carb and no sugar) rather than xanthum gum or to almond flour in general?
Thank you!
Katrin
Hi there, I've never come across gluten on its own, but I guess it would do the same job!
madness
If you want to add gluten why not just make regular cookies?
Mad Scientist
Gluten is a protein and gluten powder (or vital wheat gluten) is high protein, low carb and it makes an excellent additive to low carb flour substitutes to make them behave more like wheat flour in recipes.
It’s very easy to buy online as it’s used to make seitan, a popular vegetarian meat and protein substitute that’s been eaten all around the world for thousands of years.