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    How to Make Healthier Holiday Cookies

    By Hilary Meyer, Associate Food Editor, EatingWell Magazine

    How to make healthier holiday cookiesHow to make healthier holiday cookiesWhen the holiday season rolls around I eagerly break out my mixer and rolling pin and pump out tons of cookies. They're not just for me-I send them all over the country to my friends and relatives as gifts.
    Recipes to try: Our Top Prize-Winning Holiday Cookies

    But this whole baking extravaganza means that before they hit the post office I have tons of cookies lingering around my house. Since I care about my family's health (and my own), I've gotten savvier about making cookies that are better for you. Here are some tricks of the trade for making healthier Christmas cookies:

    Tip 1: Cut Back on Butter
    Butter is a popular ingredient when it comes to cookies, but we all know by now that it's loaded with saturated fat. There's no need to get rid of it entirely, but it is a good idea to keep it in check. Try substituting canola oil for at least some of the butter in your recipe or try recipes that call for fat replacements which can be anything from fruit purees to reduced-fat dairy products like low-fat milk or buttermilk.
    Related: Butter, Margarine or "Buttery Spreads": Which Is Healthier?

    Tip 2: Use Some Whole-Wheat Flour
    I used to think whole-wheat flour made baked goods taste like cardboard, but thankfully this isn't the case. If a recipe calls for all-purpose flour, I swap out half of it for white whole-wheat flour. White whole-wheat flour for baking looks and tastes similar to all-purpose, but it's higher in fiber (about 12 grams per cup vs. 3 grams for white flour). Look for it in well-stocked supermarkets next to the other flours or in the baking section of your local natural food store.
    Related: 5 Simple Swaps for Healthier Cookies

    Tip 3: Keep Size in Check
    There are so many cookies to try around the holidays. If they're big and you want to try them all, you're suddenly consuming tons of extra calories. I try to make my cookies small-no more than 2 or 3 bites' worth. It's a great way to keep calories in check and satisfy your craving for something sweet. Plus if you ship them like I do, the smaller cookies are less likely to break!
    Recipes to Try: Irresistible Cookies for 100 Calories or Less

    Tip 4: Avoid Artificial Ingredients
    Until recently, I dressed my cookies up with frosting every color of the rainbow. But now I try to avoid artificial colors in my cookies and decorate them creatively with white frosting, melted chocolate, nuts and jams instead. Get More Ideas for How to Decorate Cookies Naturally

    What are your tricks for healthier holiday cookies?

    By Hilary Meyer

    Hilary Meyer

    EatingWell Associate Food Editor Hilary Meyer spends much of her time in the EatingWell Test Kitchen, testing and developing healthy recipes. She is a graduate of New England Culinary Institute.



    Related Links from EatingWell:

     

    18 comments

    • Mary R  •  5 months ago
      How about just not eating very many - rather than making the cookie taste nasty?
    • Patricia  •  5 months ago
      A balanced diet is a Christmas cookie in each hand. Enjoy!
    • dede  •  5 months ago
      Canola oil tastes terrible!
    • Amy  •  5 months ago
      i do the whole wheat flour and the applesauce for part of the butter. works like a charm
    • John  •  5 months ago
      TIP #5 add flavor What the point of cookies other than being tasty and bad for you
      • Amanda 5 months ago
        Do you mean WhatS the point...maybe spelling? And yes, the point is a cookie is BAD for you..and you...and you!!!!!
      • Miss Sunfinder 5 months ago
        Amanda, you must mean "What's the point [...]". Forgot your apostrophe there. Mind your own language before correcting others. ;)
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
      I think making your own cookies in general is much healthier than buying the commercial ones in the refrigerator case at the supermarket. They're loaded with hydrogenated oils.
    • A Yahoo! User  •  5 months ago
      I can't believe how many people are still deceived and ignorant to the fact that butter isn't bad for you. It's canola oil that causes health problems, yet, "health" experts continue to believe a 50 year old lie about butter, saturated fats, and high cholesterol. This writer needs to learn what real foods are before she decides to tell people how to eat healthy.
    • Andy M  •  5 months ago
      duh....
    • Julie  •  5 months ago
      Why are so many supposedly educated people so confused about fat??? Butter is a NATURAL fat and healthy. It's not saturated fats that are bad, it's hydrogenated fats. Canola oil is a known CARCINOGEN and should be banned. Do some research Hilary!
    • Azucena  •  5 months ago
      great ideas ......I'll try.
    • Trish C  •  5 months ago
      it's the holidays. i work hard to be healthy all year, and i look forward to enjoying delicious cookies with their PROPER ingredients. i'll save the "healthy" recipes for after new years.
    • momof3  •  5 months ago
      I like the tip about making your cookies smaller. :)
    • Cy Grover  •  5 months ago
      Healthier cookies- but not good for anyone with celiac disease:)
    • Marissa  •  5 months ago
      great article!
    • what's_that...  •  5 months ago
      No, just no. If someone wants to use these suggestions, then they can go ahead. I don't substitute anything because it could alter the flavor. I spend most of the year eating healthy and Thanksgiving and Christmas I indulge.
    • Valerie  •  5 months ago
      Why do cookies have to be healty? They're cookies after all!!
      • Plysy 5 months ago
        Because U.S. adults (33.8%) are obese, which means...1/3 of us cannot control the portion of cookies we eat.
    • AnnaJoLeezy  •  5 months ago
      NO to the canola oil YES to organic unsalted butter.... i swear there is so much mis-information out here... do some research first, it is very irresponsible to give out such blatantly wrong information madam journalist
      • A Yahoo! User 5 months ago
        Thank you. People are still ignorant to what real foods are and that saturated fats from pastured butter is so much better than that fat canola oil.
      • Jessica 5 months ago
        butter is still unhealthy, it's FAT, not matter how "organic" it is.
      • Long Beach Rocker 5 months ago
        Simple test.... put your butter and oil at 98.6 degrees.... butter is still solid while vanola oil is a liquid. Now which do you want in your arteries????..
    • opinionator  •  5 months ago
      I've made chocolate chip cookies with an avacado as a butter substitution. Replace half of the amount of butter with avacado, the fat is the "healthy kind", not hydrogenated. When I made the chocolate chip cookies, it called for 2 sticks of butter, I used 1 stick and 1 avacado, they came out great and stayed moist longer.

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