Jam & Sunflower Thimbles

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“I have a very high fever”, she mumbles with a raspy voice while trying to push a tear from her eye and at the same time figuring out which face she should put on to convince us that she is too sick for preschool. She actually did a pretty good job with that theater act. Almost had us fooled for a short while. That was until we called preschool and told them that she’d be home today. It took her literally two seconds to start jumping, laughing, pulling out all her toys and declaring that it was family play-day. After having turned the living room (aka our work space during the days) into an inferno of pencils, papers and toy horses while we snuck away to get some work done, we found her watching cartoon upside-down in the sofa and asked if she wanted to help us with a cookie recipe instead.

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This is a recipe that we have tried a few times. But for the shoot, Elsa actually did most of the work herself – so she calls them ”my cookies”. We wanted the recipe to be both gluten free and nut free without using a pile of hard-to-get ingredients. We obviously have a love for nuts and nut flours, but it felt good trying something else for once. Sunflower seeds and rolled oats are great ingredients when replacing nuts. After having experimented with a few different versions – both vegan and non-vegan – we finally decided to post two recipes for these. Both turn out great in texture and flavor. I personally prefer the richness in the butter & egg cookies, but if you are vegan I think you definitely will appreciate that version as well. Luise says she can’t taste any difference.

What we particularly like about making these munchies at home is that we get to use a not-so-sweet jam to top them. Less sugar actually gives more space for the flavor. We make our own jam by simply heating up frozen raspberries and dried prunes, but if you have a favorite brand of unsweetend jam, that of course works just as well.

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PS. Can you find the Valentine cameo cookie below …?

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Jam & Sunflower Thimbles  [Gluten free + Nut free]
Makes around 15 cookies

1 cup / 240 ml / 120 g finely chopped sunflower seeds
1 cup / 240 ml /90 g rolled oats, choose gluten free if intolerant
1/2 cup / 120 ml / 60 g buckwheat flour
1 1/2 tbsp arrowroot (or corn starch or potato starch)
1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/3 tsp salt
5 tbsp / 75 g butter, room temperature
1/3 cup / 80 ml maple syrup
1 egg, separated

1/2 cup Raspberry & Prune Jam, recipe below (or jam of choice)

Set the oven to 350°F/175°C. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Spread out the sunflower seeds on the baking sheet and let them roast very quickly in the oven, just a few minutes. Put half of the sunflower seeds in a high-speed mixer together with the oats and mix until you have a coarse flour. (If you don’t have a mixer you can chop the sunflower seeds finely and grind the oats in a mortar). Add the rest  of the dry ingredients the sunflower and oat flour and stir to combine. Whisk together butter, maple syrup and egg yolk (save the white for later) in a large bowl and beat until light and fluffy. Add the dry ingredients to the bowl and mix until the dough comes together. Scoop out about 15 portions of the dough and roll them between your hands into balls. If they crack easily you can add a splay of cold water to the dough. Whisk egg whites in a small bowl and chop the rest of the sunflower seeds coarsely. Dip and roll each ball in the egg white and then in the sunflower seeds. Place them on the baking sheet and use your thumb to carefully press into the center of each cookie. Fill the indents with 1 teaspoon jam (Elsa says 2 teaspoons is much better – whatever you prefer). Bake for 10-14 minutes. Let cool slightly before moving them to a wire rack. They can be a little soft and fragile at first, but firm up as soon as they chill. 

Vegan Jam & Sunflower Thimbles  [Gluten free + Nut free + Vegan]
This is basically the same recipe as above, but the methods are slightly altered for the vegan ingredients

1 chia egg (1 tbsp chia seeds + 3 tbsp water)
1 cup / 240 ml / 120 g finely chopped sunflower seeds
1 cup / 240 ml /90 g rolled oats (or oat flour), choose gluten free if intolerant
1/2 cup / 120 ml / 60 g buckwheat flour
1 1/2 tbsp arrowroot (or corn starch or potato starch)

1 tsp baking powder
1 tsp vanilla extract
1/3 tsp salt
5 tbsp (75 g) coconut oil, room tempered
5 tbsp maple syrup
1/2 cup plant milk

1/2 cup Raspberry & Prune Jam, recipe below (or jam of choice)

Mix 1 tbsp chia seeds with 3 tbsp water and let stand 5-10 minutes until thick and gloppy. Set the oven to 350°F/175°C. Line a baking sheet with baking paper. Spread out the sunflower seeds on the baking sheet and let them roast very quickly in the oven, only for a few minutes. Put half of the sunflower seeds in a high-speed mixer together with the oats and mix until you have a coarse flour. (If you don’t have a mixer you can chop the sunflower seeds finely and grind the oats in a mortar). Add the rest  of the dry ingredients the sunflower and oat flour and stir to combine. Whisk together coconut oil, maple syrup and chia egg in a large bowl and beat until everything is mixed. Add the dry ingredients to the bowl and mix until the dough comes together. Scoop out about 15 portions of the dough and roll them between your hands into balls. If they crack easily you can add a splay of cold water to the dough. Pour the plant milk in a glass and chop the rest of the sunflower seeds coarsely. Dip and roll each ball in the plant milk and then in the sunflower seeds. Place them on the baking sheet and use your thumb to carefully press into the center of each cookie. Fill the indents with 1 teaspoon jam (Elsa says 2 teaspoons is much better – whatever you prefer). Bake for 10-14 minutes. Let cool slightly before moving them to a wire rack. They can be a little soft and fragile at first, but will firm up as soon as they chill.

Raspberry & Prune Jam
This makes more than what you need for the cookies.

1,5 cup / 200 g raspberries, during winter we use organic frozen berries (no need to thaw)
4 dried prunes, pitted and chopped
a splash of water

Place all ingredients in a small saucepan, bring to a boil, then lower the heat to medium-low and let simmer for 15-20 minutes. Pour into a bowl and place in the fridge until chilled and thick.

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79 Comments

  • Szilvia
    I made this couple of years ago and I really liked them. I was now wondering during the Christmas preparation whether these (or dough) can be frozen? Many Thanks :)
    • Green Kitchen Stories
      Hi Szilvia, you can prepare the dough, roll it into a log and freeze it unbaked. And once you are ready to bake you simply let it thaw slightly and then slice rounds off the log that you shape, fill and bake. Good luck! /David
  • Ella
    I made these years ago and just recently remembered how good they are. I was reading the recipe quickly (overconfident having made them before) and put the second half of the sunflower seeds in with the rest of the dry ingredients. It was slightly too dry so I added a dash of soy milk, and perfect! A very forgiving recipe. I used store-bought jam which is super sweet so only used about half a teaspoon per cookie which was plenty.
  • I am sure she learned much more at home than at Preschool anyway. Calling her feelings, "theatrics" seems pretty disrespectful, but I know it is the cultural response to a child faking being sick to not have to go to school. I am so happy you let her stay home. Thank you for respecting her daughters wishes.
  • Liza
    https://www.facebook.com/MirKrup/photos/pcb.1022441154465303/1022440847798667/?type=3&theater saw your pictures picture without reference to you or your site.
  • Nour Maurice
    Hey! I'm not vegan, so don't mind including the egg into the thimbles, but can i just switch the butter for coconut oil in the original recipe or not?
  • Julia
    Hi:) I'm fourteen:) My mom's favourite seeds are sunflower seeds and I want to make these for her:) Her second favourite thing is chestnut. Do you think it will work if I use chestnut flour instead of buckwheat flour?:) And how would it taste? Her birthday is very sooon;-)
  • Ines
    Hi =) I made these last week with elderberry jam, which I made according to your recipe, and they were great! I made a partly vegan version (I used honey + butter instead of coconut oil, but replaced the egg by a flax egg). ... And by accident I put the rest of the sunflower seeds in the dough as well, so I had them in the cookies instead of on them - maybe something of this was the reason for my dough being really sticky ...?! Anyway I just made heaps on my baking sheet, as the decoration had ended up inside the cookies anyway, but that worked really well too. =) They remind me a lot of some German Christmas Cookies called "Freundliche Blicke", which we used to make when I was a kid! =)
  • Sylvie
    i was a bit doubtful at first - the dough was so crumbly - but once cooked they become firm and are sooo goooood. will follow elsa's advice next time: another teaspoon of jam won't hurt, after all. p.s. such a cute story, thank you for sharing!
  • Liza
    Hello :) thank you so much for great inspirational work that you do - have your book- got it for birthday :) quick question - May buckwheat flour be substituted with rye flour in cookies and turmeric muffins? Liza.
  • Sandeepa
    These turbed out just beautiful. My husband couldn't get over them. But mine has gone greenish from inside and it has only been 3 days. Has anyone else experienced the same problem? They still taste good. It can't be mould, ew!?
  • Great recipe! I made these with peanut butter instead of butter, almond flour, and rolled them in almonds and they turned out amazing!
  • The jam I have made twice - with frozen raspberries and with frozen raspberries + strawberries. I love that the two-ingredient recipe is so easy, quick and delicious. The thimbles I have yet to try. Can any flour replace the buckwheat? I cannot find any buckwheat flour in my area.
  • Jenny
    Just made these. So great! Thank you, thank you!

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