By Amy Rains
⎯ Last updated October 6, 2021
4.3 from 10 votes
Paleo
Vegan
Gluten Free
Paleo
Vegan
Gluten Free
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Grain-free Pumpkin Snickerdoodles are a Paleo, Vegan, and Gluten-Free cookie that is perfect for the fall! These make a great snack or dessert, and are a crowd pleaser!
A fall twist on a classic cookie!
Can I just tell you how excited I am to start bringing on the pumpkin recipes It’s one of my favorite ingredients to cook with and I love this time of year when I can add it to just about anything! These delicious cookies are the perfect way to kick-off the pumpkin season. A classic cookie recipe that gets a pumpkin makeover andhas only wholesome ingredients with no refined sugar. Yep, that’s right. Go ahead and eat them for breakfast if you want. These delicious, buttery, spiced cookies were also an afternoon snack for my kids who gave them rave reviews.
“Best day ever!” said the little guy.
“I want to bring them to school and let my friends try these!” said Miss Carbivore.
They can be tough critics too. You only hear about the recipes they love, but trust me, there are recipes I create and hope to share with you, but sometimes they get the thumbs down from my kiddos. They were the ones who were initially gave me the idea for these cookies.
Another great thing about these cookies is they are SUPER easy. No fancy mixers, just a large spoon and a bowl. Let’s get started!
How to make Grain-Free Pumpkin Snickerdoodles:
Here is what you need:
- almond flour
- baking powder or baking soda
- sea salt
- pumpkin pie spice
- coconut oil
- pumpkin puree
- maple syrup
- vanilla extract
- cinnamon
- coconut sugar
We start with 2 separate bowls. Mix together the dry ingredients: almond flour, baking powder, sea salt, and pumpkin pie spice. In another bowl, mix together the wet ingredients: melted coconut oil, pumpkin puree, maple syrup, and vanilla extract.
Add the dry ingredients with wet ingredients and mix the batter well, stick them in the fridge for about 10 minutes. Remove from the fridge and form them into small balls. In a small bowl, mix together the cinnamon and sugar. Dip each cookie ball into the cinnamon mixture. You will want the balls to be about the size of a ping-pong ball:
Press down on the cookies to flatten, then transfer to the oven to bake.
Bake for about 12 minutes, and let them cool completely on the pan. Remove and enjoy!!!
More pumpkin treats you will love:
- Paleo Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Blondies
- Flourless Pumpkin Brownies
- No Bake Pumpkin Chocolate Chip Cookie Dough Truffles
- Pumpkin Bread with Chai Glaze
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Grain-Free Pumpkin Snickerdoodles
Grain-Free Pumpkin Snickerdoodles are a autumn twist on a classic cookie! You won't believe these are Paleo, Gluten-Free, Grain-Free, and Vegan.
Prep Time 5 minutes
Cook Time 12 minutes
Total Time 17 minutes
Servings 15 cookies
Author Amy Rains
4.3 from 10 votes
Ingredients
- 2cupsalmond flour
- 1tspbaking powder*
- 1/4tspsalt
- 1/2tsppumpkin pie spice
- 3tbspcoconut oilmelted
- 3tbsppumpkin puree
- 1/4cupmaple syrup
- 2tspvanilla extract
- 1/4cupcinnamon
- 1/4cupcoconut/palm sugar
Instructions
Preheat the oven to 350.
In a large bowl, mix together almond flour, baking powder, salt, and pumpkin spice powder.
In a separate small bowl, whisk together coconut oil, pumpkin puree, syrup, vanilla extract.
Add the wet ingredients to dry. Mix together until wet, and sticky. Refrigerate for about 10 minutes (this allows the dough to get a little more sticky and firm).
In a small bowl, mix cinnamon and coconut sugar.
Form dough balls that are about 1.5 inches in diameter, roll dough into cinnamon mixture. Place on a cookie sheet. Using a jar or glass, flatten cookies to about 1/2 inch thick.
Bake cookies for 10-12 minutes (depending on oven and thickness of cookies). Cookies should feel firm on the top, but may be soft in the middle. They will continue to get firmer once out of the oven.
Cool completely on the cookie sheet.
Recipe Notes
*For a Paleo version use baking soda in place of baking powder, and only use 1/2 tsp.
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Sina @ Vegan Heaven says
These look so delicious, Amy! 🙂 I love pumpkin season and I can’t wait to try your recipe!
Reply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Thanks Sina! I hope you enjoy, they were gone in less than 2 days at my house! I guess it’s time to make more 🙂
Katie Miesbauer says
Question.. what is pumpkin spice powder? Is this pumpkin pie spice?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Yes! Sorry, I don’t know why I wrote that. I just changed it. Thanks for noticing!
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lia barnier says
question what is pumpkin pie spice. what is in it. i live in the netherlands and we don’t have that kind of spice.
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Hi Lia, pumpkin pie spice is a blend of cinnamon, ginger, cloves, and nutmeg. It is 1/2 cinnamon, and equal parts of the other 3. I lived in Germany for 4 years and could find those dried spices in most stores. You could make a larger batch and add it to your baking for the fall and winter!
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Erin says
Hey Amy,
Wondering if I could substitute coconut flour for almond flour and if I would need to adjust anything?Thank you! Excited about this!
ErinReply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Hi Erin, yes you can absolutely substitute coconut flour. Coconut flour tends to be a lot more dry, so I would mix it with 1 cup tapioca flour to help balance it out. 1 cup coconut flour, 1 cup tapioca flour. Hope that helps!
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Wendy says
Hi,
Can I use honey instead of syrup?Reply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Sure can!
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Wendy says
Thanks!!!
Is it really 1/4 cup Cinnamon? I’m making these now. 🙂
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Yes! Just to roll the cookies in, you may have extra when finished. Hope you enjoyed them!
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Raia says
Delicious! 🙂
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Thanks Raia!
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Rachael says
I am very excited to try this recipe! My only thing is I do not have almond flour. What substitution would you recommend?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
To keep them grain free you could use coconut flour (1cup) and tapioca flour (1 cup). I am not sure how regular flour would work, but you could try.
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Tricia says
Are these cookies study enough to ship or would they arrive in crumbs? Wanted to send to my son at college.
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
What a great mom you are!! I would say, probably not a good idea to ship. They are very soft and delicate. Maybe if he’s home for the holidays have him take an extra batch home?
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Tricia says
That’s what I needed to know. I may just have to hand carry a batch on the plane!
Thank you for your quick reply!Reply
Anisa says
Sadly these didn’t turn out very well for me. I used a gluten-free flour blend and wonder if that might’ve been the problem. I had to add way more pumpkin puree, maple syrup and a bunch of water to make it the consistency needed to form balls. They turned out dry and not very sweet and unfortunately I doubled the recipe and now have a whole bunch of cookies that won’t get eaten 🙁Reply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Bummer Anisa! Sorry they didn’t turn out for you. I have never used a Gluten-free flour blend, so I’m not sure. I do know that almond flour has a nutty, buttery taste that works well in these cookies to keep them nice and moist!
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Abby says
These are the best snickerdoodles I have ever tasted!! OMGOSH!!!! Thank you for sharing!! I just made them yesterday and am going to have to make them again. They will be a regular!!!! I had a lot of cinnamon mixture left over, but saving it for the next batch!!Reply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Thanks Abby, glad you loved them!Reply
Wanda says
Just baked these, they are really good.Reply
amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Glad you enjoyed them!
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Melissa W. says
Almond flour I’d pretty expensive here, I was going to buy some but decided against it. If I’m not doing this gluten free can I use while wheat flour? Will it do ok? Or would all purpose be better?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
All purpose flour would probably be best, but the cookie will be dry. I would add more coconut oil (another tbsp), add more pumpkin (another tbsp), and test the consistency. If it still seems dry, add an egg. I have only made them with almond flour so this is my best guess!
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Jenny says
Oh. My. Gosh! I’m noshing on these right now and they are SO good! Great idea to “pumpkinize” snicker doodles! Thanks for the recipe!Reply
Jolaine says
I wonder how this would work with cassava flour? I can’t do nuts.
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
I think it would work just fine! I haven’t tried it yet, but you can easily replace cassava flour for almond meal or flour in most recipes.
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karen says
Can I use xylitol instead of maple syrup? Maybe a touch of maple extract?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Sure, the maple syrup really adds depth so the extract is a must!
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Nancy L. says
Why not eggs and how many of them? And also it seems like there are not enough of the spices used for the recipe ??
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Hi Nancy, no eggs in these cookies as I was making them Vegan friendly for some of my readers. The pumpkin acts as a great binding agent and eggs are not needed. Plenty of spice with the pumpkin pie spice and they are coated in cinnamon. Feel free to double the pumpkin pie spice if you’d like more!
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Lisa Petric says
i Made these last night and substituted the almond flour with the coconut and tapioca flour. However, the dough was not sticky. It was very dry. I added more maple syrup and pumpkin. It still was very dry. I added more maple syrup and pumpkin. In the end, I had to add an egg. Although it was still crumbly, I knew that it was going to work. They taste wonderful but they are more cakey and chewy than a snickerdoodle.
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Mamty says
You can’t substitute coconut for almond flour 1-1.
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Lisa says
Thanks for the tip about using both coconut and tapioca flour. Can’t do nuts. Going to go make these now.
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Stephen Stanczyk says
The weird thing about snickerdoodles to me was always the use of Cream of Tartar. I don’t see it in your recipe as you use baking powder instead.. What type of difference will I see? Any particular reason it was not used?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
No particular reason. I just prefer baking powder instead as it contains both cream of tartar and baking soda. You can substitute if you’d like, but I would recommend adding baking soda too! 1/2 tsp cream of tarter and 1/8 tsp baking soda.
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Krista says
My dough was super dry and would only kind of set up after adding additional wet ingredients. Even after cooking they just fell apart . I also didnt like the flavor. Not a fan sorry.
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Tess Cunard says
Do I put them on parchment paper or spray with coconut oil?
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
Either one works!!
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Fallon Duff says
These are wonderful!!! To those who gave this a negative review … Shame on you ???? How can you give a recipe a negative comment if you alter it. Changing the flour to something different doesn’t make you an accurate judge. I followed the recipe twice. Once exactly and once changing the proportion of the coconut sugar/ cinnamon ratio to 50/50. Both were great the 50/50 just made the cookies sweeter which of course my children preferred. However I liked it both ways. I was grateful to see a cookie recipe that did not include coconut flour . In my opinion it makes everything taste like a macaroon. Thank you for sharing this recipe, the cookies are awesome!! We will keep this one amongst our favorites..
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
This comment made my day!! Thank you!!
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Jeannine Anderson says
Snickerdoodles are one of my favorite cookies! Thanks for sharing this Paleo friendly version. I love the addition of the pumpkin and the pumpkin pie spice. I think that these cookies have just the right amount of sweetness to scratch that itch.
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amy@wholesomelicious.com says
You’re welcome! Enjoy 🙂
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Elena says
These are amazing!!!! I used coconut sugar instead of maple syrup (just because I didn’t have any) and added a little more pumpkin puree to make it wet enough. Still turned out perfect and a great soft inside. Love that this recipe is simple with no crazy ingredients and is gluten free and vegan and can be eaten by any picky eater. I will definitely be making these for every party I go to this season. Thanks for sharing!
5 Stars!
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Jennifer says
I had to double up on the wedding gradients in order to make the dough sticky using a cup of coconut flour and a cup of tapioca flour. It was way too dry to even try to make ball out of
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Jennifer says
Got to love spell check lol That was supposed to say on the wet ingredients silly phone
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Amy says
Hi Jennifer, thanks for your feedback. And yes, coconut and tapioca flour will make these very dry. The almond flour is a must!
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Christina says
Can I sub another GF flour? Im allergic to almonds.Reply
Amy says
Maybe cassava? I haven’t tried with any other flours, but they are all a little different.
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Christianmotherof5 says
Just made thse with honey since I was out of maple. These are so yummy. Kids loved them.Reply
Amy says
Yay!! So glad they were a hit!
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Bairdsbaby says
Excellent! Not too much sugar and good enough to curb cravings! Thank you for this recipe
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Karen says
Hi wondering if the cinnamon should read 1/4 tsp?
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Amy says
No, it’s 1/4 cup. It’s to roll the cookies in, most of the time I have some sugar/cinnamon mixture leftover. You could cut the cinnamon back a bit for more of a 50/50 with the sugar to make it sweeter if that is your preference.
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Annalise says
These are adorable and full of my favorite things! Can’t wait to try them and share with my GF friends 🙂
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Brianna says
These are amazing!! Totally delicious and very festive for fall. They have a fantastic texture and aren’t too sweet. I’ll be making them again STAT!
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Melissa says
Your recipe is great except I think you meant to write 1/4 coconut palm sugar and 1 TBSP cinnamon. You wrote it reversed and it’s way too much cinnamon and not enough sugarReply
Rebecca says
I added one egg, substituted honey for maple syrup and used baking soda. I also added a bitmore spice. They came out cakey, soft and delicious!
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Janis says
Hi Amy – how long can I leave these in the fridge? Wondering if I can make ahead and cook the next day. Thanks!
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Amy says
Sure can!
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Krystine says
Did anyone’s recipe yield less than 15 cookies? I only got 9.
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Suzanne says
This looks so good! What a fun way to make a classic cookie in the fall!
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Vanessa says
Thanks for sharing! It would be fun to make these with kids!
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Kim says
Hi Amy,
Is it possible to use cassava flour in place of almond flour?Reply
Amy Rains says
Hi Kim! Unfortunately, cassava is too dry for this recipe. I have only tested it with almond flour.
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