MACAU – CHINESE ALMOND COOKIES | VEGAN (澳門杏仁餅)

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Vegan Chinese Mooncakes Recipe:

Vegan Macau Almond Cookies

1 cup mung bean flour ()
1/2 cup almond flour ()
3/4 cup powdered sugar
6 tablespoons shortening or coconut oil
1 tablespoon water
2 tablespoons almond extract

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14 thoughts on “MACAU – CHINESE ALMOND COOKIES | VEGAN (澳門杏仁餅)

  1. 2 questions: 1. Can I use almond milk in place of water? I’m thinking it will give it more of an almond flavor. 2. Can I use sweet potato flour?

    1. East Meets Kitchen thanks for the quick response because I want to make the cookies this week. I was going to replace the rice flour with sweet potato flour.

    2. So…almond milk doesn’t really have flavor…unless what you’re thinking is the Chinese Almond milk drink which is more like a sweetened beverage with almond extract added….— sure you can but most of the almond flavor will come from almond extract…even actually almonds don’t add that much flavor. For sweet potato starch – you can use it to dust the cookie dough balls but starch can’t substitute for the mung beans or almonds.

  2. Love to try this version of mold cookies. Seem like it would be a light cookies. Not too crazy about using shortening. Would peanut oil work in place of coconut oil?

    1. I’ve seen store versions use vegetable oil…I think if you’re ok playing around with it…for example shortening has a higher melting temperature than say butter so shape-wise the spread may shift (but you can also play around with how dry you want the cookie…in which case it would probably not spread at all😊. I don’t want to say it’s a light cookie – just a sandy, shorebread-esque cookie.

    1. What new style??!😋 Do you mean the photos??♥️♥️ Thank you so much!! It’s tricky – sometimes pretty photos are not the same as “tasty photos” and for videos, people usually prefer the latter…so it’s always a bit of a juggle.

    1. I used to eat the really dry and sandy ones…they were the generic ones at the grocery store and I LOVED them!!😊😊

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