After nearly running out of everything during one of my recipe testing sessions in the middle of January, I stopped by the store to pick up lots of pantry essentials and baking staples. I pushed my cart up and down the aisles, grabbing flour and cocoa powder and milk and eggs off of the shelves, but then…
I ended up doing a double take halfway done the baking aisle, then pulled my shopping cart backwards to check out the display I had almost missed. My local store had stocked some pretty interesting ingredients, which was so out-of-character for them. Normally, I feel incredibly lucky just to find my favorite brand of whole wheat flour!
As I slowly scanned the shelves, I spotted cashew flour, pecan flour, cauliflower flour, powdered almond butter, and even beet powder. Although totally tempted to grab all of them, especially the cashew flour (my favorite nut!), I ended up reaching for the beet powder and nothing else, reasoning that it was worth the spur-of-the-moment splurge and price tag because I had been meaning to experiment with it as a natural red food coloring for baking recipes. (I’m still tweaking and playing with it, but stay tuned!)
Before heading to the registers to pay for my groceries, I also stopped by the store’s seasonal aisles completely decked out for Valentine’s Day. I smiled at the sight of so many bags of chocolate bars and truffles — Ghirardelli, Lindt, Godiva, Lindor, Hershey’s Dove, Ferrero Rocher — all just as tempting as those semi-exotic baking ingredients… I’m such a chocoholic and will eat (and buy!) it almost every chance I get!
On a second aisle, I noticed different Valentine’s Day decorations and gifts covering every inch of shelf space. Wreaths made of artificial red roses, white stuffed teddy bears with red hearts as their tummies, tiny tin mailboxes for children’s school classroom Valentine’s card exchanges, garlands of paper letters strung together to spell out “I love you” and “Happy Valentine’s Day”…
And oversized coffee mugs covered in X’s, O’s, and dainty hearts that were filled with the ingredients to make microwaved single-serving chocolate mug cakes. I glanced at the instructions and nutrition information included in the packaging, my eyes immediately widening in shock, and quickly returned the mug back to the shelf.
Each chocolate mug cake could’ve easily constituted as three servings of dessert… Not just one!
As I finished perusing the Valentine’s Day displays, my mind wandered back to the adorable coffee mug containing that cake mix. The porcelain mug itself certainly looked so pretty and festive…
But I’d much rather fill it with these homemade Healthy Double Chocolate Biscotti instead! They’re just as decadent and chocolaty as that chocolate mug cake mix looked, yet these are far more sensibly portioned… And they also have no butter, oil, dairy, refined flour or sugar!
Just like my ultimate healthy classic biscotti, the cookies made in this chocolate version are simple and straightforward to bake, deliciously crisp and crunchy, and perfect for dunking in coffee or tea (or even chocolate milk or hot chocolate for an extra chocolaty treat!). They’re also 53 calories!
WHAT ARE BISCOTTI?
What are biscotti? I’m so glad you asked! In a nutshell… Biscotti are twice-baked Italian cookies!
To begin, you make the cookie dough. It traditionally consists of flour, eggs, sugar, and almonds — a fairly simple ingredients list! — yet American versions often include butter, oil, and sometimes milk or cream.
For the first bake, you shape the cookie dough into a long and skinny rectangle, about ¾” tall. That goes in the oven for about half an hour, or until the outside feels crisp and firm.
After a few minutes of cooling — just long enough so you don’t burn your fingers! — you slice that rectangle into strips. The strips can either be straight across or at a slight diagonal, but then you put those strips (your individual cookies!) back in the oven to continue baking until they’re completely crisp and crunchy.
Because of this twice-baked method that normally leaves them dry and hard, biscotti are usually more shelf-stable and will keep much longer than other types of cookies. (This is why people often dunk them in coffee or tea… The hot liquid softens the cookies so they’re easier to bite into!)
Hint: If you’re a nerd like me and want to learn more about the history of biscotti, then I’ve covered that over here with my ultimate healthy biscotti recipe!
HOW TO MAKE THE BEST HEALTHY DOUBLE CHOCOLATE BISCOTTI
With that little baking history out of the way… Now wet’s go over how to make the best ever healthy chocolate biscotti! I tried to keep the recipe as traditional as possible — with just a few chocolate changes, of course! — so the ingredients list is short and simple.
You’ll start with a mix of white whole wheat flour and unsweetened cocoa powder. Use the regular unsweetened cocoa powder, like this! Dutched and “special dark” cocoa powder have a different acidity level, so they behave different in baking recipes and can often affect the taste and texture. Besides, you’re using ½ cup of cocoa powder, so your healthy double chocolate biscotti already taste exceptionally rich and chocolaty without those other two types of cocoa powder!
As for the white whole wheat flour, such a thing actually exists… And it’s not a combination of white (aka all-purpose) flour and regular whole wheat flour! Instead, white whole wheat flour is made by finely grinding a special type of soft white wheat (hence the name!), whereas regular whole wheat flour comes from a heartier variety of red wheat. They both have the same health benefits, like extra fiber, but white whole wheat flour has a lighter taste and texture… Which lets the crisp texture and rich chocolate flavor of your double chocolate biscotti really shine!
Just remember, it’s really important to measure the flour and cocoa powder correctly using this method or a kitchen scale. (← That’s the one I own!) Too much of either one will dry out your cookie dough and make it impossible to shape into a rectangular log. Too much cocoa powder will also make your cookies taste bitter, rather than rich and decadent. So pretty please, take those few extra moments to properly measure your ingredients. I promise these healthy double chocolate biscotti are worth it!
As one of the teensy tiny ways we’re breaking with biscotti tradition… You’ll also whisk a little baking powder into the flour and cocoa powder. I think that small amount gives these healthy double chocolate biscotti a little extra lift, which helps with their lovely crisp and crunchy texture!
Going back to biscotti tradition, you just need 1 egg for these healthy double chocolate biscotti. No butter and no oil! The original biscotti didn’t include either of these because cookies made with butter or oil usually spoiled much faster, and people wanted their biscotti to last for weeks (and months!) while traveling by land or sea. (More info on that over here!) So you’ll still get the perfect crunchy biscotti texture without butter or oil — I promise!
However, while classic biscotti recipes often use almond extract, I decided to break with tradition again and use vanilla in these healthy double chocolate biscotti. Even though almond extract is my all-time favorite flavoring extract and takes me a great deal of self-restraint not to use it… I thought that vanilla extract really enhanced the rich chocolate flavor and made these the best healthy double chocolate biscotti imaginable!
Whereas typical biscotti recipes call for refined granulated sugar, you’ll use coconut sugar to sweeten yours instead! Coconut sugar is exactly what it sounds like: an unrefined sweetener that comes from coconuts. However, it does not actually taste like coconuts! It has a rich caramel-like flavor, similar to brown sugar, which perfectly complements the decadent chocolate flavor in these healthy double chocolate biscotti. (And you can often find coconut sugar right next to the regular sugar on the baking aisle!)
Finally, we need the second chocolate component… Finely chopped dark chocolate! Initially, I tried using mini chocolate chips for a quick shortcut. However, chocolate chips usually to hold their shape while baking, which proved to be problematic. When I tried to slice the rectangular log into the individual biscotti after the first bake, it crumbled and broke into dozens of pieces whenever I hit a mini chocolate chip. Pretty frustrating!
So for the next round of recipe testing, I switched to using bars of high-quality dark chocolate that I finely chopped into small pieces. That worked SO much better! Dark chocolate fully melts in the oven (whereas chocolate chips contain a stabilizer that prevent them from doing so!), so those chocolate chunks were still warm and flexible when I sliced the rectangular log into strips after the first bake… And none of the biscotti broke into pieces as a result!
Tip: I love using Lindt and Ghirardelli! They’re high quality yet still affordable, and they’re usually fairly easy to find in just about any stores here in the US.
HOW TO BAKE THE PERFECT BISCOTTI
Now that you’ve mixed together your cookie dough, it’s time to shape and bake it!
First, rub your hands with a little neutral-tasting oil (just to prevent the cookie dough from sticking to them!). Then roll and shape the cookie dough into a fat log in between your palms. Place that down onto a baking sheet lined with a silicone baking mat (my favorite!) or parchment paper, and then gently but firmly press down on the tops and sides to shape it into a rectangular log.
The size and shape of the rectangular log actually matters a lot! If your log is too tall and thick, it’ll take much longer to bake. If it’s too short and thin, then it could burn. For the perfect healthy chocolate biscotti, you want your rectangular log to be 2 ¼” wide and ¾” tall.
Yes, I keep a ruler in my kitchen… Yes, I use it every time I make biscotti… And yes, it’s totally worth it!
After the first trip to the oven, your cookie dough should feel firm and hard on the outside. Let it cool for 10 minutes — no more and no less! You want it to be cool enough to touch without burning your fingers… But you want the inside to still be warm and flexible so you can slice through it without it completely falling apart into itty bitty crumbs.
To slice it, use a sharp serrated knife (aka a bread knife). This is the one I use, and it’s one of my all-time favorite knives! You can cut straight across or at a diagonal — it doesn’t matter! — just as long as you make each of your biscotti ½” thick. Again, pull out a ruler if you need to! The thickness directly affects the amount of time your healthy chocolate biscotti require during their second bake, so for the best results, make sure your biscotti are ½” thick.
Now carefully set your individual biscotti back onto your baking sheet, and slide that back in the oven. However, you get to choose the amount of time for this second bake!
For biscotti that are mostly dry and crunchy yet still have a little “give” in the centers, you’ll bake them for 6 to 8 minutes.
For biscotti that are completely hard, dry, and crunchy (aka “dunkers!”), you’ll bake them for 12 to 16 minutes.
Tip: I prefer to flip mine halfway through the second bake, just to make sure both sides bake and crisp up evenly!
Regardless of how much time you choose for the second bake, leave your healthy double chocolate biscotti on the baking sheet after removing them from the oven until they’ve completely cooled to room temperature. I know it feels like pure torture to wait that long, especially with their irresistible chocolate aroma wafting through the kitchen, but I pinky swear promise that it’s worth the wait! And then the only question is…
Will you eat yours plain — or dipped in something delicious like coffee, tea, or hot chocolate?? 😉 And when you make your own, remember to snap a picture and share it on Instagram using #amyshealthybaking and tagging @amyshealthybaking IN the photo itself! (That guarantees I’ll see your picture! 🙂 ) I’d love to see your healthy chocolate biscotti!
Healthy Double Chocolate Biscotti
Ingredients
- ¾ cup (90g) white whole wheat flour or gluten-free* flour (measured like this)
- ½ cup (40g) unsweetened cocoa powder (measured like this and see Notes!)
- ½ tsp baking powder
- 1 large egg, room temperature
- 1 tsp vanilla extract
- ½ cup (96g) coconut sugar
- 2 tbsp (28g) finely diced dark chocolate (see Notes!)
Instructions
- Preheat the oven to 350°F, and line a baking sheet with a silicone baking mat or parchment paper.
- In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoa powder, baking powder. In a separate bowl, whisk together the egg and vanilla extract. Stir in the coconut sugar. Add in the flour mixture, stirring until fully incorporated. Fold in the diced dark chocolate.
- Transfer the cookie dough to the prepared baking sheet, and shape into a long and skinny rectangle that’s 2 ¼” wide and ¾” tall using your hands or a spatula. (If the cookie dough sticks to your hands, rub them with a little neutral-tasting oil first!)
- Bake at 350°F for 33-35 minutes. (The outside should be very dry and crusty!) Let the rectangle of baked cookie dough cool on the baking sheet for 10 minutes (no more and no less!).
- Transfer the rectangle of baked cookie dough to a cutting board. Using a sharp serrated knife, cut the rectangle into ½”-thick strips (no wider!), working from one short end of the rectangle to the other. (Both diagonal strips and horizontal strips will work!) You should end up with cookies that are ½” thick, ¾” tall, and 2 ¼”+ wide.
- Place the cookies onto the original baking sheet with one cut side facing down and the other cut side facing up. Bake at 350°F, flipping the cookies halfway through, for 6-8 minutes (for centers with just a bit of “give”) or 12-16 minutes (for centers that are completely hard and dry). Cool completely to room temperature on the baking sheet.
Notes
View Nutrition Information + Weight Watchers Points
You may also like Amy’s other recipes…
♡ The Ultimate Healthy Biscotti
♡ The Ultimate Healthy Crunchy Chocolate Chip Cookies
♡ Healthy Flourless Triple Chocolate Oatmeal Cookies
♡ The Ultimate Healthy Chocolate Sugar Cookies
♡ Healthy Fudgy Triple Chocolate Cookies
♡ Healthy Chocolate Blossom Cookies
♡ …and the rest of Amy’s healthy cookie recipes!
Biscotti and coffee – a match made in cookie heaven. I don’t often eat biscotti, not for any particular reason, however this chocolate on chocolate goodness would be amazing with a hot cuppa.
I wish I could share some of these with you in person Brittany!! Maybe on our Disneyland adventure here in CA, whenever that might be??? 😉 So true about biscotti and coffee though — one of the best pairings there is!
These look really good. Is it possible to use Truvia brown sugar blend?
Thanks
Marcia
I really appreciate your interest in my recipe Marcia! I don’t have any experience with Truvia’s brown sugar blend, so I’m honestly not sure and don’t want to lead you astray. If you decide to try making these biscotti, I’d love to hear what you think of them! 🙂
I am on the second bake of these as I type. I only swapped out the coconut sugar for Lakanto Monkfruit Golden. My batter was super dry, almost like a wet ingredient was left out. I wouldn’t think the sugar sub would affect it that much. I didn’t have to time to research what wet ingredient might be best to add, so I ended up adding some water to moisten it. Maybe 1/4-1/2 cup and that seemed to do the trick. I snuck a piece to taste in between the first and second bake and the flavor is divine! Tastes like a brownie, also smells great while baking! Texture seems a little spongy-not sure if that was my water add or if that’s normal for chocolate biscotti. With my sugar sub, they worked out to be about 30 calories a piece. Thank you for the recipe! I also made your almond biscotti and it was great!
I really appreciate your interest in my recipe Amy! And YES! Using monkfruit as the sweetener is exactly what caused that issue. It doesn’t dissolve or absorb liquid the same way that coconut and brown sugar do, so it makes cookie doughs like this extremely dry. I’ve used that exact product to make my classic chocolate chip cookies, and I had to add nearly ½ cup of milk just to incorporate all of the flour… When my usual cookie recipe called for no milk whatsoever. The spongy texture is also caused by the monkfruit and addition of water. (I’ve tried making biscotti with liquid sweeteners like maple syrup instead of coconut or brown sugar, and they had the same spongy texture!) 🙂 So overall… I hope this nerdy-ish explanation helped, and I’m so glad you still enjoyed your biscotti!!
Thanks for the response! Yes, that all makes sense. They really were still delicious, so it’s probably worth it to me for them to be less calories so I can have more, lol! Can I make a request for a cinnamon toast biscotti? ????
It’s my pleasure Amy! I’m always happy to help! And I completely understand what you mean about fewer calories… I’ve eaten more than my fair share of these biscotti! 😉 I’ll add that request to my list!
Hi, Amy, 🙂 I made the chocolate biscotti and the flavor is delicious!! I love them. My dough was on the dry side too so I added a little water. I did weigh my ingredients on the scale I have just like yours. I will definitely be making these again and they will probably be one of those things I keep on hand All The Time! Like waffles! Looking forward to your new email series.
I’m so glad you enjoyed these biscotti Susan! That truly means the world to me that you already think you’ll make these all the time to keep on hand like my waffle recipes. My heart is so full right now — you’re such a sweetheart to share that with me!! ♡ I’m incredibly honored that you signed up for my new email series too, and I’m really looking forward to hearing what you think of it! 🙂
HI, using one egg i wasnt able to incorporate the dry mixture completely. What can i do in that case?
I’m so honored that you tried making my recipe, Richa! If you weren’t able to fully incorporate the dry ingredients, then add water ½ teaspoon at a time until you’re able to get everything mixed it. That’s so strange though! Did you use a large egg, rather than a small or medium egg, and the full amount of coconut sugar? Also, how did you measure the flour and cocoa powder, with a kitchen scale or measuring cups? If the latter, can you describe how you used them to measure?
I know I just asked a LOT of questions, but I’d love to solve that dryness mystery… And once I know your answers to all of them, I should have a much better idea of the potential culprit! 🙂
only commmenting because i saw others did as well, firstly it seems to make a TINY amount, they’re in the oven so we’ll see how many I can get out of it but I doubt 18. I did pack the flour 🙁 but even so there was like, tons of flour + cocoa powder left in the bowl probably a 1/4 cup! It did NOT incorporate-it’s only 1 egg! The recipe does not include any oil or water or milk?? So it’s super dry.
Still, the “dough” tastes good and I’m hoping the biscotti will come out good.
I’m honored that you tried making my recipe, Ren! If you packed the flour (and I’m guessing the cocoa powder too!), then that’s actually why there was so much of the dry ingredient mixture left in the bowl.
When measured like that, you can end up with 1 ½ times as much flour and cocoa powder as when you lightly spoon and level (aka 1 cup + 2 tablespoons of flour, instead of ¾ cup, and ¾ cup of cocoa powder, instead of ½ cup!). That extra flour and cocoa powder are definitely causing the issues that you’ve experienced!
If you don’t own a kitchen scale, then I’ve actually covered the best way to measure flour and cocoa powder on my Baking Basics page. If you click on the pink “like this” text next to each of these ingredients in the Ingredients list, that will take you to my Baking Basics page. I’ve also included my recommendation for you below. 🙂
Here’s what I recommend doing for measuring flour (and cocoa powder, oats, etc!): use a fork to “scoop” up flour from the container, and lightly shake the fork back and forth over the top of your measuring cup to transfer the flour into it. Once there’s a small mound of flour extending past the rim of the measuring cup, then place the flat back of a knife against the top of the measuring cup, and gently scrape it across the top to get rid of the excess flour. Never “pat” the flour down with the knife or fork, and never shake the measuring cup back and forth either. This fork method acts like a sifter (without dirtying another dish!) and guarantees you’ll add less flour and cocoa powder to the batter, so you’ll end up with a moist and tender dough. Does that make sense?
For your query about water or milk, I’ve actually included what to do if your dough is too dry in the Notes section of the recipe (located directly underneath the Instructions!). I know it can be easy to miss that section!
I hope that helps!
Thanks for your in-depth response, Amy! They actually turned out INCREDIBLE even though I packed the dry ingredients, so all’s well that ends well. Next time I make them (and I sure hope that will be soon!) I will try the sifting method you describe, so that I won’t have so much flour leftover…which hopefully means more biscotti for this hungry lady 🙂
Thanks!
It’s my pleasure, Ren! I’m happy to help — and I’m thrilled to hear your biscotti still turned out! That’s the best kind of compliment if you’re considering making them again. 😉 Thank you for taking the time to let me know, and I hope you enjoy your next batch even more!
I’m honored that you’re trying my recipe, Michelle! That doesn’t seem right at all. Did you stir in the full amount of coconut sugar before adding the mixture of flour and cocoa powder? Or did you happen to substitute a different sweetener?
Hey Amy!
How can I substitute the flour almond flour or coconut flour in this recipe?
Or oat
I really appreciate your interest in my recipe, Lily! Coconut flour won’t work. It behaves really differently than any other flour, so I recommend only using it in my recipes that explicitly call for coconut flour. (You can find those here or by typing “coconut flour” into the search bar on my blog!)
I don’t always recommend substituting oat flour or almond flour in my recipes, but they should work okay in this particular one. If you use oat flour, it tends to be more absorbent than wheat-based flours, so you may need to add a bit of water (½ teaspoon at a time) if you can’t incorporate all of the dry ingredients or the cookie dough seems too dry. (The cookie dough should be a bit sticky!)
Almond flour is the opposite and is less absorbent than wheat-based flour, so you may need to add more to achieve the correct cookie dough consistency. I’d recommend adding 1 teaspoon at a time, if the dough seems too wet, until you achieve a slightly (but not overly!) sticky texture.
I’d love to hear what you think of these biscotti if you end up making them! 🙂
Thank you for your detailed explanation!Will definitely let you know after I try them
You’re welcome, Lily! I’m really looking forward to hearing what you think of these biscotti! 🙂