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4.94 from 44 votes (28 ratings without comment)

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88 Comments

  1. Kristen Stirzel says:

    Hi, I would love to make your rice flour cookies for my brother who has many food allergies. He’s unable to have corn products, do you have any ideas about a substitution for the cornstarch in the recipe? Many thanks!

    1. Hey Kristen. You can also use tapioca starch or omit the cornstarch all together

    2. Arrowroot is another sub…my hubby cant have corn, tapioca or potato….trying arrowroot now. 3:1 ratio of arrow to corn. My dough seems very sticky. Not sure how rollable it will be

      1. 5 stars
        Yummy!!!!! These are SO good!

  2. I followed the recipe exactly, but I found the dough was really hard to handle since it was crumbling apart (even though I added the 4 Tbsp of water). I baked them, but they cracked and don’t look smooth as the photo.

    1. Gloriana. Sounds like you needed a little more water. The dough is crumbly as you can see in the video. But it does work.

  3. Navneet Jodhka says:

    Hi I baked these rice flour sugar cookies. They are very gritty and have a raw taste though they are perfectly baked. I followed your recipe completely and even chilled the dough for a couple of hours. Can you please advise how to avoid making them gritty? The rice flour That I used is super fine. Thanks

    1. Navneet – sounds like the rice flour is thicker in consistency and the dough was perhaps not smooth? Maybe it needed more moisture to let the rice flour soften. I’ve never had this issue at all.

  4. Just tried these cookies. It was harder to work with at first but then I added more water and it became easier to roll. We loved these cookies. So tasty too. Thanks for sharing my daughter needs gluten-free so now I can give her some cookies

  5. Can this dough be stored in the freezer like your regular sugar cookie recipe? Thankyou

    1. Hey, Lu. I have never tired freezing this dough. So not sure. If you do try, please let us know as well.

  6. What temperature would you recommend? I can’t seem to find it in the recipe.

    1. Hey Paige, they bake at 170 C / 340 F. Sorry I missed that out. Just fixed it. Thanks for bringing it to my attention

    2. I don’t know what have I done wrong. I followed the instructions and measured the exact amount of things by scale not cups, as you always do. But the dough turned out to be crumbly and I just couldn’t roll it out flat. I cut it with the cookie cutters and whenever I picked the cookies up, they break up. Luckily, they stuck together after baking, but they tasted like flour, I could feel the flour in my mouth. They were really hard, like rocks. I tried not to overbake them by subtracting the baking time, and they were a bit chewier. Then I found out that the raw dough was the thing that made it chewy. Can you help me? I’m confused.???

      1. Hey Thu, Sounds like you dough was too crumbly – perhaps a few tablespoons of water might help bring it to rolling consistency. If you roll the cookies too thick they will not cook and stay raw in the middle. Having said that rice flour does have a crumbly texture not the same as regular flour cookies. I hope that makes sense.

  7. 5 stars
    I have never actually baked (or cooked!) with rice flour, but you are making me so curious. These cookies look so good!!

  8. 5 stars
    What an interesting cookie recipe using a rice flour. I must give this a try. Sounds so easy and looks absolutely delicious.

  9. 5 stars
    Wow, they look so light and delish. Perfect for this season. Thank you.

  10. I have never baked with rice flour but after reading this I want these cookies now. These sound amazing and I think this is going on my Christmas baking list. These sound easy ans look beautiful.