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Pamela’s Chocolate Chunk Cookie Mix

Pamelas Chocolate Chunk Cookie Mix

The front of the bag says “Fast, Easy, Delicious”, and I found that to be true.  To make these cookies, just add 1 stick of butter or margarine, 1 egg, and 1 tablespoon of water. Beat the butter or margarine, then add the egg, water and contents of the bag. Mix one minute. Drop by tablespoons onto a greased cookie sheet, and bake @ 350 degrees for 10-12 minutes.

When you take them out of the oven, let them cool for a couple of minutes on the cookie sheet, then remove to a paper towel lined plate.

Pamelas cookie mix

The cookies have big chunks of chocolate in them, and cook up just right with a little crunch, a little chewiness. They taste AWESOME!  Some of the best gluten free chocolate chip cookies I have ever had.


Suggestions on the side of the bag are for Peanut Butter Chunk Cookies–add 1/2 cup peanut butter and 1/4 cup water, mix as above, and bake.  They also suggest making crumbs out of the Chocolate Chunk Cookies to use as a crust for a chocolate cream pie or a cheesecake. Mmmm, sounds very good to me!

Pamelas Cookie Mix

Ingredients: Organic chocolate chunks (organic natural evaporated cane sugar, organic chocolate liquor, organic cocoa butter, non-GMO soy lecithin/emulsifier, organic vanilla.  Chunks may contain traces of milk protein due to manufacturing equipment.); Organic natural cane sugar, brown rice flour, brown sugar, white rice flour, tapioca starch, sweet rice flour, grainless and aluminum-free baking powder (sodium bicarbonate, sodium acid pyrophosphate, potato starch), sea salt, organic cocoa power (processed with alkali), gluten-free natural flavor (contains corn derivative), xanthan gum, baking soda.

Fabgrandpa, who does not have to eat gluten free, LOVED these cookies. I will be buying more–I’m gonna make a pie crust next time!.

Pamela’s Gluten Free Bread Mix

I have used Pamela’s Gluten Free Bread Mix before for making bread, in loaves. It tastes good and is an unusually soft bread to be gluten free. But today, I was missing bagels, so I thought I would give the recipe on the side of the bag a try.


I have never made bagels before, but I love to eat them. Since I live in an RV fulltime, with a tiny oven that has a less than accurate thermostat, and because I live at almost 9,000 feet elevation, I knew it would be a challenge.

To make bagels with this mix, add the contents of the bag, 1 1/3 cup water, and 1/4 cup oil to a bowl. Mix at high speed for three minutes.

Drop 1/2 cup portions of the dough onto a greased baking pan. I always line my pan with aluminum foil to make clean up easier.


With greased hands, form each dough portion into a rounded, flat shape. Then let the dough rest for one hour.

At the end of the hour, drop each dough shape into boiling water, and let it boil for 25 seconds. Remove from water with a slotted spoon, and place back on the greased pan.


The package says to bake in a 400 degree oven for 20-25 minutes. I had to bake mine for 32 minutes. I turned them over halfway through that time, so they wouldn’t burn as much. (It’s my oven, not the mix, at fault here.)


The finished product was crispy on the outside, and soft and chewy, with a good yeasty flavor, on the inside. I ate one hot from the oven, and decided they would be best toasted first.

These bagels are pretty good for my first attempt at making bagels. I like that the process was easy, and the finished product tasted pretty good. I’ll be making some more of these as soon as I get another bag of the mix.