Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (2024)

· 26 Comments

Jump to Recipe

This gluten-free blondies recipe is made with gluten-free flour, brown sugar, butter, and vanilla. Simply make the batter, spread it into a pan, and bake. And since it’s so easy to make, it’s a great recipe for beginner gluten-free bakers.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (1)

What are Blondies Anyway?

Most folks think of blondies as a “vanilla brownie” or a “blonde brownie”. Since it’s impossible for me to think about brownies without chocolate, that definition never worked for me. Instead, I think of them as a cross between a chocolate chip cookie bar and brown sugar fudge.

If you want something a little less rich and buttery, try my gluten-free chocolate chip bars. The flavors are similar but the texture is more cake-like.

Gluten-Free Blondies: Ingredients and Substitutions.

Let’s take a look at what you’ll need to make a pan of these blondies. The full recipe with amounts is listed below.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (2)
  • Gluten-Free Flour. The soft and delicate texture for these bars comes from a gluten-free flour blend. I tested the recipe with Bob’s Red Mill’s 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking flour. It contains xanthan gum. If your flour blend doesn’t add ¼ teaspoon.
  • Brown Sugar. For a caramel-like flavor, use light brown sugar. For pronounced molasses flavor, use dark brown sugar.(Blondies pictured were made with light brown sugar.)
  • Butter. Melted butter ensures the blondes stay thick and dense. It also adds a lot of flavor.
  • Eggs. Provide structure, richness, and flavor. Use large eggs for the best results.
  • Vanilla Extract. Three things make blondies taste like blondies: brown sugar, butter, and vanilla. While you can omit vanilla extract in many baking recipes, I suggest including it in these blondies for the best flavor.
  • Baking Powder. A teaspoon of baking powder gives the bars a little lift without making them too cakey.
  • Salt. Since blondies are sweet, salt helps balance the flavor. For the batter, use table (fine) salt. If you want to sprinkle salt over the top, use Kosher or a flaky-style salt.
  • Nuts. (optional) Some folks wouldn’t dream of making blondies without nuts. And some folks wouldn’t dream of including them. I’ll leave it up to you! Add up to one cup of toasted, chopped pecans or walnuts.
  • Chocolate Chips. (optional) Add up to one cup of dark, milk, or white chocolate chips. If you want to use butterscotch chips, those are also great in blondies. As always make sure any baking chip you use is gluten-free.

Dairy-Free Ingredient Swaps.

  • Butter. Replace the butter with your favorite dairy-free butter spread. I don’t recommend shortening or oil because they don’t add flavor to the bars.
  • Chocolate Chips. Use dairy-free chocolate chips. As with all ingredients, check the label to ensure the chips are gluten-free and dairy-free.

How to Make Perfect Gluten-Free Blondies.

This is a simple, one-bowl recipe—making it great for beginner gluten-free bakers.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (3)

Mix the brown sugar with the melted butter and eggs. First, combine the brown sugar and melted butter. Whisk until it’s smooth. Then add the eggs and vanilla extract. Blend until it’s creamy and looks like a thick caramel sauce.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (4)

Add the gluten-free flour. Stir in the gluten-free flour, baking powder, and salt. You can mix the batter with a wooden spoon, sturdy flexible spatula, or an electric mixer. Whichever you prefer.

Stir in the chocolate chips and nuts. If you’re adding anything to these blondies, stir them in now.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (5)

Spread into a pan. Line a 8×8-inch square pan with parchment paper. To keep them from sticking, lightly spray the pan with nonstick cooking spray.

Spread the batter into the pan.

Cool the bars in the pan. Let these bars cool right in the pan. Then cut into squares.

How to Store and Freeze.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (6)

Gluten-free blondies keep at room temperature for about three days. To store them, let them cool. Then place them in an airtight container or place them on a plate and cover with plastic wrap.

To freeze them, bake as directed. Let the blondies cool and cut into squares. Place them into a freezer container. If you need to layer the bars, place a piece of waxed paper or parchment paper between the layers. Freeze for up to two months. Thaw the blondies at room temperature.

The recipe was originally posted in May 2018. Photos and information updated March 2024.

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (7)

4.8 from 10 votes

Print

Gluten-Free Blondies

One-bowl gluten-free blondie recipe. These are buttery, soft, and irresistible thanks to the brown sugar and butter.

CourseDessert

Prep Time 10 minutes

Cook Time 35 minutes

Total Time 45 minutes

Servings 18 bars

Calories 200 kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 ½sticks butter, melted(6 ounces; 170 grams)
  • 1 ¼cups packed brown sugar, light or dark, see note(9 ounces; 255 grams)
  • 2largeeggs
  • 1teaspoonvanilla extract
  • 1 ½cups gluten-free flour. (Bob's Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-free Baking Flour recommended.)(7½ ounces; 212 grams)
  • 1teaspoonbaking powder
  • ½teaspoonsalt
  • 1cupchocolate chips, optional (dark, milk, or white)(6 ounces; 170 grams)
  • 1cupchopped pecans or walnuts, optional (3½ ounces; 100 grams)

Instructions

  1. Preheat oven to 350°F. Line a 8×8-inch square pan with parchment paper. Let the parchment overhang the pan by about two inches. Lightly grease the pan with nonstick cooking spray.

  2. Stir together the brown sugar and melted butter until smooth in a large bowl. Add the eggs and vanilla extract. Mix until creamy and smooth.

  3. Add gluten-free flour, baking powder, and salt. Mix until the batter is thick and smooth. If using chocolate chips and/or nuts, stir them in now.

    Spread the batter into the prepared pan.

  4. Bake until the bars are golden brown and the top is shiny and slightly cracked, about 30 minutes.

  5. Let the blondies cool in the pan. They might sink in the middle as they cool.

    When cool, lift the bars out of the pan with the overhanging parchment paper. Cut into squares with a sharp knife. When cut, the bars might look underbaked. That's normal. They are very moist and buttery.

  6. Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to four days. Freeze cooled bars in a freezer container for up to two months. If you need to stack the bars, place a piece of parchmene paper or waxed paper between the layers.

Recipe Notes

Gluten-Free Flour. Use a gluten-free flour blend that contains xanthan gum. If yours doesn’t whisk ¼ teaspoon into the flour before using.

Brown Sugar. The terrific butterscotch flavor comes from brown sugar. For a caramel-like flavor, use light brown sugar. For pronounced molasses flour, use dark brown sugar.

Butter.Cool the butter slightly before adding it to the brown sugar.

Nuts. Toast nuts on a baking sheet in a 350°F oven for about 10 minutes. Remove nuts from the oven when they are golden brown and aromatic. Allow nuts to cool before chopping.

Dairy-Free Variation. For dairy-free bars, use a dairy-free butter and dairy-free chocolate chips.

Reader Interactions

Comments

  1. Julie says

    Is this baking soda or baking powder? The ingredients list calls for powder, but the directions call for soda.

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Powder. I’ve updated the recipe. Sorry about the confusion. 🙂

      Reply

  2. Elise says

    Is this recipe supposed to use baking powder or baking soda? The ingredient list conflicts with the instructions. Thanks!

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Baking powder! Sorry for the confusion. I’ve updated the recipe. 🙂

      Reply

  3. Ginger says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (8)
    Love, love, love this recipe without anything added to it!

    Reply

  4. Rob says

    Self-raising or plain flour?
    Thanks

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Regular gluten-free flour.

      Reply

  5. Robert Chamberlin says

    What do you mean by “regular” GF flour? Are you using a blend like King Arthur??

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Hi Robert,
      My comment about “regular” gluten-free flour was in response to a question about self-rising or plain gluten-free flour. I tested the recipe with Bob’s Red Mill 1:1 Gluten-Free Baking flour. Using a different gluten-free flour blend, like King Arthur’s, should work in this recipe but the texture of the blondies might be a little different. Hope this helps!

      Reply

      • Jules says

        Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (9)
        I made these with King Arthur’s GF Measure for Measure Flour and they were delicious. Moist, chewy, cakey texture – what’s not to like!

        Reply

  6. Celeste says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (10)
    The whole family enjoyed them. I did not have brown sugar but used 3/4 cane sugar and 1/3 cup maple syrup. Added some chick chips to half of it for those who can eat chocolate. All had seconds:)
    Thanks

    Reply

  7. Melonie Sullivan says

    Thanks for this recipe. I made with King Arthur GF flour. They were “softer” than those I’ve made in the past with regular flour; not as dense or chewy. I wonder if banging the pan partway through would solve that issue. Anyway, cooking from what I had on hand, I used light brown sugar, browned the butter, added toasted unsweetened coconut flakes. chopped cashews, and Maldon salt on top. Pretty tasty!

    Reply

  8. hazel says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (11)
    made with carmel chunks instead of chocolate.Rich and dense.

    Reply

  9. Roseanne says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (12)
    This recipe works well with Better Batter’s all purpose gluten-free flour (cup for cup). Thank you!

    Reply

  10. Pamela says

    At 4,000 ft. above sea level, this took 55 minutes to bake! Patience prevailed, and it was DELICIOUS! The lady who wrote this knew what she was talking about, and she achieved gluten-free blondie excellence!

    Reply

    • Alyssa says

      Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (13)
      Love this recipe, no one would guess it’s GF! My only issue is the baking time. I always feel like mine are underdone even when I add cook time. Are they supposed to be quite gooey? I just don’t want to make anyone sick!

      Reply

  11. Vicki says

    Can u freeze these?

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Yes. Let them cool first and then wrap. They keep for about two months.

      Reply

  12. Karen says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (14)
    What a great recipe! These taste delicious and have a wonderful texture. I wanted to make a 13×9 pan, but didn’t want them to be too thin. I made 1 1/2 the recipe and it resulted in a perfectly thick 13×9 pan of sweet, buttery goodness!

    Reply

  13. Barbara says

    Tried making them this morning. Rather disappointing. Color darker than photo. They stuck to pan even with parchment, fell apart when I tried to remove them. Taste good but mostly crumbs. ?
    Only difference was I used Bobs Red Mill gf 1 for 1 flour.

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      This is an odd result. The recipe was created with Bob’s 1:1 Gluten-Free Flour, which it sounds like you used? It’s hard to get anything to stick to parchment paper. But you’re saying that they stuck and then crumbled? (Just trying to troubleshoot.)

      I’m not sure what would have caused them to stick. As for crumbling, I have two guesses. Something might have been mismeasured or your oven temp might be off.

      Reply

  14. Betsy says

    Followed the recipe exactly except 1 cup sugar instead of 1.25. Quite tasty but it came out as cake not gooey blondies. Next time I will cut the flour down quite a bit bc I prefer the gooey kind and see if it works

    Reply

    • Elizabeth says

      Reducing the sugar would have changed the texture a bit to cakey. Glad you liked the flavor!

      Reply

  15. Marilyn Sturgeon says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (15)
    This is delicious & will be on my repeat baking for my church family!
    Thank you..

    Reply

  16. Brenda H says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (16)
    These are hands down the best blonde brownies that I have made since going gluten free. Absolutely mouth watering! 🤤 Thank you so much for the recipe!!

    Reply

  17. Lauren says

    Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (17)
    Made these tonight and they were SO good!! We added white chocolate chips and caramel chips and they were amazing!

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Gluten-Free Blondies Recipe | GlutenFreeBaking.com (2024)

FAQs

Does gluten free flour need extra baking powder? ›

2 teaspoons of baking powder per cup of gluten-free flour is necessary to ensure proper leavening. Baking soda and buttermilk can be used to leaven instead of baking powder, but 1-1/8 teaspoon of cream of tartar should be added for each 1/2 teaspoon baking soda used.

Why are my blondies falling apart? ›

If your blondies are coming apart in your hands, it's likely for one of three reasons: You didn't aerate the eggs enough. The leading cause of raw, sunken blondies is not whipping enough air into the batter.

Why are my blondies not cooked in the middle? ›

We want to make sure the blondies cook through completely but remain soft and gooey in the center. Avoid glass or ceramic pans as those materials take longer to heat up and cook. This often leads to the center being undercooked by the time the edges start to dry out.

Why are my blondies not gooey? ›

If they're not gooey, they were over-baked. Remember that we're letting them cool in the pan completely, so they will continue to cook out of the oven. Remove them from the oven when moist crumbs are still clinging to a toothpick. Why are my blondies cakey?

What is the trick to baking with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-free flours often contain fine starches, so they absorb more liquid than conventional flour. To address this, gluten-free recipes usually call for more liquid and produce looser batters. They may also call for a larger quantity of leavening, like baking powder, to help add volume and lighten the texture.

How much gluten-free flour is equal to all-purpose flour? ›

Measurements: All-in-one gluten-free blends are usually a one-to-one swap with regular flour, allowing you to substitute one cup of all-purpose flour with one cup of gluten-free flour.

Is baking soda or baking powder better for blondies? ›

However, if you prefer blondies with a slight rise, adding 1/2 teaspoon of baking powder will yield 1-inch-thick blondies with a uniform texture. Using baking soda is not recommended for this recipe, as it can cause the blondies to rise unevenly, resulting in tall, chewy edges and a thinner, fudgier center.

How do you keep blondies moist? ›

Granulated sugar - simple fine white granulated sugar keeps these brownies moist. If you reduce the sugar they will not be as fudgy.

Can I put undercooked blondies back in the oven? ›

If your baked goods are undercooked:
  1. If they are only slightly undercooked, you can try returning them to the oven and baking for a few more minutes.
  2. If they are significantly undercooked, you may need to extend the baking time significantly.
Sep 14, 2023

How do you know when a blondie is ready? ›

Brownies and Blondies

The toothpick test should produce a few errant crumbs stuck to the tester but not a smooth smear of batter. The edges will feel firm to the touch (not just set but actually kind of firm and crispy) and the surface will feel soft when pressed but will not spring back.

How do you know when blondies are done? ›

For a chewy, gooey-centered blondie, look for golden edges and a just-set center. It shouldn't jiggle but it may look a bit underdone and feel soft when you press it. That's perfect as the blondie will continue to cook in the pan after you take them out of the oven.

How do you rescue undercooked blondies? ›

My cookies were underdone after a bake of 7 minutes. To save these cookies, I let them completely cool first. Then continue baking them at 180 degrees C for 5 minutes. After which, turn off the oven, and again leave them in and let the trapped heat continue cooking them.

Can I eat undercooked blondies? ›

In the UK, eggs with the Red Lion seal of approval are safe to eat raw or undercooked. So you can slightly undercook blondies and brownies if you prefer a fudgier texture. However, if you don't cook them enough, you just have a tray of uncooked batter.

Is a blondie just a brownie without cocoa powder? ›

Blondies use vanilla extract and brown sugar instead of cocoa powder to get their flavor, while brownies use chocolate and cocoa. Plus, brownies usually include white sugar instead of brown sugar. So, now that you know the differences between brownies and blondies, it's time to try your hand at your own brownie recipe.

Why are my blondies spongy? ›

Unfortunately if the brownies have turned spongy then they have been overbaked. For fan ovens it is usual to turn the oven temperature down by 20C (50F) but fan ovens can still cook slightly more quickly than regular ones even at lower temperatures so the cooking time can be shorter.

Do you bake differently with gluten-free flour? ›

Because gluten-free flours provide less structure than all-purpose, the batter or dough you make with them may require more beating than that which you are accustomed. The extra beating will provide the structure that the flour itself cannot.

How much baking powder to gluten-free plain flour? ›

Here are the proportions to use: 1 cup gfJules Gluten Free All Purpose Flour. 1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder (not baking soda)

Is it harder to bake with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-free baking is a lot harder than traditional baking because gluten protein is what gives baked goods their structure.

Can you just replace all purpose flour with gluten-free flour? ›

Gluten-Free Bread Flour can be swapped 1:1 for all-purpose flour and bread flour by both weight and volume.

References

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Duncan Muller

Last Updated:

Views: 6287

Rating: 4.9 / 5 (59 voted)

Reviews: 82% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Duncan Muller

Birthday: 1997-01-13

Address: Apt. 505 914 Phillip Crossroad, O'Konborough, NV 62411

Phone: +8555305800947

Job: Construction Agent

Hobby: Shopping, Table tennis, Snowboarding, Rafting, Motor sports, Homebrewing, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Duncan Muller, I am a enchanting, good, gentle, modern, tasty, nice, elegant person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.