Do you ever have an idea that just comes to you and seems incredibly brilliant in theory, but ends up just being a huge fat mess?? Well these cookies would be one of those. Um sort of. I implemented some serious damage control and actually came out with a delicious low-cal cookie, but after some much needed trial and error first. Here allow me to recap.
I used No Pudge Fudge which is my absolute favorite! This brownie mix is seriously the best stuff ever created and was one of the first things I ever posted about on this little bloggy of mine. It’s fat-free, only 120 calories per serving and pretty much crack to your taste buds! So when my friend Nicole brought chocolate brownie crinkle cookies over to my house the other night, I KNEW I had to reinvent them using this mix!Brilliant right?
Well mine came out ginormous!! And kinda flat too. I was soo disappointed. Here I thought I had come up with the greatest chocolate crinkle cookie swap and all I got was a big chocolate mess in my kitchen and larger than life cookies……and then I tasted them.
They were pretty freakin’ good! They had a bit of a crunchy exterior, but were chewy on the inside which is how a crinkle cookie is supposed to be. The only thing I would change would be to make them smaller and to chill the dough a bit longer so that it doesn’t fall a part in my hands.
When I first made the dough, it was really thin like brownie mix so I added a bit of flour which thickened it up, but chilling the dough in the fridge for an hour or two really makes it much easier to roll into balls in the powdered sugar. Trust me, I tried to skip the whole chilling part because well, I’m impatient, and just ended up with a huge gooey chocolate mess.Epic fail.
With a spoon, combine your brownie mix, egg, flour and water in a medium-sized bowl until all ingredients are just combined; don’t over-mix. Cover your bowl with plastic wrap and chill in the fridge for about an hour.
Preheat your oven to 350 degrees F.
Using a mini ice cream scoop or a regular spoon, form about 24 1-inch balls by rolling them completely in the powdered sugar. *Hint: drop the mixture from the scoop into the powdered sugar before touching the balls with your hands. The powdered sugar helps hold the balls together and makes them much easier to form.
Place balls on a prepared cookie sheet and bake in oven for about 10 minutes. Enjoy!
Notes
Serving Size: 1 cookie • Calories: 70 • Fat: 0.2 g • Carbs: 17 g • Fiber: 0.5 g • Protein: 1.3 g • WW Points+: 2 pts
They certainly look good and we’d never know there was a mistake unless you told us. I have baking failures all the time but it’s usually texture, not taste. So, Brian and I end up standing over the baking pan, happily munching away on the “mistake” 🙂
I know a few girls who swear by that boxed mix. I should try it and yes chilling the dough is SUPER important in cookie making. It can be the difference in dough-soup and actual cookies that turn out, IMO 🙂
Oh my, Oliver is so adorable! And your cookies look great I don’t know what you are talking about! Oh ya, and as long as they taste great, how they look doesn’t even really matter, right? Haha
haha aww I’m obsessed with Oliver! He is the absolute cutest dog. Ever. Even cuter than your cookies, which look delicious 🙂 I always see that no-pudge brownie mix but I’ve never tried, I’ll have to pick up a box next time!
Patience is key to baking. I tend to have pretty big fails too when I am inpatient and skip certain steps. I like instant rewards though I am sure it will happen again soon.
I’ve seen that brownie mix, but never tried it. Now I have a good reason to get it! The cookies look wonderful. I love when you make something. you think it won’t turn out and then they do!
These sound awesome. Anytime I want to firm up a chocolate dough, I add some chocolate protein powder to the recipe. It tastes great, adds nutrients ans protein, and does a great job at firming up a batter. Maybe I should try to make these with some, you know, for experimental purposes, not to eat the batch or anything!
Mmm I love love No Pudge brownie mix. Even though half the time I’m not really trying to cut back on my brownies, I actually prefer this mix for when I am topping my brownies with anything. Maybe I’m strange.
Chocolate Crinkle Cookies are one of my favorite childhood recipes. Just thinking about them takes me back to being a kid at Christmas! Thanks for the skinny version that is suitable year round!
Ha! I’ve been there, girl. No pudge is seriously the greatest thing ever. Whoever invented it deserves a Nobel Prize. Also: there is no such thing as a bad cookie, these look yummy.
What a brilliant idea! And at only 70 calories per cookie? Count me in! It sucks when something doesn’t come out as expected, but hey, if they taste good then its not a fail!
These look DELICIOUS!! I made some nutella cookies for my Super Bowl party… Not skinny, but they were amazing. I think I’ll try these next time to cut the calories down 🙂
I love chocolate crinkle cookies! I have a recipe that is low in calories, but I haven’t made it in YEARS!! Might have to break it out again. Love the use of No Pudge though!
These are my absolute favorite cookie, and since they are so fatty and sugary in their original form, I never make them. I so totally going to use this recipe. OMGOSH. They look fabulous!!!
Oliver is the cutest! I love yorkies so much!! I am a little one of my own…he is so freaking smart! These cookies look great even if they did flatten out. Now I just need to keep an eye out for the brownie mix! 🙂
I’m a newbie at baking & I just baked my 1st ever choc chip cookies with a small oven! It was much fun…I didn’t know we can make cookies with brownie mix!! I wanna try this soon!! Thanks for sharing! 😀
No Pudge Fudge Brownies are so good… I can’t believe I never thought to use it for other purposes. Bookmarking these cookies to try ASAP! Brilliant idea. 🙂
Well they look just perfect to me. When I read your description of the crunchy outside and soft inside my mouth went into overdrive 🙂 Thanks for the tip on the brownie mix. Oliver is just precious!
In my experience making similar cookies if you roll them in the icing sugar twice you get that more pronounced white effect that was displayed in the first picture. Great idea since my original Martha Stewart recipe is way to high in calories to make more than once a year.
I just made these using the raspberry no pudge–added a pinch of baking powder and 0.5 T unsweetened applesauce because the batter seemed a bit dry…they turned out super moist and puffed up really well! Yum!!
I made these cookies today and they are really good. I even froze the dough and they turned out just like yours (flat and big) the shape doesn’t matter, they are amazing. I added some chocolate chips to them to make them a little more chocolatey. Sooo good! My whole family loves them!
These cookies are AMAZING!!! I made them with the Mint No Pudge Brownie mix. They are exactly like the full fat crinkles my mom used to make when I was a kid without the guilt!! Thanks for a great recipe 🙂
Wow! I’m eating one now, warm from the oven. I was just about to experiment making a cookie from the No-Pudge mix when I saw this post. Crinkles are a BRILLIANT idea because the powdered sugar help with the sticky batter! All the tips were perfect. I added a teaspoon each of vanila and almond extract and a 1/2 tsp of espresso powder like I do when I make the brownies. I also added some chocolate chips because I’d always wanted to try putting them in Crinkles. They’re not so low-fat anymore, but they are AMAZING. And still lower in fat than a regular cookie. THANKS!!!!!!!!! You saved me a lot of experimenting 🙂
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