Sugar-free Halloween brookies! Rich, fudgy dark chocolate brownie layered over sweet and salty peanut butter cookie dough. Very decadent, guilt-free. Or, at least crazy blood sugar spike free! If you feel like you're missing out because you can't (or shouldn't) eat Halloween candy this year, make these. You won't be disappointed. The top layer is dyed black and the bottom is dyed orange, to be festive for spooky season. Not Halloween? Not into food coloring? Just leave it out, then these are perfect for any time of the year.
If you add sprinkles on top, these have about 2 grams of sugar each. If you leave them off, or manage to find sugar-free sprinkles, each brookie has less than 1 gram of sugar. The only sugar-containing sweetener in these is a tiny bit of molasses in the cookie layer, to make them taste like they contain brown sugar. Blackstrap molasses has a pretty low glycemic index, so don't worry about it. I recommend using allulose for this recipe. I've found it causes less GI distress than erythritol or xylitol. I also think it tastes the most like sugar. But, really you can use whatever sugar-free sweetener you like that measures cup for cup like sugar.
These brookies are not particularly low-carb, but they do contain "slow" carbs. The recipe calls for chickpea flour and whole wheat flour, both of which have a good amount of fiber, especially chickpea flour. Chickpeas have a pretty low glycemic index and many health benefits.
https://wb.md/372FzwH You'd never know these had chickpea flour in them. These are delicious, they don't taste weird or healthy! The bottom line is, these taste like a normal dessert but they won't spike your blood sugar as much as a regular brownie. Don't eat the raw dough or batter though, as tempting as it may be. Raw chickpea flour has a nasty, bitter flavor.
This recipe makes 24 sugar-free Halloween brookies, so it's a great recipe for entertaining or bringing to a party.