Thursday, 20 December 2012
Sweet Smoky Mapley (GF/Vegan) Bacony Bread...
OK,
This is now my favourite bread. Ever.
I am so proud because I MADE IT.
It tastes like sweet bacon, I think...it has layered flavours of maple and smoke and salt and aaaaaahhhhhhh. I could BATHE in this bread, it is so tasty.
Not only that, but it's really EASY! So easy my 2 year old helped me make it. He did half the work, really, and had a ton of fun.
OK so, preheat your oven to 200c. Right?
Now. In a biig ole bowl, like, biggest one you've got, stir together:
2 Cups All-purpose GF flour with xanthan (I mix my own out of teff, arrowroot, ect)
+ 2 Tablespoons Arrowroot
+ 1 HEAPING teaspoon of potato or tapioca starch - real gummy stuff - this is to act as an egg replacer.
A pinch of extra xanthan...just a pinch
1 teaspoon of SMOKED salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
& 1 teaspoon of cream of tartar (you can sub with another tsp of baking soda if you want, it might just rise a little differently.)
Aaaannd 1/8 teaspoon or so of cumin. Or a bit more if you want a stronger "bacon" taste.
Optional: 1/8 tsp Pure Vitamin C for leavening.
Now add:
3/4 Cups of either yoghurt or thick nondairy milk.
and, 1/4 Cup maple syrup.
Work it in with your hands. Knead the dough until thoroughly incorporated and form an oval loaf. Place on a lined bread pan and cut several deep indents in the bread to allow for even baking (about 3/4 deep).
Pop this guy in the oven and bake for 27-30 minutes.
Taa-daaaah!
Labels:
bacon,
bread,
dairy free,
egg-free,
GFCF,
GFCFSF,
GFDF,
gluten free,
maple,
smoky,
sugar free,
teff,
vegan,
wheat-free
Wednesday, 5 December 2012
White Vanilla Chocolate & Butterless Butter Pecan Truffles
I was so excited when, in the wee hours of Pinteresting (sigh), I had found a recipe for dairy-free white chocolate. How COOL. It looked so easy, too, that I could sub the sugar for something like coconut crystals or lucuma powder and everything would be hunky-dory.
Wrong.
Ehm.
Well, I don't want to insult the author of the recipe, because their chocolate looked absolutely beautiful. Somehow; though, my following of their recipe did not come out very beautiful at all. Nor did it taste very nice, or much at all like white chocolate. It just tasted kind of like a gritty, hard vanillary lump of sweet. Which really isn't terrible, it's kind of nice as a candy, but it's NOT white chocolate. I need smooooooth.
I took a break and made a cute little gingerbread tree.
Aww!
Then I spent most of the day (aside from caring for my son & housework)
AND THEN I MADE WHITE CHOCOLATE AND IT WAS DIVINE.
So I did various other stuff, like working on my son's christmas presents...
BUT THEN THE NEXT DAY
I remelted that chocolate and grabbed the huge loaf of caramel in my fridge that I made in October (the stuff keeps for A.G.E.S. and can be used in a CORNUCOPIA of sweets. It's one of the most ingenious things I've made.) and chopped a gob out of it to shape into little balls with some peanut butter that I had sweetened with date syrup and frozen. Oh you better believe, I got cheeky and double dipped those guys in that white chocolate. Yep. White-chocolate snicker ball bombs, and I took those gingerbread trees and I dipped them in white chocolate too.
AND!
I felt a great need to create something elaborate, something...something meaningful...to recreate something special for a few of the people on my list who probably hadn't tasted it for many years.
So; I laboured intensively, and thus was borne....
BUTTERLESS BUTTER PECAN TRUFFLES, DOUBLE DIPPED IN DAIRY-FREE RAW WHITE CHOCOLATE.
You'll easily have quite a bit of vanilla-chocolate left over after dipping/double dipping your butterless butter-pecan truffles, so, do what you will with that knowledge. Leave me a comment and tell me how you like it!
Butterless butter-pecan ganache
1/2 to 2/3 Cup Coconut palm sugar (depending on how sweet you want these-I used 1/2 cup and I think it's perfect, but a bit less sweet than your typical truffle.)
1/2 Cup Non-dairy cream (I use Ecomil's almond cream. You may use something else, but it may change the flavour for all I know.)
1/4 tsp Salt
110g Chocolate (one batch of the aforementioned chocolate works *perfectly*.)
Chopped pecans-as much as desired (I used about 1/3 pecan-to-chocolate ratio)
1 tsp Arrowroot
1/4 tsp additional lecithin
Bring coconut sugar & nondairy cream to a light boil in a pan and add salt, whisking continuously. Turn off heat and add chocolate, and lecithin. Whisk for several minutes and transfer to a bowl. Refrigerate and use a half-teaspoon measuring spoon to shape truffle balls which when thoroughly chilled, you can then dip in another batch of chocolate to coat.
White vanilla chocolate:
Approx. 100g raw cacao butter
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
2/3 cup lucuma powder (I don't recommend subbing. This lends to it's colour, texture, and flavour which is all important for a recreation.)
1/2 tsp arrowroot powder OR FINELY powdered almond flour OR powdered rice milk
1/4 tsp lecithin
Pinch vanilla powder (optional, but recommended!)
Slow-melt the cacao butter on the lowest heat possible in a metal pot. The lower the temperature, the better as your chocolate will emulsify better. Add the lecithin and vanilla halfway into melting and stir continuously. When the cacao has fully melted, add the arrowroot and whisk. Add lucuma and vanilla and whisk continuously for several minutes and remove from heat. Re-melt on very very low heat as/and when needed, or pour into moulds to be eaten on it's own (it's delicious on it's own!!)
You'll easily have quite a bit of vanilla-chocolate left over after dipping/double dipping your butterless butter-pecan truffles, so, do what you will with that knowledge. Leave me a comment and tell me how you like it!
Raw eggless eggnog cream cacao candy
I made candy. Lots of candy, for the holidays. Phew. It was far too much work, and I tested many mixtures of ingredients for several days straight, but I found a few gems for recipes that were too good not to save. I like them so much in fact, that I might be making a couple of these next year.
The following recipe is one I am extremely thrilled with. Despite not containing eggs, after setting it quite literally tastes as the nogg I love so dearly from younger years before I became aware of my food sensitivities. The Christmassy creamy flavours of eggnogg, coupled with the texture of chocolate-it's a marriage made in heaven!
As I have been cooking for many years, I often do not use measuring utensils; this is a close approximation and I believe for any recipe to have good results a degree of intuition and care is required. I would also like to note here that there are hundreds of variations to eggnogg from the type of alcohol used to the ratio of spices; and this is a recreation of the eggnogg that I remember so fondly in my own childhood. So feel free to taste as you go along (remember, since this is raw it is slow melting-it shouldn't be too hot to taste test).
Raw eggless eggnog cream cacao candy
110-120 grams cacao butter
2-3 tablespoons grassfed, salted butter
4-5 teaspoons strong vanilla extract (a highly alcoholic, flavourful vanilla is preferable-just add a little more if you only have a milder one at hand)
1 teaspoon almond cream (I use Ecomil's-you may sub regular cream or another nondairy if you prefer, though the taste may vary.)
1 slightly heaped teaspoon arrowroot powder
1/3 teaspoon lecithin (this is to keep the chocolate together, basically.)
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 tsp ground clove
1/8 tsp cinnamon
About 2/3 Cups Lucuma powder (do not sub! This is essential as it is a thickening agent as well as a sweetener!)
If you have a sensitive gas hob like I do-which is ideal for this recipe-ignite a fire and turn it to the lowest possible flame. Ideally it will be on a setting so low that when you dip your finger in the melted chocolate, you won't be burnt. If you do not have such a hob; there are methods of melting raw cacao, one I believe is to have it in a bowl inside of another bowl of very hot water. One should probably research this, as I am not an expert, since I have a fantastic hob on my oven. Place a large pot on the hob and melt together the cacao and butter, stirring all the time. When they have thoroughly melted; one by one, in order, add the other ingredients in very slowly, stirring as you go along. When everything tastes right, turn off the heat and whisk vigorously for about 5 minutes. Pour into moulds or, like me, a pan lined with baking paper and sprinkled with additional nutmeg for decor. If desired, add chopped pecans/walnuts, chocolate chips, whatever to the candy. Leave covered at room temperature to set overnight. With a very very thin knife, slice into pieces-or break it up with your hands-or just have a gigantic bar of chocolate, ALL TO YOURSELF, bwahahahaha. The photo below is my finished product, broken up, which has plain bits, chocolate chunk bits, and pecan-chunk bits.
Enjoy. Happy Holidays.
Stay tuned, I have a completely dairy-free butter pecan truffle recipe coming soon.
xo
The following recipe is one I am extremely thrilled with. Despite not containing eggs, after setting it quite literally tastes as the nogg I love so dearly from younger years before I became aware of my food sensitivities. The Christmassy creamy flavours of eggnogg, coupled with the texture of chocolate-it's a marriage made in heaven!
As I have been cooking for many years, I often do not use measuring utensils; this is a close approximation and I believe for any recipe to have good results a degree of intuition and care is required. I would also like to note here that there are hundreds of variations to eggnogg from the type of alcohol used to the ratio of spices; and this is a recreation of the eggnogg that I remember so fondly in my own childhood. So feel free to taste as you go along (remember, since this is raw it is slow melting-it shouldn't be too hot to taste test).
Raw eggless eggnog cream cacao candy
110-120 grams cacao butter
2-3 tablespoons grassfed, salted butter
4-5 teaspoons strong vanilla extract (a highly alcoholic, flavourful vanilla is preferable-just add a little more if you only have a milder one at hand)
1 teaspoon almond cream (I use Ecomil's-you may sub regular cream or another nondairy if you prefer, though the taste may vary.)
1 slightly heaped teaspoon arrowroot powder
1/3 teaspoon lecithin (this is to keep the chocolate together, basically.)
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 tsp ground clove
1/8 tsp cinnamon
About 2/3 Cups Lucuma powder (do not sub! This is essential as it is a thickening agent as well as a sweetener!)
If you have a sensitive gas hob like I do-which is ideal for this recipe-ignite a fire and turn it to the lowest possible flame. Ideally it will be on a setting so low that when you dip your finger in the melted chocolate, you won't be burnt. If you do not have such a hob; there are methods of melting raw cacao, one I believe is to have it in a bowl inside of another bowl of very hot water. One should probably research this, as I am not an expert, since I have a fantastic hob on my oven. Place a large pot on the hob and melt together the cacao and butter, stirring all the time. When they have thoroughly melted; one by one, in order, add the other ingredients in very slowly, stirring as you go along. When everything tastes right, turn off the heat and whisk vigorously for about 5 minutes. Pour into moulds or, like me, a pan lined with baking paper and sprinkled with additional nutmeg for decor. If desired, add chopped pecans/walnuts, chocolate chips, whatever to the candy. Leave covered at room temperature to set overnight. With a very very thin knife, slice into pieces-or break it up with your hands-or just have a gigantic bar of chocolate, ALL TO YOURSELF, bwahahahaha. The photo below is my finished product, broken up, which has plain bits, chocolate chunk bits, and pecan-chunk bits.
Enjoy. Happy Holidays.
Stay tuned, I have a completely dairy-free butter pecan truffle recipe coming soon.
xo
Labels:
cacao,
christmas,
creamy,
egg-free,
eggnog,
GF,
holiday,
lucuma,
nutmeg,
raw,
spice,
sugar free,
wheat-free,
white chocolate,
yeast free
Monday, 3 December 2012
Living with coeliac sprue, introduction, and BREAD. Real bread. Without gluten or wheat or any of that junk.
Living life without gluten isn't easy. It's not so bad if you're battling a mild intolerance and living a low-gluten diet, eating commercial gluten-free products and seeing great results. For those of us with coeliacs disease and wheat allergy, however, it's a whole different ball game. Gluten is lurking everywhere: contaminating just about every grain, legume and seed; lunch meats, bulk bins, waxed fruits, canned vegetables, margarine, some dairy products, and a number of other things. Sneakily enough, manufacturers use a cornucopia of names to mask wheat, rye, barley and oats and their derivitives-for who knows why-and the seemingly safest of things i.e. "vegetable protein" and "dextrose" leave you violently ill. To a degree, some trace ingestion is utterly unavoidable unless you are only eating home-grown produce and perhaps even never leaving your house (and then, you risk the all-too-common problem among coeliacs of vitamin deficiencies and depression, ect) it's inevitable, but we all try the best we can. The bane of our existance is, the more we eliminate these foods, the more sensitive we become, your body tells you in the rudest of manners, ahem, when you've ingested something and there's no turning back, you're certain now you'd become frighteningly ill, if you increase your ingestion. Not to mention the intestinal damage, the risk of cancer, crohn's, malabsorption, well. I don't need to go on. You already know this story! It's like living in the most ridiculous paradox! So you start to seem like a conspiracy theorist, because gluten is lurking everywhere, and you have to be so careful, and make all of your own foods. Restaurants? Forget about it. You probably haven't had a good loaf of bread in years, I'll bet. Well, don't despair too, TOO much my friends.
I am DEDICATED to creating recipes that can be made with ingredients from dedicated gluten-free producers/manufacturers here in Europe (and with the broader variety available to you in the States, I'm reasonably certain you can ascertain these things from dedicated facilities too!) I am dedicated to creating these recipes to taste as closely as possible as the real thing. So that I don't miss out. So that my son doesn't miss out. Either on nutrition or on those amazing textures and flavours that we miss so much from gluten and wheat.
I also have people in my life with various other allergies, including some living under my own roof. Many of my recipes will cater to those with all sorts of allergies. Mostly, I will post baked goods and candy recipes, as these are my specialties. My kitchen is a whole-foods kitchen, with no sugar, gluten, corn, chemicals or yeast. No chillies either, sadly, as my son is strongly allergic. Booooo.
I'm a busy mother, and I have a lot of things to do; but baking and candymaking is one of the greatest passions of my life. Got something you're hungry for, and want me to recreate it for you without your allergen(s)? Drop me a line. Let's chat.
I hope you enjoy my natural, whole-foods, allergen-friendly recipes. All I ask is that, if shared, my recipes are sourced because I work very hard to create these with love and they are all originals from my kitchen using the knowledge from my background studies in Culinary Arts, a lot of time spent researching, many experiments, and a lot of devotion. Also, I'd LOVE to know what you think! Honest feedback-seriously.
Now. Enjoy some bread. Rustic, crusty-but-fluffy-on-the-inside granary baked type of bread. You'll forget it doesn't have gluten.
Yardana's Rustic Granary-Style Soda Bread recipe
1 1/2 Cups all-purpose GF flour of choice*
1/2 Cup Buckwheat Flour, plus extra for dusting
1 Egg
1 Cup live active yoghurt
2 Tbsp Arrowroot powder
1 Tablespoon softened butter
2 teaspoons baking soda
1 tsp raw ACV
1 tsp lemon juice
1 tsp salt
Preheat oven to 200 degrees centigrade. In a large bowl, beat the egg. In a small, seperate bowl, stir together the yoghurt, ACV, lemon, salt and baking soda. Set aside for a moment. Measure your flours and butter and add them to the bowl with the egg. Now stir in the yoghurt culture and work the dough with your hands for several minutes, until thoroughly incorporated. Shape your dough and allow it to rise for about 5 minutes, but unlike yeast dough you will want to put it in the oven before much time has passed. Before putting it in the oven, dust your pan with flour so that it does not stick and with a knife, make several deep slots (3/4 deep-ish) or a large cross if you are making a round loaf-this is to not essential but if you do not do so, the crust of your bread will crack as it rises and not look as pretty as it otherwise could be :) You may dust the top of your bread with flour or sprinkle seeds on top if you like to make it look fancy if you want but not essential at all. Place your loaf in the oven and allow to cook for approximately 35-40 minutes, depending on your altitude.
*if using self-rising GF flour, you may need to adjust the quantity of baking soda that you add to the recipe.
I typically mix my own flour from Teff, Arrowroot, ect.To make the honey-rosemary bread in the background of this blog, use intuition plus approximately:
3 Cups all-purpose GF flour of choice
1 Egg
1 1/2 Cups yoghurt
1/4 Cup Honey
1 1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp cream of tartar
1 tsp ACV
1/2 tsp rosemary, more or less to taste.
Water, added gradually as needed, plus a bit more to smooth the top of the loaf before putting in the oven (optional)
Follow the same procedures as the recipe above to make your bread.
Labels:
bread,
celiac,
coeliac,
coeliac sprue,
flour,
GF,
GFSF,
gluten,
gluten free,
recipe,
soy free,
sugar free,
teff,
wheat,
wheat-free,
yeast free
Sunday, 2 December 2012
Bagels (GF, SF with subs listed to be easily made DF/CF/Egg-Free)
2 Cups all purpose GF flour blend of choice
1/4 Cup Rice flour
1 1/2 tsp xanthan gum, if needed (if your GF flour blend does not already contain this)
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/4 Cup butter or coconut oil
1/2 Cup water plus more for boiling
1 Egg (or dissolved chia seed in a few tbsp of water?)
2 Tbsp coconut sugar or molasses sugar
Labels:
bagels,
dairy free,
flour,
GF,
GFCF,
GFCFSF,
GFDF,
gluten free,
poppyseed,
recipe,
soy free,
teff
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