Archive for the ‘Can go dairy-free’ Category

Better late than never and better gluten-free of course!


2011
03.07

Lent is late this year.  It’s still coming, but much later than I remember.  Tomorrow is Shrove Tuesday, Fat Tuesday, Faschnacht Day or many other names world wide.  And besides all those other names and goodies often associated with the day…the Tuesday before Lent is known simply as Pancake Day.  The concept is simple.  Pancakes contain sugar, fat and eggs, all rich items usually given up for the Lenten period.  In the UK, Pancake Day even means holding pancake races that date back to folklore of 1445 when a housewife, forgetting the time, was making pancakes when the bells rang for church.  Racing out of the house to make it to church on time, she forgot to put the frying pan down containing her currently cooking pancake!  Races that involve flipping pancakes while running are still held today.

So, I’m just reminding you about my pancake recipe that I posted here on my blog about a million years ago (sometime last year).  Get out your frying pan or griddle and your butters and syrups and get ready to indulge in Pancake Day.  If you have any left, cook them, and throw them in a bag in the fridge or freezer for later use.  Just mircowave for a few seconds and voila, pancakes.  Enjoy!

MY PANCAKE RECIPE LINK

Thin short stack

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Saying I love you with gluten free cupcakes


2011
02.15

Mostly I think “whatever” about cupcakes.  Most of the time, they are nothing.  Just a spec of sorta dry cake with some sweet grease on the top.  And unfortunately since the dawn of the Fancy Gourmet Cupcake Movement, I have missed out because I can’t frequent those establishments due to their use of wheat flour.

So when Valentines rolled around this year I was thinking brownies, chocolate dipped shortbread etc.  But then for some reason I remembered this recipe that I had gotten out of the August 2008 issue of the Alamo Celiac Newsletter for Barfield Banana Cake.  The recipe belongs to Anne Barfield of Chicken Paradise Bed and Breakfast here in San Antonio.  If you have never heard of it, you should!  The Barfield’s cater to all sorts of food allergies, especially Celiac/gluten-intolerant.  The property is paradise as the name indicates, but the host and hostess are what make the place out of this world!

But anyway, Anne makes this Banana Cake with the dreamy icing.  Her recipe is gluten-free, casein- free (dairy-free) and can go egg-free as well.  I’m not a banana cake fan, but this cake wins at everything I bring it to as being so fabulous.  I decided to use a Peanut Butter Frosting with a dark chocolate drizzle instead of the white frosting on this go-round.  I made a few widgets to this recipe only because I didn’t have a few things it called for.

Barfield Banana Cake (with very minor changes)

Makes 18 cupcakes, 2 8-inch, 9-inch or 10-inch layers

Ingredients:

1 1/2 c. sugar

1/2 c. Crisco or Spectrum Solid Palm Shortening

3 eggs or 3 T. flax meal (Put into a measuring cup.  Add boiling water to make 3/4 c., stir, let sit to thicken)

1 tsp. vanilla

1/3 c. plain soy yogurt, goat yogurt, cow yogurt (I used sour cream!)

1 c. mashed very ripe banana

2 c. My GF Flour Mix

1 tsp. baking soda

1 tsp. xanthan gum

1 tsp. baking powder

1/4 tsp. salt

Method of Prep:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.  Put cupcakes papers in cupcake pans, or get your cake pans sprayed with a little non-stick pan spray.

In mixer, combine shortening, sugar and vanilla.  Cream together at medium speed until fluffy.  Add eggs on at a time or flax mixture until combined well.  Cream another few minutes.  Take your bananas and mash them well.  Combine the yogurt/sour cream with the bananas.  Measure all your dry ingredients together and mix well.  Alternating dry and wet, and always ending with dry, add the flour mix and banana mix into the mixer.  Scrape the bowl down and give it a final mix.  Scoop into cupcake pan or cake pans and bake until done, about 15 minutes for cupcakes and 20 minutes for cake layers.  Cool well and get ready to frost.

My Peanut Butter Frosting

Ingredients:

1 c. creamy peanut butter (I like Skippy Natural)

6 T. butter or crisco or palm shortening

2 c. confectioner’s sugar

5T. warm water

1 tsp. vanilla extract

Method of Prep (peanut butter frosting):

Cream the butter/shortening with the peanut butter and the vanilla with your whisk in the mixer.  When combined, scrape the bowl and then sprinkle in the confectioner’s sugar.  As soon as that it added, your icing will be grainy and thick.  Gradually add the water about 1T. at a time until your icing becomes smooth.  Once it is smooth, stop adding water ad turn up your speed on the mixer and whip until the icing is fluffy.  Pipe or spread onto cupcakes or cake layers.

Chocolate Drizzle:

4 T. Chocolate Chips (Enjoy Life or Hershey’s Special Dark, depending on your needs)

Method of Prep (chocolate drizzle):

In a non-metal bowl, microwave chips about 30 seconds at a time until they begin to melt.  Stir thoroughly.  They may need a final 15 seconds or so once they are all blended.  Either drizzle on top of the cupcakes using a pastry bag or make stripes with the chocolate coming off the end of fork.

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Warm Winter Spinach Salad


2011
02.10

This is not a dainty spinach salad.  Spinach salad always makes me think of Easter.  Small, tender spinach leaves support nicely cut boiled eggs, supremed oranges, and crisp bacon.  This beast of a salad is not the dainty Easter kind.  In fact, the people you are serving this salad to might tentatively serve themselves just a little bit at first.  Only to go back for 2-3 more helpings!  This salad involves big, craggy spinach leaves and a slightly sweet hot dressing that is poured on at the last minute and tossed immediately to slightly wilt the big spinach leaves.  This goes well with everything from chicken to pork or just by itself!  Serving a crowd?  Then buy 2-3 bunches of big spinach and multiply the dressing into greater amount!

Warm Winter Spinach Salad, Serves 2-3 people

Ingredients:

1 large bunch of big, craggy spinach leaves (washed very well and spun dry)

3 slices of thick applewood smoked bacon, diced small

3 boiled eggs, diced small

8 oz. button mushrooms, sliced thin

1 apple, any kind, diced medium

2 cloves fresh garlic, minced finely

Dressing:

1/4 c. whole grain mustard

2 T. maple syrup

1 T. Sherry Vinegar

1T. Rice Vinegar

3T. Olive or Canola Oil

salt and freshly cracked pepper to taste

Method of Prep:

Wash all the spinach well and spin dry.  Break into bite-size pieces by hand and put into a big bowl.  Boil the eggs, cool, dice and set aside.  Dice the bacon and saute until crisp.  Leave the bacon and it’s fat in the saute pan as you will be using it when you make the dressing.  Slice the mushrooms and set aside.  Mix all the ingredients for the dressing together in a bowl and whisk together.  Taste the dressing and salt and pepper to your taste.

When you are ready to serve the salad, heat the pan with the bacon in it.  When the pan is hot again, throw the apples and minced garlic into the pan and saute for about 1 minute.  Add the dressing and heat until the dressing begins to boil.  Turn off the heat.  Add the mushrooms and egg to the spinach in the bowl and toss.  Then add the hot dressing to the top of the spinach and toss very thoroughly.  The hot dressing with coat the spinach, but because you are using large spinach leaves, it will not wilt the salad very much.  Serve immediately.  You will probably not have any leftovers.


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A cookie recipe long overdue for sharing


2011
01.10


Kix aren’t gluten-free. At least, their makers won’t stand by the fact that they might actually be. Which is really so sad because as a little kid, this was about as sugar cereal as it got for me. My mom used to make cookies out of them too. I had a vague memory of them and my mom couldn’t find the recipe she used to use. So I did what everyone does these days…you look it up on the internet. I got a recipe, adapted it and here it is in all it’s cookie glory. There are some alternates indicated so check out the work-arounds:)

Oh-and they are not the most attractive cookies you’ll ever make.  But they are soooo good no one will notice because they won’t last that long.

GF Kix-like Cookies

Ingredients:

1/2 c. sugar

1/2 c. brown

1/2 c. butter (or crisco or a margarine that you might like)

1/2 c. natural peanut butter or almond butter or some nut butter

1 egg

1 tsp. baking powder

1/2 tsp. baking soda

1 tsp. xanthan gum

1/2 tsp. salt

1 tsp. vanilla extract

4 c. Kix (if you dare) or Gorilla Munch

1 c. chocolate chips

you can also add extra nuts, raisins, dried cherries, dried cranberries etc.

Method:

Preheat oven to 325 degrees.  Cream the butter and sugars in the mixer  until smooth and fluffy.  Add egg and whip a few more minutes.  Whip in the peanut butter.  Add all other dry ingredients except for cereal and mix in’s.  When you are sure everything is well blended and you have scraped the bowl, on low speed add the cereal and mixers and mix by machine until just incorporated.  Take the bowl off you mixer, using your spatula, fold over a few times by hand.  Scoop onto cookies sheets by rounded teaspoonful and bake about 8-10 minutes.  Eat them all.

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I was on TV


2010
12.08

This past Monday I was privledged enough to be on the San Antonio Living Show live with host Shelly Miles.  We had fun, chatted gluten-free and whipped up a quick Gluten-free Very GINGERbread Cake with Chocolate Glaze for the winter holidays.  You can find the recipe on their site.

Here are the photos from the event, hopefully the video will soon follow!

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Pecan pie without the crack


2010
11.05


Thanksgiving this is year is going to be a little crazy.  Besides filling all the orders for pies, stuffings, gravies, green bean casserole and cakes, I’m catering a wedding the day before Thanksgiving.  In addition to all of that, our family will be a little bit of everywhere.  My husband will leave Thanksgiving Day for the annual PA Deer Camp, my niece will be at a tournament in Mexico because she plays basketball for William and Mary.  The list goes on as far as where everyone will be.

So, I decided that this year we would celebrate Fakesgiving.  This Saturday afternoon I will throw the giant turkey in the oven and by that night we will feast on all the fixings and pies necessary to really celebrate Thanksgiving.  To make even better, we’ve invited a few friends and my mother-in-law is in town to celebrate the 5-year anniversary of the night my husband and I met.  She actually chaperoned the date!

The meal will all be gluten-free of course!  But this year I’ve decided that I need to leave the corn syrup out of the pecan pie.  I hesitate a bit only because I’ve grown up addicted to that once a year dose of corn syrup crack.  I mean, what else really tastes that…awesome and bad all at the same time?  But here I go-I’m giving it up.  This is the recipe I’ll be making.  It’s fabulous.  And if you don’t want to use maple syrup, you can always use Lyle’s Golden Cane Syrup instead-it’s really delicious.  Happy baking!

This recipe can also be made dairy-free : )

Crack-less Pecan Pie or Maple Pecan Pie

Serves 8

Recipe:

1 cup pure maple syrup or Lyle’s Golden Cane Syrup

3/4 cup (packed) golden brown sugar

3 large eggs

1/4 cup sugar

3 tablespoons butter, melted or 3 tablespoons olive  or canola oil

1 tablespoon My GF Flour Mix

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1/2 teaspoon salt

2 cups coarsely chopped pecans

1 9-inch gluten-free deep-dish pie crust

Preheat oven to 350°F. Whisk first 8 ingredients in medium bowl to blend. Place unbaked crust on baking sheet. Spread nuts over crust. Pour filling over. Bake until filling is set and slightly puffed, about 45 minutes on center rack.   For the last 15 minutes, move to the very bottom rack of the oven so the crust can fully cook on the bottom.  Transfer pie to rack and cool completely.

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Very Simple Tomato Basil Soup


2010
10.06

Ugy tomatoes: usually cheap to buy and with a simple chop chop, they go from ugly to soupable!

Don’t be afraid of the tomatoes in the picture!  With this recipe you can turn them into something wonderful.

One of my daughters is a very picky eater.  It has taken years to develop her palate beyond scrambled eggs and noodles with butter.  I have found that if I can feed her something once, the next time will be a breeze and by the third time, she’ll request it!  Several weeks ago, out of the blue, she asked me for my tomato basil soup.

So I went to my favorite tomato guy at the farmer’s market and asked him for his uglies.  And ugly tomatoes are just that.  They are over-ripe or spotty, or have a crack.  They are just plain ugly.  But more than that, they are cheap and so I can afford enough to make a giant pot of soup!  For dinner I usually serve this with a home made Caesar salad and for lunch I serve it with some tasty very sharp cheddar grilled cheese sandwiches (gluten-free of course!).

Ingredients:

Makes about a gallon

Fresh Ugly Tomatoes or pretty ones if you have them, about 10-14, chop them

1/2 large sweet onion, diced

3 stalks celery, diced

4 cloves of garlic, minced

About 4 cups of tomato juice, this helps stretch it out and make it smooth

3 T olive oil

salt and pepper to taste

1/2 c. half and half (optional)

About 10 fresh basil leaves (more or less to your taste)

Method of preparation:

In a large stock pot, heat the olive oil, saute the onions and celery on medium heat until they begin to caramelize.  Throw in the garlic, stir briefly making sure not to brown the garlic.  Throw in the tomatoes and tomato juice.  Bring to a boil.  Reduce heat and let the soup simmer for about 45-50 minutes.  Add the heavy cream if you wich, chop and add the basil.  Salt and pepper to taste.  At this point if you have an immersion blender:

run it though your soup.  I like this method because you can leave the soup a little bit chunky.  If you don’t have one of these, use your blender (be careful with hot soup in a blender!!!).  You can make this soup as chunky or smooth as you like.  And then you are done.  Serve the soup, put away the leftovers for lunch tomorrow, wash the dishes, and go to bed:)

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Bolo de cenoura-gluten-free of course!


2010
10.05

Brazilian carrot cake.  It has carrots in it, but it is nothing like its American counter-part aside from being extremely moist.  And it has chocolate frosting.  Yes, chocolate frosting.

It takes about 5 minutes to mix up and about 40 minutes to bake.  It takes 1 minute to glaze with chocolate and then it’s time to eat it up.

Ingredients:

4 medium carrots, grated (about 3 cups or so)

3 large eggs

1 3/4 c. sugar

1/2 c. oil (olive or canola)

1 t. vanilla extract

2 c.  My GF Flour Mix (click here for recipe)

1T. plus 1 t. Baking Powder

1 t. salt

1 1/2 t. xanthan gum

1/2 t. cinnamon (optional)

Glaze:

2T cocoa powder

2T butter

5T milk

8T sugar

Method of preparation:

In your blender combine the shredded carrots, oil, eggs and vanilla.  Puree the ingredients in the blender until smooth.  In a bowl, place all the dry ingredients and stir together.  Pour the blender concoction into the dry ingredients and stir together until everything is well mixed and very orange.  Put cake batter into a greased and floured 10-inch bundt pan and bake at 350 degrees for about 40 minutes.  While still warm, invert the cake onto the serving platter.

In a small saucepan, mix all the ingredients for the glaze.  Gradually heat the pan while stirring the ingredients together.  The icing will begin to bubble, keep stirring for about a minute.  Pour hot glaze over the cake while the cake  is warm.

Here is a video of how to make Brazilian Carrot Cake

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Not your typical macaroni salad


2010
07.08

My parents have a story about a family picnic that occurred during the 1970′s.  It involves the potluck family food buffet and a big bowl of macaroni salad.  The way the story plays out is that no matter how much dry, flavorless and horrible macaroni salad was eaten, the bowl seemed to be just as full.  A never-ending bowl of starchy and greasy horror.

Fast forward to now.  A new era, a new generation, but gluten-free.  I’m sure you’ve cooked GF pasta and tried to eat it again once it cold.  I’m sure you’re thinking-”yeah, I have and it’s always hard and gross”.  Well, I came up with this recipe the other night and served it to my friends and family at our Day-After-the-4th Celebration.  I would be able to post a picture, except it was all gone.

Pasta Salad Worth Eating

Ingredients:

1 bag Tinkyada Spirals
1 can artichoke hearts (in water), drained and chopped
1 small jar pimentos, diced
3 green olives, diced
6 Kalamata olives, diced
3 Roma tomatoes, diced
1 green onion, sliced
6 slices salami, sliced very thin
6 fresh basil leavs, chopped or chiffonade
1 tsp fresh garlic, chopped
Salt and Pepper to taste

An optional sprinkle of parmesan for the top

Dressing:(you have two choices)
1. The quick way: about 3/4 of a bottle of Girard’s Champagne Dressing

2.  Longer way:
1/2 c. olive oil
1/4 c. vinegar (red wine, rice or sherry)
1 tsp. sugar
1 tsp. garlic powder
1/2 tsp. onion powder

Method:

Cook pasta according to package directions (the one where you bring the water to a boil, then put pasta in, cook on high for 2 minutes, then cover and turn off the heat and let sit for 12-15 minutes).  Keep an eye on it as you want it cooked, but not mushy.  When cooked, drain water, rinse with VERY HOT water, drain that off, rinse with a little cool water to cool it only slightly.  Put into a big bowl and toss with about 1/4 of the dressing that you are using.  Let it cool in the bowl while you chop and dice everything else.

Add all the chopped and diced items to the pasta (except for the parmesan), toss.  Add the rest of the dressing.  Toss again.  Taste and adjust salt and pepper.  Serve or chill and remove from fridge about 1/2 hour before serving.  Sprinkle the parm on top just before serving:)

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Sick of potato salad


2010
06.16

When I was little I hated potato salad.  My grammie used to save the liquid from sweet pickles all year round just to use it all summer in potato salad.  The pickle juice was sweet and maybe she used Miracle Whip?  I don’t know.  All I know is that the one bite I was required to eat was like licking the back of a toad to me.

Then I grew up and still thought that I hated potato salad.  But I soon discovered that all potato salads are not created equal.  My mom’s is salty and has ground up olives in it and I love it.  Dill, which I also don’t love, is perfect when mixed with a little sour cream and mayo and layered like a royal robe over some very thinly sliced boiled red potatoes.

This summer I’m not in the mood for mayo or sour cream.  I’m not even in the mood for the olive oil roasted potato salads that one can make.  That leaves me with what?  Lettuce?  Boring.

I don’t subscribe to Bon Appetit because I’m not in the love with the style of photography that they’ve gravitated to. My neighbors somehow get one extra copy of the magazine every month of which they pass on to me, and I am grateful for.  In effort to continue a past legacy of love for the magazine, I try to find one thing a month from the issue to make and love.  It’s the right thing to do.   In the May 2010 issue, I found nothing at first.  But then I randomly found a rice salad recipe.  Rice Salad? Ummmmmm…maybe yuck.  Nope-won’t go there.  So I have to make the recipe now that I even started to go there.

Checked the fridge, found most of the ingredients, substituted some others.  Cooked some rice, roasted a chicken, tossed the ingredients for the salad and we were off.  Was it good?  So good I called my Dad and told him that he was cooking giant steaks for Father’s Day and that we would be having rice salad as the side dish.  His first reaction-”Can’t you make that olive oil roasted potato salad that you made for Easter?”  I said no.  If I know my Dad, this rice salad will become one of his new standards.

Here’s my adaptation of the same recipe:

Ingredients

  • 3 cups cooked white rice or brown rice, still warm  but not hot
  • 1/2 cup fresh lemon juice
  • 1/4 cup olive oil
  • 2 tsp. garlic powder or 1 tsp. fresh garlic, minced
  • 1 tsp. onion powder
  • 1 cucumber, peeled and diced small
  • 1 cup halved cherry tomatoes (mine actually came from my own plants!)
  • 1 cup yellow zucchini, yellow squash or regular zucchini
  • 1 avocado, halved, peeled, diced
  • 3 each thinly sliced green onions
  • 1/2 bunch chopped fresh cilantro
  • Salt and Pepper to taste
  • Optional-Shredded dry cheese such as Panela

Preparation

  • Cook rice until just tender, about 15-20 minutes for white rice and 45 minutes for brown rice. Take the lid off and let sit.
  • Meanwhile, whisk lemon juice, garlic powder, onion powder and most of olive oil in small bowl. Season dressing to taste with salt and pepper.
  • Heat the rest of the olive oil in large nonstick skillet over medium heat. Add zucchini. Sprinkle with salt and pepper. Sauté until just tender, 6 to 7 minutes; scrape into large bowl. Add cucumbers, tomatoes, green onions, cilantro, and dressing; toss to coat. Add the rice and mix well, without crushing the rice. Season with salt and pepper. Serve room temperature. Sprinkle on avocado and optional cheese just before serving.

Here’s the link to Bon Appetit’s recipe: http://www.bonappetit.com/recipes/quick-recipes/2010/05/southwest_rice_and_corn_salad_with_lemon_dressing

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