We have had to revamp a lot of our traditions that involved food because of needing to avoid Gluten & Casein. We've butted heads with extended friends and family members on this issue for oh 7 years. Often skipping get togethers in hopes of avoiding ugly confrontations and nasty end results from an Opps!
A glimmer of light is beginning to appear at the end of the tunnel. I say this because of the following recipes I am sharing below. These recipes are all for Gluten free options of some holiday favorites. I got these recipes from not 1 source but a total of 4, Where they got them or who created them I do not know as it wasn't specified. While these won't be used here this year for Thanksgiving (the ones who would benefit most from these recipes are not big on corn bread, stuffing, or pie), I share these in order to possibly help someone else who could truly benefit from these.
To those who sent them for us to use: Thank You!
To whoever created these recipes: We salute you! You have given us hope and possible new palate tempting recipes for the future.
Gluten-Free Jalapeno Cornbread
Makes 8 servings
1/4 cup sorghum flour
1/4 cup tapioca starch
1/4 cup potato starch
1/4 cup sweet rice flour
2 tablespoons sugar
4 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
1/4 cup shortening
2 large eggs, at room temperature
1 cup low-fat milk, at room temperature
3 jalapeno peppers, seeded and diced
1 cup yellow cornmeal
Butter or margarine for final rub
Place rack in the middle of the oven and preheat oven to 425 degrees. Generously grease a deep, 9-inch square baking dish with nonstick baking spray.
Sift the sorghum, tapioca, potato and sweet rice flours into a large bowl. Add the sugar, baking powder, salt and xanthan gum, mixing well. Cut the shortening into the flours with a pastry cutter or fork, as if you were making a pie crust. The batter should be crumbly, with coarse crumbs that resemble small peas.
Combine the eggs and milk in a small bowl and beat with a fork. Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and pour in the liquid, as if making fresh pasta. Stir with a rubber spatula until everything is combined. Add the jalapeno peppers and mix just until they are evenly distributed.
Stir in the cornmeal, whisking fast, until it is just combined. Do not overstir.
Pour the batter into the greased pan. Bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until the sides of the cornbread are slightly shrinking from the pan and a toothpick stuck into the center comes out clean. Rub a stick of butter along the top of the hot bread to coat and soften the crust. Allow to cool for 5 minutes before cutting.
Variations: For regular cornbread, omit jalapeno peppers and increase sugar to 3 tablespoons total; cook as specified. For mildly smoky cornbread, omit jalapeno peppers and mix 1 teaspoon of smoked paprika, or pimenton dulce, into dry ingredients, then continue with recipe as specified.
Gluten-Free Stuffing With Autumn Fruit
Makes 8 servings
1 loaf of heavy gluten-free bread, cut into 3/4-inch cubes to equal 5 to 6 cups
1 1/2 cups walnuts, cut into pieces
5 tablespoons olive oil, divided
1 medium onion, diced
2 teaspoons dried sage, or 1 1/2 teaspoons fresh sage
1 1/2 teaspoons dried thyme, or 1 teaspoon fresh thyme
2 stalks celery, chopped
2 teaspoons sea salt
1 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1 1/2 cups stock (vegetable, chicken or turkey)
2 fuyu persimmons, chopped coarsely
2 pears, such as Bartlett or Asian pears, cored and chopped coarsely
Additional salt and pepper for seasoning
3 tablespoons butter
Place rack in middle of the oven and preheat oven to 325 degrees.
Spread gluten-free bread cubes evenly on a baking sheet. Toast in oven for 20 minutes, flipping halfway through. Remove from oven and set aside. Raise oven heat to 375 degrees.
Preheat a large skillet over medium heat and add walnut pieces. Toast for 4 minutes, agitating every 15 seconds to allow for even toasting and to prevent burning. Walnuts are done when they are fragrant and have turned a few shades darker. Pour into a bowl and set aside.
In the same skillet over medium flame, heat 3 tablespoons olive oil until it shimmers. Add onions and saute until they are translucent and slightly brown, about 5 minutes. Add sage and thyme, sauteing for 30 seconds, then celery, sauteing for 2 minutes. Add salt, pepper and bread cubes and mix well. Drizzle in stock and remaining olive oil, mixing until bread cubes are coated. Remove from heat and allow to soak for 5 minutes, mixing once halfway through.
Gently stir in persimmons, pears and toasted walnuts. Season to taste with salt and pepper, then pour the whole thing into a lightly greased 9-by-13-inch pan. Dot the top with butter and bake uncovered for 45 minutes, or until the top is golden brown.
Gluten-Free Butternut Squash Pie
Makes 8 servings
Crust
1 cup Gluten-Free Flour Mix (recipe below)
5 teaspoons sweet rice flour
2 teaspoons sugar
1/2 teaspoon xanthan gum
Pinch of salt
6 tablespoons cold salted butter
1 large egg
1 teaspoon orange juice
Prepare a 9-inch pie pan by greasing it with butter or nonstick baking spray and generously coating it with Gluten-Free Flour Mix (recipe below).
Mix flours, sugar, xanthan gum and salt in a bowl. Using a pastry cutter or fork, cut cold butter into dry ingredients until it becomes crumbly and resembles small peas. Add egg and orange juice, and mix with a fork until the dough combines. Form into a ball and place in the refrigerator, covered with wax paper, for 10 minutes.
Lay down a sheet of wax paper and place the ball of dough in the middle. Lay another piece of wax paper over the top and press down gently with your hands to flatten the ball. Roll the dough with a rolling pin until it is about 1/4-inch thick, making sure to keep an even thickness and fill in any cracks with dough from the edges.
Remove the top sheet of wax paper and place the dough in the pan, then peel off the remaining sheet of wax paper and gently press the dough into the pan. Take care not to puncture the dough with your fingers or fingernails. Crimp the edges and prick a few holes in the bottom of the dough with a fork. Cover pie pan loosely with wax paper and place in freezer for 15 minutes.
While the dough is freezing, place rack in the middle of the oven and preheat oven to 350 degrees.
Remove pie pan from freezer and line crust with aluminum foil, making sure to seal the edges so they don't burn. Bake for 10 minutes, then remove foil and bake for another 10 minutes, or until crust is a pale brown. Remove from oven and set aside.
Filling
2 pounds butternut squash
3/4 cup low-fat milk
1/2 cup packed brown sugar
3/4 cup heavy whipping cream
5 tablespoons sugar
1 tablespoon butter, melted
1 1/4 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground ginger
1/8 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/8 teaspoon salt
2 large eggs
Squash
Preheat to 425 degrees.
Cut squash in half lengthwise and scoop out seeds with a spoon. Lay squash facedown on a jelly-roll pan and pour 1/2 cup of water into the pan. Roast in oven for 1 hour, checking occasionally to make sure there is still water in the pan. Squash is done when a fork easily penetrates the flesh. Remove squash from oven, allow to cool and scoop flesh out with a spoon. You need 1 1/2 cups of mashed squash for the filling.
Assembly
Make a shield for the edge of the pie crust by cutting 3-inch-thick strips of foil and folding them over the edges of your crust to protect them from burning. The foil should not dip down into the basin of the pan. Make sure it just covers the crimped parts around the rim of the pie pan.
To make the filling, combine all ingredients in a blender or food processor. Blend on high for 1 minute, or until ingredients are liquefied. Pour filling into pie crust and carefully place on the center rack of the oven. Bake for 45 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted in the pie comes out clean.
Place pie on wire rack until completely cooled. Slice and serve with whipped cream, which is nice with a little cayenne pepper.
Variation: For standard pumpkin pie, replace the butternut squash with 1 1/2 cups of fresh, unseasoned pumpkin puree. If you are roasting your own pumpkin, cut open the top, scoop out the seeds and split the body into four pieces. Roast according to directions above.
Another version of a Gluten Free Flour base mix.
Gluten Free Flour Mix
Makes 3 cups
2 cups finely ground brown rice flour
2/3 cup potato starch (not potato flour)
1/3 cup tapioca flour
Mix flours in a large bowl. Sift and store in an airtight container in the freezer.
Showing posts with label gluten free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gluten free. Show all posts
Monday, November 23, 2009
Friday, June 5, 2009
GF CF Great Pancakes Recipe
GF CF Pancakes
1 c brown rice flour
½ c white rice flour
1 c tapioca flour
½ c potato starch
2 tsp salt
1 T GF baking powder
3 T sugar
3 eggs *
1¼ c Vance's Dairy Free**
3 T oil
¼ tsp GF vanilla
Mix like normal pancake batter. Lumps are ok as long as not big. Cook on griddle until light brown and bubbles form. Turn over cook other side til brown around edge.
Variation: for chocolate pancakes use Vance's Dairy Free Chocolate.
*or use egg replacer
**or use other milk substitute
This is a recipe that is good with syrup, jam, peanut butter, powder sugar, or however, you like your pancakes. The pancakes also work well for wrap style sandwiches.
1 c brown rice flour
½ c white rice flour
1 c tapioca flour
½ c potato starch
2 tsp salt
1 T GF baking powder
3 T sugar
3 eggs *
1¼ c Vance's Dairy Free**
3 T oil
¼ tsp GF vanilla
Mix like normal pancake batter. Lumps are ok as long as not big. Cook on griddle until light brown and bubbles form. Turn over cook other side til brown around edge.
Variation: for chocolate pancakes use Vance's Dairy Free Chocolate.
*or use egg replacer
**or use other milk substitute
This is a recipe that is good with syrup, jam, peanut butter, powder sugar, or however, you like your pancakes. The pancakes also work well for wrap style sandwiches.
Thursday, June 4, 2009
Gluten Free Rice-Oat Bread
Here's an exciting recipe. Exciting because it's NEW and the sample at a funeral meal wasn't bad. It didn't taste like cardboard. Since I was given the recipe, I thought I would share with others.
Rice-Oat Bread
Combine in bowl of a heavy duty mixer:
3 large Eggs
¼ cup Sunflower/Soybean oil
1 Tablespoon Cider Vinegar
10 ½ cups Very Warm Water
In a separate bowl, mix dry ingredients. (Remember flours kept in refrigerator should be mixed first; microwave for 20 -30 seconds to warm... then add other ingredients)
1 cup Rice Flour
1 cup PrOating Flour
½ cup Tapioca Flour
½ cup Potato Starch Flour
3 Tablespoons Sugar
1 Tablespoon Xanthan Gum
1 ½ teaspoons Salt
2 Tablespoons Egg Replacer (or an extra egg white)
2 packages Active Dry Yeast
½ cup dry milk powder*
Add about half of the flour mixture to the liquids, beat on low speed to mix. Gradually add rest to flour mixture and then beat on high speed for a full 3 minutes.
Batter will be like very thick cake batter. Spoon into well greased loaf pans. Let rise in warm place until double, about 40-60 minutes. Bake at 350° about 23 minutes for large loaves or 18 minutes for mini loaves. Turn onto rack to cool.
Makes 2 regular sized loaves or 5-6 mini loaves.
*or lactose-free baby formula instead of dry milk powder. or potato milk can also be used to make this a dairy free recipe.
As for heavy duty mixer... Denise recommends that we use a Bosch universal mixer for this. Although a heavy duty kitchen aide might work. Denise also says that a GF oat flour can be used in place of PrOating although PrOating is what she used.
Thanks to Denise for sharing the recipe. Thanks to Eloise for creating it in the first place as that is where Denise got the recipe from.
Rice-Oat Bread
Combine in bowl of a heavy duty mixer:
3 large Eggs
¼ cup Sunflower/Soybean oil
1 Tablespoon Cider Vinegar
10 ½ cups Very Warm Water
In a separate bowl, mix dry ingredients. (Remember flours kept in refrigerator should be mixed first; microwave for 20 -30 seconds to warm... then add other ingredients)
1 cup Rice Flour
1 cup PrOating Flour
½ cup Tapioca Flour
½ cup Potato Starch Flour
3 Tablespoons Sugar
1 Tablespoon Xanthan Gum
1 ½ teaspoons Salt
2 Tablespoons Egg Replacer (or an extra egg white)
2 packages Active Dry Yeast
½ cup dry milk powder*
Add about half of the flour mixture to the liquids, beat on low speed to mix. Gradually add rest to flour mixture and then beat on high speed for a full 3 minutes.
Batter will be like very thick cake batter. Spoon into well greased loaf pans. Let rise in warm place until double, about 40-60 minutes. Bake at 350° about 23 minutes for large loaves or 18 minutes for mini loaves. Turn onto rack to cool.
Makes 2 regular sized loaves or 5-6 mini loaves.
*or lactose-free baby formula instead of dry milk powder. or potato milk can also be used to make this a dairy free recipe.
As for heavy duty mixer... Denise recommends that we use a Bosch universal mixer for this. Although a heavy duty kitchen aide might work. Denise also says that a GF oat flour can be used in place of PrOating although PrOating is what she used.
Thanks to Denise for sharing the recipe. Thanks to Eloise for creating it in the first place as that is where Denise got the recipe from.
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