Monday, October 25, 2010

Pumpkin Muffins

This last weekend we had a party where the theme ingredient was pumpkin.  I did not want to be too ordinary but I wanted something sweet that I could eat so I made pumpkin muffins.






I found a basic recipe on Cooks.com and then adapted it to be gluten free and more like something I would eat.  They were a big hit and more of them were eaten than the other muffins with gluten in them.  They are really moist and light with a great texture.

Dry ingredients:
3 1/3 cups gluten free flour
2 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons Xanthan gum
2 cups sugar (I used turbinado sugar)
1 1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1/4 teaspoon ground ginger
1/4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/8 teaspoon ground mace

Wet ingredients:
1 cup vegetable oil
4 eggs
2/3 cup buttermilk
2 cups pumpkin
2 Tablespoons molasses

Preheat oven to 350.  Sift together dry ingredients into a large bowl.  Combine wet ingredients together in another bowl and then add to dry ingredients.  Mix well. 

Prepare muffin tins and add batter.  I filled mine pretty full (a bit over 3/4 full) since gluten free baked goods don't rise as much.  They baked for 25 minutes in my oven, but I started checking them at 20 minutes.  20-30 minutes should cover most ovens.  A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean. It does depend on the oven and how full you filled the muffin tins.  Remove muffins from tins after about 5-10 minutes.  If you leave them in the pan too long the bottoms will get wet and soggy from condensation.  They can cool on a plate or a cooling rack just as easily.  Plus then you can try one to make sure that they are good.  Then you can have a second one 'just to be sure.'

I got about 2 1/2 dozen muffins from this recipe.  I also made a wonderful pumpkin soup, I did not get a picture of that but I will get the recipe up soon.  It was easy and really good. 

Tuesday, October 19, 2010

Snickerdoodles

So I had a craving for cookies a week ago and gave in.  I made snickerdoodles.  I don't know why but cookies covered in cinnamon and sugar sounded perfect.

So I went to my cookbooks and found a couple of recipes and picked the best of both of them and made me some cookies.  I found the source recipes in my 'Rosie's Bakery Chocolate packed, Jam filled, Butter-rich, no-holds-barred cookie book' by Judy Rosenberg.  I got this book as a wedding present along with my baking sheets.  I have made glutenous cookies from this book before and had great results.   This is the first time I tried to use it for gluten free ideas though.

This is a combination of the Bakers Best Snickerdoodles and Classic Snickerdoodles recipes.

3 cups gluten free flour
1 Tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon baking powder
1 1/4 teaspoon Xanthan gum
1/2 teaspoon salt
3 teaspoons ground cinnamon
1 1/2 cups plus 2 Tablespoons sugar
1 cup (2 sticks) unsalted butter at room temperature
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
2 large eggs

Heat oven to 375.  Prepare baking sheets, I like to use my silicone sheet liners since parchment paper tends to catch on fire in my current oven.

Sift flour, baking powder, salt, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, and Xanthan gum together into a bowl.  Set aside. 

Combine cinnamon and 2 Tablespoons of sugar into a small bowl and set aside.

Cream the butter, 1 1/2 cups sugar and vanilla together until light and fluffy.  I used my hand held mixer at medium speed for about 1 minute.  Scrape the bowl in the middle of creaming and then at the end to ensure everything is combined.

Add the eggs and mix until combined.

Add half the flour mixture and mix.  Scrape the bowl and add the remaining flour and mix until combined.  Taking the dough a Tablespoon, at a time form the dough into balls with your hands.  Put the cookies into the cinnamon sugar and roll to cover (the recipe said to put the cinnamon sugar into a plastic bag, add the cookies and shake to cover, but in the interest of the environment I choose to just roll the cookies in a bowl instead).

Put the cookies 2 inches apart on the sheets and bake for 15-18 minutes.  The cookies should be slightly cracked and the edges crisp.  I did not flatten my cookies so they were still rounded but either way is fine.  They only took about 14 minutes in my oven.  I cooled the cookies on cooling racks so I could use the sheets again.  This recipe made me over 3 dozen cookies.

The main recipe I converted said that if you were not going to eat the cookies right away they should be frozen.  I ignored this and by the next day they were very crispy.  They still tasted the same but had the consistency of biscotti cookies.  Not a bad thing, but not what I was expecting.  However, I brought them into work and they were gone in hours and no one knew they were gluten free.  I am thinking I will try a more traditional sugar cookie recipe the next time.  I did like the addition of the cinnamon into the dough.  Gluten free dough can taste 'different' and I have found that adding cinnamon or nutmeg to cookies or other baked goods can help with the taste factor.  I put both into my pancakes and waffles. 


So this weekend I am going to a party where the theme is pumpkin.  It is a potluck and everyone has to bring an item made with pumpkin.  So I should have pumpkin soup and pumpkin muffins in the next few weeks.  I also made a wonder southwestern chicken stew called Pozole.  It is wonderful and just perfect when the weather gets colder.  So look for those recipes coming up soon.

Sunday, October 10, 2010

Lasagna is yummy.

So I switched gears a bit and made lasagna.  I was getting a bit tired of sugary baked goods and the clean up involved in baking.   So I made lasagna, which actually makes more dishes than making cupcakes.  This is one of 2 recipes that I learned from my mother that are actually good.  My mom's cooking is the reason I learned to cook and bake for myself.  But she had this lasagna recipe that she shared with me and in the years since she taught this to me the recipe has grown and changed as my skills in the kitchen have improved with age.  I use the Tinkyada brand of gluten free pasta.  They have many shapes and sizes including lasagna noodles.  They are not my favorite brand, but Bi-Aglut is no longer available in the U.S.  The Tunkyada noodles taste good and hold up well to over-cooking.  They are good enough that you can use them to make pasta with brown butter and cheese.

Anyway here is the lasagna recipe.  All ingredients can be increased or decreased to your personal taste.  I like garlic but some people don't like it a s much as I do.

1 package GF lasagna noodles
1-2 pounds ground beef (or turkey or pork, or a combination of meats)
2 large cans peeled whole tomatoes
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 small can tomato paste
6 cups mozzerella cheese, shredded
1 large container ricotta cheese (I like the low fat, but use what you like)
Basil
1 small onion chopped
dried parsley
1 egg, lightly beaten
3 cups parmesan cheese

Cook the lasagna noodles according to the package directions.  You want them a bit undercooked so start testing them 3-4 minutes before the packages says they should be done.  You want them cooked slightly less than al dente.  They should still have  bit of crunch to them, this will cook out later.

Once the noodles are cooked, drain them and rinse with cold water to stop the cooking.  Leave them to drain.


Combine the ricotta cheese and the egg.  Add 1 cup grated parmesan cheese and about 1 tablespoon dried parsley (the parsley is not essential so if you don't have any you can leave it out)
Brown the meat in a large skillet.  Add some minced garlic (I usually add about 2-3 cloves here) and some dried basil.  Once the meat is cooked, drain it and wipe out the skillet. 

Put the 2 cans of tomatoes into the skillet.  Using your spatula or a spoon break up the tomatoes.  You want small pieces.  I usually break them into quarters and then cut the quarters in half if they are too large.  The size of the tomato pieces is pretty much a personal preference.  If you are cooking for anti-tomato people, use canned minced tomatoes.

You can also use fresh tomatoes, I would use about 6-8 medium tomatoes.  Cut them into 1 inch chunks and saute them in the pan with some olive oil until they are soft.

Add the tomato paste and stir to incorporate it with the tomatoes in the pan.  Once this is smooth add 3-5 cloves chopped garlic and the onion.  Once this is cooking nicely add the meat back in and stir to incorporate.  Let this simmer for 10 minutes or so.  You want it to thicken and cook down a bit to make the sauce.  This also allows the flavors to combine.

Once the sauce is ready you can assemble the lasagna.
In a 9x13 casserole dish put down a layer of the cooked noodles.  Slightly overlap them and cover the entire bottom of the dish.  Spoon about 1/3 of the meat sauce over the noodles and spread it to cover the noodles completely.  Put 3-4 heaping tablespoons of the ricotta mixture over the meat and gently spread it as best as you can to cover the sauce.  Don't worry if it doesn't cover it well, it will melt and spread during cooking.  Cover all this completely with mozzerella.

Cover the cheese with another layer of noodles and continue layering until you run out of meat sauce.  I usually get 2 complete layers in.  Once the top layer of mozzerella cheese is on sprinkle more paremsan cheese over the top.

Put the lasagna in a 350 oven for 30-60 minutes.  You want the cheese to be melted and bubbly.  I like it to be really browned but you can cook it less.  If the lasagna is really full put some foil on the oven rack below it to catch the overflow.  I usually put the foil on the rack below the one I have the lasagna on, this way I can catch everything.  Do not put the foil on the bottom of your oven, you will block the vents if it is a gas oven and if it is an electric oven putting the foil under the heating element defeats the purpose of putting foil down to keep the melted cheese off the heating element.

This is the only picture I got of the lasagna since we ate most of it before I could get pictures.  These are the last 2 pieces from the day after I made the lasagna.  It never stays around very long and there are only 2 of us.  I usually serve this with garlic toast and a nice salad. 

Garlic toast is easy: take gluten free bread (or rolls) and spread it with butter and sprinkle garlic powder on top.  Top with some grated parmesan and put in the toaster oven until the cheese is bubbly and browned.  You can also simply make garlic butter and spread that on the bread.  The cheese is optional but I like cheese even more than I like garlic.

So there it is.  My lasagna.  I apologize if the quantities are not very specific but this is the first time I have written this down and it does change slightly every time I make it.  Experiment with the quantities until you find the way you like it best.   You can make it vegetarian by browning diced eggplant instead of the meat and just make the sauce the same way.  I have also used sliced eggplant as the noodles and then just browned vegetables in the sauce to put on top.  Experiment, find what you like and stick with it.  That is what this cooking thing is all about.

Sunday, October 3, 2010

Lemon Bars

So last week I was craving lemon bars.  So I dug out my favorite recipe and set about making it gluten free.  I found this recipe in the March 1999 issue of Gourmet magazine (I miss Gourmet...), I made it back then and fell in love with it.  I hadn't made it since being diagnosed with Celiac almost 7 years ago.  But when the craving struck I went back to my issues of Gourmet and found this recipe.

4 large eggs
1 1/2 cups granulated sugar
3/4 cup fresh lemon juice (it does taste better with fresh juice but I only had Real Lemon, it was fine)
1/3 cup gluten free flour  (I used Bette's featherlight blend)
Hot Shortbread Base (recipe follows)
3 Tablespoon powdered sugar

Preheat oven to 350
Whisk together eggs and sugar in a bowl until well combined.  Stir in lemon juice and flour.  Pour lemon mixture over hot shortbread.  Turn down oven to 300 and bake bars in middle of he oven until set, about 30 minutes.   Cool completely in pan and then cut into 24 bars.  Lemon bars keep, covered and chilled for 3 days.  Sift the powdered sugar over the bars before serving.

Shortbread Base

1 1/2 sticks of butter (unsalted)
2 cups gluten free flour
1 teaspoon Xanthan gum
1/2 cup packed light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt

Preheat oven to 350.
Cut butter into 1/2 inch pieces.  In a food processor combine all ingredients until mixture begins to form small lumps.  Sprinkle mixture into a 13x9x2 inch baking pan.  With a spatula or your fingers press mixture evenly onto bottom of pan.  Bake shortbread in the middle of the oven until golden brown, about 20 minutes.  Prepare topping while shortbread is baking.

I don't even take the shortbread pan out of the oven, I jut pull out the oven rack and pour the filling into the hot base, make sure it is evenly distributed and put it right back into the oven to bake.

You can also use lime juice and make lime bars, but I don't like them as much.  I am sorry about the quality of the picture this week.  I only had a few bars left to take a photo of and my husband left the tray of bars out and the dog knocked them off the counter and the landed upside down, at least they were covered with foil so they were still good to eat.  But they didn't look as nice as they used to.  But I don't go by looks, if it tastes good I am happy.

I am planning to switch gears a bit int he next few weeks since  I didn't do much baking but I made lasagna and beef stroganoff.  So I will have some dinner ideas for a few weeks and then probably back to the baking.  Or maybe gluten free dog treats...