30 December 2009

My Ongoing Brownie Battle

Since I was diagnosed with an egg allergy about 8 years ago, I've been trying various egg substitutes in recipes. I have something that works for most cakes and other odds and ends, but I've never been able to successfully make brownies without eggs.

Maybe I'm too picky when it comes to foods. But darn it, I have culinary standards!

Things have, of course, gotten even more difficult since the wheat allergy. But I'm still trying. Perhaps in vain.

So I lamented my latest attempt of trying to make the Namaste brownie mix. This time I used ground flax seeds instead of the egg replacer. It turned out as a gooey mess--not really changing from a batter into a baked good. I was complaining about it on Twitter, and had a Holistic Health nutritionist post a recipe for me to try. The original recipe is here.

Well, water is boring. And I don't have walnut or grape seed oil. And I don't have xylitol (although I wish I did. Good stuff.) So here's how I modified it.

4 T canola oil
2/3 c Splenda
1/2 c almond milk
1 t vanilla
1 c rice flour
4 T unsweetened cocoa powder (I used Green & Blacks)
1 t baking powder (the special, corn-free stuff)

Mix the oil, Splenda, almond milk, and vanilla. Add the flour, cocoa, and baking powder. Mix thoroughly. Spread into a greased 8x8 pan. Bake 20 minutes at 350.

Result?



Crumby. Dry. The taste isn't bad, but it's not quite sweet enough.


(Sorry about the blurriness.)

I need something that's going to give it moisture. (Oh, sure, and egg would work wonders. But, you know.) It also needs more sugar, which means it needs more liquid. I'm not sure how to fix this one. Ideas? Or should I just give the victory to the brownies and hang up my gloves?

20 December 2009

Oh, the baking disasters! Part II: Cranberry Bread

I'd been craving cranberry bread or pumpkin bread or stuff like that for the past few days. So yesterday I decided "what the heck." Since I was baking shortbread anyway, I found a recipe to try.

Original recipe here.

2 cups gluten free flour (I used the Namaste All-Purpose list.)
3/4 cup granulated sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
1 Tablespoon orange zest (I used two, actually)
3/4 cup orange juice, freshly squeezed
1/4 cup butter or butter substitute, melted (I used canola oil--I was so over the coconut oil by this time)
2 eggs (I used 2 tbs ground flax seed mixed with 4 tbs hot water)
1 cup whole cranberries )
3/4 cup-1 cup walnuts chopped- (I used about 1 cup of chopped cashews)

Mix the dry ingredients. Add the orange zest to the flour mixture.

Mix the canola oil and orange juice. In a separate bowl, mix the flax seed and hot water.

Combine the orange juice mixture with the flour just until it's wet. Fold in the flax seed mixture. Then fold in the cranberries and cashews.

Put into a bread pan, bake at 350F for 40-50 minutes.

Results:




The texture turned out perfect, but the cranberries were a little too tart. If you store it, though, make sure to put it into something that won't retain moisture, which will turn it into a gooey mess. This bread is much better the second day. The cranberries weren't quite so tart.

The next time, I plan to add more sugar and fewer cranberries. And not put it in a baggie.

Oh, the baking disasters! Part I: Shortbread

Scottish shortbread is kind of a holiday tradition for my family. It's a relatively simple food to make, and only has four ingredients. Unfortunately, I'm allergic to two of the four.

A normal shortbread is a mixture of flour, salt, sugar, and butter. Nothing else. So what do you use as a butter substitute when you're allergic to both milk and soy? And will the finicky gluten-free flour really stand up without the butter?

Actually, no. Not really.

I poked around for a recipe that only required the ingredients I had on hand. Several of the recipes used coconut flour, so those were out. Then I found a recipe for a vanilla and chocolate swirl shortbread and decided to try it.

Here's the recipe:

50g (2oz) rice flour
50g (2oz) potato flour
25g (1oz) tapioca (I wasn't sure whether this should be tapioca flour, starch, pearl, or whatever so I used tapioca flour)
.25 tsp xanthan gum
.50 tsp salt
50g (2oz) caster sugar (I assumed this was confectioner's sugar)
1 tsp vanilla essence (I used almond extract)
125g (4.5oz) dairy free margarine (I used coconut oil)

Combine dry ingredients. I stirred the almond extract into the coconut oil. Then I "rub[bed] in the margarine until the mixture combines, using [my] fingertips."

It was a creamy, gooey mess that stuck to my fingers because my hands were warm enough to melt the coconut oil.

Place dough in the fridge for 30 minutes.

Roll the dough out on wax paper (to about 1cm) and cut into rectangles. At this point, I had to put it back into the fridge because the "dough" was melting apart as I tried to put it on the cookie sheet.

Bake for 15-20 minutes.

Within 2 minutes, I knew it was a disaster. The rectangles spread and broke. In the "separating in weird ways" kind of broke.




Despite it not keeping its shape, the texture is actually about right. However, the coconut oil is a bust. The coconut flavor is overpowering, so they're more like coconut oil cookies. Meh. I'm not as much of a fan of coconut oil after these.