Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts
Showing posts with label dessert. Show all posts

Monday, July 19, 2010

Gluten Free Fruit Crisp


Exciting foodie weekend for me. I finally got my act together and made it to the Cherry Creek Farmer's Market on time Saturday. Too bad it was a record 102 degree high that day. It made for super hot shopping :( I haven't been yet this year so I was excited to see the gluten free offerings. The only stand that really interested me was one with gluten free cookies, breads and brownies. I went up and looked at the menu and saw it was all junkie sugar stuff and was about to turn away. But then the attendant caught me and said hi. I made a comment about how the bread she had out to sample was crumbly, like all gluten free stuff. She thought I was being mean and responded "it's been out in the hot sun for a while" I was like, right because gluten free stuff also melts (it really does). Then I explained that I am gluten free and I know everything crumbles and that's what sucks about it. So then we were talking for bit and finally I felt like I had to buy something. So I bought a piece of lemon poppyseed bread and it was pretty good actually. Don't think I've had poppyseed something for awhile (that used to be my favorite kind of muffin). After that stand I came across a FABULOUS FIND. Remember I mentioned those tamales from Boulder in my last post. Well, they were there! In Denver! So great! They even had frozen ones I could take home too. I bought some bean and spinach ones. And I had one tonight. So good! I will be going to the Farmers Market every Saturday now!
Peaches are just coming into season right now. So I bought some at the farmer's market, the famous Palisade Peaches. As well as some cherries and decided to whip up a fruit crisp for dessert. I made this recipe many times last summer but I never blogged about it. It was very good and my boyfriend liked it too. Not too sweet or crunchy. I also like this recipe because the flours are basic ones I always have. The crisp part would work with any fruit too! Here's the recipe.

Gluten Free Fruit Crisp
(Makes 4 servings)

2-3 Cups Fruit (I used blueberries, peaches and cherries)
1/2 C white sugar
1 1/2 TBS cornstarch
3/4 C brown rice flour
1/2 tsp xanthan gum
1/4 C brown sugar
1/2 C crushed Enjoy Life Very Berry Granola
1/3 C butter (I used Vegan Earth Balance)

1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
2. Prepare fruit by cutting and/or pitting. Can use frozen but thawed and drained fruit.
3. Place fruit into 9x9 pan, spread evenly.
4. Sprinkle fruit with white sugar and cornstarch.
5. Toss mixture to make sure evenly distributed.
6. In bowl, mix brown rice flour and xanthan gum.
7. Add brown sugar, mix again.
8. Add smashed granola.
9. Cut butter into the flour mix. The topping should look like coarse, crumbly cornmeal when ready.
10. Pour topping onto fruit in pan. Layer evenly.
11. Bake for 50 minutes. The fruit juices will be dark and bubbling. With a browned topping when it is done.
12. Enjoy a la mode or plain!

Tuesday, July 6, 2010

A Happy GF 4th!


I did have one! I traveled with my boyfriend to Pueblo, CO to meet up with some friends for the weekend. I really wanted to get some tamales :) but my friend said they don't make bean ones. They do in Boulder, DUH it's Boulder. So I'll have to travel up there sometime soon for some! They are Amaizing Corn Tamales found at the Boulder's Farmers Market or Berry Best Smoothies. Anyways, I traveled pretty simply food wise for the weekend. I brought things that could be eaten for many meals. I packed a lunch for the way down, 2 little containers of Whole Foods Black Bean Quinoa, tortilla chips, salsa, eggs, strawberries, granola bars. And of course I had to make a GF Flag Cake to share! Seen above, I remember making one when I was little and haven't had one for a while so I made one! I used the Betty Crocker Mix and frosting mentioned in an earlier post. It was kind of dry.... but it got eaten! And it looked pretty so that's all that matters :) The weekend worked out well with food and fun! We launched our own fireworks! Fun!

Sunday, June 27, 2010

Work Lunches

Work lunches are hard, as I found out this week. Having a party/meal with my friends is easy. They all know what kinds of foods I can eat or that they need to ask me about them. At work well people don't know me, I'm the "new temp girl". They don't know people with food allergies either, so just don't know how to work with that type of person. So one of my coworkers last day was Friday so this lady planned a lunch for him on Thursday. The menu: pizza, wings and cake. Oh great. The absolute of what I can't eat. Pizza and wings: no big deal I'll just bring lunch like normal. Cake: I had, what I thought I was a very good idea. I offered to make the cake. I would use GF cake mix and regular trans fatty frosting. Well apparently our department is a bunch of pigs because the planner lady said she was going to get a Costco cake. (We don't have THAT many people, and lots of the women don't eat sweets) And said I could bring my own cake. Yeah lady, I'm going to make a whole cake just so I don't feel left out. I'm NOT 5 years old thank you. Then I remembered that Costco only has white cakes. And I know their are chocoholics in my department (me included) so I just decided to make a chocolate cake. I wasn't trying to go behind the lady's back at all. I just knew she didn't understand. And I think she's the type of person that doesn't cook. And any thought of cooking just seems unnecessary. And I'm the opposite, I would rather cook because it shows more effort and tastes better :)

So I made a chocolate cake with Betty Crocker GF Cake Mix and Frosting. General Mills has really jumped on the GF bandwagon. They have a list of GF items online. They label all their products that are GF. And have a few boxed mixes and is coming out with GF Bisquick this summer! I love their boxed mixes. Reasonably priced, turns out well, and tastes good. Some of the mixes at Whole Foods are kind of scary.... I used to be totally against Betty Crocker because most of her stuff has trans fats in it and many other ingredients I can't pronounce. But the GF stuff is surprisingly quite pure.

I brought the whole cake to work. The guy it was for thanked me, he liked the effort. A couple people tried it at lunch and liked it. And then I had some to bring home (and hide from my boyfriend)! Overall, it worked out well. This is new territory for me, work lunches. And many more to come. (Sorry no picture)

Sunday, April 18, 2010

Cookies!


I baked something and it was actually good! Surprise! And I know why! I made these cookies and they didn't have any special flour or ingredients. They were just naturally GFDF. They don't "melt" after a while (like some gf flours seem to do) And the cookies rose and were a normal cookie texture! I'm so proud of myself! Oh and the cookies were peanut butter chocolate chip, recipe below.

Now that tax season is over I have to start thinking about what to cook again. So we'll see how that turns out.

I bought this really good dairy free cheese. I was in line at Whole Foods and the person in front of me was buying and saying they just got it in (an employee). I was making pizza that night so I ran back and grabbed a bag. It melted and tasted pretty good. Best I've had for diary free. It also doesn't have any scary ingredients :) Daiya Vegan Cheese

Flourless Peanut Butter Chocolate Chip Cookies
(makes about 1 cookie sheet)

1 cup Peanut Butter (or any nut butter)
1 cup sugar
1 egg
1 tsp baking powder
1/3 c chocolate chips

1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
2. Mix ingredients together in bowl.
3. Spoon dough pieces on to the cookie sheet. (I lined the cookie sheet with parchment paper. My cookies were about 1 inch in diameter and they cooked well)
4. Bake cookies for 15 minutes. (Mine weren't brown by this point but were done enough to harden)

Enjoy!

Monday, February 23, 2009

We stayed home for Valentine's Day

Yes, my boyfriend and I did. He came up to my house, there are not quite as many "special" restaurants as in Denver so we decided that any food I make would be better. I made Spinach Tofu Lasagna which was amazing with the fake cheese. I was surprised, usually I don't like these "replacement" recipes but this one was really good. The Ricotta Tofu worked out well even in a blender. Adding beef would have made it good also. I will try that next time because yes there will be one. The only complaint was the top layer of noodles did not soften. I suppose there was not enough sauce and cheese covering it (even though it did not melt on the top.) Next, to the cake. Gosh, I have seen recipes for this so many times and have never had the guts to make it (because I would eat all of it) but Valentine's is the perfect excuse. This is our new Valentines tradition I have decided because it was amazing. Usually anything with chocolate is. I added the raspberries on top which were the best pieces. Put them all over when you make it! Anyways, pretty good for my posting lately. My goal for the month is to be better. Plus, good distraction and break from massive amounts of homework!

Spinach Tofu Lasagna

2 C Spinach
1 package "Follow Your Heart" Mozzarella Cheese
12 Lasagna Rice Noodles
Tofu Ricotta (see below)
2 C (maybe 2 1/2) Tomato Pasta Sauce

1. Cut cheese into slices.
2. Layer in a 11x14 in baking dish:
1/2 c sauce
1 layer of Noodles
1/3 of Ricotta
1/3 of Spinach
1/3 of Mozzarella Cheese
3. Repeat 2 more times.
4. Bake in a preheated oven of 350 degrees for 45 minutes. Let sit for 10 minutes after done.

Tofu Ricotta
1 package firm tofu, rinsed and drained
1/4 C packed, shredded fresh basil
1/4 C chopped parsley
2 TBS finely chopped red onion
2 TBS fresh thyme leaves
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 tsp lemon juice
1/2 tsp salt
1 tsp ground black pepper

1. Combine all ingredients into a food processor or blender.
2. Blend until slightly crumbly.


Flourless Chocolate Cake with Dark Chocolate Glaze (from WholeFoodsMarket.com)

12 ounces bittersweet chocolate chips or bittersweet chocolate, roughly chopped
1 cup (2 sticks) plus 3 tablespoons vegan butter, cut into chunks
1 1/4 cups sugar
6 eggs
1 cup unsweetened cocoa powder
1 tablespoon soymilk
1 tablespoon honey
1/4 teaspoon gluten-free vanilla extract

1. Preheat oven to 375°F.

2. Spray a 9-inch springform pan with nonstick cooking spray, then line the bottom with a circle of parchment paper. Spray the paper with cooking spray, too, then set the pan aside. (I used a 9X9 baking dish and it turned out fine)

3. Place two-thirds (8 ounces) of the chocolate and 1 cup (2 sticks) of the butter in a medium saucepan over medium low heat. Stirring often, melt chocolate with butter until completely blended.

4. Remove from heat and transfer to a large bowl. Add sugar and mix well.

5. Add eggs one at a time, whisking well after each addition.

6. Sift cocoa into bowl and stir until just blended.

7. Pour batter into prepared pan and bake for 35 to 40 minutes, or until cake has risen and top has formed a thin crust. The cake should be just firm in the center when done.

8. Cool for 10 minutes, then invert onto a plate, removing sides of springform pan. Remove and discard parchment paper and set cake aside to cool completely.

9. Meanwhile, make the chocolate glaze. Melt remaining 4 ounces chocolate and 3 tablespoons butter in a small saucepan over medium low heat, stirring until smooth.

10. Remove from heat, then stir in milk, honey and vanilla. Set aside to cool slightly.

11. When cake has cooled, pour glaze onto the center.

12. Using a spatula or the back of a spoon, very gently smooth glaze along the top and sides of the cake.

13. Chill cake, uncovered, for 30 to 60 minutes before serving to set the glaze and make the cake easier to slice.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Thanksgiving for me!

Why hello, it's officially the holiday season. Thanksgiving last week and Christmas and New Years right around the corner. These are my first holidays completely gluten/dairy free so they should be exciting. Thanksgiving went well because my family let me make versions of things I could eat. Christmas will be hard with all those cookies though! At least there's always chocolate. So I got to make the Pumpkin Pie for my family! My first time making a pie! It went pretty well. My wonderful brother is sugar free at the moment, hopefully not forever, so he wanted me to make the pie sugar free but I refused because I was making my own pie for me and if he wants his own pie then he can make one. The recipe called for 1/3 cup honey or maple syrup so I tried to convince him that it was natural sugar and he could eat it. He wouldn't and it turns out the pie needed more sugar. My grandma informed me that regular pumpkin pies have 1 cup of sugar in them. Wow, so that's a big difference. Needless to say the pie wasn't that sweet. Could kind of taste the tofu. But if there would have been more it would have been amazing, like normal people food! So add more sugar when you make it. I don't know how you do that, just add it in or do you have to alter the whole recipe. Next year I'll just look for a new recipe. This one was from Whole Foods. They would have one with less sugar..... The cornbread was a complete winner though! It was super easy. I decided to add another ingredient to my GF flour library, soy flour. It was less than $4 so I decided why not. Now I have it and can make cornbread whenever I want! It calls for stuff I usually always have, eggs, butter and milk. Then I just have to have corn meal which is super cheap. Anyways, I made the cornbread again this week, when I got back to Colorado because I was making chili! Ah I need to blog that also! Ok well that's enough blabbing for tonight. Hope you like the recipes! And Happy Holidays!


Gluten/Dairy Free Pie Crust

3/4 cup rice flour
1 tsp honey
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp xanthan gum
1/3 cup vegan butter
2 TBS cold water
1. Stir dry ingredients together, making sure xanthan gum is evenly distributed.
2. Cut in butter or oil and add honey.
3. Add cold water a little at a time until a ball is formed. (I had to add 2 TBS more)
4. Roll dough to 1/8" thickness between two sheets of aluminum foil.
5. Peel top sheet of foil off, and invert dough onto a 9" pie pan.
6. Peel off other foil sheet.
Dairy Free Pumpkin Pie Filling

2 cups pumpkin purée (1 can)
2 eggs
1/3 cup maple syrup, honey, or rice syrup
Pinch of salt
1 1/2 tsp pumpkin pie spice
1 (14-ounce) package silken tofu
1 (9-inch) unbaked pie crust (in pie pan)

1. Preheat oven to 425°F.

2. Put pumpkin, eggs, maple syrup, salt, pumpkin pie spice and tofu into the blender and purée until smooth. (Super FUN!)

3. Pour pumpkin mixture into unbaked pie shell and bake for 15 minutes.

4. Reduce temperature to 350°F and bake an additional 45 minutes, or until set.

Gluten/Dairy Free Cornbread

1 TBS vegan butter
1 cup corn meal
1/2 cup soy flour
1/2 cup brown rice flour
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 TBS brown sugar
1 tsp baking soda
1 egg
1 cup soy milk

1. Preheat oven to 350°F.

2. Place butter in a 9-inch square baking pan or in a small cast iron skillet. Put the pan in the preheating oven until butter is melted.

3. Remove from oven and tilt the pan back and forth to coat. Set

aside.

4. Mix corn meal, soy flour, brown rice flour, salt, brown sugar and baking soda together.

5. Add egg, milk and melted butter.

6. Combine with a few strokes, not overbeating.

7. Pour into prepared pan and bake for 25 to 30 minutes.

Thursday, October 16, 2008

More Boxes

Happy Birthday to the boyfriend. A friend gave me this mix and I had been waiting for a good time to use it and this seemed like it. I was a little wery of using a box cake mix, especially GF. But I added the stuff it said to in the mix. You had to add 2 eggs, 1 1/2 cups of yogurt (I used plain soy yogurt), vanilla, butter (vegan Earth Balance) and I think that's it. I mixed it all together and it got really thick. I got excitied and started eating the batter. yummm I can taste it now...... I used partchment paper because I wanted the cake to come out well to decorate it. But I didn't know cakes had to bake for so long! I've actually never make a cake by myself before ;) And I ended up doing this late on a friday night, which worked out well because I made the AMAZING frosting while it was baking, did dishes then the cake was done. Took it out and left it to cool overnight, then frosted in the morning. In the end, it turned out super well. I would highly recommend this mix. Now I want to try all the Whole Food's GF mixes! I finally got to try the cake after I gave it to my boyfriend. We both loved it. It stuck together quite well and was moist. So I was proud for making yet another desert! Here's the recipe for the frosting! Cheers to a gluten and dairy free cake!

Dairy Free Chocolate Frosting

1/2 cup (1 stick) dairy-free margarine, room temperature
2-1/2 tablespoons honey (really added to the texture!)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
½ cup dairy-free 100% cocoa powder
2-1/2 tablespoons water
2-1/2 cups powdered sugar

Place margarine, honey, and vanilla in mixing bowl. Sift cocoa into this bowl. Using electric beaters at low speed, cream these ingredients together. Add water and sift powdered sugar into mixture. Beat with electric beaters on medium speed until well mixed. Use frosting to frost cake.

Makes about 2-1/2 cups frosting, enough to frost a 9-inch double-layer cake.

Finished!

Sunday, September 28, 2008

I wish.

COOKIES! Oh my gosh I wish I could eat them more often. I banned myself from making desserts awhile ago. But last weekend I just had a craving for cookies. I wish there was a place in this small of a town that I could just buy a cookie. But no so I had to make them. Making gluten free cookies from scratch = nightmare. So I bought this box mix at Whole Foods and it was even on sale too. It was really simple, only called for you to add, 1 egg, butter (I used vegan Earth Balance) and vanilla. I mixed everything up and snacked on the yummy yet very crumbly dough. What else about being gluten free is new though?! I squeezed the dough into balls and baked. When I pulled them out of the oven I was amazed to see a real cookie. Not a super flat or spread out mess. The cookies looked real, like in those old days of so called food. I was amazed and ate one when they cooled a bit. Satisfied the craving! Thank you. I froze the rest so I didn't eat them all at once (the reason for the ban on baking) and I still have some a week later. So it worked. Anyways, I recommend this mix, it's pretty quick. I also have the chocolate cake mix that I'm making for my boyfriend's birthday in a few weeks so I'll let you know how that turns out. Good eating!

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Does the trick.



No, I didn't make cookies. I gave up doing that a long time ago. They turn out horrible and I just stuff my face with them. Two very bad things. So I usually just stick to the chocolate bars. "When coffee dreams, it dreams of chocolate." On a box of Starbucks Chocolate. That stuff is amazing by the way. The Espresso Dark Chocolate Bar, a personal favorite. But anyways, I do love chocolate and usually eat that but sometimes it just doesn't do the trick. So off to Whole Foods to buy a prepackaged cookie. Last night I had this one by Wow Baking Co. It's pretty amazing! It does have dairy, usually I try to stay away. But the texture is like a real cookie so I give myself a treat. Anyways, it does the trick. This is from a local Seattle company and they do not have them in Colorado. Usually I buy a cookie from the Whole Foods Bakery that they make that is flourless. However, they do not make that at the Seattle ones. I guess that's good that not all stores are exactly the same. So if you're in the Seattle Area try these out! Let me know what you think. Thanks all!

Friday, June 13, 2008

It's a party

And it's graduation time. My brother graduated from high school yesterday. So of course with big events like this come the parties. Well yeah I basically can't eat anything at parties ever so I made my own food. This is "Wonder Cake" from The Kid-Friendly Food Allergy Cookbook. It's gluten, dairy and sugar free. My brother is currently living sugar free so I wanted to make a treat for him that he can eat. So needless to say the cake turned out pretty well. The texture was moist and fluffy. A little crumbly like all GF things are. Then I made royal frosting in his school colors for people who eat sugar. The weird thing was the recipe called for olive oil and not vegetable oil. I could kind of taste the olive oil and it was kinda gross. So maybe next time I'll make it with just vegetable oil. Anyone have any thoughts?

Wonder Cake
1 egg
1/3 c each honey and molasses (I only used honey)
6 TB olive oil
1 3/4 c rice flour
dash of salt
2 ts cinnamon (I used 3)
2 ts baking powder
1/2 ts baking soda
1 cup apple juice
1 small apple, chopped
1 small pear, chopped
1/2 c raisins (I used Craisins)

Cream the egg. Blend in honey, molasses and oil. Add the flour, salt, cinnamon, baking powder and soda. On low speed mix in the juice. Stir in the chopped apple, pear, raisins. Pour into a parchment lined 8 or 9 inch cake pan. Bake in a 350 degree oven for 45 minutes.

Royal Frosting
1 egg white
1 3/4 c powdered sugar
2 TB water

Mix all together. Add more powdered sugar/water if needed. Can add food coloring.


I also needed to make something with substance to eat for dinner. So what better than quinoa?! I actually had this recipe for lunch at PCC last week. I immediately tried to find the recipe online when I got home. I came up with one pretty close. It's really easy and doesn't call for many crazy ingredients. Remember you can buy some them in the bulk section. Pumpkin seeds, quinoa, pepper. Anyways, the salad turned out really well, my family was impressed. And it's just super healthy and makes you feel good! Oh the perks of being gluten, dairy, meat free!

Aztec Quinoa Salad
1 cup quinoa, well rinsed
1 cup thawed frozen corn kernels
Juice of 1 lemon
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 or 3 scallions, minced
1-pound can pinto, pink, or kidney beans, drained and rinsed
1 heaping cup diced canned tomatoes (I used 1 fresh)
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar or balsamic vinegar
¼ cup chopped fresh parsley
Freshly ground black pepper, to taste
1/2 c Pumpkin seeds

Optional:
Black olives
1 medium red bell pepper, cut into strips

Bring 2 cups of water to a boil in a heavy saucepan. Add quinoa and simmer gently, covered, for 15 minutes. When the quinoa is done, remove it from the heat, fluff it with a fork, and transfer it to a mixing bowl. Combine the quinoa with the remaining ingredients and toss well. Also good when served chilled.