zondag 28 februari 2021

Huge Banana Muesli Buns

I often mess around and forget to write down the recipe.  This week I made fiber-rich buns for my sons, which were very much appreciated by my oldest.  So today I baked them again, but couldn't resist adding banana, raisins and dried fruit.  And so it became Banana Muesli buns.  The recipe for the fiber-rich breadrolls will therefore have to wait a while.  😉

Ingredients:
400 ml of lukewarm water
1 tablespoon of cane sugar
14 grams of dried yeast
45 grams of melted (cream) butter
200 grams of Twello's Brown Bread Mix from LePoole
300 gram Oat bread mix from LePoole
2 ripe bananas
20 grams of psyllium fiber Peaks
6 grams of inulin powder
20 grams of broken linseed
30 grams of rolled oats
75 grams raisins
50 grams of cut dried fruit
6 grams of bread salt
1 teaspoon of tartaric baking acid
1 teaspoon of balsamic vinegar
2 tablespoons of powdered milk
1 tablespoon of cinnamon
1 tablespoon of honey
sesame seeds for decoration

Preparation:
1. Preheat your oven to 50 degrees (I always let the bread rise in the oven).
2. Dissolve the cane sugar in the lukewarm water.  Add the yeast and let stand for 10 minutes for the yeast to activate.
3. Add the melted butter and banana, followed by the sifted bread mix, and the other ingredients.  Make sure that the yeast does not come into direct contact with the bread salt.
4. Mix everything together for a few minutes on the lowest setting.  (I have a K-Mix, and do not use the bread hook for this, but the K-mix hook. I think they mix better).  Then turn it to the highest setting and let it mix well for another minute or two.
4. Put the dough on your counter or on a sheet of baking paper and knead well.  Note, it can stick a bit, then put a little bread mix on your hands.
5. Divide the bread into 10 pieces of about 140 grams (I took out 10 large buns, my boys are growing and big eaters).
6. Make round balls and roll them through the sesame seeds, so that they are well covered all over.  If you do show cracks or if it is very sticky, wet your hands and form balls with them.  This way you add some extra moisture to your bread and that benefits your bread rolls.
6. Place the rolls on a lined baking tray and place in the preheated oven.  Let them rise for about an hour.
7. When they have risen enough, increase the temperature of the oven to about 230 degrees.  Because the buns often collapse when I take them out of the warm oven to heat them up further before baking, I just leave them in the oven.  In this way they rise a little further and remain more stable.
Place a bowl of warm water in the oven to create steam in the oven.
8. Once the oven is up to temperature, bake the buns for another 35 -45 minutes.
9. Remove the buns from the oven and let them cool down for a while before eating them.
10. They are delicious with cheese or just some butter.



 

zaterdag 26 december 2020

Oatflour bagels

Who doesn't love a bagel? My boys do! I made them these based on another recipe I found online (https://www.snixykitchen.com/gluten-free-bagels/) and changed it a bit because of the flours I had in my pantry and the workings of my temperamental oven. 
If you live in the US I suggest you use the original recipe because it uses flours available over the pond. I used Dutch flours from LePoole.
Ingredients
  • 350 ml warm water 
  • 14 grams of yeast 
  • 1 tablespoon of cane sugar
  • 160 grams of LePoole Twello's bruin breadmix 
  • 300 grams of oatflour breadmix by LePoole
  • 20g psyllium husks
  • 6 grams of bread salt (iodized salt)
  • 1,5 teaspoon of cream of tartar
  • 1 tablespoon white vinegar
  • ½ tablespoon extra virgin olive oil
  • For egg wash: 1 egg white beaten with 1 tablespoon water
  • Optional toppings: sesame seeds, poppy seeds, pumpkin seeds or oatmeal.

Poaching water

  • 2 litres of water
  • 2 tablespoons honey
Instructions
  1. Put lukewarm water in the mixer bowl and mix in the sugar. Slowly sprinkle the yeast in the warm water. Let sit for 10 minutes while the yeast activates and foams. 
  2. After 10 minutes combine with the flours, psyllium husk, salt, and cream of tartar followed by the olive oil and vinegar and mix on low to combine. Increase speed to medium and knead for 4-5 minutes until the dough is smooth.
  3. Divide the dough into 8 equal pieces. Knead and roll each piece into a ball and use your thumb and index finger to pinch a whole in the center. Place on a parchment-lined baking tray and repeat with remaining dough, placing them apart. If the dough feels too firm or starts to dry/crack as you roll, either knead in a tiny bit more water or dampen your hands as you knead and roll out a new bagel. When finished with all 8 bagels, put the oventray in a preheated oven that is heated to 35 degrees celcius.
  4. When they're done rising, in my case for about 45 minutes, bring a large pot of 2 litres of water plus honey to boil and preheat the oven to 225 degrees celcius. Whisk together the egg and water and set aside with a pastry brush and have your desired toppings in a separate bowl.
  5. Working in batches of 2-3 bagels, use a slotted spoon or spatula to drop a bagel into the boiling water. Boil for 1 minute, flip each bagel and boil for another minute. Transfer bagels back to the parchment-lined baking sheet, tapping lightly on the edge of the pot to get rid of extra water. Repeat until you've boiled all the bagels.
  6. Brush each bagel with egg wash all over the exposed surfaces and sprinkle with your desired toppings. Bake on the middle rack for about 25-30 minutes until the bagels are golden brown and firm to the touch. Let cool completely before slicing and serving.
  7. Store bagels in an airtight container for two days. Slice and freeze any bagels you won't eat within 2 days. 

zondag 15 april 2018

Pumpkin muffins with ginger and mixed spice

Yesterday we had pumpkin risotto  for dinner and (as with every recipe) I was left with about a quarter of a pumpkin, which I did not need in the recipe. I always use more vegetables than the original recipe, because how else do you eat the required amount of vegetables per day? I think: "How can one family live off of 1 onion and 250 grams of pumpkin?", when I read such a recipe. 

I cram my kids full with 'that healthy stuff' called vegetables. In the beginning it was a huge struggle, but now it's getting better. My boys are no longer bouncing with disgust at the sight of asparagus, spinach, beans or pumpkin in this case. Sure, the three P's: fries (in Dutch it's called patat hence the three P's), pizza and pancakes for those who do not know those holy P's) are still favorites, but vegetables are now pretty ok. Not all of them of course, I mean, who likes Brussels sprouts? Blergh! ;-)

But anyway, there I was left with another 200 grams of grated pumpkin. What are you going to do with that? Well ... i decided to make high-fiber muffins, which the boys can take to school in their snack box (or i can take it to work as a snack). 

The recipe below is a free interpretation (read, I used what I had in at home) on a recipe from the Dutch cookery book Powersnacks, and of course I made it gluten free for the boys. In the original recipe, the pumpkin must be cooked, but because it was grated so finely, I have used the pumpkin ijlst like that. That way those fibers are retained a bit better and my gluten free boys need those extra fibers.



Ingredients for about 12 muffins:

  • 200 grams (7 oz) of peeled, grated pumpkin
  • Fresh ginger, piece of 4 cm finely grated
  • 3 eggs
  • 4 tablespoons  of date syrup (every syrup works I think)
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of Greek yogurt (the recipe contained 225 grams (8 oz) of yogurt, but I did not have that anymore, so I added crème fraiche and milk to it.) Also works. ;-))
  • 125 grams (4.4 oz) of crème fraiche
  • 50 ml (1.7 fl oz) of milk
  • 175 grams (6.2 oz) of rice flour
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of cornmeal
  • 3 teaspoons of cream of tartar baking powder
  • 2 tablespoons of gingerbread spices/ mixed spices


Instruction:

  1. Preheat the oven to 190 degrees centigrade/ 360 fahrenheit. 
  2. Grease the muffin tin (or multiple muffin tins) or place paper cups in the cavities.
  3. Mix the pumpkin, ginger, rice flour, corn meal, tartar baking powder and gingerbread spices in a large mixing bowl.
  4. Beat the eggs with the crème fraiche, yogurt, milk and date syrup and pour this into the flour and pumpkin mixture. Stir everything together until everything is mixed well.
  5. Spoon it into the cavities of the muffin tins and decorate the batter with some pumpkin seeds if you have them (i didn't) and put in the oven. Bake this for about 20 minutes until the muffins have risen and are nicely brown.
  6. Allow them to cool for five minutes in the tin before removing them from the tin and allowing to cool completely on a rack.
Enjoy your meal!

dinsdag 9 januari 2018

Glutenfree oatcakes

I'm reading Jenny Colgan's The Summer Seaside Kitchen and in them the main character Flora makes Scottish oatcakes. Usually her books contain a few recipes and this one is no exception.... except... the Scottish Oatcakes aren't one of them. So I searched the ever knowing world wide wide and made my own version of the various different recipes I've found. 


These oatcakes are wonderful with a bit of butter or cheese, but I think they make a great and quite healthy breakfast option too, as I'm one of those breakfast cracker kind of person. ;-)

I made these crackers with 100% gluten free oats and oat flour so my two gluten free sons can eat them as well. My sons don't react to oats (i know that is not the case for everyone with coeliacs disease) and they love eating oatmeal and such. 


Ingredients: 
  • 100 grams of rolled oats
  • 175 grams of oat flour
  • 1 teaspoon of cream of tartar
  • 60 grams of cold butter
  • 1 teaspoon of iodised salt
  • 1 teaspoon of sugar
  • 100 ml  of hot water
Instructions: 
  1. Pre-heat the oven to 200 degrees centigrade or 390 degrees Fahrenheit.
  2. Mix together the rolled oats, oat flour, cream of tartar, iodised salt and sugar in a big bowl.
  3. Add the cold butter mix this through the flour and rolled oats mixture by rubbing it together until everything is mixed. It should have the consistency of bread crumbs. 
  4. Add the water (just bit by bit) and combine until you have a somewhat thick and slightly sticky dough. The amount of water varies; depending on the oats. I needed a lot of water. 
  5. Sprinkle some flour on a clean work surface and roll out the dough to  thickness that's about 1/2cm. Use a cookie cutter to cut out shapes. 
  6. Place the oat cakes on a baking tray and bake  them in the oven for  about 20-30mins until a light golden brown colour. 
  7. Let them cool a bit on a wire rack before you eat them with some salted butter or cheese. 

zondag 17 september 2017

Yoghurt cheesecake with blueberries and a country cookie base

This recipe popped up in my mind  the moment I saw the biscuits cakes they were baking in last weeks Heel Holland Bakt- episode (this is the Dutch version of the Great British Bake Off). But... just before the new broadcast tonight, it is finished: a gluten-free yoghurt cheesecake with blueberries and a country cookie base.

My kids (and I am too) are crazy about country cookies based on (gluten-free cultivated and processed) oatmeal. It seemed to me an ideal crust for a zingy cheesecake. And blueberries and cheesecake .. they just belong together? Right? So that cheesecake had to be made before it drove me crazy.






Ingredients:

For the bottom and some cookies for decoration

  • 300 grams of oatmeal (gluten-free cultivated and processed)
  • 3 teaspoons of ground cinnamon
  • a pinch of salt
  • 100 grams of ground coconut
  • 4 small eggs
  • 10 tablespoons honey
  • 125 grams of butter (melted)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract

For the cheesecake filling

  • 500 grams of Greek yogurt
  • 300 grams of cream cheese (at room temperature)
  • 4 small eggs or 3 large ones
  • 150 grams of fine caster sugar
  • 50 grams of rice flour (gluten-free)
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla extract
  • 1 teaspoon of  lemon zest

For the blueberry topping

  • 100 ml of pear juice
  • 150 grams of blueberries
  • 3 leaves of gelatin

NB. Make sure you have some extra blueberries to put on the bottom of the cheesecake

Preparation:

  1. Preheat the oven to 160 degrees Celcius (325 Fahrenheit).
  2. Cover a spring tin of 20 cm diameter with baking paper and grease it.
  3. First make the dough for the bottom and the biscuits. Put all of the ingredients in a bowl and mix with a mixer until you have a cohesive mixture (it will not be a firm dough, but all oatmeal and coconut must be sticky with the other ingredients). Fill the tin with 2/3 of the dough and make sure you coat the edges.
  4. From the remaining dough, make small biscuits, that you bake on a baking tray covered with baking parchment for 10-12 minutes at 200 degrees Celcius.  This can be done while your cheesecake is in the oven (or if you only have 1 oven: after baking the cheesecake, as this must cool down for 3 hours in the fridge).
  5. Now make the cheesecake mixture. I put everything in the bowl of my kitchen machine and that beat it until well combined. To prevent lumps (that's what happens with the Monchou cream cheese if you have just taken it out of the fridge like I did) I used my blender to whip it into an airy mixture (and the lumps will also have disappeared ;-) ).
  6. Sprinkle blueberries over the dough and pour the cheesecake mixture over it.
  7. Put the cheesecake in the oven and cook it for about 60-80 minutes. The top is then light brown and the middle can no longer wobble. If the cheesecake is slightly cracked in the middle and it doesn't wobble it is usually cooked. First let it cool down and then refrigerate the cake to completely cool in 3 hours.
  8. When the cheesecake is in the oven, make the blueberry jelly. Cook the pear juice with the blueberries  and let it boil for 5 minutes or so. Take it off the heat. Soak the leaves of gelatin in cold water and add to the warm blueberry mixture, puree it with a blender to get a smooth jelly. Allow to cool and pour over the cheesecake when it is cooling down in the oven (in my case the jelly was too set already so it is slightly less smooth than I intended).
  9. Decorate with some cookies and serve your guests (or eat it yourself ;-))

Bon Appetit !!

zondag 9 oktober 2016

Carrot cake with walnuts, raisins and coconut


Now that autumn has arrived I wanted to bake a nice robust cake, a pie in which you can taste the fall. My first instinct was to make pumpkin pie, but my boys were not quite in favor. They think pumpkin is delicious in a risotto, but as a pie ... that's a step too far. So carrot cake it was. Not typically autumn, but mixed spices give it a hint of autumn. And it contains lots of fiber, something thatmy boys with their gluten-free diet can really use. When the batter was finished I had so much that I ended up baking two cakes. One for us at home, and one that I take to work, where they already know that gluten free tastes good. ;-)

I have a basic recipe adapted added lots of extras. 
The end result:




Ingredients:
For the carrot cake

  • 300 grams (10.5 oz) of grated carrot
  • 180 grams (6.35 oz) of walnuts
  • 50 grams (1.75 oz) of coconut
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of raisins
  • 2 tbsp mixed spice
  • 50 grams (1.75 oz) of almond flour
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of rice flour
  • 2 bags of baking soda (or two teaspoons)
  • 300 grams (10.5 oz) brown sugar
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of butter
  • 200 ml (7 fl oz) of coconut oil
  • 4 eggs (separated)

For the cream cheese buttercream:

  • 400 grams (14 oz) of cream cheese
  • 250 grams (8.8 oz) of butter
  • 250 grams (8.8 oz) of icing sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla flavoring

Preparation:

  1. Preheat the oven to 150 degrees Celsius/300 degrees Fahrenheit.
  2. Melt the butter and coconut oil (if solidified) and whisk in a bowl with the caster sugar until creamy.
  3. Mix the carrot, walnuts, coconut, raisins, spice cake, almond flour, rice flour and baking soda in a separate bowl.
  4. Beat the egg yolks with the butter and sugar mixture and add the dry ingredients to this. Beat the egg whites in a clean, dry bowl and fold gently into the batter. Do this carefully so that you keep the air inside.
  5. Grease a large springform pan (I used two little ones) and line it with parchment paper. Spoon the batter into the springform pan(s) and smooth. Put it in the oven and bake 45 minutes at 150 degrees/300 degrees fahrenheit.
  6. After three minutes, turn the temperature to 170 degrees celsius/ 340 degrees fahrenheit and bake the cakes even further (about 30 minutes). Make sure the top is not too dark, otherwise you cover it with aluminum foil.
  7. Meanwhile, make the butter cream by putting all the ingredients into the food processor and mix for some time (I let my machine mix for 45 minutes on a low setting). Thus, it becomes a light cream.
  8. If the cake(s) are ready, remove them from the oven and let them cool completely on a rack. When they are cool you cut them and fill them with some of the cream and the rest you spread over the top. Decorate the cake with whole walnuts (or as I did with marzipan and chocolate figurines).

Bon appetit!

zondag 4 september 2016

Blueberry muffins

I'm almost ashamed to say it's been a really, really, really long while since I've actually blogged a recipe. That doesn't mean I've stopped baking, because baking never stops when you have two gluten free boys to take care of. But life has been a tad bit hectic so blogging the recipes I developed never quite 'happened' to make it onto here. 

This week a brand new kitchen gadget arrived: My very own Kenwood Kmix and that was reason enough to bake something. Because, it is no use letting it be pretty on your kitchen countertop right? So... blueberry muffins it was. And they turned out so nice I just couldn't let them go "unblogged'. So hey... I'm back! 


This recipe makes 12 midsize muffins

Ingredients: 
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of rice flour
  • 50 grams (1.76 oz) of corn flour
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of almond flour
  • 75 grams (2.65 oz) of sugar
  • 10 grams (0.35 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons fiber husk
  • 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum
  • 1 teaspoon of cinnamon
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of soft butter
  • 2 dl (3.33 fl oz) of butter milk 
  • 2 eggs
  • 175 grams (6.17 oz) of blueberries


Instructions:
  1. Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade/ 350 fahrenheit. 
  2. Put the paper cups into the muffin tray or butter the muffin tray. 
  3. Mix all the dry ingredients in one bowl. 
  4. Beat the sugar into the soft butter until it is a fluffy mixture. Add the eggs and beat them into the butter mixture. 
  5. Add the mixed dry ingredients and mix it all in until it is combined. Then add the blueberries and fold them in carefully so they won't break open. I added them to the mixture in my Kmix and let it mix on the slowest/first setting. 
  6. Scoop the mixture into the muffin tray with a spoon. 
  7. Put in the oven and bake for about 20-25 minutes until golden brown. 
  8. Take them out of the oven, let them cool in the tray first for a couple of minutes. Then take them out and let them cool completely on a wire rack. 
Enjoy!!




zondag 12 juli 2015

Lemon & Honey cookies

I not only bake for my kids or my blog, I bake for my colleagues too. Almost two weeks ago I had a work dinner and I spent half the evening taking requests from colleagues for cookies. My cookie baking reputation at work has taken a flying leap. And every now & then I indulge them. And I always love their reaction: "You can't tell this is gluten free!" Well, duhhh, of course not. Gluten free does not equal cardboard cookies. Not if you do it right.

But first I needed a recipe for cookies that were delicious, taste like summer & that I could make in enormous quantities. So I adapted another recipe that had the consistency I was looking for with honey and lemon and a bit more sugar to match the summery feel I wanted. This is the result. So I first made a batch for my little men and soon I'll be baking a gigantic amount of cookies & I'll take a tour to visit all the cookie begging colleagues and bring them some. 

They may not look like summer, but they taste like it all the same!

This recipe makes two dozen cookies.

Ingredients:
  • 300 grams (10.5 oz) of rice flour
  • 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum
  • 1.5 teaspoon of cream of tartar
  • 15 grams (0.5 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of light caster sugar
  • The zest of two lemons
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of butter
  • 4 tablespoons of honey

Instructions:
  • Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade (350 degrees fahrenheit)
  • Put all the ingredients in one big bowl and mix till you have a combined dough. It will feel soft, but not extremely sticky.
  • Pour some gluten rice free flour on a clean kitchen surface, kneed the dough on it and then roll it out with a rolling pin. Cut out cookies with your favourite cookie cutters. Repeat until you have used up all the dough.
  • Put the cookies on baking trays lined with baking parchment and put in the oven for about 15 minutes until slightly risen and golden. 
  • Take them out of the oven and let them cool completely before you serve them with a cup of tea or coffee. 


Enjoy! My boys loved them and I think they have a new favourite cookie.

dinsdag 14 april 2015

Sinful Gigantic Chocolate Chip Cookies

I could tell these cookies would be fabulous just by tasting the dough. Crunchy, velvety dough full of chocolate. And you know what makes it so fabulous? Loads of full fat butter, sugar, vanilla & egg yolks. Lots of stuff that basically is not healthy for you, but oh so delicious every now & then. 

Those of you who know me a little know that I'm totally horrified by the fact that some people seem to think that the gluten free diet is a good way to lose weight. It's not, it's a diet that helps people get their health back. That doesn't mean that I'm opposed to living healthy either. Those that know me well know I've struggled with my weight for a period of my life and the only way I got back to a healthy weight was by cutting down portions, eating healthier (read loads of veggies, fruits, rice, wholemeal bread and such and above all no more processed packaged foods) and exercising way more (riding my bike to work every day). So I get people wanting to live healthy. I just don't believe that the gluten free diet is going to do you any favours. Because gluten aren't your enemy unless you have celiac disease. Sugar, fat & such are. But if you don't eat unhealthy stuff all day, every day, it's ok to indulge yourself every once in a while. And that's what I've done by making these cookies. Cookies that I'll serve to my kids and some of my colleagues tomorrow because I think they deserve a bit of indulgence. And I may just have one myself. ;-)

This recipe makes about 20 huge cookies. 


Ingredients:
  • 250 grams (9 oz) of full fat butter
  • 250 grams (9 oz) of light caster sugar
  • 250 grams (9 oz) of (sticky) rice flour 
  • 2 egg yolks
  • 2 teaspoons of xanthan gum
  • 1 teaspoon of baking soda or cream of tartar
  • 0.5 a teaspoon of iodised salt
  • the scraped seeds of a vanilla bean
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of white chocolate
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of dark chocolate

Instructions:
  • Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade or 350 degrees fahrenheit.
  • I bought to bars of chocolate and bashed them to smithereens with my meat hammer (make sure you have some big chunks left in there too for good measure).
  • Put all the ingredients in a big bowl and mix them until you have above mentioned crunchy velvety dough with tons of chocolate.
  • I rolled out the dough (on a gluten free, clean surface) till it was about 0.5 cm (almost 0.25 of an inch) thick and punched out round cookies with cookie cutter with a diameter of 7 cm (2.5 inch). I put them on a baking tray (make sure you leave a lot of space in between) and put them in the oven for about 10-12 minutes. 
  • Leave to cool & then impress your friends, family, colleagues (or yourself) with them as you serve them with a cup of coffee.

dinsdag 31 maart 2015

Gluten-Free Easter Bunny bread rolls

This week my boys will have Easter brunch at school, after the Easter service in the local Catholic church. It is a nice end to the church service and a wonderful beginning of the Easter weekend. But it is always one of those days that my boys realize they eat differently. That they're the odd one out. The rest of their class will eat the brunch served by school and they will be eating their own gluten free bread rolls. Because school won't provide a gluten free brunch for them. Part of me understands, because the chance of glutening the kids is huge, and you don't want to be responsible for that, but on the other hand it is still a bit sad that school can't provide for kids with special diets. But... it is what is is, so I made my boys these Easter Bunny bread rolls, so they have something special at the brunch.

These are so easy to make, you can make them with your kids. 

I used Peak's Free From fibre-rich bread mix to make these airy bread rolls, but I did not quite follow the instructions on the box. This recipe makes about 12 Easter Bunny's.

Ingredients:
  • 450 grams  (1 lb) of Peak's Free From fibre-rich bread mix
  • 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum
  • 15 grams (0.5 oz) of yeast
  • 12 grams (0.3 oz) of sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 250 ml (9 fl oz) of warm milk
  • 60 ml (2.03 fl oz) of extra vergine olive oil
  • 1 teaspoon of apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tablespoon of molasses
  • oatmal to make noses
  • black currants to make the bunnies eyes
  • an egg (whisked) to brush on top of the bunnies
  • a bit of oat flour to roll out the dough and prevent it from sticking to the surface & the rolling pin
Instructions:
  1. Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade /350 degrees fahrenheit
  2. Mix the bread mix, xanthan gum, yeast and sugar in a big bowl.
  3. Mix the milk, eggs, olive oil, apple cider vinegar and molasses in another bowl.
  4. Add the milk mixture to the bread mix and beat with an electric mixer till all is combined and you have a sticky dough.
  5. Dust a clean surface with a bit of oat flour and roll out the dough till it's about a centimeter or half an inch thick. Dust the top with oat flour too when you roll out your dough. Then use a (large) bunny shaped cookie cutter to cut out the bread rolls.
  6. Brush the top of the bread bunnies with the whisked egg and then make noses from the oat flakes & press in black currants for eyes. 
  7. Put the bread rolls in the warm oven and bake for about 35 minutes until golden and fluffy.
  8. Put them on a wire rack to let them cool. 
Serve them with a bit of salted butter and some cheese. Happy gluten free Easter!

donderdag 26 maart 2015

Blueberry & Lemon Cheesecake

I'm not going to write a whole intro to this recipe because basically I've baked this for the sheer fun of it. I wanted to bake and since I yearn for more springlike (or better yet summery) weather, I made this blueberry and lemon cheesecake. Both flavours represent sunny weather for me and they go together so incredibly well! 
Also, I don't feel like preaching about gluten free all the time. This luxurious and rich cheese cake is my way of saying: see... living gluten free ain't so bad. You can have cheese cake & eat it all! 

Here's how it turned out.


Yeah, I know.... it tastes as good as it looks, I promise!

Ingredients:
Base
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of soft butter
  • 50 grams (1.75 oz) of raw cane sugar
  • 200 grams  (7 oz) of gluten free rice flour
Cheesecake
  • 600 grams (1 lb 5 oz)of softened cream cheese, softened
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of sugar
  • 15 grams (0.5 oz)of vanilla sugar
  • 85 grams (3 oz) of sticky rice flour (gluten free) 
  • half a teaspoon of baking soda
  • 4 eggs
  • 125 ml (4 fl oz) of sour cream
  • grated zest of one lemon
  • juice of one lemon
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of fresh blueberries
Lemon & cream cheese frosting
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of cream cheese, room temperature
  • 50 grams (3.5 oz) of butter, room temperature
  • 50 ml (2 fl oz) of sour cream
  • 250 grams (9 oz) of powdered sugar
  • grated zest of one lemon
  • lemon juice 2 tablespoons
  • about 100 grams (3.5 oz) of blueberries for decoration
Instructions:
Base:
  1. Preheat the oven to 200 degrees centigrade/ 400 degrees fhrenheit
  2. Line a spring cake tin with baking parchment & butter the sides
  3. Mix the butter, sugar & rice flour in a bowl till you have a crumbly mixture. Pour it in the spring tin & cover the base of the spring tin pressing the mixture to form a solid base. Put it in the oven for 15-20 minutes until it starts to turn golden & take it out of the oven. Let it cool down.
Cream cheese filling: 
  1. Reduce oven to 150 degrees centigrade / 300 degrees fahrenheit.
  2. In a large bowl, mix the cream cheese, sugar, rice flour and baking soda until combined (Use low speed to keep less air from getting into the batter). Scrape down the sides of the bowl.
  3. Add eggs one at a time, beating slowly and scraping the sides of the bowl after each addition.
  4. Add the sour cream, lemon zest and lemon juice. Beat on low speed until well combined.  
  5. Now fold in the blueberries with a spatula so they stay intact. 
  6. Pour the cream cheese mixture on top of the (shortbread) base.
  7. Place spring tin(covered with aluminum foil) in the oven.
  8. Bake for 1 hour and 20 minutes.
  9. Turn off the heat and leave cheesecake in oven with door closed for 30 minutes.
  10. Remove cheesecake from oven and chill it in the refrigerator.
Decorate:
  1. Combine cream cheese , sour cream and butter and mix until smooth.
  2. Add lemon zest and powdered sugar and mix until smooth.
  3. Add lemon juice and mix until smooth.
  4. Once cheesecake is cool and firm, remove from spring tin and place on serving plate. Cover with icing. Sprinkle blueberries on top. Refrigerate until ready to serve.
Enjoy!!!

vrijdag 13 maart 2015

Carrot Coconut Cake with Cream Cheese frosting

I always bake gluten free, even for my own birthday. Why? Because I do not want to risk any cross contamination in my kitchen and in my baking products. The only gluten products that come into my kitchen are my breakfast crackers & our bread that we religiously keep away from the gluten free stuff. Our dinner is always gluten free, I do not want to cook two seperate meals.

So that also means that the birthday cakes for my husband and my birthday are always gluten free too. No fuss, and basically (if I do it right) people don't even taste the difference. This year I wanted to make a carrot cake. I had never made one gluten free, so now was as good as a time as any. When I googled carrot cake I stumbled on this Dutch recipe and it sounded so delicious that I just needed to make a gluten free version of it. And that is more than just substituting the flour, because gluten free flour react differently than normal flour, so i needed to make some changes in the recipe. Here's how it turned out:

There's tons & tons of cream cheese frosting on top to give the cake some extra zing!
Ingredients:
Cake:
  • 450 grams (1 lb) of grated carrots
  • 300 grams (10.5 oz) of gluten free cake flour (I used Schar's mix C) 
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of raw cane sugar
  • 125 grams (4.5 oz) of grated coconut
  • 2,5 teaspoons of cream of tartar
  • 2 teaspoons of xanthan gum
  • the zest of 1 orange
  • half a teaspoon of iodized salt
  • 1 tablespoon of cinnamon
  • 1 tablespoon of grated nutmeg
  • 0.5 teaspoon of powdered ginger 
  • 0.5 teaspoon of powdered cloves
  • 15 grams (0.5 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 225 ml (8 fl oz) of olive oil
  • 125 ml (4 fl oz) of buttermilk
  • 4 eggs
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of chopped walnuts 
  • 100 gram (3.5 oz)  of chopped raisins (sultanas)

Orange & cream cheese frosting
  • 300 grams (10.5 oz)(3 of cream cheese 
  • 3 tablespoons of fresh cheese (quark)
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of powdered sugar 
  • zest of one orange
  • 2-3 tablespoons of orange juice.
  • about 50 grams (1.75 oz) of chopped walnuts to decorate.
Instructions:
  1. Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade/350 degrees fahrenheit.
  2. Take a big bowl (you need a big one, because this amount makes a whole lot of batter!!!) and mix the flour, cane sugar, grated coconut, grated carrot, vanilla sugar, cream of tartar, xanthan gum, cinnamon, nutmeg, powdered ginger, powdered cloves and the orange zest. 
  3. Take another bowl and mix the eggs with the buttermilk & olive oil.
  4. Mix the egg, oil & buttermilk mixture in with the huge amount of flour, spices, carrots & coconut mixture. Make sure it is mixed well. If your mixture remains a bit dry, add a bit of extra buttermilk.
  5. Now fold in the chopped walnuts and raisins.
  6. Butter a round spring tin and line it with parchment paper. Pour in the batter and softly even it out with a spoon.
  7. Put it in the oven for about 50-60 minutes until it is nice & golden.
  8. Let the cake cool completely before you decorate it with the cream cheese frosting. To make the frosting mix the cream cheese, fresh cheese, orange juice & powdered sugar till all is combined. Spread it on top of the cake.  Sprinkle the cream cheese frosting with orange zest & chopped walnuts.
Enjoy!


donderdag 12 maart 2015

Mascarpone & parmesan bread rolls with chives & pine nuts

Before I share this recipe with you all, there's something that I need to get off my chest.

I've had it with this whole fad concept that people seem to think that gluten free is. I've also had it with people eating gluten free solely because they think it's healthy for them. I really don't know how to make this any clearer but: gluten free does not equal healthier people. You are basically denying yourself nutritients: vitamins & minerals because you avoid gluten without any medical reason to do so. Wheat, rye, spelt, whatever.... it's not unhealthy for you (unless you have celiac disease or a wheat allergy). And if you don't have a medical reason to avoid gluten, neither are the gluten. Eat the damn stuff, just do it with moderation. These grains contain nutrients you need & that celiacs need to compensate for with other foods to get their daily intake. Just stop eating all the processed shit that food companies try to sell you. Because that all does contain crap you do not want to eat on a regular basis. Just eat healthy and do not believe the hype, because that is pure marketing. It does not mean it's valid or true. And you are simply making the life of people who have no other choice but to live gluten free very, very difficult. Because you feed the common thought that gluten free is a fad and that you do not need to take it seriously. 

And to all the people on the other side of the spectrum that are rolling their eyes and questioning living gluten free: some people really do have a medical reason to eat gluten free. And it's a very valid one. I honestly hope you don't ever have to go through this strict way of life, where you have to watch out what you eat, to make sure your food does not get contaminated. Because one crumb of bread or a bit of wheat flour can make you sick. And I mean really, really sick. And yes weird things such as cosmetics, play doh or glue can contain gluten and if you forget to wash your hands it will contaminate your food. Just like that. For real. It's not a joke. My 8 year old is proof. He has celiac disease and he is doing remarkably well. Most of the time. He is very strict on his diet, but his intestines will always be his weak spot. Even if he sticks to his diet. Right now he is home with tummy cramps and other stuff that comes with it, solely because the stomach flu virus he picked up is harder on him than it is on others. And he is suffering from it longer than you & I would. He has this disease for life. So trust me, it's real. It's damn real.

Rant over. Here's the recipe to the mascarpone & parmesan bread rolls I made for my sons. Because living gluten free may be hard and serious 'shit', it's not the end of the world either. 




Ingredients:
  • 250 ml (9 fl oz) of buttermilk
  • 1  large egg
  • 125 grams (4.5 oz) of mascarpone cheese
  • 450 grams (1 lb) of gluten free bread flour (I used Le Poole mix for white bread)
  • 2 teaspoons of xanthan gum
  • 2 teaspoons of fiber husk
  • 10 grams (0.25 oz) of granulated sugar
  • half a teaspoon of iodized salt
  • 75 grams (2.75 oz) of grated parmesan cheese
  • 3 tablespoons of chopped chives
  • 1 egg yolk, two tablespoons of water & pine nuts for decoration
Instructions:
  1. Preheat the oven to 50 degrees centigrade (110 degrees fahrenheit) & put a bowl of water in the oven. The water will help the dough proof.
  2. Put all the ingredients (except for the pine nuts) into a big bowl in the order you see above. 
  3. Mix it all until you have a firm but sticky dough.
  4. Divide the dough into 9 equal pieces and form them into rolls. I used the handle of a wooden spoon to make indentations on top (in the middle) of each roll. Just because it looks nice. 
  5. Put the rolls onto a baking tray lined with baking parchment & put it in the preheated oven for about 45 minutes to let the dough proof.
  6. Take the dough out of the oven and turn up the heat of the oven to 200 degrees centigrade (400 degrees fahrenheit).
  7. Mix the egg yolk with the water & brush it on top of the bread rolls. Sprinkle with the pine nuts.
  8. Put the bread rolls back into the oven for about 30-35 minutes until they are golden. 
  9. Let them cool on a wire rack before you serve them, although my son ate his straight from the oven.
Enjoy!



dinsdag 3 maart 2015

Fluffy peanut butter cookies with a chocolate surprise

The recipe is based on this brilliant recipe that popped up on my Tumblr feed and I decided to make a gluten free version of it because my youngest son is a huge, huge fan of peanut butter. And of chocolate sprinkles. I fear that slight addiction is all my fault, because when I was pregnant with my youngest son I suddenly developed a craving for peanut butter & chocolate sprinkles sandwiches. When I was pregnant with my first I ate tons of olives. Guess what he loves? Yeah...

Anyway, I decided to add a little twist to the recipe and hid a chocolate button in the centre of each cookie. That way my youngest had cookie that combined his favorite sandwich toppings: peanut butter & chocolate. In the next batch I'm putting in a bit more, because the balance isn't quite right yet. There isn't enough chocolate in the cookie. So f you make it, pout in a bigger chunk of chocolate & you'll be very pleased with the end result! 

Here's how mine turned out:
See, not enough chocolate. but delicious all the same!
This recipe makes about 25 medium cookies.

Ingredients: 

  • 125 grams (4.5 oz) of peanut butter 
  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of butter
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of raw cane sugar
  • 2 eggs
  • 15 grams (0.5 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 300 grams (10.5 oz) of gluten free rice flour
  • 1 teaspoon of cream of tartar
  • 2 teaspoons of xanthan gum
  • some raw can sugar to coat the cookies with
Instructions:


  1. Preheat oven to 175 degrees centigrade/350 degrees fahrenheit. Using an electric mixer, cream peanut butter and butter in a mixing bowl until it's smooth. Add the raw cane sugar; beat it until it is fully combined. Add the eggs and vanilla sugar, and continue beating until creamy.
  2. First sift your flour in a separate bowl so it will be light & airy, sift the baking powder and xanthan gum as well. The xanthan gum is needed so your cookies won't crumble. Then whisk together the flour, baking powder & xanthan gum. Gradually add the flour mixture to the butter, sugar & peanut butter mixture, beating on low speed.
  3. Prepare baking sheet by lining it with parchment paper or lightly greased aluminum foil. Place raw cane sugar on a plate. Roll (table) spoonfuls of cookie dough into balls, press a chocolate button or chunk in the middle and then roll each ball between your hands. Roll balls in sugar to coat them completely.
  4. Place cookie balls 3 cm / 2 inches apart on a prepared baking sheet. Bake until cookies begin to puff up slightly, about 12-15 minutes, until cookies just brown around the edges and crackle on top. Remove from oven and let the cookies cool at least 10 minutes on baking sheet before transferring cookies to rack to cool completely.

Enjoy!


dinsdag 10 februari 2015

Easy to bake cinnamon rolls a la Wendy

You know that moment when you read a recipe and think: "Man, I would do that completely different and it would be absolutely amazing?" Or am I the only one cocky enough to think that? (I do hope some of you who actually use my recipes think that every now & then and improve my recipes. Because there is always room for improvement!)
The longer I'm doing the gluten free baking stuff the more I recognize a good recipe or one that could be improved. Simply because I've baked so much I just know how certain components go together or how gluten free dough reacts. So if you are just starting out & wonder what the f*ck you got landed with when you received the diagnose of celiac disease: it does get better. The more you bake, the better you become at it. It's just a new way of baking and accepting that the old way is not going to work. 

This recipe for easy cinnamon rolls is one of those: "Man I would do that differently"-recipes. I knew certain components were missing to make the dough more like "real" cinnamon rolls. More fluffy, less compact. Why settle for ok, if it can be wonderful, right? 
The fact is, my first version was sort of ok. It had the consistency I wanted, but the taste was still a bit off. Turned out I used the wrong combination of flours and too much baking soda. Bummer! So here's the recipe to my improvement of the improvement. You still with me? So don't be discouraged if something doesn't work out the first time. Just try again and change your recipe a bit.

This recipe makes about 12 cinnamon rolls and you whip them up in about 45 minutes or so. A quick fix if you suddenly have guests and you need to serve them something delicious.

Fluffy, soft, yummy cinnamon rolls
Ingredients:

  • 100 grams (3.5 oz) of soft butter
  • 1 egg
  • 40 grams (1.5 oz) of full fat yoghurt
  • 20 grams (0.75 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 2 tablespoons of honey
  • 175 grams (6 oz) of basic bread flour (and a bit more for dusting your work surface and rolling out your dough)
  • 5 grams (0.125 oz) of xanthan gum
  • 5 grams (0.125 oz) of baking soda
  • half a teaspoon of iodized salt
  • 40 grams (1.5 oz) of finely granulated sugar
  • 1.5 teaspoon of cinnamon
Instructions:
  1. Preheat your oven to 175 degrees centigrade or 325 degrees fahrenheit.
  2. Put the butter, egg, yoghurt, vanilla sugar and honey in a bowl and mix it till it's creamy and combined. Add the flour, xanthan gum, baking soda and salt and mix it into the creamy butter mixture. Your dough can be quite sticky. If it is, add a bit of extra flour. 
  3. Dust a clean work surface with a bit of flour and roll out your dough into a rectangle shape. 
  4. Mix the granulated sugar with the cinnamon to create cinnamon sugar and spread it over the dough. Leave a border with no sugar so the dough can stick toghter when you roll it up. 
  5. You roll up the dough from the short side of your rectangle. Then slice it up in tiny rolls. If some cinnamon sugar falls out of your cinnamon rolls, just press the top into it, so you get a nice layer on top of your cinnamon rolls, as well as in between. 
  6. Put them on a baking tray lined with baking parchment and put them in the preheated oven for about 20 minutes. They'll come out all risen and golden. 
  7. Let them cool on the tray before you serve them with a cup of tea (or coffee if you so please)
  8. Enjoy!




maandag 8 december 2014

Cinnamon cheescake with Dutch stewed pears & a speculoos base

Autumn & winter aren't my favorite seasons. I don't like the cold. I don't like the darkness & the gloomy atmosphere that comes with it. But I do love the food. It's comforting & traditional. The smells & tastes bring me back to my youth, when life was simple. And the food is just as simple. 
This cheesecake combines the best of autumn & winter: cinnamon, speculoos cookies (or as we call it speculaas) and typically Dutch stewed pears. Whenever I make them, i think of my grandma, who made them for us when we came for dinner and they always tasted so delicious. She was so good at them. They make me smile & this cheesecake will warm your heart & tickle your tastebuds as well. 

I did not invent this recipe, it's someone else's clever & delicious invention. I altered a bit of the recipe to my grandma's way of making the stewed pears (with port wine, you cannot do without!!) and a gluten free base with my "kruidnootjes" dough as base. Here's my gluten free version:

It might not look all that pretty, but it makes up for it in taste

Ingredients:
Stewed pears
  • 4-5 Gieser Wildeman pears
  • 350 ml (12 fl oz) water
  • 2 tablespoons of granulated vanilla sugar
  • 1 cinnamonstick
  • 1 vanilla bean
  • 2 star anise
  • 1.5 glass of port wine
For the gluten free speculoos base
  • 25 grams (1 oz) of soft butter
  • 125 gram (4,5 oz) of dark caster sugar 
  • 8 grams (0.25 oz) of vanilla sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 teaspoon of xanthan gum
  • pinch of salt
  • 2 teaspoons of cream of tartar
  • 50 grams (1.75 oz) of gluten free buckwheat flour
  • 200 grams (7 oz) of gluten free cookie flour (I used Shar's C mix)
  • 1 tablespoon of cinnamon powder
  • 2 tablespoons of gluten free mixed spice/speculoos spices (a mixture of ground cinnamon, coriander, nutmeg, ginger, cloves, kardemom & orange peels) 
For the Cheesecake
  • 400 grams (14 oz) of cream cheese (I used Dutch Mon Chou cream cheese)
  • 250 grams (9 oz) of cottage cheese 
  • 125 grams (4,5 oz) of granulated sugar
  • 8 grams (0.25 oz) of vanilla sugar 
  • 4 eggs
  • 1 teaspoon of cinnamon 
  • 1 tablespoon of mixed spice/speculoos spices 
  • 1 vanilla bean

How to make the stewed pears:
It's best to make them the night before so they are cold when used in the cake. 
  • Scrape the vanilla from the bean'pod and put in a separate bowl. 
  • Put the water, sugar, cinnamon, vanilla bean and star anise in a small saucepan. Stir so that the juice absorbs the sugar. 
  • Peel the pears, slice them in quarters and remove the core. Add them to the pan. Place the pan over medium heat and bring to a boil. 
  • Reduce heat to low, cover the pan and cook the pears for about 1 hour. Then add the port wine & cook for another 30 minutes. 
  • Turn off the heat and let the pears cool in the pan with the lid on, outside of the refrigerator.

How to make the cake:
You start with the dough for the speculoos base:
  • Beat the butter with the sugar until creamy. 
  • Beat in the egg.
  • Then add the mixed spice/speculoos spice, cinnamon, xanthan gum, salt, cream of tartar and all of the gluten-free flour and kneed the dough (using a mixer) into a firm ball. 
  • Put this, covered with foil, in the refrigerator for an hour.
  • Line a spring baking tin with baking parchment and butter the sides. 
  • Roll out the dough on a clean surface and line the baking tin with it. Put it in the fridge.
  • Preheat the oven to 175 degrees centigrade / 350 degrees fahrenheit.
Now make the cheesecake filling as follows:
  • Mix the cream cheese, cottage cheese, sugar, cinnamon, mixed spices and vanilla until you have a smooth mixture. 
  • Fold in the eggs one at a time. 
  • Remove the tin from the fridge and pour the mixture onto the crust. 
  • Put the pears on top. 
  • Bake the cake about 1 hour in the preheated oven. 
  • The cake should have a beautiful golden color and there should be no more moisture to be seen. 
  • Allow the cake to cool for at least three hours on a wire rack before you serve it. 
Enjoy!


Ps. next time I'm making this cheesecake, I'll chop up some 1 extra stewed pear and mix it through the cheesecake mixture. That would make it even more fabulous!!