5 posts from 2007
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i though there was hope for my hips come the gluten free life. the bananas were freed into the wilds for the deer, and i had unappealing breakfasts facing me from here until eternity. until looking as two very brown bananas this weekend. i decided to check the new bible to see what there was in way of banana bread.
lo and behold, it involves a whole stick of butter, so we know it's going o be good! it's also dead simple, with about 1/2 the ingredients i'm used to . but i did have to add raisins, cinnamon, vanilla and nutmeg, otherwise it just isn't banana bread for me.
the most wonderful thing about this bread it is really did give a good rise, but remains very rich. and it is in no way crumbly. i've been going all out an spreading it with a mix of peanut butter and honey, and there is barely a crumb on the plate. the texture and flavor is such that no would even know that's actually rice flour in there.
yet another winner!
i spotted this recipe on Gluten-Free By The Bay's recipe round-up a few weeks back, and it instantly got a do this! from me for the crock-pot alone. i adore my crock-pot for weekend cooking since it gives me just a bit more time to do other stuff, and makes the house smell great in the process. of course the ingredient list was a mile long, but it ended up being worth it. this was the yummiest lunch, and quite filling.
Je Mange la Ville made quite a few modifications to the recipe, and i went back to the "original", but decided on some modifications of my own. I noticed well into cooking that this really wasn't so much as a stew, but a soup, and i really wanted something thicker and heartier. i quickly pulled out a couple yukon gold potatoes, nuked them half way and gave them a chop and tossed them in to catch the last two hours of cooking. this was a huge improvement. it gave just the right amount of starch, and the potatoes really soaked up the spices. i really recommend tossing them in.
as for the finishing touches, i used a mix of raisins and chopped dried apricots for the fruit. they plumped up obscenely as expected. i also finished off with garlic stuffed green olives, and some toasted pine nuts. the nuts added a nice contract to the sweet and spicy flavor of the stew.
this was such a delight last week, i was tempted to make it again for this coming week. but i was good, and am trying out a different moroccan spiced lentil and chick pea soup, but will probably repeat this stew next weekend
new year's resolution: post cook prepped for the week, even if a repeat of a tried-and-true recipe.
so yes, i have finally hit burnout on what had become my standard evening fare of chopped hearts of romaine with some GF dressing. ::yawn:: not to mention i was becoming incredibly lazy if for some reason i was out of already chopped and washed lettuce and had to take the 10 minutes to prep everything.
last week, i found myself once again in love with celery sticks (from the leftover bunch bought for what was cooked up). of course, slather them with peanut butter, and who doesn't love a pile of the crunchy bugger to munch on in the evening.
so this week, i'm putting celery sticks (with a lower-fat alternative of humus for dipping) in the lunch-bag for a healthy and filling snack. and still not able to face the blah of lettuce in the evenings, i decided a nice quinoa greek salad would be a winner.
and is it ever! with more crunch veggies (do you really think i put in a scant 1/2 or 1/4 each of those things? use the whole pepper, or the leftover 1/2 onion in the fridge!) than quinoa, it is filling and zesty. as an extra treat on those days when i feel the need for the extra oomph of some more protein, i have have some cooked shrimp in the freezer i can pop on there, and add another splash of lemon juice. i also went for cheve instead of feta. just didn't feel i wanted the harsh acidity of the feta this week, and i love the crumbled cheve my WF carries.
now if i could just stop eating the leftover kalamata olives like candy, i'd be all set. . .
all in all, the change to gluten free has been pretty painless. after a few weeks without cookies, the Mi-Del atrocity of a chocolate chip cookie is actually tolerable. saying good by to pasta has been surprisingly easy. only as i walk by the cases of hand-made ravioli's at WF do i get misty-eyed. i actually miss my udon noodles much more than i do the Barilla that used to be in the cabinet. sandwiches and breads have been easily replaced if i feel and gnawing need, but those are actually rare.
but there was one area that continued to haunt me, a long-time lover stalking me, not ready to let go: pizza. i'm picky about my pizza, preferring a crust somewhere between thin and thick, and with no grease. topping must be fresh and simple, light on the sauce (or even better, none at all), and excellent cheese.
i did try a few of the GF pizza products out there, and found them absolutely miserable. others i looked at were so ridiculously expensive ($10 for an itty bitty pizza crust? that might be half a serving?), i didn't even bother. i resigned myself to a life without pizza.
(or, quietly plotted to order one the friday night of a long weekend so i could gorge myself, and be sick for the next week. sad, but it was really the point to where i was getting.)
until giftmas arrived. bless my super-clever sister who managed to find my amazon wishlist and spotted Easy Gluten-Free Baking by Elizabeth Barbone that i put up there on a whim.
see, i'm a cook. i am in now way, shape or form a baker. why make cookies from scratch when you can get the dough ready to go? cakes are in mixes. and hey, why else did we invent a breadmaker than to just dump in ingredients and be done with them.
but as i opened up this book and started flipping through, i suddenly felt inspired. and then i saw it: a recipe for GF pizza crust. two of them in fact -- one thick, one thin. and reading down the ingredients of rice flours, potato starch flour, corn starch, xanthum gum, i realized this was what i was already stock in my GF pantry.
so a couple friday's ago, when i got to leave work early, i hit the grocery store for fresh veggies and some fresh mozzarella. once home, i pulled out the world's oldest stand mixer (we are talking vintage 1989! and it was used when i got it. . . ) and prepared to get the kitchen very dirty. i should point out that i never did post my experience with making naan. that recipe requires some modification because sadly, a dough never formed -- everything remained as a batter, forcing me to keep adding more rice flour so i could form little balls of almost-dough. but that didn't mean they were going to then be palatable!
so i had me doubts as i measure and and began the mixer. would this really work. but after babysitting the mixture, and making sure everything got in there, i did have something dough-like to press out into my cookie sheet. i happily set it in the oven to rise away, ala Alton Brown, and proceeded to chop up veggies, caramelize onions, and pull out various seasonings to create the pizza i had been craving for weeks.
the dough did indeed rise, and this was no "thin crust like a cracker" pizza that Elizabeth had described in the recipe. oh, no, this was that in-between crust i love so much, full of the promise to be chewy.
so i set the crust in to bake first. and oh, the smells that wafted through the kitchen! because of course i had to put in fresh rosemary and garlic into the dough as i made it. my head was full of visions of the future, an thick pieces of focaccia served with soups, and dessert pizza piles high with fresh fruit and brown sugar.
once backed, i topped up that pizza so fast, and popped it back into the oven, eagerly watching for the cheese to melt and bubble so i could pull it out and eat.
that whole waiting to cool bit is a killer. i did finally pull a corner of the crust off because i had to know if that most crucial bit, the crust, tasted as good as it smelled.
try better. insanely better. better than wheat flour crust. this was rich and chewy, but with a finer 'grain' to it, as anything with rice flour is bound to feel on the tongue. bu the flavor was spot on. once finally cut into and first piece tasted, i nearly began to cry out of sheer happiness. this is really what i had been missing, and was trying to very hard to ignore.
amazingly enough, one piece was more than filling. it is a magic crust, i say. i was ready to eat half the pizza that night, but there was no way i could eat more than the one piece. which is just fine. the rest was quickly sealed away and put into the freezer, a piece at a time coming out on weekend, heating up slowly in the toater over, and it passed the freeze/reheat test with flying colors.
so now, i'm actually looking into things like making my own chocolate chip cookies. and maybe a cake. that is, if i ever stop making pizza crust.
but i am still cooking, continuing to feel better GF, and finally out of the massive heavy work-load at work.
i have a lot of catching up to do as far as recipes are concerned!
thanks to the sticky white rice leftovers of the christmas day chinese feast, i was able to try my hand at making a quick, easy, and gluten-free version of the classic to try and satisfy my craving.
so with a non-wok type pan brought up to screaming hot temps, i added egg, a selection of frozen veggies (Whole Foods' Asian Medley is my favorite from the freezer case), some GF mirin, chicken stock, and GF tamari to the cold left-over rice, and comfort food was created.
since then, i've been cooking up rice simply to turn into stir fry. and with a fresh supply of onion on hand, some chapped onions have been into the mix.
talk about no effort filling food! and it even makes a perfect breakfast.
