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PIE OF THE WEEK

Showing posts with label gluten-free. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gluten-free. Show all posts

Saturday, February 16, 2013

Paleo Pancakes

It may have been two years since I posted...
but I still check back on my blog for recipes.


Here's one I'm sick of scrolling through 12 months of photos on Instagram for.
PALEO PANCAKES!!
A.K.A Lembas Bread (but taster)

I also forgot to add "1 c of bananas" to the written recipe in the picture below.

http://instagram.com/p/ImoXbcunM5/

Monday, November 22, 2010

Dairy- & Gluten-free Pine Nut Pie

Unbaked pie - bakes into a pretty, marbly surface!

I know that last week I wrote on my Pine Nut Pie recipe and that this week - if anyone was paying attention to the Pie of the Week widget off to the right - I was supposed to write on a made-up recipe for Banana Nutella, but to be honest, my Banana Nutella Pie did not turn out as well as I had hoped whilst my Pine Nut Pie seems to be improving!

This last week I made it for the birthday celebration of Paul Hoppe and then again for the in-laws, some of who cannot eat wheat and/or dairy. I learned some things and made improvements to my recipe, including a version that would not offend the stomachs of my loved ones!

Original ingredients:
Danica's Pine Nute Pie Ingredients
(click here for the original recipe)

Dairy & Gluten Free CHOCOLATE CHIP PINE NUT PIE  ingredients: 1 c 		chic chips 8 oz		pinenuts 3/4 c 	LIGHT brown sugar 		(if you use dar brown sugar, use 2 Tbsp of potato flour) 1.5 tsp 	cardamom 		(Can also be replaced by all-spice and cinnamon) 1 tsp 	nutmeg 1 		eggs (room temp) 2 		egg whites  (room temp) 1 		tsp cream of tartar 1.5 tsp 	vanilla extract 8 Tbsp	Earth Balance Buttery Spread (chilled) + 1 Tbsp of melted Earth Balance Buttery Spread (to replace 3 Tbsp of heavy cream)  1. preheat oven to 350 F & make sure pie shell is chilled (not frozen or room temp) in the fridge 	*I have found the best gluten-free FLOUR pie shells are made from potato flour; but a nut pie crust would go best!) 2. mix together dry ingredients - without pine nuts, chocolate chips or spices - in a large bowl adding butter a Tbsp at a time and blending thoroughly & set aside 3. in a separate bowl beat eggs and blend wet ingredients  4. mix into large bowl wet ingredients and spices 5. add in pine nuts and chocolate chips distributing evenly 6. as soon as all nuts and chips have been added, pour filling into pie shell, raking in left overs evenly throughout the pie 7. Put pie in oven and bake for 50 minutes, rotating pie 180° halfway through 8. Cool on a rack for at least 2 hours before serving with coffee!

What I learned the second and third time around:
  • Istead of dark brown sugar, light brown sugar! This lends itself to a more fluffy filling and doesn't get quite as dense.
  • The flour is only necessary if you want to use dark brown sugar which mixes into a syrup that is thicker than the light brown sugar.
  • Earth Balance Natural Buttery Spread bakes very well with pies! I hardly noticed the difference between it and regular butter.
  • On a similar note, this spread has a higher viscosity than butter when melted and is similar to the heavy cream - 1 Tbsp of this for the missing consistency of 3 Tbsp of heavy cream
  • The best alternatives for gluten-free pie crusts are not potato flour ones, but cornmeal and nut based! This is Almond Tart Dough is vegan and wheat-free.
  • Trader Joe's new press-in pie crusts are AWESOME. (Not Vegan/Vegetarian/Gluten-free)

Sunday, October 17, 2010

Chinese 5-Spice Winter Squash Pie

In the interest of the book I have been cooking from, Pie, I will not post the recipe in it entirety. But an image of the book's page of ingredients for the Chinese Five-Spice Winter Squash Pie can be seen here; below is a brief description and notes on my own experience making it.


Ever since our trip to Avila Barn, I have been pondering on squash. I have yet to show-off my crazy "winged" squash, but I overheard some ladies talking about the fact that all squash can be eaten. This brought to mind the mistake I made last year of cooking a decorative pumpkin from Casey's farm (awesome!); despite its green skin and whitish innards, it turned out to be the best pumpkin soup I ever made. While listening to the women, I wondered what wonders could be made with the zillions of squash before me and, sure enough.... there is a magical pie!

The Chinese Five-Spice Winter Squash Pie was a little bit more involved than the Apple Cheddar Cheese Pie. It required a total of 2.5 hours of preparation (most of which was done during the cooking time or food processor) and a handful of more ingredients, but all in all it was not terribly complicated.

I did, however, have to learn about (and brave) delicata squash. This variety of winter squash is rather ugly in the humble opinion of Sarah I and I. It's yellowy-greeny and plastic looking. It just doesn't come across as something good to eat - but if you submitted to this superficial assessment, you would be sorely missing out! After performing the first step of the pie recipe (cooking the squash for 50 minutes), it was clear that the wonderful sweet-potato-like smell filling the house was, in fact, not coming from the butternut squash the recipe called for, but the delicata! Thusly, it is actually known as "the sweet potato squash" for this familiar aroma and taste. The squash was not only more manageable to cut and deseed, it had a great smooth texture and sweet, woody or nutty flavor. This is probably because it is far less dense and stringy than most squash. This latter fact is likely why it fell into obscurity until fairly recently since its introduction in the 1920s - the thin skin and creamy flesh doesn't transport terribly well.
(More on winter squash!)



As I said before, I would like to encourage looking into the book, Pie, so I will only summarize the recipe; however, I am quickly learning that pie-making consists of four, usually very simple, steps:
(0)Prepare the crust)
1) Cook the filling
2) Puree/chop up the filling
3) place it in the pie crust
4) Bake

Essentially, this pie required me to simply bake the squash at 50 min, puree it with all the other ingredients, and bake for another 50 min!


Butternut SquashDelicata Squash

I might give up my pumpkin pie preference in favor of delicata. I can't wait to try it in a soup!

One very helpful tip I learned from Pie was that only a very shallow bed of water is required for the dish in which the squash are being cooked - putting the right amount of water will keep the squash dense and make a more creamy puree than a lot of water, which will get absorbed during the long cooking process.



Also, I made an almost vegan/vegetarian version (I still used eggs) for my father-in-law and sister-in-law (one has a wheat allergy and both avoid dairy). I replaced the flour with rice flour (often the preferred gluten-free pastry alternative) I used almond milk in lieu of the half-and-half; but since it is so much thinner I added an extra two table spoons of rice flour. I got a nearly identical consistency! But the flavor was a bit off. The rice flour also had a distinct flavor that I recalled being present in anything I've cooked with rice flour. I might try 1/4 c of tapioca instead. I think next time around, I would want to play more on the almond tones that definitely compliment the nutty delicata flavor, too - perhaps by adding an extra tsp or two of nutmeg and then roasting some almond slivers and garnishing the top with them!

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