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

Thursday, 2 December 2010

Very Lazy gluten-free bread


I set out to make bagels yesterday.  I took my 500g urid lentil flour, added a teaspoon of yeast and one of agave syrup, and whisked it into 900ml warm water. I use filtered water as there is a lot of chlorine in our water and it is not good for the yeast.

I covered the bowl with plastic wrap and left it on a windowsill while I got on with other tasks.  To put it simply, I forgot all about it.  When I next looked the dough was pushing against the wrap and about to escape.  OK, so it a very liquid dough, not like bread dough, and it probably wouldn't have been able to crawl off and live a life of its own, but it did mean I needed to get on with the next stage.



I didn't feel like starting the next stages of bagelling - 900g tapioca flour and two eggs beaten in, shaping 125g rings, leaving to rise, boiling for two minutes, draining, baking...OK, these stages can be separated and I could have just mixed in the flour and put the bowl in the fridge to finish the job the next day. So, I stirred in 100g yellow cornmeal for colour and crunch, added tapioca until the dough was stiffish - you can see it holds its shape a bit, and put it into a greased and lined tin.



I try to remember to put paper in the bottom of bread tins when I make a loaf.  The dough definitely sticks a lot more than wheat loaves, and it is annoying gouging 'non-stick' pans when trying to lever bread out.


I dolloped the dough into the tin and sprinkled a little water on top. I would normally have been neater....

I put it into a warm oven (about 40C) to rise, with a bowl of hot water on the floor of the oven to keep the air moist.  A little while later I realised the dough was up to the top of the tin and it looked hazardous to move it.  Normally at this stage I would take the loaf out and pre-heat the oven to 170C before putting the bread back in.  This time I just left it where it was and turned the oven on, setting the timer for 35 minutes.  After 35 minutes I turned the heat down to 100C and left it another 15 minutes.  I then turned the heat off and left the loaf in the oven for another ten minutes before taking it out.  I have found my gluten-free bread tends to be sticky in the middle and thought this long slow cooling process might help.


I used a long, high-sided tin called a Pullman tin.  It comes with a lid so that you can make completely square bread for sandwiches if you are using wheat.   It is the only bread tin I found available that gives a slice that is big enough to fit properly in a toaster and gives a good sized sandwich.  I got it from http://bakerybits.co.uk.  A tip, don't use the lid or you will struggle for ages to get the tin open!

I did consider ordering custom-made tins from Alan Silverwood, who will make tins at quite a reasonable price to suit your needs.  (alan-silverwood.co.uk - really charming friendly people). However, when I found this tin I decided to use this for the moment.  You can also use the Silverwood adjustable tin to make small square loaves if you want.  Normal tins designed for wheat flour just give such a sad shaped loaf as you need the tin to be as tall as you want the finished loaf to be.

The loaf is the best gluten-free loaf I have made.  It has a nice squeeziness when compressed as a whole, it cuts easily, doesn't granulate in the mouth, and toasts to a crunchiness that is very satisfying.





Having been developed as a solution to a burst of baking idleness I will now use this process for future loaves.

Wednesday, 1 December 2010

Finally – the gluten-free mincepies




So, I made the candied peel.  I made the mincemeat.  I have now made the mince pies and delivered them to Revill’s farm shop and Number8 Community Art’s Centre.  I have a great big jar, the kind sweets were sold in, full of mincemeat which should only get better as it matures.

Pastry Ingredients
200g butter

(400g flour) 
150 urid lentil flour
125 fine polenta
125 tapioca flour

1 egg, lightly beaten
approx 100ml water
1/2 tsp sugar

Method
Whisk or sieve the flours together.  Cut butter into little lumps and stir into flour so that they are all coated. 

Either rub in by hand until they resemble breadcrumbs (I must think of a gluten-intolerant descriptor for this stage, suggestions welcome) or blitz in a food processor.  Don’t keep going until it gets claggy, just pulse until all butter lumps are tiny.

Stir in a little sugar to help the pastry brown and give a slight sweetness.  I tried the mince pies with sweet pastry and didn’t like it as much, but a teaspoon of sugar wont really be noticeable.

Stir in the egg.  I use a flat silicon scraper to avoid over working the mixture and to keep the noise down in my metal bowl, but just use whatever tool feels right to you.  Try to mix without squashing too much.
You should find that your dough doesn’t easily form big patties yet.  Add cold water and stir until you find that a handful of dough squidges into a lump of dough that stays together easily and doesn’t split along the edges if you roll it flat.  The amount of water you need will depend on the flours you use, the humidity of the day and the size of the eggs.

As I was making a big batch of pies for a customer I ran a test just to be sure I hadn’t made any dreadful errors.  I have been know to make cake without the sugar – it is usually the sugar I forget, but it has been butter, one of the flours…so now I try to test the dough or taste the batter before I get to the point where I can't fix things.  It also means you get (hopefully) a treat to eat before you carry on with the work, and is made and eaten before the pastry has had its twenty minutes in the fridge.

Wrap in cling film and putting in the fridge to chill a bit.  If your butter gets to warm it is harder to roll out the pastry neatly.

I rolled out the pastry using tapioca flour to dust my work surface and rolling pin.  You can also roll between two sheets of Clingfilm/plastic wrap or parchment paper.  I rolled this straight onto the board to show how the pastry does work easily and isn’t really any more trouble than a plain wheat pastry to handle.

I rolled the pastry so thin that you could easily see the pattern of my tablecloth through it.  I could still handle it but it was a bit fragile. This is too thin for these tarts, which need to be able to cope with handling in a store.  



I used a 78mm cutter to go in the little foil trays.  I placed each round on the tray and gently squeezed the pastry in place – ok, so it does take a bit more care than I recollect wheat pastry to need, but it isn’t too hard.  


If you get a tear just take a little piece of dough and press it into the gap.  I have done a little video of this but it is my first attempt and the sound pick-up was poor – I posted it a couple of days ago just to get me started.


repairing a hole in the pastry

When you have cut out your circles, cut out any smaller pieces you want for toppings.  


Take the remaining pastry and lightly shape it before rolling out again.  You can do this three  or four times with the pastry still being acceptable.  

Place a heaped teaspoon of mincemeat in each tart.  I put little pastry stars on top as I like to be able to see the mince and I like the slight caramelising that takes place when the mincemeat gets direct heat.

I cooked these little tarts at 170degreesC for 8-12 minutes depending on where they were in my irregular old oven. Cool and sprinkle if desired with icing sugar or caster sugar.


holding together!

Enjoy.  I don’t know how well they will keep yet but the mincemeat frangipane tart I made last year stayed good for weeks.  I’ve kept some to test over the next month. I will post results.

I made a bigger tart with all the bits of pastry that had already been rolled out and re-squidged three times.  I just compressed it into the tart tin rather than rolling it out again.  It still tasted good and wasn’t tough, but the pastry was definitely a little less crisp and light.



I tried mince tarts made with Bob’s Red Mill flour but I didn’t like the slight chickpea flavour, though my Tolerant Taster said he didn't notice it.  The pastry was also more difficult to manage so I made it thicker, and it was more stodgy.
























Thursday, 25 November 2010

Gluten-free dairy-free mince pies


I made these with a pack of ready mixed all-purpose gluten-free flour called Bob’s Red Mill.  I normally mix my own flour for different recipes from Urid lentils, tapioca, polenta and almonds.  The recipe made ten deep-filled mince pies and six mini pies.

Ingredients

  • 225g Flour
  • 100g Cookeen – hard vegetable fat – or butter if dairy is ok
  • 40g sugar
  • 1 egg (leave out if can't / don't eat egg and add a bit more water.  If you have trouble with managing the dough try adding a bit of tapioca gel: 10g tapioca starch 100ml water, stir together cold, cook until clear gloop, wash utensils well with cold water)
  • 35 ml water – add slowly until you have the right amount.  You might need more or less depending on the flour and the humidity of the air.

Method. 
Whizz fat into flour in food processor or rub in by hand until it resemble breadcrumbs.  Add the sugar, whizz, then add the egg and whizz just until mixed.  I tip out into a bowl and add the water by hand to be sure not to add too much, but you can just add the water in the machine and whizz until it just starts forming a dough.

Roll out the pastry between two sheets of cling film / plastic wrap – this saves on mess and having to add flour.  

Cut into circles and place in tart tins or other tin of choice.  Half fill with mincemeat. 
I used some from a jar for this but have bought citrus fruit to make candied peel this weekend so I can make some without sulphites.

Bake until the pastry is just turning golden.  Mine took twenty minutes at 170C in a fan oven. 

I sifted icing sugar over half of the mince pies.


Mini-mince pies



I used a mini muffin tin and what I call a stomper (mini-tart shaper:  The Pampered Chef http://bit.ly/g23sN5). Take a ball of dough (about 18g), place in bottom of tin, dust stomper with flour, press into dough twisting slightly.  You will get a neat little pastry case with remarkably little effort.  

Sunday, 7 November 2010

Gluten-free Wedding Cupcake Tower.


I may well never make 120 cupcakes plus giant cupcake for cutting again so it seems like a good idea to write about it on the blog.

This morning I scrubbed the kitchen and then laid out four double recipe quantities of all the ingredients so that I could pound through the making efficiently. I find more than a double recipe a bit hard to handle this size fits well into my mixing bowls and I don’t have to worry about having more batter than will fit in the oven in one go.

I was all set to go when my mother-in-law turned up for coffee, so proceedings were interrupted while we heard about her week and she expressed amazement that I was wearing chef whites (actually blue and white check trousers with white jacket and hat).

The recipe is adapted from the ‘romantic rose cupcakes’ on the BBC Good Food website. I have posted it before but to save hunting around here it is again.

I’ll make the whole batch of cupcakes, freeze them and do the frosting the day before the wedding. The flowers are all piled in boxes waiting to be put on top. The amusing cake topper I made out of polymer clay, of the couple on a tandem (they had a tandem on their wedding invites) fell apart on the final firing in the oven so I’ll manage without that; there isn’t really time to do it over again.

Makes about 12 deep cupcakes or one 7inch cake. Double recipe for a layer cake suitable for a party.

Ingredients

150ml pot natural yogurt

3 eggs, beaten

1tsp vanilla

175g golden caster sugar

120g flour

120g ground almonds

3 tsp baking powder

175g unsalted butter, melted

White chocolate frosting

100g white chocolate

140g unsalted butter – room temperature

140g icing sugar

Line cake tins and set oven to 190C, fan 170C

Cake

In a jug, mix yogurt, eggs, butter and vanilla extract.

Sift flour and baking powder together, add almonds and sugar and mix well.

Add wet to dry ingredients and mix well. Spoon into tin /cupcake cases.

Bake approx 4 5-50 minutes for large cake, 20-25 minutes for cupcakes. Test with skewer to see if comes out clean.

Cool on wire rack. Eat within three days or freeze as soon as possible.

Frosting

Melt chocolate in microwave, stirring occasionally. Leave to cool.

Beat butter and icing sugar until soft and light. Beat in chocolate. Cover and chill for up to one month.

This cake freezes well, and can be frozen with the frosting. Eat within two days of defrosting.