Showing posts with label pudding. Show all posts
Showing posts with label pudding. Show all posts

Sunday, 5 February 2017

Rhubarb and Polenta Cake

Flicking through this month's Waitrose Food Magazine, I spotted a recipe for Sticky Rhubarb and Semolina Skillet Cake. I'd just bought some new season English rhubarb and scanning through the recipe, thought it looked an easy (ish) one to adapt for MEWS free. 
My Free From version on top of the magazine picture
I can't find an online recipe to give you a link, but I swapped the semolina for polenta, butter for dairy free margarine, yogurt for dairy free yogurt, and did a straight swap to gluten free flour. The only problem I could see being the eggs. I've never successfully replaced more than 1 egg in a recipe, even with egg replacer, and this needed 2! I didn't want it to taste of banana, so tried a combination of pear puree, egg replacer and flax egg. Seemed to work, might try without the egg replacer next time.


I think this might be the longest list of ingredients I've ever posted in a recipe (I usually try to keep it simple), but don't let that put you off.

Syrup
Juice of 1 Orange (Zest it first to add to cake)
125g Caster Sugar
125mls Water

Cake
40g Dairy and Soya Free Margarine
75g Caster Sugar
10 Cardamom Pods (seeds removed and crushed)
400g Rhubarb (cut into 4-5cm pieces)
225g Dairy and Soya Free Yogurt or Creme Fraiche
100mls Olive oil
100g Pear Puree
1tbsp Ground Flax Seed mixed with 2tbsp Water
45mls Milk Substitute
Zest of 1 Organge
160g Polenta
80g Gluten Free Self Raising Flour
1tsp Baking Powder
2tsp Egg Replacer
50g Ground Almonds
50g Caster Sugar (I'm pretty sure I forgot to add this)
30g Pistachio Nuts (Roughly Chopped)

Put the orange juice, water and caster sugar in a small pan. Stir then bring to the boil. Simmer for 5 minutes then set aside to cool (I decided mine was still too runny so put it back on and forgot about it… It had reduced to about half volume and was nice and syrupy by the time I realised).

Melt the margarine in a heavy based, oven proof, frying pan (I new there was a reason to keep the one the handle came off a few months ago!).

Add the sugar and cook for 2-3 minutes. Sprinkle on the cardamom and top with the rhubarb.

Put the yogurt, oil, pear puree, flax seed mixture, milk substitute and orange zest in a jug or bowl and mix.
In a large bowl, weigh out the flour, polenta, ground almonds, sugar, baking powder and egg replacer. Mix together.

Pour in the liquid and mix well. 

Spoon onto the rhubarb and spread evenly over the top.
Bake on the oven at 180Âșc for 40-50mins.
Remove from oven, pierce top with a skewer and pour over the syrup. Leave to cool for 5 minutes.
Turn out onto a plate to cool and top with the pistachio nuts.

Delicious served warm with custard.


Tuesday, 13 September 2016

Dampfnudel (steamed buns) - GBBO2016 - Week3

I think this is the 4th Bake Off since I was challenged to create milk, egg, wheat and soya free versions of the technical challenges. The last couple of years, recipes have been few and far between as real life has got in the way. 

For those of you who don't follow me on twitter, I'm off work at the moment following eye surgery. In theory, this should give me more time to bake and to write up some of the 90 odd 'drafts' I have on the site. In practice, my eyes can't focus properly to type and my altered depth of vision makes cooking slower. 

I struggled with precision needed for topping the Jaffa cakes with chocolate on week one and my mum was here to do week two's Viennese Whirls for me. But while the contestants seemed to struggle with bread week, it was finally something, less precise, I could do more easily. The typing up less so, this is my second attempt as I tried doing it on my phone (easier for me to see than laptop), but it doesn't save automatically like my laptop does and I lost it all! 

I've been making bread for as long as I can remember, but since Mini Monster went wheat free too, I found it a struggle as it needed much wetter mix that couldn't be shaped so easily. I have regained my love of bread making over the last year, thanks largely to the discovery of Bakels and Coori Mixes. Both of these produce a 'workable' dough, which means some of our old favourites are producible again at home.

Like me, I suspect last week's Bake Off was the first time most of you had ever heard of Dampfnudel. I had a look at Paul's recipe and decided that for my first attempt I'd use the Coori Puff Pastry Mix that I have found is great for making a free from equivalent of a rich dough, which would usually contain milk, eggs and butter (also, I'd run out of the Bakels white mix, using my last bag to make a chocolate and cherry Couronne the day before).

My next problem was lack of a shallow, heavy based pan with a tight fitting lid. As you'll see from the pictures, I improvised with a glass bowl over a cast iron frying pan…

Not entirely sure if it would even work, I went for a smaller quantity of dough, which made 7 dampfnudel about 8-10cm across. This was enough for 4 of us, but the kids had finished off the plum sauce and custard before we had ours, I'll make the full quantity of those next time! 

This recipe is for double quantity I used (but closer to Paul's amount for 12 in the original recipe). I made this amount of the basic dough, but then split it in two and used half for the next step of the dampfnudel and half for sausage rolls. If you only want to make a small amount, just use half quantities for dough below.

Dough
400g Coori Puff Pastry Mix (this is already sweetened, so you don't need the extra sugar)
260mls Milk Substitute (warmed to hand hot)
7g Sachet of Dried Yeast
70g Dairy and Soya Free Spread (I used the hard Stork)
1tsp Vanilla Paste (or extract)
Grated Zest of 1 Unwaxed Lemon
Extra flour for kneading if too sticky (use a basic gluten free plain flour for this as it's cheaper)

Mix yeast with the milk and set aside to foam.

Put flour mix in a bowl (wide enough for you to knead in).

Add yeast mixture to flour and mix with a blunt knife until the dough begins to come together.

Sprinkle with a little extra flour if sticky and use your hands to knead lightly until you have a smooth dough.

Cover and set aside to rise until doubled in size (You can make the plum sauce at this stage).

Flatten dough slightly, then add the vanilla, lemon zest and dairy free spread. Fold over the dough and continue to knead until the added ingredients are well combined and you have a smooth shiny dough (you can use it at this stage, however, I covered mine and put it in the fridge for a couple of hours so I could make them fresh for the boy's dinner).

Divide the dough into 12 (or 7 if using half quantity) and roll into balls. If you made your dough in advance, you will need to knead it again before deciding, to knock out the air.

Poaching Liquid
150mls Milk Substitute
25g Dairy and Soya Free Spread
25g Caster Sugar

Heat the poaching liquid in the pan until sugar dissolved. Remove from heat.

Place the dough balls gently in the warm poaching liquid and leave for 15 minutes until well risen.

Not quite sure if this is what they meant my tight fitting lid...
Return pan to a low heat and cook covered for 25-30 minutes . Remove the lid and cook for a further 5-10minutes until golden and caramelised on the bottoms.

Carefully loosen the bottoms from the pan. Remove dampfnudel and serve with plum and vanilla sauce.

Nice light spongy texture.
Slightly scruffy edges, but the crust was delicious!
Plum Sauce
4 Ripe Plums 
1-2tbsp sugar (I only used one as my kids, but can add more later if too sharp for you)
Juice of an orange (I didn't have one so used a tangerine and half a lemon)
A pinch of ground cinnamon

Cut the plums in half and remove the stones. Chop into small pieces.

Add to a small pan with all the juice and sugar and cook gently until sugar dissolved.

Increase the heat and boil for 10 minutes until thickened and plum pieces soft.

Add the cinnamon and blend until smooth.


Vanilla Sauce
1/2 tbsp Custard Powder (gives a slight, but not too yellow colour)
1tbsp Cornflour
1tbsp Caster Sugar
1tsp Vanilla Paste or extract
300mls Milk Substitute
100mls Dairy and Soya Free Cream 

Follow instructions for custard here. This is supposed to be a thinner pouring consistency, if you want something thicker, just increase the amount of cornflour used.



Sunday, 18 January 2015

Sponge Pudding

My real food hero is my mum, who armed me with enough basic cooking skills to be able to fend for myself and know what will work by eye. Unfortunately, that makes getting recipes down to share more difficult as I often don't use scales. 

One of the most useful basic recipes I had when I left home was sponge pudding (second only to emergency bread, which I use regularly on the days I realise I have no bread for packed lunch). Even better is it works in the microwave for a fairly instant pud!

It's taken a while to perfect it without the egg or the wheat, but the boys never refuse it as a pudding option, and if there is any left, it's great in their packed lunch the next day.

Basic recipe:
60g Dairy and Soya Free Spread (e.g. Pure/Vitalite)
30g Sugar
105mls Milk Substitute (4 + 3 tbsp)
1 tsp Vanilla Paste
110g Gluten free/Wheat free Self Raising Flour (depending on the blend, you may need to adjust the fluid to get a dropping consistency) or 120g Self Raising Flour (if you don't need it to be wheat free)


Flavour options:
Fruit - add a couple of handfuls of frozen fruit to the bottom of the bowl and cover with the sponge mix (as in these photos)
Banana - add a mashed banana after whisking in the milk
Jam - add a couple of tablespoons of jam to the bottom of the bowl and cover with the sponge mix
Blueberry - add a handful of blueberries (or any other fruit) to the mix
Ginger and Chocolate Chip - add small pack of chocolate buttons and finely grated preserved ginger (or a little ground ginger) to the mix
Syrupadd a couple of tablespoons of syrup to the bottom of the bowl and cover with the sponge mix
Chocolate - swap 10g of the flour for cocoa powder

Whisk spread, sugar and vanilla together.

Whisk in 4 tbsp milk substitute (1 tbsp at a time) until well combined (don't worry if it looks curdled, just keep whisking until it comes back together).

Add the flour and the rest of the milk and mix until just combined.

Stir in other flavours/fruit/chocolate chips etc if using.

Spoon into a greased microwavable bowl (over jam/fruit/syrup etc) and smooth the top.

Microwave for 4-6 minutes (or until risen and spongy to the touch and just coming away from the sides of the bowl). It can also be cooked like a sponge in a normal oven, I'm just never organised enough to start it in time for pudding!

Usually I scoop straight from bowl, but it can be turned out onto a plate to serve
Spoon into bowls and serve with suitable custard/cream/ice-cream…

Enjoy!




Monday, 8 September 2014

GBBO 2014 Challenge - Week 4 - Tiramisu Cake

I always worry about new visitors to the site during the Great British Bake Off Challenge. Honestly, the recipes on the site are usually pretty straightforward, but for a few weeks a year I've been set a challenge… To recreate the technical challenges from the bake off, without using milk, egg, wheat or soya! And the contestants think they have a challenge!

Bear with me though, this one wasn't as tough as it seemed and was well worth the effort. I've already thought how to improve it for next time, I probably should have looked at Mary's recipe first, then I may not have forgotten the layers of chocolate/cocoa too!

I thought long and hard about which sponge recipe to use, then rather than using a tried and tested one, used the Victoria Sponge Recipe from the wonderful Ms Cupcake for the first time. Perfect! - although, I probably should have used a slightly larger quantity to get all four layers this cake should have had (I used 1/3, should have used 1/2 quantity)… I'm still not sure if it wasn't enough 'mascarpone' filling, or if I just ate too much while it was cooling… Will definitely make more of that next time too!

This was enough to make 3 layers of an 18x18cm cake. 

Sponge Layers

140g Self Raising or Gluten Free Self Raising Flour
80g Caster Sugar
2/3tsp Baking Powder
140mls Milk Substitute (plus 1-2tbsp if using GF flour)
50mls Vegetable Oil
1tsp Vanilla Paste (or extract)

Put the dry ingredients in a bowl and mix well.

Add the milk substitute, oil and vanilla and mix to a smooth paste with a wooden spoon or hand whisk.

Pour into a greased lined tin and bake for 25-30mins or until firm to the touch and just coming away from the sides of the tin.

Leave to cool for 5-10mins in the tin, then turn out onto a cooling rack to cool completely.

Carefully slice horizontally into 3 layers.


Mascarpone Cream

200mls Milk Substitute
2tbsp Cornflour
1tsp Vanilla Paste (or extract)
1tsp Caster Sugar
100mls Dairy and Soya Free Cream (e.g. rice/oat/almond)
2 Leaves Gelatine (soaked in cold water for 10 mins)
1/2 - 1 tbsp Marsala Wine (or coffee or almond liquor) - optional

Mix sugar, cornflour and vanilla to a paste with a little of the milk substitute.

Add the rest of the milk substitute and microwave (or cook in pan), stirring every minute until boiled and very thick.

Stir on the Marsala  - If you're worried about adding alcohol if children going to eat it, add it before it's thickened, to allow the alcohol to boil off.

Add the soaked gelatine sheets and stir until dissolved.

Whisk occasionally as it cools to keep it smooth.

When warm, but not hot, whisk in the dairy free cream. Set aside to cool completely.


Topping/Filling

2tbsp Grated Dairy and Soya Free Chocolate (or Plamil Dark Chocolate flakes/Mortimer's Chocolate Powder)
1-2tbsp Cocoa
100mls Strong Coffee/Decaf Coffee 

Line the tin with cling film. put one layer of the sponge back in.

Brush with the coffee mixture to soak through.

Top with 1/3 of the custard mixture and spread out evenly.
Sprinkle over cocoa powder or grated chocolate and continue to layer up.
Leave in fridge for a couple of hours to set.


Mini Monster has requested this for his birthday cake this year, guess that means it was good!





Monday, 23 June 2014

Strawberry Sponge Cake

Every now and then I like to retry one of the recipes in the info we give out to patients, just to check it still works. This is the basic cake recipe from the milk, egg, wheat and soya free diet sheet, with added strawberry pieces. Well it is Wimbledon week after all… Oh, and I reduced the sugar, still can't just follow a recipe, even when it's one of mine!

Sorry not many pictures as I went along, it's gymnastics night so didn't get home 'til after we normally would have had dinner.

175g Wheat Free Self Raising Flour
1/4tsp Bicarbonate of Soda
45g Dairy and Soya Free Spread
80g Caster Sugar
30g Golden Syrup
160mls Milk Substitute
1tsp Vinegar or Lemon Juice
1/2tsp Vanilla Paste or Extract
100g Chopped Fresh Strawberries (good use for the ones a little past eating fresh)

Melt spread, sugar and syrup together in a bowl.

Stir in milk substitute, vanilla and vinegar and set aside.

Weight out flour into another bowl and stir in bicarb.

Stir in the liquid to give a smooth batter.

Add the fruit and stir again.

Pour into a lined tin (I used a tray bake tin about 18x25cm).

Bake at 180Âșc for 25-30mins until firm to the touch.

Serve with dairy free cream, ice cream and fresh strawberries.

Thursday, 5 June 2014

Mini Fruit Strudels

My 7 year old is going to cooking club after school this term. They are not allowed to eat the food at school, which means forward planning to make sure Mini Monster has something similar. So far, we've had salad, fruit salad and chocolate chip cookies, which are all pretty straight forward, bit I know they have filo parcels coming up soon. I can cobble together pastry for jam tarts or a pie, but wheat free filo pastry? Not sure even I can manage that one!

I thought about just making thin pancakes, but knew it wouldn't be quite right. I almost feel this is cheating it was so easy, but then I wouldn't have made filo pastry either!

For 2

4 Rice Pancakes (for spring rolls - not spring roll wrappers which contain wheat)
3-4tbsp Stewed Fruit (I softened 1 apple and 3 apricots in a frying pan with vanilla paste and a little water - you don't want it too wet) 
3-4tbsp Wheat Free Bread/Cake Crumbs
1-2tsp sugar
Olive Oil (or other suitable oil)
Hot Water for softening Rice Pancakes
Caster Sugar to caramelise outside (optional)

Cook some suitable fruit and set aside to cool.
Put bread or cake crumbs in a frying pan with a little oil and sugar. Probably about a tsp of each.
Cook over a medium heat, stirring frequently until caramelised and crispy.
Add crumbs to fruit mixture.
I don't have pictures of dipping the pancakes, but dip them in a bowl of hot water for a few seconds until soft.
Put 2 softened pancakes onto an oiled worktop (or greaseproof paper makes for easier clearing up).

Place 2tbsp of fruit mix onto the pancake.
Fold in sides and roll up the pancake like a spring roll.
Repeat for remaining pancakes.

Fry in a little oil, turning frequently to brown all the way round.
If you want them caramelised, put a tsp of caster sugar in the pan (it should melt almost immediately) and toss them around in the caramel until covered.
Serve with suitable custard, cream or ice-cream.