Frosted Caramel Apple SunButter Blondies
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Frosted Caramel Apple SunButter Blondies
Fluffy Vegan Banana Bread Cinnamon Rolls (Gluten Free Option)
My favorite coffee shop switched what kind of chicken it's using in sandwiches so that it'll be more allergy friendly!!!!
Instant Pot Loaded Potato Soup (Dairy free, Gluten Free & Vegan Options)
~ Allergy Awesomeness ~
Lemon Raisin Scones/Muffins
I make these every year as an Imbolc tradition
Ingredients:
-1 cup oat flour or ground oats
-2 cup all purpose flour
-⅔ cup white sugar
-2½ tsp baking soda
-½ tsp salt
-zest from 1 lemon
-¾ cup butter, margarine, or butter substitute (1 ½ sticks) ((cold & cubed)) *note: I have not tried lard for this yet but will in the future
-1 cup raisins
-1 cup milk or plant milk
-juice from 1 lemon
-2 tsp vanilla extract (optional)
Preheat oven to 375°F. Grease/flour baking sheet or muffin tin
Dry:
Combine dry ingredients (oat flour, a.p. flour, sugar, baking soda, salt) and lemon zest in a bowl. Cut in butter with pastry cutter or two knives. Toss in raisins.
Wet:
Combine wet ingredients (milk, lemon juice, vanilla) in a small bowl.
Combine:
Pour wet ingredients into dry and mix gently. Dough will be sticky and wet, so if you're using your hands prepare for messiness.
Prep to bake:
Cut into wedges (if your dough is firm enough) or just kind of shape it into triangle-ish blobs OR put in a muffin tin. Sprinkle sugar over top
Bake for 25 minutes (as wedges) or 18 minutes (for muffins)
Makes about 8 scones or 12 muffins
The best food in the world...
Alright folks we are cooking with whatever stuff I did up out of the cupboard.
Think you can’t bake? Wrong. It’s not hard. I’ll show you.
Today I have a bunch of margarine I need to use up, leftover from New Years, so going to make
Thumbprint Cookies
And you can tweak this recipe fairly easily to make it allergy friendly. This version happens to be dairy and egg free, but if you’ve got plain gluten free flour you could make it gluten free too. Whatever you’ve got in your cupboard in these trying times.
First assemble the Avengers:
We will need:
1/2 cup of icing sugar (aliases include: powdered sugar, confectioners sugar)
225g of margarine (or a little more is ok. Or use butter at room temperature if that’s what you’ve got)
2 & 1/4 teaspoons of vanilla essence or extract.
2 cups of plain flour. You could use white, wholemeal or gluten free if that’s what you’ve got
1/4 teaspoon of salt
Jam of choice. Or chocolate chips if you don’t like jam
Got everything? Pop the margarine and icing sugar into a bowl.
Beat it with an electric mixer for a minute or two until it’s all combined and fluffy. You can also do it by hand if you’re some sort of master chef.
Add your vanilla and mix in. I know it says 2 & 1/4 teaspoons but I never measure it and just follow my heart.
Mix in the flour and salt, any old spoon is fine, doesn’t have to be electric, until you have a soft dough. Should stick to itself fairly well.
If too sticky, add a little more flour. If not sticky enough, add a little milk-of-choice or a touch of water.
You need to be able to roll the dough into little balls. Should feel a lot like playdough, but taste a lot better.
(And yes, you can eat these raw. No eggs, see?)
Then press your thumb into the middle of each ball, to make the notorious ‘thumb print’. That’s the bit you fill up with your favourite jam, or chocolate, or lemon curd, or I guess you could even try caramel or m&m’s.
But I only have jam.
Bake at about 170 degrees Celsius (that’s about 350F for yankie heathens) for about 18 minutes until golden.
The jam comes out like lava. Let them cool a little bit before you eat them or serve to the unsuspecting.
Enjoy.
Would you mind sharing your brioche recipe?
I DO NOT MIND AT ALL
BUCKLE UP KIDS
GOOD DAMN GLUTEN-FREE BRIOCHE
250g (8.8 oz) cornstarch OR potato starch OR arrowroot starch
150g (5.3 oz) tapioca starch
100g (3.5 oz) brown rice flour
50g (1.8 oz) millet flour
50g (1.8 oz) sorghum flour
30g (1 oz) gluten-free oat flour
20g (.7 oz) teff flour
1 tbsp xanthan gum OR guar gum
1 tsp salt
-
20g (.7 oz) yeast
1 ½ tsp sugar
80 mL (2.7 oz or 1/3 c.) warm water
-
25g flaxmeal, preferably golden
80 mL (2.7 oz or 1/3 c.) hot water
-
40g (1.4 oz) honey
50g (1.8 oz) sugar
-
5 large eggs at room temperature
1 tbsp apple cider vinegar
-
113g (4 oz or 1 stick) butter plus ~50g (2 oz or ½ stick) separate (it should be possible to substitute coconut or olive oil, but I have not tested this)
320 mL (10.8 oz or 1 1/3 c.) half and half OR high fat unsweetened dairy substitute
NOTE ON MEASUREMENTS: Gluten free baking involves more precision than most other baking, because the flours weigh and behave differently from wheat flours. You could try to convert to volumetric measures with Google but I can’t guarantee that’ll work. This has been tested a hundred times or more with consistent, predictable results. Weigh your ingredients.
-
Preheat your oven to 170 degrees F (or 75 degrees C).
Measure your flours, xanthan/guar gum and salt and whisk them together thoroughly in a mixing bowl and set to the side.
In a separate, large mixing bowl, combine yeast, 1 ½ tsp sugar and warm (NOT HOT, you will kill your yeast) water, and set in a warm space. Set aside and ignore it for five to ten minutes, or until it’s frothed up and doubled in size.
While the yeast is waking up, in a third small bowl (I know, we’re using all your bowls), combine your flaxmeal and the hot water until it turns into a goopy slurry.
Now, add the sugar and honey to the yeast bowl, along with the flax slurry, apple cider vinegar and four of the eggs. Mix well, then add a half cup or so of your flour mixture. If you’ve baked any sort of bread before, you know that we are making a sponge! This is the part where, if you’ve never made gluten-free bread before, things begin to look a little weird. It's gonna look kind of like thin, foamy cake batter, and that’s normal. Set aside until it’s just about doubled in size.
You don’t wanna let it over-rise because these gums and flax make great substitutes, but they don’t trap the gases from the yeast quite as effectively as gluten. In yet another (microwave safe) bowl, melt the first stick of butter. Stir in the half and half and microwave for thirty to forty-five seconds, or until warm-ish.
Now, mix in the rest of your flour blend to the sponge, adding in alternating increments with the butter/half-and-half mixture. If you’ve made gluten-having bread before, here is where things start to be very distressing, because this is not the sort of dough you can knead. In point of fact, this isn’t the kind of dough you can just throw on a stone in a nice ball; you need a pan. (No, seriously, pan not optional). This recipe makes either two small loaves, or a bunch of rolls, or a small loaf and rolls.
With a flourless cooking spray, liberally spray the interior of your pan(s) and transfer the dough so the pans are approximately 2/3 full. I recommend a spatula, and also spraying your hand with the cooking spray to assist said spatula, because this stuff is STICKY, like soda bread from hell. Smooth the tops of the dough as best you can, and slot your pans into your low-temp oven, because unbeknownst to you, you’ve constructed a no-budget proofer box! Set a timer for fifteen minutes and use the time to wash up, because by now your kitchen is a small disaster area.
Once your timer goes off, take your bread out to continue to relax and breathe in a cozy place in your kitchen and raise your oven temp to 375 degrees F (190 C). While the oven’s heating up, crack your last egg, whisk it, and brush it over the top of your dough with a pastry brush. Once your oven’s preheated, take a very sharp knife and gently saw some slashes in the top of your dough. (You want the slashes because they’re a.) necessary for rising and b.) attractive.)
For rolls, set your timer for fifteen to twenty minutes (loaves need closer to thirty or forty), but keep an eye on the oven. You want a golden brown top and ovens tend to vary on how they hold temp, but you’ll know they’re done when you jab them with a thermometer and they’re 190 degrees F (85-ish degrees C) in the center. Melt the final half stick of butter and give your bread a glaze while they’re still warm.
That’s a lot of very specific words, and maybe you don’t trust like that. Maybe you want visual proof that this isn’t a fool’s errand. Okay. Here’s a roll:
Huh. Whaddaya know, that looks pretty bread-like. But what about the interiors? You tell me.
That thar appears to be… hmm. What’s the word I’m looking for… ah yes. BREAD. IT’S BREAD. IT’S HELLA BREAD. IT IS IN FACT A BRIOCHE.
When it’s warm, it’s light and fluffy like some kind of miraculous cloud. When it’s cooled, it’s dense and hearty rib-sticking peasant bread. It freezes well. It thaws fine. Toast it, use it for sandwiches, crumble it up for breadcrumbs to make meatballs, drag it around a soup bowl to sop up the broth. LIVE YOUR TRUTH.
It makes bread pudding so good you see see god and french toast that’ll make your knees go out, no lie.
I KNOW WHAT I’M ABOUT.