Archive for the ‘Dessert’ Category
Sue Carnase, of the Bronx, New York, made the best cheesecake ever. It was tested many times in double-blind taste tests and it always came out at the top of the rankings. Here is her recipe, in her own words, with a slight modification that will make the recipe gluten free.
“In a large bowl cream together 1 pound each of cream cheese, softened, and ricotta and one cup sugar and beat in 4 large eggs at room temperatures, one at a time, beating well after each addition. Add 1/2 stick (2 ounces) butter melted and cooled, 3 tablespoons each of gluten free flour mix* and cornstarch, and 2 1/2 teaspoons vanilla and 1 teaspoon fresh lemon rind, beat mixture well until well combined. Fold in 2 cups sour cream, pour batter in ungreased 9 inch springform pan and bake the cake in the middle of a preheated moderately slow oven (325) for 1 hour and 15 minutes.
The cake will be soft in the center. TURN OFF THE HEAT (DO NOT OPEN THE OVEN DOOR.) Let the cake stand in the oven for 2 hours. Let the cake cool completely in the pan on a rack and chill it loosely covered for at least 4 hours. Remove the sides of pan and transfer cake to a plate. You can freeze it at this point. Remove from the freezer the day before use and refrigerate.
HINTS: Cheesecakes often crack while baking and some rise high and later fall, but these are not matters of concern. Cheesecakes do not take kindly to sudden changes in temperature. SO DO NOT OPEN OVEN DOOR DURING THE BAKING.
I find it much easier to cream the cheeses by putting them through the Cuisinart.”
*original recipe called for wheat flour
Further notes from GF-Zing!: The batter will fill most of the pan and during the baking the cake will rise to the very top of the pan or higher. Do NOT use a smaller pan than called for in the recipe. Full fat ricotta makes a nice cake. We use Friendship brand sour cream because its only ingredients are milk, cream and enzymes. We line the bottom of the spring form pan with parchment paper to make transferring the cake to a plate a little easier.
Susie’s Shopping List for Cheesecake:
1 pound cream cheese
1 pound ricotta
Sugar
4 large eggs
Butter
GF Flour
Cornstarch
Vanilla
Sour Cream
1 lemon
You can make a fine blueberry pie using dark maple syrup as a sweetener instead of granulated sugar. This pie is refreshingly fruity and not as sweet as the more common sugar-sweetened pie.
Here are the general rules:
for 5-6 cups of Maine wild blueberries, add the following in a large bowl:
1 cup of pure maple syrup
2 Tablespoons of cornstarch
3 Tablespoons of flavorless tapioca starch (Authentic Foods offers a tapioca starch) or 1/4 cup instant granulated tapioca. If you use instant granulated tapioca, let the whole mixture sit for 15 minutes before constructing the pie.
1/8 teaspoon salt
3-4 Tablespoons of fresh lemon juice to offset the maple syrup
1/4 teaspoon of ground cinnamon
Use a 2-crust recipe for pie crust, and use a 9 or 10 inch glass pie dish. If you use a larger pie dish, the pie will have less depth, and if you use a smaller pie dish then the pie will be more “heaped up.” Line the pie dish with 1 piece of crust pastry, fill with the blueberry mixture, top with the second crust. Sprinkle the top crust with 1/4 cup of granulated sugar.
Bake in preheated 375 degree oven for 1 hour. If the blueberries are frozen, the pie may need a few extra minutes. Cool the pie on a rack before cutting.
Use all gluten-free ingredients!
For this dessert, you need fresh local strawberries, high quality white chocolate (gluten free) in a bar form, and gluten free orange liqueur.
Find a bowl that will hold 3 cups exactly when filled to the top with water. This will be serving dish. Set it aside.
Melt a 4-ounce bar of gluten free white chocolate over hot water. Take it off the heat, add 1 Tablespoon sugar, 1 Tablespoon gluten free orange liqueur, 1/2 teaspoon vanilla and 1 ounce of cream cheese. Beat well until mixed.
In a different bowl beat 1/2 cup of heavy cream until stiff. Fold in the white chocolate mixure.
Put enough strawberries (or other berries) in the serving bowl to cover the bottom of the bowl. Spoon the whipped cream/white chocolate mixture on top. Smooth the top and chill the dessert for 3 hourss or overnight. This will serve 3-4 people.
You can triple the mixture, make a crumb crust in a spring-form pan, and triple the amount of berries, put the berries on the crust, add the cream mixture, chill, then cut the dessert like a cake (since it has a crust.)
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free.
It’s time for the Memorial Day barbecue, and with 6 extra-ripe bananas on the countertop, our minds wandered - what to do, should we make 4 loaves of gluten free banana bread? No, and although deep-fried banana fritters were sounding pretty good what ended up seeming much better was homemade ice cream.
This recipe is refreshing, and not high in fat. The bananas have a slight tartness, and the dulce de leche’s deep brown color covers up the color of the overripe bananas, making an attractive finished ice cream. There are no egg yolks or heavy cream in this ice cream, but the texture is creamy. The major ingredient is banana.
Make the following mixture (use a potato masher to mix), and chill in the refrigerator for a few hours:
3 cups 1% milk
1 cup coconut milk
2/3 cup sugar
6 very overripe bananas, too mushy for anything but banana bread
13.4 ounce can of gluten free Dulce de Leche (or you can make your own)
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon cardamom
1/8 teaspoon cloves
1/8 teaspoon nutmeg
The mixture will be brown, like caramel. After the mixture has chilled, freeze it in an ice cream maker according to the directions.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
It’s spring and the temptation to purchase strawberries is renewed again. Unfortunately, “strawberry disappointment” follows, when the first strawberries to arrive in the supermarket, while red, are not flavorful! Time to make trifle, but how to do this in an interesting and gluten-free way?
We searched the internet for gluten free trifle recipes, and found the most interesting recipe, not quite gluten-free and way too complicated, at this address: Teafactory. Even though this recipe is “simplified” it is still too complex for ordinary humans like us, and it includes puff pastry which is not gluten free, and 2 custards. So, we have modified it to a delicious, easy and gluten-free dessert.
At the request of a fan, we have added the measurements for volume, rather than weight, for the dry ingredients, but we strongly recommend using the weights. GF flours can be ground finely or coarse, and that changes the volume tremendously. When we measured the ingredients with tablespoons, we used Koda Farms mochiko, and finely ground cornmeal and garbanzo bean flour from the natural foods store nearby.
Included in the original recipe is a Cardamom Biscuit which is gluten free and a very close textural approximation of an English digestive biscuit, but with a whallopping cardamom punch. This is an excellent cookie in its own right.
You need to make 4 layers: The strawberries, the cookies, the custard, the whipped cream. Use a scale to measure the ingredients.
Berry Jelly:
Make a compote by mixing the following ingredients and simmering them for 20 minutes:
250 grams of strawberries, cut in quarters
40 grams of sugar (3 TB or slightly more)
1 teaspoon amontillado sherry
1 teaspoon lemon juice
(the original recipe includes rose water which we omitted)
When it has cooked for 20 minutes, add 1 envelope of plain gelatin (no flavor) which has been softened in cold water. Do not add the gelatin directly to the strawberries without first softening the powder in water or the gelatin will form globs of glue in a strawberry soup - not what you want. Cool to room temperature then distribute amongst 8 dishes that hold about 1 cup each. Refrigerate these 8 dishes until the strawberry layer has firmed up. (If you do not add the gelatin, the strawberry liquid would soak through the biscuits which are the next layer.)
Cookie layer: (this has been altered to eliminate some refrigerating and freezing steps)
Use a scale to weigh out the ingredients - this really makes a difference!
70g unsalted butter (softened) - about 5 Tb
45g white sugar - about 3 Tb + 1 tsp
25g ground almonds - about 3 Tb + 1 tsp
¼ tsp salt
½ tsp baking powder
35g glutinous rice flour (also called mochiko) - about 4 Tb + 1 tsp
25g cornmeal - about 3 Tb + 1 tsp if finely ground
20g chickpea (garbanzo bean) flour - about 2 Tb + 2 tsp
1 tsp freshly ground cardamom (skin the pods, and grind 1 teaspoon of seeds in a mortar and pestle)
1/2 tsp powdered vanilla from Authentic Foods
1 egg yolk
- Cream the butter & sugar.
- Add all the dry ingredients & mix well.
- Add the egg yolk and mix until a dough forms. Make the dough in to a disk shape.
- The original recipe calls for chilling the dough for one hour here, but we just proceeded since the air is cold in winter.
- Get 2 pieces of waxed paper about the size of a cookie sheet. Put 1/8 cup of white rice flour on the bottom piece, put the disk of dough on the flour and turn it over to coat both sides with rice flour. Put the second sheet of waxed paper on top. Roll the dough to 1/8 inch thick and cut cookies in a size that will fit in the dishes that have the strawberry mixture in the bottom. Re-roll the dough as necessary to make 16 cookies (17 if you want to taste one.)
- preheat the oven to 300F
- Transfer the cookies to a parchment lined baking sheet and bake for 10-12 minutes until golden. Cool on the pan, then remove them gently and put one cookie on top of the strawberry mixture in each dish. You will have 8 cookies left for the next layer.
Custard layer:
Mix 1 cup 2% milk, 3/4 cup light cream, 1 teaspoon amontillado sherry and one small (3 oz.) package of gluten free instant vanilla pudding. Beat with a whisk until thick. Divide amongst the 8 dishes on top of the cookie layer. Add another cookie on top of this custard.
Whipped cream:
Whip one cup of heavy whipping cream with some sugar to sweeten. Add vanilla or sherry to flavor this whipped cream and distribute on top of the last cookie layer.
Candied nuts (can be omitted):
Taste some pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds to see if their flavor will be an asset to the dish.
In a pan that can be heated relatively hot, put 2 Tb of pumpkin seeds and 2 Tb of sunflower seeds with 2 Tb of sugar. Heat the nuts over medium heat, stirring constantly until the sugar melts and the nuts brown slightly. Transfer to a plate immediately and cool completely. Garnish the top of the whipped cream with these nuts if you want an extra crunch texture.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
You can make this vanilla cake with a chocolate icing, or you can include some lemon ingredients in the batter and make a lemon icing. The recipe is for 2 9-inch round cake pans, or the equivalent volume in square cake pans. To figure out the size, remember that the area of a circle is pi (3.14) times the radius squared, and you have to account for the depth also, since this is about volume…
Don’t use bottled lemon juice - use fresh juice - it tastes better.
1 1/2 cups white rice flour
3/4 cup tapioca flour
1 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon baking soda
3 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
4 eggs
1 1/4 cups white sugar
2/3 cup gluten-free mayonnaise
2 teaspoons gluten-free vanilla extract
1 cup milk (for the lemon cake use part buttermilk)
This is really easy to mix up - put the first six dry ingredients in a bowl, and stir well.
In another bowl, beat the eggs with the sugar until light and lemony colored. Beat in the mayonnaise and vanilla. Next, mix in the dry ingredients alternating with the milk, until all is mixed up well.
Grease the 9-inch round pans with butter, line the bottoms with circles of parchment paper, and dust the insides of the greased pans with rice flour or mochiko flour. Divide the batter evenly between the two pans. Bake at 350 degrees for 25 minutes, or until a skewer tests clean. Let the cake cool in the pans for 10 minutes, then loosen the edges with a knife and turn out the cakes on racks to cool.
To stack the cake for icing, put the first layer on the plate top side down, frost the flat bottom side, then put the next layer on with the flat side down. This will put the flat sides together and they will not slide around as much.
To make a lemon cake, add the following and make adjustments:
Add the grated rind of one lemon and 2 Tablespoons of lemon juice from one fresh lemon, and substitute for the milk 1/2 cup of milk and 1/2 cup of buttermilk.
To make a lemon cream cheese frosting, melt 11 ounces of fine gluten free white chocolate (don’t use chips - they don’t melt well) in the top of a double boiler, allow to cool to room temperature. Mix in 12 ounces of cream cheese, and 12 Tablespoons of unsalted butter. Beat well until really smooth. Mix in 2 Tablespoons of fresh lemon juice. Use one cup of the icing between the layers, and use the rest to coat the top and sides of the layer cake.
For a chocolate frosted birthday cake, use the vanilla cake as the base. Then use the following icing from the Food Network’s Barefoot Contessa Show, adapted for gluten free cooking:
6 ounces gluten free semisweet chocolate
1/2 pound (2 sticks) unsalted butter, at room temperature
1 Tablespoon of gluten-free pasteurized egg product, such as Eggbeaters, but check on gluten free status
1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 1/4 cups sifted confectioners’ sugar
1 tablespoon gluten free instant coffee powder dissolved in 2 teaspoons of hot water
Melt chocolate in top of double-boiler and set aside to cool to room temperature.
In a separate bowl, beat the butter until light and fluffy, mix in the egg product and the vanilla. Gradually beat in the confectioner’s sugar and the coffee mixture by hand. Do not overbeat. This is a soft icing - spread it on the cake and then refrigerate the cake immediately.
2/3 cup chopped walnuts (break up the walnuts by hand or chop them)
1 cup golden raisins (golden raisins are really better than brown for this bread)
2 1/2 cups grated carrots
1 cup dark brown sugar
1 1/4 cup flour mix - (mix 2 cups white rice flour, 2/3 cup potato starch, 1/3 cup tapioca starch and 1 teaspoon xantham gum, stir together and use 1 1/4 cups of it, store the rest)
1 tsp baking soda
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 9 x 5 loaf pan.
In a pyrex measuring cup, melt the butter in the microwave. Remove and let cool slightly, then stir in the eggs and orange juice.
In one bowl, mix the spices, gluten free flour, baking soda, salt, brown sugar, shredded coconut and chopped walnuts. Add the raisins and carrots. Stir to make sure everything is evenly mixed up.
Stir the wet ingredients from the pyrex measuring cup in to the dry mixture that contains the fruits. Stir everything until well mixed.
The finished batter will have the consistency of a muffin batter.
Spoon the batter immediately into the prepared loaf pan, smooth the top, and bake for 60-70 minutes or until a tester comes out clean.
Cool in pan for ten minutes, then turn out to cool. Slice with a bread knife.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
This is a gluten-free version of a pleasant old-fashioned spice cake, with the exciting addition of a cream cheese maple icing.
In a food processor, mix until smooth:
¼ vegetable oil or melted butter
2 eggs
1/3 cup molasses
1 ¼ cups cooked pumpkin, mashed and drained of excess water
In a bowl, mix:
1 ½ cups brown rice flour
½ cup potato starch (katakuriko)
¼ cup tapioca starch
1 teaspoon xantham gum
1 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1 ½ teaspoons baking powder (see recipe for homemade version)
¾ teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon nutmeg
Add the dry ingredients to the wet ones and mix well.
Add
2/3 cup dry currants
Grease a 9 x 13 inch pan, line the bottom with parchment paper. Pour the batter into the pan and bake in preheated 375 degree oven for 35 minutes until a toothpick inserted in the batter comes out clean.
For the frosting:
Mix:
8 ounces cream cheese
2/3 cup dark maple syrup (grade B has more flavor than grade A)
1 teaspoon vanilla
Spread the frosting on the cooled cake.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
Gf-Zing! has been experimenting with the 123 Gluten Free Pound Cake mix, and we have hit on an excellent set of additions. Make the mix as directed on the package but use grapefruit soda, and add 3/4 cup of dried currants, and 1 1/2 teaspoons freshly ground cardamom seeds. It is important to use freshly ground cardamom seeds. Use dried, green cardamom pods, crack them open and take out the seeds, discarding the shells. Crush the seeds in a mortar and pestle until you have a powder, and then measure 1 1/2 teaspoons.
We make the cake in an angel food cake pan, with a cookie sheet underneath on the oven shelf below to catch any drips. We dust the greased cake pan with mochiko (sweet rice) or tapioca flour. It takes 1 1/4 hours to bake.
- The additions of currants, cardamom seed and grapefruit soda make an excellent cake. Try it with a cup of darjeeling tea!
This nice rice pudding from Gf-Zing! has large grains of rice and tart cherries to offset the sugar. The recipe is not cloyingly sweet, and is quite attractive because of the large grains of rice.
In the rice cooker, put 3/4 cup of Arborio rice, 4 cups of non-fat milk, 1/2 cup of sugar, 1/4 teaspoon of salt, 1/4 cup of dried cherries and 2 Tablespoons of slivered almonds. Set the menu to Porridge, close the top and turn on the cooker.
When the cooker switches to “keep warm,” beat 1 egg, 1 teaspoon of almond extract and 1/4 teaspoon of lemon extract in a large bowl. Add the hot, cooked rice mixture to the egg mixture, about a soup spoon at a time, and beat well with a large spoon after each addition. The reason for adding a little of the hot rice at a time is so that the egg will not cook suddenly - if it did, it would make a sort of rice pudding with hard-boiled egg bits in it - Yuck! If you add the rice a bit at a time and stir vigorously after each addition, then you will get a nice creamy rice pudding.
After this mixture cools, serve it in small bowls with heavy cream to pour over each serving. You may have to do a little counter-top clean up, if the milk comes out through the vent holes in the top of the cooker during the cooking process. We had to clean up this milky mess, but we didn’t mind because the rice pudding was so tasty!
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
This recipe for a beautiful blueberry crumb coffeecake was developed for the Gf-Zing! website, which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
Make topping:
Mix 1/2 cup sugar, 1/4 cup softened butter, 1/3 cup Gluten Free Cookie Flour or GF pancake mix, 1 teaspoon cinnamon - mix thoroughly and set aside.
Batter:
Cream together:
1/4 cup butter
3/4 cup sugar
1 egg
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
1 teaspoon xantham gum
1/4-1/2 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
Add 2 cups Gluten Free Cookie Flour
Then stir in 1/2 cup milk.
Stir the batter thoroughly, then add 2 cups fresh or frozen wild blueberries and stir gently just to mix. If you mix too hard, the batter will turn blue throughout. If the blueberries are still frozen that is ok.
Spoon the batter into a greased, lined (use parchment paper to line the bottom), 8×8 or 9×9 inch pan. Sprinkle reserved topping on the top. Bake at 375 for 40-50 minutes. Stick a knife in to the middle and if the knife comes out clean the cake is done.
Serve warm or cold.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free.
This recipe was developed by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
When using non-wheat flours, cooks have to up the ante on flavorings. Here, the lemon extract in the original recipe is enhanced with fresh lemon zest, vanilla and some salt.
In a food processor, using the chopping blade, whir together:
1/2 cup white sugar
1/2 cup brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
grated zest of 1 lemon
Add and whir it some more until smooth:
1 stick butter
1/2 cup full fat cream cheese (use half of an 8 ounce package)
1 teaspoon lemon extract (we used a lemon extract with a base of sunflower oil)
1 teaspoon vanilla extract (or less if using Authentic Foods powdered vanilla)
1 teaspoon baking powder
Add one at a time and whir until smooth:
5 large eggs
Lastly, add 2 cups of almond meal, and keep mixing until smooth and combined. Scrape down the sides as necessary to make sure everything is mixed together.
Grease and line a 9″ spring-form pan with parchment paper, then grease the paper. Pour the mixture immediately into the prepared pan. The batter will have the consistency of thick pancake batter. Bake at 350 degrees for 55-60 minutes. The cake will not rise a great deal. Let cool for ten minutes in the pan, then remove from the pan and cool completely on a rack.
If you use a bundt pan, you may find that this is a challenging cake to remove from the pan.
Make sure all your ingredients, including the cream cheese, are gluten free!
It is up to the individual to decide whether they can eat oats or not. To eat oats or not is a controversial issue in the gluten free world. Please research the oat issue carefully for yourself, and decide what you want to do in consultation with your healthcare professional. If you are feeding a gluten-free guest, please inquire whether they eat oats or not. You may substitute dried coconut for the oats in this recipe. This recipe was developed by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
2 cups gluten free cookie flour
1 cup rolled quick or old-fashioned gluten free oatmeal, uncooked or oat substitute
3/4 cup sugar
2 teaspoons gluten free baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon Authentic Foods powdered gluten free vanilla
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon xantham gum
3/4 cup orange juice
1 teaspoon almond extract
2 eggs
1/3 cup extra light olive oil
grated zest of one orange
3/4 cup chopped dried cranberries
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
Mix the first 8 ingredients in one bowl, and mix the second 7 ingredients in a second bowl. Grease a 9×5 inch loaf pan, line the bottom with parchment paper, and grease again. Flour the pan lightly with mochiko (sweet rice flour).
Combine the contents of both bowls and stir briefly just until thoroughly blended. Spoon the dough in to the prepared pan. Bake at 350 degrees for 1 hour to 1 hour and ten minutes. When a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean, the bread is finished.
Remove the pan from the oven and let cool on a rack for one hour. Turn the bread out of the pan and let cool completely before serving.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free, and investigate the oat issue and the source of the oats and ask your medical professional for their advice regarding this topic before eating oats.
This recipe was developed by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
First, prepare the brown sugar:
In a small frying pan, brown 1 Tablespoon butter until light brown, then add 1/2 cup dark brown sugar and melt the sugar into the butter. Do not burn. Set aside.
2 3/4 cups 1 % milk
3 Tablespoons Minute Tapioca
1/8 teaspoon sea salt
1 egg
Mix this in a 2 quart saucepan and let sit for 5 minutes. Then cook over medium heat, stirring constantly, until it comes to a boil.
Add the brown sugar mixture in to the tapioca and stir to mix completely. Add 1 teaspoon GF vanilla and stir again. Pour tapioca in to a serving dish and chill completely.
Serve with toasted coconut sprinkled on each serving. Toasted coconut is obtained by spreading a layer of gluten free baking coconut on a cookie sheet or pie plate and baking at 350 for 10-12 minutes, until lightly browned.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
Make a recipe of gluten free sugar cookies, and roll and cut 1/4″ thick into valentine heart shapes. Cut a center out of half the cookies (these will be the tops of the sandwich cookies). Bake as directed.
Dust the top cookies (the ones with the center cut-out) with gluten free confectioner’s sugar.
Spread the bottom cookies with raspberry jam (we prefer seedless), and top each with a cookie that has a center cutout - this will allow the jam to show through.
A pretty, gluten free cookie for Valentine’s Day!
The cake is dairy free, although the icing contains dairy. The recipe was adapted and made accessible to the gluten free community by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
Dry ingredients:
2 cups gluten free cookie flour
2 teaspoons gluten free baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Other ingredients:
3/4 cup vegetable oil
2 cups white sugar
4 large eggs
2 cups coarsley grated carrots (4-5 carrots needed)
1 cup crushed pineapple (drained before measuring)
2 teaspoons freshly grated ginger
1 teaspoon vanilla (or 1/2 teaspoon Authentic Foods powdered vanilla)
3/4 cup dried sweetened cranberries or raisins (make sure these are gluten free)
Oven temperature is 350.
Grease two 9 inch round cake pans liberally and dust them mochiko flour (sweet rice flour).
Combine dry ingredients in one bowl. Add the berries or raisins and set aside.
In another bowl, or the food processor, cream the oil and sugar with the 4 eggs. Then add the carrots, pineapple, ginger, vanilla.
Add the wet mixture to the dry ingredients and fruit. Do this in the bowl, not the food processor, as the food processor would dice up all the berries and fruit.
Spread the dough evenly between the two prepared pans and bake for 35 or more minutes, until a knife tests clean when inserted near the center of the pans.
Remove the cakes to racks to cool for ten minutes, then remove from the pans.
Frost with Cream Cheese Icing:
Cream together:
8 ounces gluten free cream cheese
1 stick of butter
1 Tablespoon brandy
1/4 teaspoon powdered gluten free vanilla (Authentic Foods brand)
1 box (4 1/2 -5 cups) confectioner’s sugar
Frost the bottom layer of the cake, put the second layer on top. Frost the top and the sides with remaining icing.
This makes a substantial and large cake which will feed 16.
Make sure all your ingredients are gluten free!
This recipe was developed by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
Make a 9 inch gluten free pie crust, and pre-bake it at 350 degrees for 20 minutes or until it is as brown as you like it. Set the pie shell aside to cool.
Filling:
1 cup sugar
1/4 cup gluten free gravy flour (see below)
3 Tablespoons cornstarch
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 cups water
4 egg yolks, beaten
1 tablespoon butter or gluten free vegan margarine
1/4 cup fresh squeezed key lime juice (requires 8-10 tiny key limes or 4 regular limes)
1 teaspoon finely grated lime zest
Meringue:
4 egg whites
1/4 teaspoon cream of tartar (to stabilize the meringue)
6 teaspoons sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla
Combine the sugar, gluten free gravy flour, cornstarch and salt in a 2-quart saucepan. Gradually stir in the 2 cups of water. Cook at medium heat, stirring constantly with a whisk, until thickened. At this point, it will taste bland. Don’t taste it now.
Stir a small amount of the hot mixture in to the egg yolks, then a little more, then a little more, until half the hot mixture has been added to the yolks. Combine the yolk mixture with the rest of the mixture in the saucepan, whisking constantly and cooking for two minutes. Whisk in the butter or margarine. The aim of this process is to mix everything without getting lumps of hard-boiled egg yolk. Stir in the key lime juice and zest. Cool slightly, then pour in to the cooked pie shell.
Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Beat the egg whites and cream of tartar for the meringue using a hand beater or an electric beater until the whites form soft peaks that hold their shape. Gradually beat in the sugar and the vanilla until the meringue is glossy and holds well. Spread the meringue carefully all over the pie to cover the pie completely. Bake the pie for 6 minutes, or slightly longer, to brown the top of the meringue. Cool the pie completely before serving.
Gluten Free Gravy Flour:
Mix these ingredients together and use what you need:
6 Tablespoons brown rice flour
2 1/4 Tablespoons sweet rice flour (mochiko)
4 1/2 teaspoons tapioca starch
1 teaspoon of xantham gum
Use all gluten-free ingredients!
This recipe was developed by Gf-Zing! , which celebrates flavor in the gluten free world.
1 cup gluten free butter or vegan margarine
1 cup white sugar
1/2 cup dark brown sugar
1 egg
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 3/4 cups gluten free cookie flour
1/3 cup gluten free unsweetened cocoa powder
1/2 teaspoon gluten free baking powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
2 cups gluten free semi-sweet chocolate chips
3/4 cups chopped dried cherries (Rainier cherries are good)
Oven at 350 degrees.
Cream the butter 0r margarine (or one stick of each) with the two sugars and the vanilla until light and “fluffy.” Beat in the egg. Mix the dry ingredients in a separate bowl and add them to the creamed mixture. Mix thoroughly. Up to this point in the recipe you can use a food processor to do the mixing.
Stir in the chocolate chips and the cherries.
Drop tablespoons of dough on a silpat lined cookie sheet. Flatten them slightly with your hand or with the bottom of a glass that you dip repeatedly in sugar.
Bake the cookies for 11-12 minutes, then remove the cookie sheet from the oven and allow the cookies to cool for 2 minutes on the pan before removing them to a rack to cool completely.
This recipe will make a 3 dozen cookies or so, and they will be eaten so fast you will have to make more right away!
Be sure to use all gluten-free ingredients!
Since we can’t have gluten, why not have some vanilla ice cream with our breakfast instead? This cake is good, with or without added vanilla ice cream. It is pretty darned sweet - not so sweet that it makes your teeth hurt, but almost.
Mix in a food processor, and then transfer to a large bowl:
2 cups gluten free cookie flour
1/2 cup (1 stick) unsalted butter
2 cups dark brown sugar
1 cup finely chopped toasted pecans (toast them in a 300 degree oven for 10-15 minutes, cool, then chop)
1/4 teaspoon xantham gum
Remove 2 3/4 cups of this mixture and pat it evenly into an ungreased 9×13 inch baking pan. Set aside.
To the remaining dry ingredients, add the following and combine thoroughly:
2 teaspoons gluten free cinnamon
1 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup gluten free sour cream
1 teaspoon gluten free vanilla
1 egg
Lastly, to this mixture add:
2 cups finely chopped apples (peel first)
Carefully plop spoonfulls of this mixture over the stuff that is in the 9×13 pan that you set aside earlier. Spread the gooey dough carefully over the dry layer.
Bake for 30-35 minutes at 350 degrees until a toothpick comes out clean. Cool in the pan, then cut in large squares and serve it slightly warm with gluten free vanilla ice cream. At the time of this writing, Haagen-Dazs claims gluten free status for its vanilla ice cream, but the consumer must check frequently to see if the company has changed their formulations.
Note: The bottom “crust” improves the structural integrity of this cake, and produces an interesting textural contrast.
Always use all gluten free ingredients!
All those gluten-free cookies need to have the spice and flavor component enhanced, as spices and flavors tend to disappear into the rice flour…..Here is a good way to obtain a nice, strongly ginger-flavored cookie - a recipe from Gf-Zing!
You will need Miss Roben’s Mock Graham Cracker Cookie mix for this recipe.
Put the contents of 1 package of Miss Roben’s Mock Graham Cracker mix in a large bowl.
Add:
2 teaspoons gluten free ground ginger
1 teaspoon freshly grated lemon zest
3/4 cup minced crystallized ginger
Now, follow the instructions on the Miss Roben’s Graham Cracker mix bag, adding the honey, vanilla, butter, and water. Do not leave out the honey - use a fresh, local honey for extra good flavor.
Roll out the dough between pieces of waxed paper dusted with confectioner’s sugar, until the dough is about 1/4 inch thick. Cut with cookie cutters or a small glass. You can prick the cookies with a fork or press them with a ceramic cookie stamp - both methods will make nice designs on these cookies.
Bake the cookies as per the instructions on the Miss Roben’s bag. If you cook them longer they get darker and crunchier. They will keep for a long time in a cookie jar, and are excellent with coffee or tea.
Your friends in the glutenated world will want this recipe!
Make sure that you use all gluten-free ingredients!