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  • Coconut flour several ways

    Posted on January 9th, 2012 Charity No comments

    I love coconut flour!

     

    Thanks to Coconut Mama, I have some new coconut flour baked goods. Being gluten free and now mostly grain free, I miss eating things some others take for granted… bread, biscuits, pizza. You get the idea.

    Coconut flour is a relative newcomer on the food scene. With the rise of people interested in low carb dieting, Paleo and Primal eating, grain free recipes, the search went out world wide to find things to expand those  parameters. Coconut flour is sort of a conundrum for me. It is processed so not really a whole food. But/and, I am human and I want what I want. I am not willing to go the rest of my life without baked goods. I am willing to go the rest of my life having better health, having a healthier thyroid and all those issues which are affected by gluten. So, I am happy to include coconut flour in my diet when those carb-y urges arise. It has a really good nutritional profile, 2 Tablespoons provides the following:

    1.5 g fat (1 g saturated fat)
    10 g carbs (with 9 g fiber, bringing the net carb count to a measly 1)
    2 g protein

    (Read more: http://www.marksdailyapple.com/coconut-flour/#ixzz1j1HnrWoy)

    Note how high in fiber it is. I don’t need to tell you everything that that means! Just be aware and don’t eat too much at one time. ( a good thing to remember about food in general) Drink some extra water. I find that things made with coconut flour tend to be on the dry side. Most recipes contain plenty of fat and there seems to be some chemical reason that coconut flour needs a lot of eggs for things to work. This increases the protein content of things, which is a good thing.

    This is a good basic recipe for flatbread, biscuits, and beyond.  After the recipe, you will find some of my ideas for improvising. As usual with my posts, I encourage you to be creative and come up with your own explorations.

    Coconut Flour Flatbread

    makes 4 small bread rounds

    • 3  Tablespoons Coconut Flour or 1 Tablespoon Almond  Flour & 1 Tablespoon Coconut Flour Mixed Together
    • 2Tablespoon Coconut Oil, Melted
    • 2 Eggs ( local and pasture raised organic)
    • 1/2 Teaspoon Sea Salt
    • 1/4 Teaspoon Baking Powder
    All of these ingredients can and should be organic.
    Preheat your oven to 350 degrees. Prepare a baking sheet with parchment paper. Mix all ingredients thoroughly. An interesting aspect to coconut flour is that it tends to get really clumpy when you combine it with wet ingredients. Please sift your flour first. The clumping will happen anyway. You must have to keep mixing until the clumps are gone. I have at times used my stick blender for a recipe such as this, or use a hand mixer. Divide mix into 4 and place dough onto paper. The original recipe indicated that it would be runny but I found it is pretty thick. So, use your hands ( wet them a bit) to pat it down. Thinner, the bread will be crisper. Thicker, it will be more like a biscuit. Bake for about 10 minutes, until starting to turn golden.
    My variation ideas:
    Thicker will be more like a biscuit, so if that is what you want, add a few drops of stevia or 1/2 tsp. of sugar to the dough before baking. Split, use butter and jam. Yum.
    For a savory biscuit, add about a tsp. of chopped fresh herbs and a T. of parmesan cheese. Use olive oil instead of coconut oil.
    Make them thin and bake a few minutes longer. When cooled, spread with some pesto and some grated cheese. Broil for a minute or two. Voila, pizza.
    Or, use the thin version. Heat some butter in a saute pan. Use the breads flat side up, cover with your favorite cheese, place those sides together and cook in saute pan a few minutes on each side. Grilled cheese!
    Use the dough by the spoonful and make dumplings on top of your favorite stew.
    What ideas do you have ?? Let me hear about them in the comments.

     

  • Personal Chef for Hire

    Posted on February 6th, 2011 Charity 1 comment

    Whetting your appetite

    We are moving ever closer to spring and I am contemplating new items for my personal chef clients’ menus. I thought I would whet your appetite with some pictures and descriptions of some of the things my clients have eaten lately. Some things stay on the menu year round and many things are seasonal. As you faithful readers of this blog know, I am a firm believer in eating according to the seasons. The reasons are many. The quality of locally grown in season food is higher, has more nutritive value, and is less expensive. Each season has its own energies, as does the food that grows during that time.

    I must admit I am ready for the spring produce – peas, asparagus, strawberries! But, we have a few more weeks of root vegetables and squashes ahead of us. We are blessed here in California with an early spring but Mother Earth is still resting and waiting and so must we.

    Here is a Winter Vegetable Stew I made for a vegetarian couple, rich with mushroom broth and locally cultivated mushrooms, winter squash, celery root, celery, onions, spinach, and sundried tomatoes which were picked and dried in the height of the season and so carry that life force in them.

    A soup that sticks around most of the year is Chicken Noodle soup. Obviously, this was not for the same clients, but a family who orders soup every week. Here is where I get to be creative. I hardly ever use a recipe for soup. I have a memory of a recipe or a concept  and either see what looks good at the market and/or what is available in the fridge. This means each time it is a one of a kind masterpiece, never to be exactly repeated. This soup contains chicken thighs which I find have so much more flavor and richness, especially good for soups and stews. It also has onions, carrots, celery, spinach and noodles. This day, I used what noodles were available in the clients’ cupboards. It also has a healthy dose of garlic, and some salt and pepper.

    Next up is a recipe, often requested by my vegetarian clients, from the wonderful Molly Katzen for Spaghetti Squash Pancakes. You first bake the squash and when cooked scrape out the flesh which is noodle like in shape. Personally, I have never quite gotten into using this squash as a substitute for noodles but many people do. The batter is simple with the cooked noodles, rice flour, onion, eggs, salt and pepper. I like using red onion and adding some fresh thyme. This definitely is a seasonal recipe, appearing in the fall and winter. These clients love little patties and cakes so I am sure some sort of spring pancake will be on their menus soon, perhaps peas.

    Lastly is a recipe I found on a piece of paper when cleaning out my garage. I suspect it is a Zone diet recipe but I cannot give appropriate credit for it. Delicious little good for you cookies, made of dried figs, almond flour, salt, vanilla,orange zest, and a bit of coconut oil. ( the oil was not in the original recipe) Happily, they are processed sugar free, grain free, and gluten free.

    Almond Fig Bites

    2 cups almond meal
    1 c. ( 6 oz) soft dried figs ( one of my personal chef friends suggested subbing apricots, yum!)
    2 tsp. orange zest
    1 tsp. vanilla
    1/2 tsp. salt
    1 T. coconut oil

    Heat oven to 325º. Lightly coat a baking sheet with cooking spray or line with parchment paper.

    Blend all the ingredients in a food processor until mixture resembles coarse meal, about 1 minute.

    Form dough into small slightly flattened balls  and place on baking sheet 1/2 in. apart. ( cookies do not spread during baking). Bake until bottoms of cookies are slightly browned, 12 to 15 minutes, turning pan once half way through. Cool and eat!

    There is a small taste of what has been keeping me busy lately. I love my work as a personal chef. Every day is different and every client is different. Stay tuned for Spring will surely come and new ideas will emerge along with the new vegetables, fruits, and herbs.

    This post is part of  GNOWFGLINS Tuesday Twister. Head over there and read all the other interesting posts, please.