Showing posts with label elana's pantry. Show all posts
Showing posts with label elana's pantry. Show all posts

Friday, November 11, 2011

Day three hundred and eight

Chocolate chip cookies (almond flour; Recipe: Elana).  These were neat-- really nutty and chewy, almost like a PB cup flavor.

Fresh mozzarella and farmer's market tomatoes.

Dinner: Asian chicken meatballs, brown rice (with pureed cauliflower; Double Delicious), steamed broccoli, and pineapple.

Homemade vanilla ice cream with chocolate chip cookies. All of this gluten-free business is hard work.  We deserved a treat.  ;)

Day three hundred and four

Another gluten-free first: PIZZA!!  I would not, could not live without pizza.  Perfecting the best gluten-free crust is a project still in progress, and this was our first attempt.  It was pretty tasty, but I'm not sure how authentically "Italian" it tasted.  I'll get there sooner or later...

Before going into the oven: Pizza crust made with almond flour (recipe: Elana).

Dinner: Pizza (almond flour crust) with chicken, fresh mozzarella, and broccoli.  My daughters prefer their broccoli on the side rather than as a topping, so I don't put it on half of the pizza.  The crust had a nice crunch to it, so overall we were satisfied with dinner.

Day three hundred and three: Blueberry muffin challenge

My husband was out of town, my daughters wanted muffins, and we decided to give the gluten-free muffin experiment a try.  As I've been learning, a lot of gluten-free cooking is trial and error, so I decided to take two recipes, as well as two very different types of flours, and see what happened.

This first batch is made with coconut flour, and the recipe comes from the gluten-free Elana.  They are grain-free-- one baking method with which we're experimenting.  The muffins tasted good, but to be honest were very wet and oily, and didn't rise very much, so we decided to bake batch #2.

This second batch was made with Bob's Red Mill gluten-free flour blend.  The biggest downside to baking with this flour blend was that there is a slight bean-y aftertaste, which I did not care for.  On the flip side, they were light, fluffy, and not too wet or dry.  After the fact, I discovered a flour blend which I like MUCH better.  I'll get to that in a future post.
For comparison sake, here are both muffins.  In a taste test, #2 were much better.  The coconut-flour ones weren't too bad, though.  I froze the extras in a ziploc bag, and used them for the next month as a snack to toss into my daughter's school backpack.