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Entries in Dairy-free (85)

Sunday
Jan022011

Savor {Orange Oatmeal Scones}

Every New Year’s Day one of my best friends picks a word as her focus for the year ahead. I marvel at her decision to do this—to think about and live by that word all year long.

It takes the same kind of self determination to go gluten-free and never look back. I’ve done that. I guess I can pick a word and see where it takes me. Maybe I need a vision board—like the ones some of my GF blogger friends are creating—hanging in my office to remind me to center myself on something more than the necessary day-to-day tasks that seem to fill the moments, hours, and days to overflowing.

Looking for the right word is not something I decided to do New Year’s Day morning. I’ve thought about this for weeks while hustling and bustling through preparations for holidays, getting up to speed on a new job, celebrating with family and friends, dealing with an aging mother and the passing of older relatives. Thinking about it on days I feel like talking myself off the ledge while I breathe deeply into a paper sack. And, even when I know that life is really very good—having coffee or dinner with friends, picking up my son from college, snuggling a little dog or enjoying a rare quiet moment.

Little snippets of sayings and songs passed through my head as I searched for a word. Don’t worry, be happy. Stop and smell the roses. Things like that. Happy?  I thought of one of my favorite little books The Tao of Pooh (a must read! over and over and over.) Tao? Zen? Nothing was snapping.

And, then today I read this post over at Tickled Red and something clicked. I get this woman. I connect with her on some level—little sparks of connectivity like snyapses popping across the internet.

What she wrote spoke to me. A word in her post popped off the page—SAVOR. Yes. That’s the word.

Savor—to enjoy or appreciate completely.

Yes. That’s it. That’s the word for 2011. Savor.

I’m going to wrap my head around that word and see where it takes me.

 


Orange Oatmeal Scones

Preheat the oven to 425 degrees. The rack should be in the center position.

Mix together and set aside:

½ teaspoon orange extract
½ cup coconut milk
½ cup orange juice
2 tablespoons orange marmalade

Place the following dry ingredients into a food processor fitted with a blade and then pulse a few times until all ingredients are mixed evenly.

1½ cups sorghum flour
1¼ cups gluten-free flour blend (Authentic Foods Multi-Blend Flour recommended)
¼ cup sugar
¼ cup dark brown sugar
1 tablespoon baking powder
½ teaspoon cinnamon
½ teaspoon salt

Add and pulse about 12 times (in one second pulses):

½ cup cold Earth Balance Buttery Spread, cut into small chunks

The mixture should resemble coarse meal. (If you are doing this by hand put the dry ingredients in a big bowl and whisk until combined. Then, using two knives, a pastry blender or your fingertips, cut the Earth Balance into the dry mixture.)

Transfer from the food processor to a large bowl. Add and mix in:

2 cups gluten-free rolled oats

Using a spatula, stir in about half of the coconut/orange juice mixture. Add the remaining liquid a little at time until the dough begins to form. The dough should be a little soft and sticky but should hold together when formed and cut. (This ratio of liquid to dry ingredients worked perfectly for me but you can adjust the dough to reach the desired consistency by adding more coconut milk or flour, if needed.)

Lightly dust the counter top or pastry mat with sorghum or rice flour. Separate the dough into thirds. Form each third into a circle about 4 or 5 inches across and 1½ inches high. Cut each round in half and then half again to create 4 wedges.

Place on a parchment or silpat lined cookie sheet and, if desired, sprinkle each scone with a pinch of turbinado sugar. Bake for about 15 minutes until the scones are lightly browned. Remove to a wire rack when cool enough to handle. Serve warm or at room temperature.

PRINT RECIPE

More wonderful scone recipes for you to savor:

 

Book of Yum—Amaranth Scones (Gluten, Egg, and Dairy Free)

Book of Yum—Cardamom Date Scones (Gluten, Soy and Dairy Free)

Nourishing Meals—Maple Raspberry Scones (Gluten, Egg, and Dairy Free)

Lexie’s Kitchen—Lexie’s Scones (Gluten, Egg, and Dairy Free)

 

Monday
Nov152010

Brown Sugar Hand Pies (plus a story & a cookbook)

There are times I’m certain the cooking mojo has left me—times when kitchen creativity has taken wing. It’s a hollow feeling and have found it’s best to cook and bake old reliables until it passes.

Sooner or later my mojo returns and I breathe a sigh of relief.

Now a new kind of mojo chaser has surfaced to pester me. The ideas are coming but the execution…not so much.

Have you ever read “Like Water for Chocolate”? It’s a fabulous book with a story line that somewhat mimics my current dilemma.

The main character, Tita, cooks from her soul. Her very emotions are the main ingredient in the delicacies she prepares and serves to family and friends. When she’s feeling passionate her dining companions become full of passion. When she’s feeling despondent they become despondent. The more they eat, the more they feel what she feels.

Although my family doesn’t feel my emotions when eating the food I’ve cooked they do experience what my emotions do to my cooking. Nothing turns out quite right.

During serene, happy times the food from my kitchen looks better. It smells better. It tastes better. It is just better.

But right now with older family members becoming unsteady and some who have recently passed, with a new job, with the holidays ahead of us…there’s a feverish energy afoot that’s putting my kitchen in turmoil.

It’s time to turn this around so I’ve prescribed myself some positive energy activities—long walks in the crisp fall air, the exercise plan I’ve been putting off, a fun evening with friends, and curling up to a hot cup of tea and a good cookbook. I remind myself each morning that every journey has bumps in the road and today might just be the first bump-free day of many yet to come. You know, “pick yourself up, dust yourself off, start all over again.”

So, for this post, what started out as Apple Dumplings (then became Savory Fennel, Apple & Goat Cheese Tartlets) finally wound up as Brown Sugar Hand Pies.

The pie crust dough is wonderful (not just any pie dough—gluten-free pie crust a la Shauna Ahern, Gluten-Free Girl extraordinaire.) But my ideas in using it for an apple dumpling or savory tartlet—although good ones—just didn’t turn out. Brown Sugar Hand Pies, on the other hand, are a bit simpler. My mood brightened at the prospect. Ahh, much better. Sometimes simple and tasty are just fine in my book.

Armed with a freshly baked goodie and steamy cup of tea I opened my latest cookbook acquisition—gluten-free girl and the chef: a love story with 100 tempting recipes.

And, similar to “Like Water for Chocolate” it speaks to me.

It has heart and soul, along with dishes that have each been made countless times by the Aherns until each one is just right.

It’s got me thinking—will we be able to feel the love that went into the book, the recipes, their lives when serving up some of these dishes to unsuspecting diners? We shall see.

PS - don’t stop here. I know this is a long post but scroll down to see the recipe, a link to win a cookbook and more, plus some amazing recipes—all gluten-free—for your Thanksgiving table.

Brown Sugar Hand Pies

Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.

Mix together in a small bowl:

1/2 cup brown sugar

2 tablespoons sugar

1/4 teaspoon cinnamon

Drizzle over the sugar mixture and mix in thoroughly (this should only slightly moisten it):

1/2 teaspoon maple or agave syrup mixed with 1/2 teaspoon water

 

Make one batch of Shauna’s Pie Crust with the following substitutions (if required by your dietary constraints) and addition:

Instead of:

5 tablespoons butter use 5 tablespoons Earth Balance Natural Buttery Spread

4 tablespoons leaf lard use 4 tablespoons shortening

1 egg use 1 flax egg (1 tablespoon ground flax mixed with 3 tablespoons warm water)

Add: 3 tablespoons granulated sugar to the flour mix

Keep the dough refrigerated until ready to use. Follow Shauna’s instructions for rolling it out between two layers of parchment paper. You’ll want the dough to be about 1/16” thick for the hand pies.

Cut the dough into squares or rectangles using a cookie cutter (I used a 2 5/8” square) or measure out using a ruler and cut with a knife.

Gently remove the squares to a parchment lined baking sheet. A small metal spatula comes in handy for this step. If the dough separates a little you can gently push it back together.

Place a heaping spoonful of the cinnamon sugar mixture into the center of each square leaving a border of about 1/4” of dough uncovered. Place another square on top.

Slightly press the edges down in two or three places along each edge then crimp all around with the tines of a fork. Use the fork to place a few decorative holes in the top of each hand pie.

Brush with milk (rice, soy, or any alternative milk you have on hand) and sprinkle with turbinado or regular sugar.

Bake for 15-17 minutes until the dough is set (dough made with shortening does not brown). Take the hand pies out of the oven and when cool enough to handle remove to a cooling rack.

What to do with the leftover scraps of dough?

My Mom always cut the leftover scraps of piecrust dough into rough strips. Then she topped them with cinnamon sugar, a dot of butter (Earth Balance) and popped them in a 350 degree oven for about 10 minutes. Mmmmm.

PRINT RECIPE

Gluten-Free Challenge Link Love:

Visit Gluten-free Girl and the Chef for some great gluten-free Thanksgiving recipes, a little about their gluten-free challenge and…a chance to win Shauna and Danny’s book plus a few more things (hint: one is a Kitchen Aid Mixer!). Plus check out all these great bloggers who participated in the challenge:

Amber of Bluebonnets and Brownies made gluten-free apple and pear cobbler.

Andrea of Andrea’s Recipes made gluten-free pumpkin scones.

Aran of Canelle et Vanille made sweet potato and crabapple clafoutis.

Ashley of Not Without Salt made gluten-free chocolate biscotti.

Charissa of Zest Bakery made warm pumpkin polenta with goat cheese.

Deanna of The Mommy Bowl made gluten-free bread.

Debra of Smith Bites made gluten-free celery root soup with cashew cream.

Diane and Todd of White on Rice Couple made Turkey Sloppy Joes on Rosemary Rolls.

Gaby of What’s Gaby Cooking made gluten-free molasses cookies.

Gudrun of Kitchen Gadget Girl made a gluten-free pumpkin strata.

Heather of Rookie Moms made chocolate peanut butter brownies.

Heena of Tiffin Tales made glorious gluten-free Thanksgiving torte.

Heidi of Adventures of a Gluten-Free Mom made crescent rolls and cinnamon rolls, gluten-free, dairy-free, and egg free.

Irvin of Eat the Love made Gluten Free Maple Sweet Potato Cheesecake with Gingerbread Bottom and Sour Cream Marshmallow Topping.

Jean of Gluten-Free Doctor Recipes made gluten-free sourdough rosemary rolls and gluten-free mincemeat cookies.

Jeanne of The Art of Gluten-Free Baking made gluten-free pumpkin pie.

Kamran of Sophisticated Gourmet made cranberry-almond-coconut macaroons topped with chocolate.

Karen of Cook 4 Seasons made gluten-free pumpkin mousse.

Kim of Cook It Allergy Free made Cornbread and (Shauna’s) Crusty Bread Stuffing with Apples, Sausage, Pine Nuts, and… a special ingredient.

Lexie of Lexie’s Kitchen made dairy-free, egg-free, gluten-free, no-bake pumpkin pie filling.

Lori of Recipe Girl made an entire Thanksgiving menu, gluten-free.

Maria of Two Peas and Their Pod made gluten-free apple cranberry crisp.

Melissa of Gluten-Free for Good made gluten-free cherry cobbler.

Michelle of What’s Cooking With Kids made gluten-free apple cobbler. 

Molly of My Madeleine made butternut squash soup.

Nikki of Art and Lemons made gluten-free rustic squash tarts.

Paula of Bellalimento made gluten pree Pumpkin roll with mascarpone and nutella filling.

Ricki of Diets, Dessert and Dogs made gluten-free coco-nut shortbread buttons.


Serene of Mom Food Project made an entire Thanksgiving, gluten-free.

Shaina of Food for My Family made a gluten-free apple pie cheesecake.

Shirley of Gluten-Free Easily made candy carrot coins.

Silvana of Dish Towel Diaries made kale caesar slaw.

Tara   of A Baking Life made gluten-free gingerbread cake with vanilla-bourbon Bavarian cream and cinnamon-brown sugar caramel.

Tia of Glugle Gluten-Free made gluten-free pumpkin muffins.

Wendy of Wenderly made sweet and savory prosciutto cups.

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