I've
been experimenting around the last month with various foods and have
comprised a variety of things to keep working with as I create and alter
recipes as usual.
The first is date paste. Date paste stands in as a
natural sweetener (like agave, maple syrup, and honey) and apparently is
rich in a wide array of vitamins and is anti-inflammatory. As a stand
in for brown sugar, it worked great in an altered brownie recipe from
Easy Gluten-Free Baking. To make date paste, you pit 1 cup of
dates and combine with 1 cup hot water. Mix in blender until pureed --
this will take at least one minute. It will keep in the fridge for a few
weeks. The brownies held together; and, my experience with brownies on my
diet is that they are too crumbly and not moist enough. This is no
longer the case! Do these properties of date paste hold up for bread and cake? I
don't know. But I am definitely going to play around with it more. I
was originally hoping date paste would hold my granola bars together,
but alas, I still have to work on that as they still crumble. Date
paste is also a key ingredient in a dairy free homemade coffee creamer
I've come to use a lot.
I have been trying to find a sugar free chocolate chip (or recipe) ever since Sunspire discontinued their grain-sweetened ones. Alas, I have had no luck yet. People often suggest cocoa nibs,
which aren't the same -- mainly due to their lack of sweetness. I did
try coating the nibs in maple syrup before making chocolate chip cookies
and even though it was not a replicated taste of chocolate chips, it
was pretty good. By the way, the dough in Fruit-Sweet and Sugar-Free
has the consistency of Chips Ahoy -- it's awesome.
This pesto was amazing. Instead of using Parmesan I used goat cheese (many dairy allergic
folks can tolerate this in moderation). I also sauted some chicken
before adding the sauce, and mixed in cooked gluten free pasta. Total
success. I'm thinking of using turkey instead of chicken next time,
just to mix it up.
There is a restaurant in Oregon that had these
amazing apple pancake topping years ago. I had been really wanting
them, so I replicated the recipe as best as a could -- taking the tastes
from memory. Here it is, Maple-Apple Sauce Topping:
-Core some apples (how many apples you ask? However many you want!).
-Cut up into bite size chunks.
-Place some coconut oil in frying pan (maybe...a couple tablespoons or so) on medium high heat.
-Once oil has melted, place apple chunks in pan.
-Douse in maple sugar and cinnamon (taste to liking).
-Pour pure maple syrup in (enough to cover bottom of pan) and make sure everything is coated evenly.
-Place lid on pan, stir occasionally.
-Roughly ten minutes later apples should be soft and about half of the syrup will be absorbed (don't let them get soggy).
-So
now, there are two choices: pour in organic unsweetened applesauce or use an immersion
blender to blend half of the apples. Blend/stir to desired chunkiness.
-Top with more maple sugar (it gives it a little more zest)
-Serve
over pancakes, waffles, french toast, etc. And now that I think about
it, a GF graham cracker crumble would really highlight the experience.
I've also been experimenting with salads because I
need a more steady diet of greens, but need them in meals. I mean,
salad greens by themselves are not filling, nor are kale chips. At the
store I just pick and choose two salad packs, because really I have no
idea and have so far all kinds have been good for my liking. I often
end up with spinach in one because I like it and it has proven its worth
to me (I'll spare you the graphic details for that one). The real fun
is in various combinations of other stuff: sliced avocado, radishes, pear,
apples, strawberry and blueberries, chicken or turkey or salmon covered
in a spice, cucumber, carrots, or quinoa. Endless possibilities here!
Now, we move on to salad dressing. Honestly, I used
to hate salad dressing. Why sogg-ify what is supposed to be crunchy?
But now, I often put a combination of olive oil, flax oil, apple cider
vinegar, lemon juice, and crushed garlic because they are all good oils
that dramatically effect the health of my gut. And I've actually have
grown to like the taste. I don't think this combination exists on the
market and it's so much cheaper to keep a fresh jar of my own likings in
the fridge anyways.
For all you improv cooks, you've got to check out the Flavor Thesaurus. It's not exhaustive, but it pairs different foods together and it is a great tool for experimenting. (This is where I got the idea to marinade a turkey breast in olive oil and dill to highlight the cucumbers in a salad.)
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