Monday, December 30, 2019

Banana Bread


Banana Bread
Gluten and Dairy Free
My Little Blue Heron

This is the best banana bread to emerge from my oven since I began baking without gluten. I’m so excited to share this recipe with you.

I hope you’ve been freezing your overripe bananas. Please do this. When you defrost them, you can pour off the liquid. You’ll have the most wonderfully condensed, banana-y flavor. Don’t worry about recalculating weight. If you opt to keep the liquid, that’s fine. (If using fresh bananas, you won’t have any liquid to pour off.)

You will need a kitchen scale. Please buy an inexpensive one for consistent results. Here’s a link. This link is for the United States. It’s an inexpensive scale. Not perfect, but sufficient for this (and other) recipes!

I worked with a couple of different starches and binders, and the winners are: arrowroot and xanthan gum. I prefer maple syrup as a sweetener, and (refined) coconut oil over clarified butter. Clarified butter adds dairy (but not casein) to the recipe. So for those dairy-free humans, this is good news.

Every gluten free baker should have a pantry with: buckwheat flour, oat flour, sorghum flour and arrowroot starch. Xanthan gum is a binder, and fro gluten free baking it’s a staple ingredient for your kitchen. Maple syrup is less processed than other sweeteners (and it's delicious). Look for reasonably priced maple syrup at Costco or Trader Joe’s. When it comes to coconut oil and baking, I recommend refined, organic coconut oil. Nutiva makes a great product. The label, 'refined' carries such negative connotations, as though it has been stripped of its healthy qualities. It's fat. It's saturated fat. Enuf said. 

Please buy whole nutmegs and a nutmeg grater. Fresh nutmeg is gorgeous. Try some on steamed or sautéed spinach; and mix some into ricotta (or Kite Hill vegan ricotta). I learned this from my mom. You need just a pinch. Buy fresh nutmegs from an amazing resource like World Spice Merchants or Penzey’s.  Both are great companies. Penzey’s supports teachers. I like people who like teachers.

I always recommend Baldwin’s vanilla extract. I’ve been recommending it to you for over ten years. I still recommend it. It’s good as gold.

Additions of nuts are up to you. If you don’t choose to add them, you can substitute gluten free chocolate chips. The bread isn’t cloying, so the addition of chocolate shouldn’t sugar shock you. I like walnuts with bananas, but I think pecans or hazelnuts would be excellent choices.

Fast away the old year passes. Out with those old bananas. Enjoy your days, one at a time, one breath at a time, a banana at a time.

Here's to a peaceful and healthy 2020. Let's hope that we find our way back to the garden, that we return to a country that is sane, that's led with intellect and that we return to democracy. 

Happy New Year!

love always.
always love.
jane

🍌 🍌 🍌 🍌 🍌

Banana Bread

Equipment: Electric hand or stand mixer, kitchen scale, bowls, measuring spoons, potato masher (for the bananas), loaf pans (standard size, or several smaller, or muffin tins).

Ingredients:
75 g. sorghum flour
75 g. oat flour
50 g. buckwheat flour
50 g. arrowroot flour
½ tsp./1g. xanthan gum
1tsp./6g. baking soda
½ tsp./2g. salt (I like kosher salt)
½ tsp. freshly grated nutmeg
2 eggs, size large, room temperature
80 grams refined coconut oil, melted (cooled to room temp.)
½ c. maple syrup (dark is best for baking)
1 tsp. pure vanilla extract
385 g. banana (approx. 3 large), mashed
66 grams chopped walnuts (or pecans or ‘other’ nuts)
       (Or, throw in equivalent GF chocolate chips)

Procedure:
Preheat oven to 350º F. and prepare loaf pan or pans with spray release or brush with melted coconut oil.

1. Set a large bowl on your kitchen scale and tare it to zero.

2. Measure dry ingredients (through the nutmeg on the ingredient list), taring after each addition. (Alternatively, if you feel you’ll have better control, you can measure each ingredient separately (use one smaller bowl, dumping the weighed ingredient into the large bowl each time.) Remember: tare, tare, tare.

3. When all dry ingredients have been measured, whisk together until completely combined.

4. In another large bowl (or in the bowl of an electric mixer), mix together: eggs, coconut oil (brought to a liquid state, but at room temperature) and maple syrup until well blended.

5. Add vanilla extract and blend.

6. Dump in the dry ingredients and mix, on low speed, until absorbed.

7. Add mashed bananas and mix until incorporated.

8. If adding nuts (or chocolate chips), dump them in and mix by hand. This will ensure that the batter is mixed throughout and ready for baking.

9. Fill prepared loaf pans (or muffin tins), filling them 2/3 of the way up.

10. Bake in the center of your oven, depending on size of product and your oven, anywhere from 15 minutes, up. The bread is done when you can put a toothpick in and it comes out clean. You’ll see the sides pulling away a little, too.

11. Remove from oven and as soon as you can, release from pans and cool on rack. When cool, serve or wrap well. These will keep for a day or two out of the fridge. After, refrigerate or freeze for up to a month.

Banappetite!
  









Sunday, December 22, 2019

Pain D'Épices for 2020

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Pain D’Épices
Gluten (and Dairy) Free Spice Cake
Adapted by My Little Blue Heron from Les cakes de Laurent sans gluten & sans lait by Laurent Dran


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Pain D’Épices is traditionally eaten at New Year’s. This loaf is a warmly spiced honey cake. Sweetness and warmth to usher in the new year sound perfect.   

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Dran’s recipe calls for superfine rice flour. I replaced this with oat and sorghum flours. This combination removes that gluten-free ‘grit’, improving texture and mouth feel. You’ll be astonished that it’s gluten free. This only grit remaining is its spice legs and warmth.

The French home cook doesn’t prepare super-sized cakes. This loaf is smaller than what you’re probably used to baking. The loaf pan you’ll need is 16 x 9 cm (6.3 x 3.5 in inches .. or 6 x 4 should work). Simpler solution: double the recipe and make one large loaf and a small loaf or some cupcakes.

I’ve made this by hand, with a Kitchen Aid and with a Kitchen Aid hand mixer.

You MUST have a kitchen scale that weighs in grams. If you don’t, they’re so easy to get on Amazon. Here’s a link. This one’s $10 American on Amazon.

Guar gum replaces Xanthan Gum for binding. Could be that Xanthan Gum is hard to find in France. I like Guar Gum. (Xanthan Gum’s a mold that's grown on corn.)  

Oven temperature is 356º F. If you don’t have a digital oven, that’s fine. Set it to 350º F. and the bake may take a little longer.

A truc that Dran recommends is to slit the cake down the middle. He says that a small, quick slit will help to develop a “big bump”, like a madeleine. 

The batter is way too thin to do this when you begin the bake, so you can make your “petite incision” once the cake or cakes are firm enough to do so. (My loaves develop big bumps sans the petite incisions.) 

MLBH Trucs: Use organic expeller pressed refined coconut oil (Spectrum brand is lovely). Your cake won't taste like coconut.

I use Julia Child’s recipe for equal amounts of cinnamon, cloves and mace. You might want to reduce the clove amount if it’s too ‘cloven’ (sorry). I like dark honey. If you have buckwheat honey, it’ll complement the flour, and the warm spices. If you don’t, don’t stress.

In New York, daylight is at a minimum. It’s cold. Fill your home with fragrant spices and welcome 2020 with warmth and love. 🌞🌝

d’épeace and always love, love all ways,
jane


🎡

Pain D’Épices


Preparation: 
Using spray release or a neutral oil, coat the baking pans well.
Preheat the oven to 356º F. (see note above.)  


Ingredients: 
25 g. oat flour
25 g. sorghum flour
25 g. potato starch
35 g. buckwheat flour
4 g. baking powder (aluminum free is best)
1 gram Guar gum
60 g. dark brown sugar 
1 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. ground cloves
1 tsp. ground mace*(see below for a different spice profile!)
1/4 tsp. Kosher salt 
1 egg, size large (about 50 grams) at room temperature
110 g. water, room temperature (approx.. ½ c.)
85 g. honey, buckwheat preferred
55 g. refined coconut oil, brought to liquid state. Do this in the microwave at half power until melted.

*(for a different spice profile try: 1 tsp. cinnamon, 1/4 tsp. ginger, 1/4 tsp. ground cloves, 1/2 tsp. ground mace - closer to Child's cake.)

Procedure: 
In a medium sized bowl, whisk together all dry ingredients and set aside.

In another bowl (or if using an electric stand mixer, in that bowl), measure out ingredients, and whisk together for a minute.

Add dry ingredients to wet until combined.

Pour into prepared pan(s) and let sit for about 15 minutes before putting into the oven. Bake, depending on your pan(s) and your oven for 30-45 minutes. Bake in the center of your oven. (If baking cupcakes, baking time will be reduced.) If making the 'small incision', when loaf/loaves are firm enough to do so, using a very sharp knife or a rasp, make a quick incision along top and continue baking until cakes are firm, and a tester or toothpick comes out dry (okay preferable if moist crumbs are clinging!)

Remove from oven and cool 10-15 minutes on baking rack before releasing from pans. Cool completely before wrapping. (If you give a little time for the spices to settle, your loaf will improve with a little rest.)

Wrapped well, loaf will keep for a couple of days at room temperature. You can refrigerate it and bring it to room temperature before serving. This is delicious ‘as is’, with ice cream, some fruit, or for a real treat, toast and serve with butter and jam. (I love apricot or raspberry.)




Frozen, it'll keep well for several months.



With Metta, from My Little Blue Heron's Kitchen

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