Monday, May 6, 2013

Meltaway shortbread cookies

These shortbread-like biscuits have almost become a pantry staple in our house, where, thanks to the 3 year old, they have become known as "circle bikkies", despite being only roughly round. They are more circle-shaped than "egg bikkies" (oval-shaped milk arrowroot biscuits) and Tiny Teddies, hence the name. ;-)

This recipe was adapted from the Meltaway Cookie recipe on Landee See, Landee Do, where the blogger ices them with enticing-looking cream cheese icing, but I have never felt the need to make these any sweeter. If you wanted to make the icing you could simply substitute dextrose for the powdered sugar at a 1:1 ratio. 


Meltaway shortbread cookies (AKA "circle bikkies")

Makes about 40 cookies, fitting on 3 large trays. 

  • 250g butter (salted, or add a pinch of salt if using unsalted butter)
  • 3/4 cup cornflour (cornstarch)
  • 3/4 cup dextrose
  • 1 cup plain (all purpose) flour



In a medium bowl, cream the butter until fluffy. Add cornflour and dextrose and blend well. Beat in flour until thoroughly mixed. Drop by small teaspoons onto baking sheet and flatten out with the bottom of a glass, dipping the glass in dextrose each time to prevent sticking. Bake at 180C for 10-12 minutes or until just starting to brown. Allow to cool before storing in airtight container. 








Friday, March 29, 2013

Orange chocolate truffles

Has anyone noticed this blog has quite a chocolate theme?! Cutting out fructose has left me seeking my chocolate fix in ways not involving the consumption of chocolate blocks... but it hasn't stopped me wanting it. I've heard that women crave chocolate because they need magnesium, so I guess a simple fix could be to take magnesium supplements... but that doesn't sound quite as appetising as chocolate! 

I have had numerous attempts to make a satisfactory chocolate, but nothing has quite cut it... until these truffles. I've tried chocolate variations using unsweetened baker's chocolate (AKA cacao liquor), raw cacao powder, and normal baking cocoa powder; I've mixed them with cacao butter and coconut oil (bleurgh); I've sweetened them with rice malt syrup, dextrose-based syrup and stevia; I've added vanilla and/or coffee to try to compensate for the lack of flavour. I've found that using unsweetened chocolate (I have some Baker's Unsweetened Chocolate a friend kindly brought back from USA) or raw cacao powder result in an overpowering, bitter chocolate taste (like licking cocoa powder off the spoon), which is difficult to mask. And the chocolate is either waxy or chewy. 

For my first couple of attempts making these truffles I used Nestle baking cocoa powder, then raw cacao powder, and both were very nice, but VERY dark tasting and a little on the bitter side, and I added extra sweetening to compensate. I have now discovered that using the less acidic dutch processed cocoa powder results in a friendlier chocolate. Yes, raw cacao powder may have more magnesium and other minerals to benefit my body, but when it comes to chocolate it's the taste buds I aim to please. ;) (And from what I've read, raw cacao powder doesn't strictly meet the requirements for raw food anyway, if you're concerned about that sort of thing.)

You could try using this chocolate coating recipe to make eating chocolate or choc chips for baking if you like... It is not my ideal chocolate by a long shot, but it is the best fructose-free option I have discovered, and I'm happy enough for it to coat these extremely delicious orange truffles. OR you could coat the truffles in 85% cocoa chocolate, or some store-bought fructose-free chocolate such as Plamil's No Added Sugar Organic Chocolate (which I got from Flannery's). 





Makes about 18 truffles

Truffle filling
  • 30g (3 tablespoons or 1/4 cup) cacao butter, chopped
  • 2 tablespoons (40ml) coconut oil (I used unrefined, cold-pressed extra virgin coconut oil, which has quite a coconut flavour, but is not noticeable in these truffles)
  • 1/4 cup (60ml) rice malt syrup
  • 2 tablespoons (40ml) coconut butter (make a batch of this first, if you haven't made it in advance)
  • 1/2 cup dutch processed cocoa powder (I used Nestle Plaistowe premium cocoa. You can use normal baking cocoa powder or raw cacao powder, but the truffles will have more of a bitter taste and you may wish to add more sweetening to compensate.)
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/4 cup (3 tablespoons) strained fresh orange or mandarin juice (takes about 1/2 a large orange)
  • 1 teaspoon orange or mandarin zest (from 1 large orange)
  • 5 drops liquid stevia (optional. Adjust to taste.)
  • pinch of sea salt 


Chocolate coating
  • 25g (2 ½) tablespoons cacao butter
  • 3 ½ tablespoons cocoa powder (I haven't successfully made the coating with dutch processed cocoa yet – it seized and I have run out of the cocoa powder – but assuming it wasn't the type of cocoa powder that caused it to seize, I would recommend dutch processed cocoa for flavour. I have successfully made the coating with raw cacao powder.)
  • 1 tablespoon rice malt syrup, warmed till very runny
  • ¼ teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 5 drops liquid stevia


Directions

Make a batch of coconut butter if you don't have any on hand by throwing a whole packet (I use 500g) of dessicated coconut into a food processor and blitzing until it turns runny. It may take around 15 minutes, and you will probably need to scrape the sides of the bowl several times. NOTE: You need to make a large quantity of coconut butter for the food processor to handle it. There are plenty of ways to use it up! Don't worry about cleaning your food processor yet as you are going to put the coconut butter back in shortly with other ingredients.

Place the 30g cacao butter in a double boiler over the boiling water. Stir for 1-2 minutes until it has started to melt, but there are still some solid pieces. Turn off the heat, then whisk in the 2 Tbs coconut oil and 60ml rice malt syrup.

Pour the mixture into a food processor, then add the ½ cup cacao powder, 2 Tbs coconut butter, 1 tsp vanilla, ¼ cup orange juice, 1 tsp zest, 5 drops stevia and small dash of salt. Process for about a minute until your mixture is smooth and thick.

Refrigerate truffle mixture for 45 minutes.

After the truffle mixture has chilled, use a spoon to scoop out balls (about 1/2 or 2/3 of a tablespoon in size) from the bowl. Roll them between your palms to form smooth balls. (Use disposable food handling gloves if you'd rather not get your hands messy! Alternatively, rub some coconut oil onto your hands to stop the chocolate sticking too much.) Place the balls on a tray lined with baking paper and refrigerate at least 15 minutes. Be careful not to roll the balls too much or the heat from your hands can melt the chocolate.

For the chocolate coating, melt the cacao butter over a double boiler until it reaches 50 degrees Celsius (122F). Take care no water or steam (from the double boiler or elsewhere) gets into the bowl at any stage, else the chocolate will seize.

Add the warmed rice malt syrup, vanilla, stevia and cocoa powder. Mix until all combined and the mixture reaches 50 degrees Celsius again.

Remove the chocolate from heat and allow to cool slightly. Take the truffles out of the fridge and dip each truffle in the chocolate (or hold the truffle over the melted chocolate – you can use a toothpick – while spooning the melted chocolate over it). Place truffles on a fresh sheet of baking paper on the refrigerated tray and allow them to cool and harden at room temperature before storing in the fridge.


Yeah, I used to think that making truffles by mixing chopped chocolate with cream was fiddly. Well, these are totally worth the fiddling in my opinion! Yum! 


Excuse the daggy photo - I may take a better one someday, but in the meantime, check out the pretty pictures from the original Mandarin Chocolate Truffle recipe. :)

Monday, March 18, 2013

Coconut Vanilla Cupcakes

I have probably made these cupcakes (or variations of them) more than any other recipe in my entire life.  This has been adapted from a few different recipes, and I have made many different variations just using the same basics of coconut flour and eggs.  It's hard to go wrong with these two key ingredients!  Just note with coconut flour that a little goes a long way - you definitely don't need the same sort of quantities that you would use with wheat flour. 

This version is gluten free as well as fructose free, and if using coconut oil (and no cream cheese icing) it is also dairy free - all of which come in useful in our extended family with all sorts of food intolerances.

These cupcakes are beautifully moist and dense. They have received compliments from so many people who had no idea that they were fructose or gluten free.  And as with most coconut flour recipes, they actually get better after a couple of days in the fridge - they keep really well for at least 5 days or so, and they freeze great too.


(with blueberry cream cheese icing)



Coconut vanilla cupcakes

(makes 12)

6 eggs
1/2 cup coconut oil or butter
1/2 cup rice malt syrup
1 Tbsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup coconut flour
pinch of salt
1/4 tsp baking soda

Beat eggs and add coconut oil, syrup and vanilla. Beat to combine.

Add dry ingredients. Blend with a hand mixer until smooth.

Pour into well greased muffin tins or into cupcake papers.

Bake at 180 degrees Celcius for 20 minutes.


These go with lots of different icings and fillings, but my favourite is cream cheese icing.


Cream Cheese Icing

250g cream cheese
100g butter (optional)
Dextrose or rice syrup to taste (around 1/2 to 1 cup)
Vanilla extract

Soften cream cheese and butter and mix until smooth. Add dextrose and vanilla and mix to combine.



Some variations I have tried to this recipe:

Lemon and coconut - add lemon rind, lemon juice and dessicated/shredded coconut

Raspberry and white chocolate - add fresh or frozen raspberries and white chocolate drops (make your own out of cocoa butter and sweetener for a fructose free version), and use melted cocoa butter instead of butter in the icing for an extra chocolate-y taste

Strawberry and dark chocolate - add a whole strawberry (I used tinned ones in the middle of winter) and a piece of 70% or 85% Lindt chocolate to the centre before baking - particularly nice to eat straight from the oven without any icing, and a great easy dessert to whip up at the last minute :-)

Mango and cream cheese - add a slice of mango and chunk of cream cheese to the centre instead of icing

And pretty much anything else you can think of! Coconut flour is great to work with because it is quite hard to mess it up! I rarely measure my ingredients, and several times I have completely messed up quantities by doubling the recipe but forgetting to double everything, or deciding to make 18 muffins instead of 12 but accidentally doubling some ingredients instead, and they have always turned out ok!

Enjoy! :-)