Tag: GlutenFree

Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread (and baking tips) by Gordon Ramsay

Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread (and baking tips)


Gluten free and dairy free Irish soda bread with raisins


The Mother of Invention.

If I call this new gluten-free bread an Irish soda bread, traditionalists will snicker. Raisins are not traditional in a true Irish soda bread, you see. If a soda bread has raisins in it, it’s called Spotted Dog over yonder, ‘cross the pond in the Emerald Isle (or so I’m told). I never knew this, growing up on the white clapboard wilds of the Connecticut shore. I was blithely ignorant of this quaint canine moniker, despite a hefty streak of familial Irish blood. We ate more pierogi and kielbasa in our culturally eclectic house than Irish soda bread and tea. So my own first home baked Irish soda bread recipe had raisins in it.


And, actually, why not?


When it comes to traditions, I’m the first to admit- I am an upstart. I wiggle and chafe beneath constraint and “should” like an itchy school girl with pinching new shoes. I admire traditions. From afar. At least, in theory. In an abstract, symbolic way. The meaning and the message is more interesting to me than formula. When it comes to formula, I usually prefer to wing it.

Which is why I enjoy gluten-free baking.



My skill set groove runs deep on the intuitive side. If a recipe calls for x amount of flour and I sense the dough is too wet, I’ll add more flour until the dough feels “right” to me. Experience helps. No doubt about it. The process of trial and error gives you a feel for gluten-free dough, an inkling about the muffin batter and how it might behave on any given day. Which varies, I hate to tell you.

So I pay attention to elements like humidity, and room temperature. Weather.

Bread dough will behave differently on a hot and humid day than it will on a windy, cold one. Your kitchen changes with the seasons, you know. So recipes may have to change a wee bit, too. The amount of milk or brown rice flour may need to be adjusted. Tweaked a tiny bit toward wet or dry.


Baking gluten-free is more of an art than a science.

I recommend you tune in to your ingredients and learn how they behave. Learn how humidity affects flour- notice it’s dampness. Or dryness. Dry flours will soak up more liquid. Damp flours are heavier, and may need less moisture. A cool and drafty kitchen may require a longer rise time than a hot and sultry one. A thin metal bread pan may bake the outside of a loaf faster than the inside can keep up. Your oven may run a tad hotter than you imagined. Or lag behind and never quite pre-heat itself (do your gluten-free baked goods end up gummy in the center?).

Gluten-free baking requires your full attention. A dash of patience. An intimacy with your ingredients. A willingness to adjust. And most of all, developing an intuition you can trust.

Even if it goes against tradition.


 

Gluten free Spotted Dog soda bread is an Irish classic with a twist



Karina’s Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread Recipe- with Spots

Tweaked from my original recipe posted in 2011– by Karina Allrich. 


Use your favorite milk, or non-dairy milk- but note that non-traditional coconut milk and a touch of coconut flour add a subtle fragrant tenderness to this easy, rustic quick bread. If you cannot use coconut, try your usual milk choice, and substitute the coconut flour with sweet rice flour.


Preheat the oven to 375ºF. Line a 7-inch or 8-inch cake pan with a piece of parchment paper.


Ingredients:


1/2 cup brown rice flour or gluten-free oat flour
1/2 cup sorghum flour, gluten-free oat flour, or millet flour
1/2 cup almond or hazelnut flour
1/2 cup tapioca starch or potato starch (not potato flour!)
1/4 cup organic coconut flour
1/4 cup organic light brown sugar
1/2 teaspoon fine sea salt
2 teaspoons double acting baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1 1/2 teaspoons xanthan gum
3 organic free-range eggs or egg replacer
6 tablespoons light olive oil
3/4 cup coconut milk, soy milk or non-dairy milk
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1/2 to 3/4 cup currants (or raisins)


Instructions:


Whisk the flours and dry ingredients together in a large mixing bowl.


Combine the wet ingredients together in a separate bowl.


Make a well in the center of the dry ingredients and slowly pour the wet into the dry ingredients, gently mixing as you go. I use a soft silicone or rubber spatula to do this. If you need a little more coconut milk to moisten the dough, add a tablespoon at a time and stir in.


When the dough is evenly moist and sticky, add the raisins and stir by hand to mix them in.


Scrape out the dough and plop it into the center of the lined cake pan. Use oiled or wet hands to mound the dough into a rustic round loaf. Dot with extra raisins, if you like and press them in a bit.


Slice a smallish criss-cross into the center of the dough.


Place the pan into the center of a preheated oven. Bake for about 30 to 33 minutes, until the loaf is golden and firm. Insert a wooden toothpick into the center to test for doneness.




Gluten free Irish Soda Bread with new flours







Cool the pan on a wire rack for five minutes, then turn the loaf out of the pan to continue cooling (you don’t want a steamy bottom!).


Serve slightly warm with your favorite buttery spread and some fruity jam.


Recipe Notes:

Rustic soda breads are really best eaten warm from the oven. This latest version is tender and slightly sweet- perfect for tea time. 

If you have leftovers, I would wrap and freeze the remaining bread to preserve the texture and taste. Thaw and warm it up in the oven or grill slices with a pat of butter.


This recipe is gluten-free and dairy-free. 

To make it vegan, use your favorite egg replacer equivalent to 3 beaten eggs- about 6 tablespoons of liquid. See below for a link to my vegan Irish Soda Bread with Millet.



Cook time: 30 minutes


Yield: 8 to 10 slices

Recipe Source: glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com


All images & content are copyright protected, all rights reserved. Please do not use our images or content without prior permission. Thank you. 

Gluten free Irish soda bread


More gluten-free Irish soda bread recipes:



My vegan Irish Soda Bread with Millet


Elana’s Pantry Gluten-Free Irish Soda Bread


Gluten Freedom does up one of my earlier Irish Soda Bread recipes…


For substitution help, please see my guide to baking with substitutions here.

Gluten-Free Recipe Love- Be My Valentine by Gordon Ramsay

Gluten-Free Recipe Love- Be My Valentine


Celebrate love Gluten-Free Goddess style.


Be My Valentine, Sugar.


I’ve said it before. Chocolate is love. And any excuse to celebrate love (or chocolate) is high on my priority list. Here are some of my hand-picked favorite gluten-free chocolate recipes for Valentine’s Day- or any day you feel like celebrating love.

Which, in my corner of the world, ought to be every day.


Cacao! conquers all.


Karina's gluten-free chocolate layer cake


Menu Suggestions for V-Day Love

by Karina




All images & content are copyright protected, all rights reserved. Please do not use our images or content without prior permission. Thank you. 

Gluten-Free Goddess Recipes: Gluten-Free Banana Crumb Cake by Gordon Ramsay

Gluten-Free Goddess Recipes: Gluten-Free Banana Crumb Cake


Sweet slices of Karina's Gluten-Free Banana Crumb Cake



A certain someone in our household has a sweet tooth. And- best of all- he not only likes to eat cake, he likes to bake it, too. Apparently baking can be a form of meditation for some folks- a calming, distracting respite from toiling away in one’s head for hours, excavating the various thematic elements underpinning character motivation, conflict and story arcs. All those juicy, gnarly, invisible threads and knots we movie viewers take for granted when we settle in with our gluten-free popcorn to watch a screenplay come to life.


Something I’ve learned, living with a screenwriter (aside from the fact that baking is therapy)?


Don’t judge the script by the movie.


Because chances are the script was good.


Chances are the script was tight and wry and sharp. And moving. And funny. Chances are the script made you leak a well-earned tear. Or two.


Then came the notes.


From the director. From the actor. From the producer. And the producer’s girlfriend. Her dentist.


So the script gets whittled. And weakened. And tweaked. Scenes are added to make a character more likeable (How ’bout we give him a dog- or a koi pond?). Then locales get switched (apparently producers believe New Mexican Pueblo humor translates without a glitch to Australia’s Gold-Coast). The language once precise gets watered down with unimaginative phrases you’ve heard before (not every actor can improvise like Robert De Niro I am sorry to tell you).


Sometimes the collaborative magic of film-making works.


And sometimes it doesn’t.


And baking ensues.


Lately?


We always have cake in the freezer.









Gluten-Free Banana Crumb Cake

Gluten-Free Banana Crumb Cake

Recipe posted August 2012 by Karina Allrich.


This gently sweet coffee cake recipe has a soft crumb topping laced with cinnamon. For big banana flavor, use soft ripe bananas. Yep. Cake makes everything better.



Ingredients:


1 cup almond or hazelnut flour
1/2 cup sorghum flour
1/4 cup white rice flour
1/4 cup tapioca starch
2 teaspoons baking powder
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon xanthan gum (may omit)
2 teaspoons cinnamon
1/4 teaspoon nutmeg
1 1/4 cups organic light brown sugar
3 large free-range organic eggs, beaten
1/3 cup organic coconut oil, melted
3 ripe bananas, mashed
1 tablespoon bourbon vanilla extract


Crumb topping:


1/4 cup organic light brown sugar
2 tablespoons chopped nuts (may omit)
2 tablespoons rice or almond flour
2 tablespoons coconut oil
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon


Instructions:


Preheat oven to 350ºF. Prepare a 10×12-inch baking pan by lining it with parchment.


Add the almond meal, gluten-free flours and starch, baking powder, baking soda, sea salt, xanthan gum, cinnamon, nutmeg and brown sugar to a large mixing bowl and whisk to combine.


Add the eggs, coconut oil, mashed bananas and vanilla. Beat for two minutes until the batter is smooth.


Pour the batter into the prepared baking pan.


Make your crumb topping. Sprinkle it over the cake batter. Pat down gently.


Bake in the center of the oven for 33 to 35 minutes until done. Check the center for doneness with a wooden pick. The cake should appear slightly golden brown at the edge, firm to a light touch. 


Note: If for some reason (you may have a smaller, or hotter, oven) the crumb topping begins to brown too much, loosely tent the top with foil.



Cool the cake on a wire rack.


Wrap, bag, and freeze leftover slices for easy on-the-go treats.

Makes 18 square pieces.



Recipe Source: glutenfreegoddess.blogspot.com

All images & content are copyright protected, all rights reserved. Please do not use our images or content without prior permission. Thank you. 



Note– I’m now using less brown rice and brown rice flour, and eating fewer rice cakes, etc. Here’s why- there is elevated arsenic in rice.


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