Saturday, August 6, 2011

Re-post: Banana Rum Cupcakes

These cupcakes look so spectacularly yummy I decided to include Claire's full post from This Gluten-free Life. If you try the recipe, let me know how it turns out! I think it's going to be awhile before I can experiment with something for just B. and me, and I seem to be getting a lot of teetotalers at the farmers' markets. (Several people objected to my Mojito Agave Sweets this week b/c of the inclusion of rum. Sheesh. Get a life, folks. You're talking to someone who thinks 3 glasses of wine in a week is heavy drinking, it's not like I'm out to turn your children into gutter drunks.)


Banana Rum Cupcakes with Rum Glaze for the Gluten-free Ratio Rally



Soft. Fluffy. Spongey. Moist. Tender. Crumbly. Cake-y.  

Sadly, those usually aren't the first words that that come to mind to describe many gluten-free cakes I've tried from the store.  But that, up there?  That is a cupcake.  A real cupcake.  It is all of those words, to a tee.  And what is behind all of those happy descriptors?

A ratio.  A beautifully simple ratio.



Our host for the Gluten-free Ratio Rally this month is Kate of Gluten-free Gobsmacked.  She's inspired us all to make some delicious variations on white and yellow cake.  Check out her blog for her recipe for Basic White Birthday Cake (I could have used this a few weeks ago for my own birthday!) and for links to all of the other fantastic recipes the members of the Rally came up with (which you can also find at the end of this post).


Sometimes the ratios that Ruhlman describes need a little tweaking.  A few adjustments; a little less flour here, a little more liquid there, an extra egg here, a dash more sugar there.  But for me, his ratio for sponge cake worked perfectly.  One equal part each of flour, butter, sugar, and egg gave me a cake with an incredibly tender crumb, and a beautifully brown and spongey top.  It tasted like real cake - the kind I remember from my gluten days (you know, the kind that made me sick, but was delicious - but that's beside the point.)

Of course, I had to do SOME kind of tweaking to make it my own.  One of my absolute favorite cakes ever is my great aunt Gene's rum cake. (Whenever I see the cover of the cookbook Heirloom Baking with the Brass Sisters, I always think of aunt Gene and rum cakes, for some reason - I think it makes me think of other, older times and places and scraps of paper tucked between the tattered pages of cookbooks, holding the keys to unlock the secrets of the most delicious things your family has passed down.)  I wanted to make a cake I could drizzle her rum glaze over, so I used some banana in place of half the butter to balance out the rum flavor (which also had the added advantage of making it a lower-fat cake).

The result was absolutely heavenly.  These are best served warm, so either drizzle the glaze over them while they're still cooling and consume right away, or store refrigerated and then reheat them in the microwave for 20 - 30 seconds before serving.  Cold, they are still pretty delicious, but they are a bit harder.  Warmed up, they practically melt in your mouth.  I was both sad and very, very glad that I had used the ratio to make only 4 cupcakes.  I shudder to think of myself in the alternate scenario, which would likely have resulted in my eating a full dozen of these.  That's another reason ratios are awesome - you can make as many - or as few - as you like.


Trust me, you will not be sorry you made these.  The commitment is minimal anyway - you can just make 4 to start and see how you like them.  It's perfect for girls living alone, or for you and just a few friends.  I'm pretty sure you'll want to get right back into your kitchen to make more, though.  It's hard to resist an old-fashioned favorite like rum cake.

Banana Rum Cupcakes with Rum Glaze
Makes 4 cupcakes - can easily be doubled, tripled, or quadrupled, or...you get the idea.

For the cupcakes:
25 grams Earth Balance Buttery Spread
25 grams very ripe banana (about 1/4 medium banana)
50 grams white sugar
1 egg
1/2 tsp. vanilla
1/4 tsp. rum extract
20 grams potato starch
15 grams tapioca starch
15 grams sorghum flour
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
1/8 tsp. xanthan gum (probably optional, but I didn't try the recipe without it)

For the rum glaze:
1 tsp. Earth Balance Buttery Spread
2 tsp. water
1.5 tbsp. white sugar
1/2 tsp. rum extract

Preheat the oven to 350 F.  Place 4 cupcake liners in a muffin/cupcake pan.

In a mixing bowl, combine the Earth Balance Buttery Spread and the banana.  Whisk together until smooth, then add the sugar and mix well.  Add the egg, vanilla, and rum extract and beat together.

In a separate small bowl, combine the tapioca starch, potato starch, sorghum flour, baking powder, salt, and xanthan gum.  Add to the wet ingredients and mix well.

Pour into the prepared cupcake liners and bake at 350 F for 15 - 17 minutes or until a toothpick or knife inserted into the cupcake comes out clean.  Mine took exactly 17 minutes.

Remove from the oven and let sit in the hot muffin pan for another 3 - 5 minutes (so they don't fall apart when you take them out).  Remove to a cooling rack and let cool the rest of the way, or until you can't stand it anymore and have to eat one.  When they are totally cool, poke a bunch of holes in the top with a fork and drizzle a good amount of rum glaze over the top so that it sinks into the cupcake.

Store in the fridge until ready to serve.  Microwave for a few seconds before serving.

To make rum glaze:  Combine the butter, water, sugar, and rum extract in a small saucepan and bring to a simmer.  Continue to simmer for 1 - 3 minutes or until it just starts to get thick.  Drizzle over the cooled cupcakes immediately (or it will get too thick to drizzle). 

Thursday, July 21, 2011

Cool Treats Served Up at Hartland Farmers' Market Tomorrow

The forecast for tomorrow is temps in the 90s, so good thing Barbarian Cooks is planning to bring some cool treats for you!
Dinner - Gluten-Free Tabbouleh Salad with fresh mint, baby greens, heritage variety pink rice, and quinoa
Cool Drinks - Fresh Mint Iced Tea sweetened with your choice of agave, local honey, stevia, or sugar
Dessert - Iced Mojito Chocolates (lime, fresh mint, and rum), Raw Mint Cashew Cremes, Dulce de Leche Caramel Ice Cream Topping

Plus, I'll have Gluten-Free Vegan S'Mores Cupcakes and Gluten-Free Decadent Fudge Brownies!

Sunday, June 26, 2011

Ginger Rhubarb Crisp

It's that wonderful strawberry and rhubarb time of year! My strawberries are teeny and slug-eaten this year (too much rain) but I have recently acquired some miniature rhubarb plants, and several local farms have a good strawberry crop. If I weren't on a special cleanse diet I'd be all over this recipe...but since I am, you'll have to enjoy it for me. ;-)
http://glutenfree.wordpress.com/2011/06/26/gluten-free-fresh-ginger-and-rhubarb-crisp/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+glutenfreegobsmacked+%28Gluten+Free+Gobsmacked%29
Fresh ginger and rhubard crisp:  Gluten free, of course.

Friday, June 24, 2011

GF Fig Newtons

Check out these delicious looking GF, low(er) carb, vegan fig newtons!!
http://realsustenance.com/fig-newtons-gluten-freevegangrainsoyrefined-sugar-free/

I can't wait to try the recipe and play around with this blanched almond flour. The only down side is the flour isn't organic. I know I can't mill nut flour this fine with my limited machinery + elbow grease...

Tuesday, June 21, 2011

Fable Farm Solstice Celebration on Thursday!

Dear Fable Farm Folks,

Solstice greets us today. Be sure to celebrate the high mark of the sun’s path as it’s light will be of greatest length. Today is a fantastic day to be outside, especially into evening.

This Thursday we will celebrate Summer Solstice with the pleasure of feast and gathering. It will be another Pot-Luck Pick-up but with a twist: a stone soup will be simmering and the earth oven fired. A stone soup is a soup made in a big pot wherein everyone brings something to add to it. On Thursday morning we will start a chicken broth, to be filled with whatever people bring to the pot that evening. The earth oven will be heated for people interested in experimenting with pizza. You’ll have to bring your own dough and toppings but know that the heat of the earth hearth will be available for use.

We are asking anyone who plays an instrument and wants to jam with others to bring it on Thursday. We are holding an open acoustic jam session. Feel free to invite your musical friends to come and play in round. The more the merrier.

As usual vegetables will be ready to be picked up by 4:30 The stone soup and pot-luck festivities will start around 5:30-6:-00. Come and go as you please.

May we celebrate the changing of the seasons with friends and family over soup and cider, fire and music.

Here’s to a happy Solstice and fruitful Summer,
Your Friends at Fable Farm

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Magic 7 Raw Chocolate

I don't go in much for supplements and herbal powders, but this sure sounds like a tasty way to take in your herbs and antioxidants! I just wish I could make my raw chocolates look this solid and shiny - mine are always more like fudge than actual chocolates.

http://goneraw.com/recipe/magic-seven-chocolate


The Magic Seven Chocolate


5
Average: 5 (1 vote)
The Magic Seven
Servings: 
 18 ice-cube-sized confections
Here's my favorite recipe.
The Magic Seven:
125 g cacao butter
5 tbsp cacao powder
3 tbsp lucuma powder
2 tbsp maca powder
2 tbsp organic honey
a pinch of salt
3 drops of essential peppermint oil
Cacao butter is a bit more difficult to melt but with a hot water bath and grating it small it works fine. Then add honey and salt into the fat and mix well. And finally, add powders and the peppermint oil. Mix well again and check that it tastes good. Then pour it into ice-cube molds and put into freezer for 30-60 minutes. Once the chocolate is hardened enough, get it out of the freezer and let it melt for a while in room temperature. Never eat ice cold chocolate, you won't taste all the magnificent flavors. Enjoy!
You can find more recipes and tips on my website: http://www.rawchocolaterecipes.net
Ingredients: 
cacao butter, cacao powder, lucuma powder, maca powder, organic honey, salt, essential peppermint oil

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Feta Fête

The first time I set out to make a gluten-free ricotta so my husband could partake, I was stunned by how easy it was. Since then I've successfully made several kinds of yogurt cheese, chevre, and mozzarella. These are all fresh, unbrined cheeses. I'm not yet ready to try real aged cheeses yet, but feta seems like a reasonable step toward more complex cheese making. And my goat milk supplier recently told me that her two current milkers are producing an astounding 4 gallons a week, so she can easily get me enough milk for cheese making! Still not sure I want to brine cheese for 30 days (so many things possible to go wrong in all that time), but if cheese prices keep going up I'll probably risk it.


How to Make Feta Cheese

 (from Cultures for Health Newsletter)
Feta cheese makes a wonderful addition to salads, sandwiches or as a garnish for meat or vegetables.  Generally made with goat milk, it can be made with cow milk if desired.
What you need:

Feta Instructions:
      Warm the milk in a stainless steel (or other non-reactive) pot to 86 F degrees.  Add the culture to the milk and stir thoroughly.  Allow the milk to sit undisturbed for an hour at room temperature.  Once the milk has sat, dilute the rennet in 1/4 cup cool water.  Mix the rennet/water into the milk using an up and down motion with your spoon (not a stirring motion).  Incorporate the rennet but do not over mix.  Place a lid on the pot and let the milk mixture sit undisturbed overnight.  The next morning, check that the milk has gelled and there is a clean break in the curd.  Use a knife to cut the curd into 1/2" x 1/2" cubes.  If necessary, use very clean hands to check the bottom of the pot for curds that may have been missed.  Gently stir the curd off and on over the next 20 minutes.  The curds should become somewhat retracted. 
      Place a tea towel, cotton bag, multi-layered cheese cloth in a colander.  Pour in the curds and allow the visible whey to drain off.  Once the whey has drained, tie the cloth in knots and hang it over the sink or a bowl.  Allow the curd to drain for another 4 hours or until no more whey drips off.  
      Make a brine solution using 1/3 cup non-iodized salt and 1/2 gallon of water.  Place the curds in the brine solution in a jar with a lid in the fridge.  Brine for 4-5 days if using store-bought goat milk or for 30 days if using farm fresh goat milk.  
      Extra tip: If you find that your curd doesn't set firmly enough, some cheese makers suggest mixing 1/8 teaspoon calcium chloride diluted in 1/4 cup water into the milk the next time you make feta.