I am lousy at taking photos of my bakings, so I am sorry to tell you that this time around, again, there won´t be many photos to showcase. This is mainly because I am always trying out new things or making my own adjustments to the recipe and I am not sure if what I am trying to do will succeed at all, so I just concentrate on baking. :)
I have dreamed of having a nice, soft cardamom roll for as long as I have stopped eating gluten. I have tried many recipes and they work, somehow, but mostly, the result is either a soft but a flat, really flat, version or then a beautifully shaped, hard, rock-type of a ball.
In my childhood, cardamom rolls were the type of homey treat I guess cookies are in the States or scones in Britain. The usual version (originally a combo of milk, yeast, cardamom, sugar and wheat - give or take eggs and a dash of salt, sprinkled with sugar) were baked often and devoured as a snack or with tea.
In February, during Laskiainen, Shrove Tuesday, the same roll is filled with whipped cream and yam or marzipan. The marzipan version is a Swedish tradition and a tradition I followed as a child - and I still think that is the only proper "laskiaispulla".
During Christmas, the rolls were made more posh with saffron. The seasoning gave them a beautiful colour and a lovely taste, as well as a bit more luxury.
Yesterday, I dove head into the bun thing. Earlier on, I discovered this recipe:
http://keliakia.blogspot.fi/2011/02/nyt-se-onnistui-pulla.html
It seemed good, but I had some concerns.
See, before my gluten-free life began, I loved making bread. I dare to say I was really good at it. I enjoyed the feeling of creating gluten in the dough. It was a full-on process, chemistry. And it was good. And that is why it took me so long to realise that gluten-free baking is not such a vivid, fun process. Once I adapted and turned my thinking upside-down, baking bread, rolls and other (often yeast) bakes got a lot easier.
Here´s my list:
1. In a normal dough, you create gluten with your kneading. This, together with yeast, will make the bread/roll inflate with air and give you nice, soft results.
In a gluten-free dough, you need to whisk the dough (I know, sound silly) to create the air bubbles, because there is not gluten to help you out with it.
2. When making a normal dough, you will let it rise twice. In the middle, you will smash out the air bubbles and wake up the dough with a bit more kneading. Then you let the dough rise again.
In a gluten-free dough, you must not let it rise more than once. You can not knead the dough even once. After you have swelled the psyllium (if you are using any) and the flour (yes, that too, because gluten-free flour tends to be a lot drier than what flour) you have to gently form the dough into balls, or whatever is your desired shape, and then let them rise, rather quickly.
For me, these 2 thigs were the most important lessons to learn.
And ta-daa, on to the recipe, finally!
Cardamom rolls with saffron
Ingredients:
5 dl milk, at aroun 45 degrees Celsius
2 tsp Psyllium
1 small container of saffron (about 1-2 grams)
½ tsp salt
2 dl sugar
1 tbsp ground cardamom
2 eggs
7 dl flour (gluten-free mix)
2 dl of rice flour
2 bags of yeast
Method:
Heat the milk up to about 45 degrees Celsius. It needs to be hotter than your hand, because it will sit for a while until the yeast is added. Add the salt, sugar, cardamom, saffron and psyllium and whisk shortly with an electric mixer. Leave to sit (and swell) for about 2 minutes, whisk again and give it another 2 minutes.
In the meantime, mix together the rice flour, yeast and the gluten-free flour mix. (The original recipe suggest putting in only half of the flour mix at this point and the rest after the swelling time. You choose and tell me how it went)
To the milk, add the eggs. whisking well. Next, add the flour mix. Whisk well, for at least 3 minutes. Then, let the dough stand (and swell) for about 10 minutes. No more than 15, though, you do not want to kill the yeast.
Then, flour your hands and scoop out the dough. It will be a bit looser than a standard dough, but you should be able to manage it in your hands nonetheless. Gently roll them into balls in your hands, place them on a lined baking tray. You will probably need to flour your hands before each rolling session.
Cover the rolls/buns with a cloth and let them rise for about 30 minutes.
Before placing the rolls in the oven, gently brush them with a lightly mixed egg and sprinkle with sugar. (On a Christmas roll, raisins are typically used but they are not my cup of tea.)
Bake at 200 degrees Celsius, for about 10-12 minutes, until nice and golden brown.
This recipe will make about 15 rolls.
Let me know if it worked out for you!
Let me colour me - a thirty-something baking enthusiast, interior architect, samba-dancer(ish) and wanna-be-traveller on a gluten-free diet.
Näytetään tekstit, joissa on tunniste baking. Näytä kaikki tekstit
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maanantai 15. joulukuuta 2014
sunnuntai 14. syyskuuta 2014
Gluten-free red currant - white chocolate cake
The perfect cake for autumn! This is such a fresh cake - and super easy to make.
CAKE
White chocolate filling:
200 g white chocolate
2 dl heavy cream
200 g quark (plain yoghurt is a good substitute)
0,5 dl sugar
4 gelatin leaves
1 tbsp boiling water
Red currant filling:
Red currant – white chocolate cake
BASE (Traditional
Finnish oatmeal cookie recipe.)
Ingredients:
50 g
vegetable shortening or butter
1 dl sugar
2 dl rolled
oats (gluten-free)
1 tbsp of gluten-free flour
1 tsp baking powder
1 egg
Method:
Place the
butter / shortening together with sugar in a pan. Heat the mixture until the
butter melts. Add the rest of the ingredients and quickly mix them together.
Spread the
mixture over a lined cake tin with loose edges. Bake for about 10-15 minutes at
200 degrees (Celsius) or until golden brown and set.
Note that
the “cookie” is supposed to stay a bit chewy so do not overcook! Once baked,
set aside to cool and continue with the white chocolate mixture.
300 g red currants
1 dl sugar
2 dl heavy cream
200 grams of quark
5 gelatin leaves
First prepare the white chocolate filling.
Place the gelatin leaves in cold water.
Whip the cream. Add the sugar and qaurk.
Melt the white chocolate. (I always do the following: I boil water in a pan and place a steel bowl on top of it. Once boiling, I remove the pan from heat and only then place the white chocolate in the bowl. White chocolate liquefies already in about 40 degrees so you need to handle the chocolate gently to prevent it from turning grainy.)
Pour the melted chocolate into the cream-quark mixture. Mix well.
Dissolve the gelatin leaves into a small amount of boiling water and add to the mixture.
Pour the mousse into to cake tin and refrigerate for about 60 minutes.
For the red currant filling, place the gelatin leaves in cold water.
Bring the red currants and the sugar to boil in a pan. Sieve the berries and leave to cool.
While still somewhat warm, dissolve the gelatin leaves into the berries.
Whip the cream and mix with the quark and the cooled berries (should be about room temperature).
Pour the pink mousse over the white chocolate mousse and place back in the refrigerator.
Let the cake set completely (at least 3 hours) before removing from the cake tin.
If you like, garnish the cake with whipped cream and/or red currants. Last time I made this, I did not use any garnish and I still think it looks great.
The cake is served here with white chocolate chip cookies. Recipe to follow!
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