Eggs Benedict 2.0

I happen to love eggs benedict especially with high quality home raised eggs and my homemade hollandaise sauce. plus decent Canadian bacon and good gf English Muffins. I give my mom’s easy and foolproof hollandaise sauce recipe below. It is far superior to those weird blender recipes I see out there. and is really easy. Your welcome!

Recently I found a new recipe that I really prefer for the muffins. I have posted about this meal before not not with this particular recipe for English muffins. These are gf sourdough muffins. I used Mock Better Batter flour in mine. The recipe can be found at welcometomyglutenfreejourney.blospot.com

The ingredients are:

2 cups gf flour

1 tsp. xanthan gum (I used 1/2 tsp as my blend has some xanthan gum)

1 tsp. ground chia seeds

2 tsp. sugar

1.5 tsp salt

1/2 cup gf sourdough starter, active (no substitutions will work)

1 tsp. yeast (my insurance policy for no fail muffins)

1 cup warm filtered water; divided in half

1/2 cup room temp butermilk

1 large egg room temp

1 tbsp. sunflower oil or melted butter; I used oil

yellow cornmeal for sprinkling in rings before and after a big dollop of the dough which you spread with your fingers before more cornmeal sprinkles on top.

Go to that site mentioned earlier for specific recipe directions. I added a full cup of water plus a bit more by time I got the dough to be like thick cake batter. Then I let my dough bulk rise in warmed oven for 2 hours. I used cooking spray to grease the rings and a 10 inch cast iron pan which was a bit of a tight fit. I actually had to remove the rings from most during the flipping process. I think they turned out great but mulling over a bigger pan for next time. I got 11 muffins but I think I want them slightly thicker; going for 10 next time. Definitely will be a next time as these had a superior texture and were less work.

My Mom’s Perfect Hollandaise Sauce

Makes about ¾ cup.

1 stick salted butter
2 egg yolks (from large eggs)
Juice of ½ a lemon

Please, no substitutions of any kind will work for this recipe and you MUST make it in a Pyrex measuring cup placed in a pan of hot water; just below the boil and going no more than ½ the way up the sides of the glass measuring cup. The glass insulates the contents and allows for a slow measured melting of the butter and an equally slow and almost alchemical blending of these three ingredients into a smooth sauce. Unsalted butter gives a pale unbalanced sauce and not enough lemon makes the flavor insipid. Any leftover sauce can be gently reheated in a microwave or over water; stir a lot and you can add ¼ tsp. hot water if it separates. Beat it with a spoon until it comes back together.

Anyway, back to the recipe! Cut the stick of butter into 8 chunks and place in a Pyrex glass measuring cup; one cup size please. Add the yolks and the lemon juice, no pits either! Place in a sauce pan half full of hot water. Do not let the water boil or go more than half way up the measuring cup. Stir often with a long handled ice tea spoon; I leave the spoon right in the cup. It will be hard to stir at first as the butter is still solid but the stirring will get easier. Stir almost constantly until the sauce thickens to coat the spoon and then continue stirring it to an almost custard like thickness. Take the cup of sauce out of the water bath and cover it with aluminum foil while you poach the eggs.

Egg Directions:

4 eggs
2 English muffins
4 slices Canadian bacon (round thin slices)

Eggs: get the best and freshest quality eggs possible. Old eggs spread out as they poach and you will have the perfect shaped poached eggs with really fresh ones. I got mine from a friend who raises chickens; far superior in flavor and freshness to anything from a store.

Spray a sauce pan with cooking spray, for two eggs I use a 1 quart pan; use a bigger one for more eggs. Fill it with warm water. Bring the water to an active bubble, add a tbsp. white vinegar. Break each egg into a short cup and use a fork to swirl the bubbling water into a tiny whirlpool then gently tip the egg into the hot water. Do not boil the water. Poach them 3 minutes for a soft squishy egg and 4-5 for firmer eggs. Some like lots of egg yolk liquid and others like a firmer textured egg. Do not overcook them or they are just hard boiled eggs. They should not be firm when you remove them. Lift out with a slotted spoon and drain briefly on a paper towel.

While those eggs were poaching gently heat the bacon in a small frying pan with a tsp of butter. Cook on low about 2 minutes and flip, cook 1 more minutes.

Muffins; split each open with a dinner fork and toast in toaster; pale tan; not really browned.

Assembly: place two hot muffin halves on each plate. Top with a slice of Canadian bacon and then a poached egg. Pour a big dollop of sauce on top. We like them served with briefly steamed asparagus spears in the spring and either green beans or steamed broccoli spears the rest of the year.  Dig in!

Drip is Delish!

The other evening we decided to try out a local eatery, Drip The Flavor Lab Restaurant on Main Street in Hellertown. It is a burger and fried chicken joint and much of the menu can be made gluten free for those who need to eat gf. We got there at peak time around 5:40 on a Saturday evening. The place was packed! All seats taken, people still coming in. We ordered using a fun printed menu that you fill out with a pencil and turn in at the counter. We stood around sharing a snifter class of classic hard cider while we waited for a table to open up. the cider was a classic apple (no sugar added) cider and had a lovely, bubbliness, yet quite crisp and oh-so drinkable. We people watched, and just enjoyed the vibe. Our food got out in decent time and by then we had secured seating at a high top table.

I had the classic Drip burger with slaw and Joe ordered his with all sorts of additions like jalapeno pepper slices, lettuce, tomato and bacon which he swore to me he didn’t order! Plus an order of fries. He ate the whole burger! And some slaw they accidentally gave him as well as fries. I confess I ate a fair amount of the fries; they were in a wire basket and were hot and so crispy. They stayed warm a long time which I loved. My classic burger had just katsup and cheddar cheese. These are smash-burgers which someone eating there told me that they add butter as they fry so they have a rich flavor and a crispy exterior. Mine was perfect; just pink inside and it was so juicy yet crisp. The fresh gluten free bun was smaller than my meat patty but that was no problem. I loved every bite of this awesome burger. The slaw was nice although I like it with lots of green; it was all white pieces of cabbage; ate every bit. 

We shared a second glass of the hard cider; there was a large selection of beers on tap and some hard tea and mojitos. My guy was wishing for a lager but seemed quite content with the bubbly cider. They messed up the add-ons to his burger a little bit but honestly he loved it just as it came out. Prices are not far off other burger joints, not cheap but I feel we got great quality and we enjoyed the hopping atmosphere in this small eatery! That said, it was a bit crowded; the waitress said that Saturdays are their most busy nights. Folks came in and picked up take-outs, meals were rapidly coming out of the kitchen and tables were reset and more folks seated. You might want to try it on another night when it isn’t quite so jammed. Also, I didn’t know they had ice tea and lemonade until we were done. and cold water in a cooler. The front staff is very friendly and accommodating. I simply loved my burger; now I want to go back for the fried chicken! They also have floats and milkshakes…

I didn’t have my phone on me; left in the car so no meal pictures. Look them up on line at https://www.driptheflavorlab.com/  so you can view the menu and hours; they close at 8; a bit early and on Sundays; its 7 pm so don’t turn up late…. I definitely felt they cater quite nicely to those who need to eat gf, I didn’t feel deprived or end up eating bland, sad food as some places do for gf meals. If you live in the Lehigh Valley, Pennsylvania this is a great burger place!

Tuna Noodle Casserole, 2.0

I never make tuna noodle casserole; too blah but I had some new pasta shapes so I attempted it and made a scratch gluten free sauce. What a difference that made! So delicious, a delicate flavor and a huge improvement over bought cans of mushroom soup or cream of chicken soup which are generally not gf anyway. This was as good a tuna casserole if not better than any I have tasted so I plan to make it again for sure. It really isn’t that much work to make a scratch sauce and it makes all the difference in the world in terms of flavor. Just don’t boil the sauce or it may separate.

Notes: you can use any kind of gf pasta or noodles. I used Jovial bowties; just cook them 2-3 minutes less than package says, great look and good flavor. Don’t leave out anything in the sauce; the celery/onions/peas give it such a fresh taste, like early spring! Use the tuna you like; suggest water packed white for this. I find albacore kind of dry so the solid white tastes better to my taste buds; totally your call what tuna you use. Be sure to drain it; your critters will love the juice in their suppers! I served mine with baby carrots cooked with maple syrup. A salad would be nice too!

Angie’s Tuna Noodle Casserole with Crumb Topping

Ingredients:

4 Tbsp. butter, divided

1 rib of celery, diced finely

as1/3-1/2 cup finely diced onion

1 Tsp (1 clove) minced fresh garlic

2/3 cup frozen peas

7 ounces dry pasta; cook it while you cook the sauce; undercook by 2-3 minutes.

4 Tbsp. white rice flour

14 ounces chicken broth; low sodium preferably

7/8-1 cup of milk; I warmed it 1 minute in my microwave

1/4 tsp. sea salt

1/8 tsp. freshly ground black pepper

1/4 tsp. dried dill weed

2 tsp. fresh lemon juice

1-2 Tbsp. finely chopped fresh Italian parsley

1/2 cup fresh grated Parmesan cheese

1/2 cup grated sharp cheddar cheese

2 cans tuna, (5 oz cans) drained

Topping 1/2-3/4 cup crushed gf Schar Company Crackers and 1-2 Tbsp. melted butter; mix in small dish and sprinkle it over before baking the casserole.

Directions: Melt 1 Tbsp. butter in medium frying pan, medium heat. Add onions and celery; cook 4-5 minutes, add garlic and peas, cook one more minute. While they cook, butter a 9×12 glass baking dish and put those hot veggies on a plate while you whip up the nummy good sauce.

Start oven heating to 350 degrees. Melt rest of the butter in the same frying pan, add the flour when it is hot; stir it while the flour blends in, cooking it 30-60 seconds. Add in the broth and then the warm milk, stirring constantly with a whisk. Add the salt, dill, parsley and lemon juice. keep stirring; after a minute or two it should be thick and bubbly. Stir in the parmesan cheese as it bubbles; not at a boil. Taste and adjust sauce as needed. I thought it was perfect with no changes but up to you. Dump back in those veggies; stir; add the tuna and the hot noodles, stir gently and after it looks somewhat blended carefully pour it all into the baking dish. Top with the cheddar cheese and then the buttery crumbs and bake about 25 or 30 minutes until it is bubbling.

It keeps in the fridge for 5-6 days; I added a touch of half and half to my serving before microwaving it; like a couple teaspoons; helps it stay moist when reheated.

New Pasta Choices

I think I am going to write a regular post on new products or one’s folks may be missing in the store. This one is on pasta. The other week I was in Trader Joe’s and got some wide pasta, tagliatelle. In the past I have bought similar shaped noodles on Amazon for a ridiculous price, and it was nothing that amazing. This store brand pasta is great looking and at a super great price. It will pair well with a chunky meaty ragu and you won’t even miss that darn gluten!

Next, I looked at the cassava-based orzo; purchased at my local Shoprite and is a shape that is very hard to find in a gf format. Orzo is particularly great in soups; I have missed it in mine… I made a chickpea pasta soup this week and used gf orzo for the pasta; it was great to have it the right size already; no breaking up elbow pasta that is in a Ziplock baggie. Which gives you irregular jagged bits and pieces, certainly not what you really want in your soup?

I just made the classic tuna casserole but without the canned soup goop. Instead, I made a scratch white sauce flavored with sautéed onions, celery, garlic and peas plus a hint of dill week. Mixed with the par cooked pasta and 2 cans of drained solid white tuna it was somewhat sad looking. I topped it with partially crushed Shaar Company crackers, like Ritz crackers but gf. then I drizzled melted butter over the crackers and baked it for 25 minutes. It became all crunchy buttery crumbs that elevated my delicate white sauced tuna into a delicious treat. I don’t actually remember when I last made a gf tuna noodle casserole. That’s because so often it is a goopy dull mess of that canned sauce and sad noodles. this is just an elegant and tasty version I know I will make it again and again. One cavoite; I think I will cook the noodles less so they are definitely underdone before assembling the casserole. Mine were a tad overcooked when reheated the next day so undercooking is the way to go.

I will try the capellini another time; only so much pasta I eat these days. I am looking forward to it! If you don’t have a ShopRite near you try the store with the biggest gf section; most likely place to find these tempting pasta shapes.

There are so many more gf pastas than there were 11 years ago when I had to go gluten free. Get out there and try some; it makes all the difference to a recipe to use the right size and shape of pasta and it adds variety to what you can make. Enjoy!

Demystifying GF Flours for Baking Fun

Full winter is upon us. Pies are being baked for desserts, cake is often on the menu and cookie season is pretty much always here. I have had emergency texts about gf flour choices and substitutions in creating something gf when the baker is not gf and is more than a little confused. So, I am reposting this flour treatise from last year, in the hopes that folks will read it and use this information to have the best possible results. GF baking is much more technical than wheat flour-based recipes. Substituting is trickier especially flour subbing, partially because of all the new 1 to 1 blends, baking mixes and other innovations. So, before you make those gf cookies for a gf friend, read up on the differences, so you use the right flour. The wrong one will give you a poor result; so important to know what you are doing flour wise.

So, I am writing this post for a friend who bakes gf cookies for someone in her family. I want to go over the flour issue again, particularly for someone new to cooking gf meals. It is slightly tricky, so I am going to try to make it clear for everyone: there are a lot of issues and different scenarios so be sure to read the whole article. So, here are my best thoughts and advice on using gf flours for gravy, and especially for baking.

You could use this rice flour for gravy making.

There are individual gf flours like rice flour, buckwheat flour, oat flour, tapioca flour, sweet rice flour, potato starch, cornstarch, sorghum flour, brown rice flour, etc.! A bewildering array of choices as almost any grain can be ground into a flour. Flour can then be processed to create a starch, which tends to be nearly flavorless but often has a big purpose in gf baking. I rarely use just one flour in a baking recipe. Why? Because a single flour is often missing an important characteristic of what we want in a baking result. A mixture has different kinds of flours to replicate all purpose flour (wheat based) or whole grain flour (also wheat based). Without the gluten there are a number of ways to make it a useful blend for cooking or baking. That said, I use single flour blends in sauces. Just for sauces people!

I usually use blends for baking, 2-6 flours that are blended and work together to mimic wheat-based flour in different applications like bread, cake, cobbler, cookies, pastry or pasta dough. I have a number of them, but my favorite is one you can buy in most stores.  King Arthur’s Basic GF Blend; made of a proportional blend of brown rice flour, potato starch and tapioca starch.  I use it for over 90% of my baking and cooking needs. There are a number of blends available from companies like Bob’s Red Mill or Jeanes. One of my favorites is Better Batter; never see it in the store but it can be found online. There are many, many blends provided in gf cookbooks.  It can cause a traffic jam of jars/cans/zip lock bags of blends labeled and stored in your freezer or fridge.  Some of these blends have a gum like xanthan gum included. The gum helps your finished bread/cookie/cake hold together – in wheat based recipes it is the gluten that is the “glue” that holds things together. My blend doesn’t have it so I add it based upon my recipe. Xanthan or guar gum are commonly used. Doesn’t take much xanthan gum; ½-1 tsp is often enough in any recipe. FYI: Better Batter has the gum in it. You should always check on this gum issue; if none in the flour mix you will need to add some; often about 1/2 teaspoon per cup of flour. This amount of gum does vary due to what you are making. Look at a similar gf recipe and add as much gum as that recipe does. There also is psyllium gum but it is mainly used in breads and rolls. Not so much for cookies and cakes.

Next; If your recipe is a recipe not formatted for gluten free baking, you must use a special blend meant for that circumstance. They are called measure for measure, or one-for-one blends. They were not around a decade ago; fairly new. They are carefully calibrated to sub in for all-purpose flour. They may not work as a substitute for whole wheat or rye flour, and yeast baking is not where this flour is meant to be used, it is great for your all purpose flour cookie or cake recipes.

I have used this measure for measure blend and had good results. It is calibrated to be substitutable in any gluten flour-based recipe except I would not recommend it for yeasted breads. Similar restrictions on using Bob’s 1 for 1 GF Blend; not for breads except quick breads. Do not use these blends as a substitute for GF flour blends like King Arthurs Basic GF Blend. They are not interchangeable. They are basically just for when you want to make a cookie or cake that is not meant to be gluten free; these flour 1 for 1 blends sub in and magically make the cookie recipe work using this special blend created exactly for this purpose.
Amazon.com : Bob's Red Mill Gluten Free 1-to-1 Baking Flour, 44-ounce :  Grocery & Gourmet Food
Bob’s Red Mill calls it 1 to 1 Baking Flour; same idea as measure for measure. Again, use this in your regular recipe instead of the all-purpose flour in the recipe. This is an excellent flour blend but is Not suggested for yeast breads.

As I wrote above, measure for measure flour is fairly new and very useful. They are for when you want to make a normally gluten-based recipe but use a gf flour. FYI: most gf recipes have been altered from their original recipe or were created just for gf flour. If you want to make those cookies, you can’t enjoy anymore and sub in gf flour these new measure for measure blends is perfect to do that. You generally don’t need to alter your recipe or add gum. The flour blend is made to mimic regular all-purpose flour. It is not interchangeable with things like the Basic GF Blend from King Arthur that I mention above. Don’t use measure for measure in a gf calibrated recipe, use it to make stuff from your old wheat flour-based recipes. [Yes, I am repeating myself but I am finding that people are doing exactly what I caution not to do so repeating myself!] King Arthur or Bob’s Red Mill or a few other companies have a measure for measure blend so get that if you want to take your gluten-based recipe and change it to gf. I must caution you that these flours don’t work well if you are replacing flour in a yeast bread recipe. Works for quick breads, cookies, muffins, and many cakes but I wouldn’t make my old fav Italian bread recipe with these measure for measure as the result is unlikely to be similar to the recipe as made with wheat-based flour. Besides, I have an awesome gf Italian bread recipe my family clamors for!

One more thing, many companies now have gf baking mixes that can be used to make muffins, cookies, cakes, pancakes, etc. They are different from the blends described above. Do not substitute those blends for a basic blend like the one I use. These blends already have gum, baking powder, salt, etc. added to the flour. They are very convenient and there are lots of recipes formulated for using them. There are bread flour mixes that can be used to create shaped pastries; I just bought 1 boxes of Chebe All Purpose Bread Mix. Can’t wait to test it in a pastry recipe I found recently. These gf baking mixes cannot be used in place of the gf flour specified in a recipe or to use like a 1 for 1 Substitution gf flour. they are very specific to recipes that require them or the recipes on the box or the manufacturer’s website.

King Arthur Flour Baking Mix, All Purpose, Gluten Free | Flour & Meals |  Edwards Food Giant
I used an image for King Arthur baking mix as this is the only premade mix I have tried. It works great!

To repeat; there are single flours, there are blends with or without gum added, there are measure for measure blends for use in the gluten-based recipes you want to recreate as gluten free dishes and there are baking mixes that can be used as a starting place for a quickly constructed baked good like a cake, cookie or muffin. I know, it seems complicated but read your recipe carefully, so you get the right kind of flour to make it successfully. The wrong flour will give you a poor result as gf baking is relatively unforgiving of big errors like that.

Oh, and there are read-made cake or brownie mixes just like you can buy with wheat-based flour; you add eggs, milk/water and oil to them to complete the mixture. The grocery store will likely have a number of choices for gf mixes to make brownies, cakes and other baked goods. Amazon has lots too! It’s where I got the Chebe flour mix.

Here is that Chebe Bread mix I mentioned above.

None of these blends/mixes are interchangeable between other types of blends. Use the blend the gluten free recipe asks for. If it is an old all-purpose flour-based recipe use the measure for measure. Except, do not use that measure for measure for a yeasted bread; quite unlikely to work especially when you use over 1 1/4 cups of it in a recipe; the more the recipe is depending on the flour the less likely it will be successful.

A pie made with King Arthur Basic GF flour blend for the crust.

My recipes generally tell you which flour blend I used. You cannot sub in measure for measure for a basic blend.  Nor can you use a baking mix for anything, but a recipe meant specifically for a baking mix. Get the right flour as specified and you will have a great start towards a delicious result. I hope I have educated you on this issue so you can be successful if you need to bake gf this holiday season. Have fun baking!

Sugar cookies made with a Measure for Measure flour blend in my old (pre-celiac) Betty Crocker cookie recipe.