Showing posts with label foodallergy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label foodallergy. Show all posts

Tuesday, 24 December 2013

Christmas morning muffins

I try to accommodate all breakfast requests on Christmas morning and Phil, my husband, asked for a continental breakfast this year.  We lived in Holland for ten years and he used to treat me to a delivered breakfast hamper on my birthday.  A guy dressed in a fluffy white dressing gown would show up with a huge box filled with orange juice, tea, bread rolls, croissants, hard boiled eggs, yoghurts, flavoured sprinkles (called hagelslag - love and miss them now we're back in England!) and cheeses, jams... you get the idea.  I've never seen this service offered in the UK and it's such a pity.  I've bought most of the products needed for the perfect continental breakfast and unfortunately I can't have many of them!  It's so annoying that gluten-free bread is made with egg and most normal supermarket bread contains soya.  Ah, well. I've found some Italian-style rolls I can have and coconut yoghurt.  I've also made some Christmas morning muffins, adapted from a recipe of Nigella's.  Again, I haven't made these before.  I swapped out the milk and replaced it with unsweetened almond milk and replaced the egg with Orgran no egg.  I didn't have any vegetable oil so I used sunflower oil.  The recipe required me to zest and juice two clementines.  I think I would have had more success trying to bottle smoke.  They were so soft and squishy and this was the aftermath...



Hopefully it will be worth it.  They smelled delicious when cooking and this is the result...



A couple of cook books arrived today - The Food Allergy Mama's Baking Book and The Food Allergy Mama's Easy, Fast Family Meals.  Both by Kelly Rudnicki.  A lady with five children, one with food allergies.  She could be me if I was a talented cook from the US instead of a slovenly Brit with questionable baking skills.  I have only flipped through them so far and I'm particularly excited about the recipes in the baking book.  Kelly commonly suggests rice milk in her recipes so I'll have to get hold of some of that.  I hope the muffins turn out ok with unsweetened almond milk.  I would have thought it would be ok for a Christmassy recipe?  I don't have a fluffy white dressing gown but will serve the breakfast tomorrow with a slightly tatty blue dressing gown and a happy smile :)  Merry Christmas to all!

Update

We just got back from bowling and being thrashed by the kids at air hockey.  My eyes fell upon the muffins as soon as I walked through the door and I had to try one.  Delicious doesn't do it justice, and I am a very severe critic of my own cooking.  It was light, moist, sweet and very attractive when sliced in two thanks to the zest and dried cranberries.  The only problem is, as Phil pointed out, I didn't make enough.  I can't expect all my allergy-friendly baking attempts to be this successful but this is a great start.


Monday, 23 December 2013

Christmas cake

Well the cake is now cooling in the tin.  It's a chocolate fruitcake.  I should point out that this is the first year I have tried this recipe so I have no idea if the family will like either the original or the adapted version.  I had a panic before I started because I realised that I had bought unsweetened almond milk.  It seemed like the right choice at the time but there is also sweetened almond milk and I had no idea which would be the most suitable.  Cow's milk is naturally sweet but how sweet is unsweetened almond milk?  Then I realised that the recipe didn't call for milk at all and I was off the hook.  All I needed to replace was the butter for Stork margarine and the three eggs for a product called Orgran no egg.  With the first cake, I had omitted the alcohol and replaced it with cherry juice because I was cooking for little people and not all the alcohol burns off with cooking.  Because the second cake is purely for the grownups (Ash is too little for Christmas cake this year!) I decided to put the 75ml of brandy in.  The mix seemed quite dense when I spooned it into the tin and I can't remember if that was the case with the first cake.

Next year I'll need to find a replacement for marzipan because Ash needs to avoid all nuts.  Any suggestions?  It is such a distinctive taste.  I have been told that I only need to avoid peanuts while I am breastfeeding and no other nuts.

So this is what the cake looks like right now:


I should probably also have pointed out before I started that I am not a particularly good baker.  I'm a passable cook but when it comes to baking I have mixed success.  I don't think I've ever made scones that have risen.  While I was waiting for the cake to cook I iced the first cake, loosely following this recipe.  I covered the cake with marzipan and fondant icing and then shop bought sugarcraft gingerbread men.  I had intended to make the candy cane decorations myself, I'd bought coloured fondant icing ready, but the twins needed my attention and so I cheated and used a festive cake frill I found in an old box of Christmas decorations.  In the past I've only ever covered a Christmas cake with royal icing and spiked it up to look like a snow scene so this is progress for me.  I really should take a course in cake decorating, though.  If I ever get some time...  ha!  Anyway, here's the finished first cake:



The second cake will be covered in royal icing so I don't mix the two up.  All suggestions and opinions gratefully received but please be gentle with me!  Importantly, the children were impressed.  Bless them, they're always very appreciative of my baking attempts, even when I order them out of the kitchen in a cloud of icing sugar and angry outbursts directed at my recipe books.