Kamis, 30 Desember 2010

Hot Artichoke Dip Recipe - Gluten-Free + Vegan

Hot artichoke dip that is gluten free and dairy free vegan
This hot artichoke dip is worthy of a party. Gluten-free and vegan yum.

I wasn't sure I had another recipe post in me -- before the year of 2010 turns into a pumpkin and rolls backward into the past. I thought I was going out with a year-end Top Ten Gluten-Free Recipes post, catching up with all you gluten-free  lovelies again in 2011. I thought I was done. Spent. Empty as a pocket, to quote a certain singer-songwriter. So much for assumptions.

Turns out my fevered brain wasn't done with 2010. It spun off in party mode as soon as I heard that my oldest son was officially engaged. He popped the question with true romantic flare. On a wine train. In the rain. In Napa Valley. And she said yes. The ring fit. People on the train applauded. It doesn't get much better than this. To witness your son's heart. Blooming.

Your misty-eyed gluten-free goddess is going to be a mother-in-law.

And so. The year closes. I make a mug of chamomile tea and reflect upon the deepest joys of motherhood, turning their myriad facets toward the window light above the kitchen sink stacked with breakfast plates, cups, and spoons. Learning to love with open arms and a tender opinion, unconditional. This floats to the top of all other joys. The thick cream of it. A layered, rich reward. To love a son expands your heart beyond measure. To see him love, and inspire love, is the most beautiful working of magic. 

Don't you think?


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Selasa, 28 Desember 2010

Top Ten Gluten-Free Recipes for 2010: My Faves

Selected gluten free recipes at Gluten Free Goddess for best of the year
From cake to quinoa - my year's best gluten-free recipes

The annual ritual of creating top ten lists has commenced. Critics are choosing their top ten movies, editors have picked their Top Ten Books. Fashionistas have declared the year's best and worst trends of 2010 (jeggings- love 'em or hate 'em?). Do I dare leap into the scuffle and pluck ten gluten-free recipes as the year's best? And if so -- just how, exactly -- does one choose the golden top ten? The best of the best. Do I do as I did last year and let stats decide? (Might seem rather lazy, to repeat that process.) Or do I rely on my personal and often quirky preferences? (Could be controversial, especially if I was honest and chose peanut butter on ryeless rye bread toast as my number one.) Perhaps I should make a game of it and draw names from a hat. Randomness is appealing, in a way. (Though unsatisfying.)

I'll just do it.

I'll be bold. I'll be opinionated. I'll pick my g-free favorites from this year's recipes. Perhaps I need to define my criteria, though. How do you choose a favorite among the dozens you've created in a year? I'm proud of each recipe. After all, I enjoyed them enough to photograph them in all their gluten-free glory (unless, sadly, they were not photogenic, and that, Dear Reader, is a loss to the blog). And every recipe I shared passed the family taste test or they wouldn't stand a chance of appearing on Gluten-Free Goddess. You don't hear about the runner-ups, or the flat out failures that left your intrepid goddess weeping and gnashing her teeth. [Not really. I'm not the weeping kind. I swear like a character in Deadwood and take deadly aim at the trash bin.]

My criteria, then? Simple. A favorite recipe would be a recipe I'd make again. And share with company.

So with that in mind, away we go.

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Rabu, 22 Desember 2010

Solstice Sweets and a Holiday Menu



WOW! What a solstice that was, eh? A lunar eclipse, a full moon, a total deep-freeze accompanied by a massive snowfall, and all on the same day we welcome winter?! It’s enough to make this tree hugger burst! Tee hee.
To celebrate the awesomeness my friends and I made a little fire in the forest and rung in the new season acknowledging how abundant our lives are and reflecting on all of our great fortunes. I think at this time of year, it is especially easy to get wrapped up in the frantic commercialism and rampant over-indulgence in every sense of the word. It felt really nice just to sit in nature and be quiet with people I care about. Simple.
And because no celebration is complete without something delicious to eat, Sarah B. brought along these solstice sweets to mark the occasion and satisfy everyone’s sweet tooth.

This recipe is also from my friend Eva (whose amazing cookbook will be available shortly!) and uses a very groovy ingredient, arrowroot, making its debut appearance here on My New Roots.

Woot woot, Arrowroot!
We are all very familiar with cornstarch in North America because corn is just oh-so-abundant. But arrowroot used in place of said thickener has several advantages over cornstarch. For one, the taste of arrowroot is more neutral, making it an ideal thickener for more subtle flavoured sauces, baby food, ice creams, and desserts. It also works at a lower temperature, and tolerates acidic ingredients and prolonged cooking better. And while sauces thickened with cornstarch turn into a spongy mess if they're frozen, those made with arrowroot can be frozen and thawed with impunity.
You can find arrowroot at most natural food grocers, health food stores, and even some Asian markets. It is more expensive than cornstarch, but far less processed and even has some health benefits.

I dug out my copy of Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon (p.s. best book ever) to learn more about this remarkable root. According to Falon, arrowroot flour is the only starch with a calcium ash, and is a totally nutritious food, obtained from the fleshy rootstock of a tropical American plant. It is an easily digested food well fitted for infants and the convalescent.
Arrowroot was once widely used in baby formulas as a superior carbohydrate, experience having shown it agreed with babies better than any other starch or sugar. We now find the reason. It is the only starch product with a calcium ash. In this regard, the calcium chloride, in the form of calcium found in arrowroot starch, is very important for the maintenance of proper acid and alkali balances in the human body.
Arrowroot only thrives on tidal flats where the sea minerals are available. Its known health-building properties may be due to trace minerals from the sea, as well as from the calcium it gets from the seawater. If it is used in ice cream formulas in place of cornstarch, arrowroot imparts a vanilla-like flavor, a smooth texture. Arrowroot as it comes to you is not a refined product; it is simply the dried and powdered root.

To use arrowroot, mix it with an equal amount of cold water, then whisk the slurry into 1 cup hot liquid for about 30 seconds. (One tablespoon thickens one cup of liquid.)

These little sweets are almost too easy to make. You can mold them into whatever shapes you like, so they are great to prepare with kids. Feel free to roll them in melted dark chocolate (um, I did) and I think next time I am going to put a whole almond or hazelnut in the center before baking them, or perhaps a couple dried cranberries. Get creative - these treats come together so fast you’ll want something else to do!

Solstice Sweets

Ingredients:
2 Tbsp. tapioca or arrowroot flour
1/2 cup rice milk
2 Tbsp. olive oil
1/2 cup rice syrup (or agave nectar, maple syrup, or date syrup)
3 cups shredded coconut
2 tsp. vanilla extract

Directions:
1. Preheat the oven to 300oF.
2. Grease a cookie sheet with ghee or coconut oil.
3. Combine the tapioca flour and the milk in a small saucepan and mix thoroughly. Add the oil and rice syrup.
4. Heat up these liquid ingredients, stirring constantly, until well combined and thickened into a sauce. Add the vanilla extract.
5. Place the shredded coconut in a large bowl and add the sauce. Mix well.
6. Spoon out the mixture by dollops onto the cookie sheet and form these into
shapes with your fingers.
7. Bake for 15 to 20 minutes until the tips are slightly brown.

* * * * *

Holiday Menu
Okay, as promised, my top picks for your (healthy) holiday meals, or for, ahem, recovering from everything else you ate. Cheers.

For the roster I went back through my past articles and took a careful look at seasonality and flavour profiles to come up with this collection of extraordinary recipes that will make you and your whole family very happy and very full indeed. There are two different sample meals, but change it up to suit your tastes. I arranged the menus this way so that there would be a small nibble to start, followed by a delicious diversity of cooked dishes and appropriate raw foods, all while considering the balance of proteins, starches, and healthy fats. Whew! Bet your turkey dinner can’t lay claim to that.

Meal I
- Kickin’ Chickpeas
- Four Corners Lentil Soup
- Forest Walk Cabbage
- Spaghetti Squash
- Masala Chai Tea
- Dream Date Cake

Meal II
- Flax Crackers with Sweet Potato Hummus
- Best Lentil Salad, Ever
- Warming Winter Wheat Berry Salad
- Millet Mash with Good Gravy
- Smooth Criminal Chocolate Mousse Tarts

Breakfast Ideas
- Holiday Granola with Homemade Yogurt
- Coziest Banana Bread
- Fig Jam with Baby Step Buns
- Morning Glories

Other Favorites
- Wild Rice and Butter Bean Salad
- Roasted Fennel with Orange and Mint
- Roasted Roots


I wish you all the most beautiful holiday, whatever you are celebrating this season, and I will return in the New Year with all kinds of food for thought and food to eat.
Love to you all.
In health,
Sarah B.

Senin, 20 Desember 2010

Good Gravy!



Hey – it’s time for a quickie. I am squeezing this post in because I just made the most delicious vegetarian gravy I’ve ever tasted and had to share.
Out of all the traditional foods we consume over the holidays, gravy is right up there in the “must-have” category, am I right? It’s simply not Christmas without a mashed potato volcano.

I gave up gravy when I became a vegetarian, but up until now, I’ve even avoided the vegan versions of the ubiquitous brown sauce. Many vegan gravies are made from margarine, cornstarch, food colouring, and a whole host of super-processed ingredients that I just don’t groove with. Here’s one that my friend Eva came up with made from only three whole food ingredients, and sooooo tasty! And since I also avoid potatoes for the most part, I made my famous Millet Mash and bathed that garlicky cloud in good gravy love.

Even if you’re not a vegetarian, give this recipe a try, and put both on the table. Since traditional gravy is loaded with saturated fat and sodium, this version is far more health-supportive, and as a bonus, won’t hurl you into a complete gravy coma post-consumption.
Enjoy.

Good Gravy!
Ingredients:
1 Tbsp. dark miso paste
2 Tbsp. tahini
about 1/2 cup freshly squeezed orange juice

Directions:
1. In a small saucepan over low heat, combine miso and tahini and whisk in the orange juice gradually to prevent lumps. Stop adding the orange juice once you have achieved the desired consistency. Do NOT boil – you’ll kill the nutrients and probiotics in the miso.

Tip: This recipe easily doubles or triples. Make as much as you need.

Rabu, 15 Desember 2010

Apple Cake with Cranberries

Gluten free apple cake with cranberries
A gluten-free cranberry apple cake- with a sweet-tart kick.

No philosophy today. Instead, a cake. A beautiful gluten-free cake to bake for the holidays- or any day you feel like celebrating. So dust off your cake pan, Babycakes.

This is a moist and tender apple cake laced with a hint of cinnamon and studded with fresh tart berries. After seven eight nine years of baking various gluten-free incarnations of my tried and true Jewish apple cake recipe, this could be our favorite. Maybe it's the sweet-tart combo. The subtlety of flavors. In a food culture obsessed with kicking up recipes with more for the sake of more (white chocolate peanut butter bacon swirled maple mouse drizzled in dulche de leche coconut marshmallow and dusted with sugared lime zest and shaved dark chocolate, anyone?) the clean and classic flavor contrast of apples and cranberries is somehow new again. Even, refreshing. 

I don't need dessert to taste like candy. I like my cake to taste like cake. 

How about you?


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Senin, 13 Desember 2010

Warming Winter Wheat Berry Salad


Whoa, is it actually this close to Christmas? Where the deuce have I been? I got a bit of a shock the other day when my dear friend Kiki asked me if I could share with her my favorite healthy holiday meal ideas. Yikes! I have actually thought of doing some kind of “festive favorites” round-up every year, but never got around to it because I seem to have a serious aversion to things I am “supposed” to do. Oops. So now…err, uh…I guess I will give it a go! And thanks to Kiki for putting a fire under it. ;)

I am going to start with this dish that I came up with at work last week, which I feel fits the bill just so. And it re-introduces many people to this groovy grain we all know as wheat, but in its whole form! I feel it’s holiday-appropriate because the familiar flavours of the spice mix in this dish are reminiscent of Christmas, but with an exotic edge. In the back of my head I was going for some sort of Moroccan thing - I love cinnamon in savory dishes, especially when hanging out with coriander and cumin. Totally winter-warming! Secondly, we got those beautiful wheat berries, which spend a heck of a lot of time boiling away, sucking in all that heat energy. AND, the roasted carrots that turn from crispy-cold to caramelized with love from the oven. Sigh. Everything coming together for a good cause: feeding your beautiful body with warmth! What could be better than that during the holidays?

Wheat Berries…have we met?
Yes, you have. Wheat berries are just kernels of wheat (the kind that would otherwise be ground into flour), totally unprocessed in their whole state. Exciting, eh? I think so. I would put them in a category with short-grain brown rice, as they too are plump, hearty, and satisfying with the most amazing chewy texture. I love eating wheat berries in salads because they maintain their shape and suck up dressing like a good grain should. They are also wonderful in warm dishes and add awesome texture to soups and stews.

Because wheat berries are unprocessed, they contain all the goodness of the whole grain. We’re talking oodles of B vitamins (except B12) for extra energy and battling holiday stress; lots of fiber for keeping us, ahem, regular, as well as protein, folate, vitamin E, and calcium. Sounds like a pretty good deal, no?
The other wonderful proponent of wheat berries that I get a kick out of, are the plant lignans! Remember those fun-loving phytonutrients? They are commonly found in flax seeds, nuts, and legumes – I wrote about them here. According to the World’s Healthiest Foods, lignans are converted by friendly flora in our intestines into mammalian lignans, including one called enterolactone that is thought to protect against breast and other hormone-dependent cancers as well as heart disease. Lignans have also been shown to decrease insulin resistance, which, in turn, reduces bio-available estrogen, which also lessens breast cancer risk.
Just a couple more reasons to eat your wheat!

You can find wheat berries at health food stores, most often in the bulk section. It's rather inexpensive and is great to store in your pantry, as it keeps for months. Make it your new staple!



Warming Winter Wheat Berry Salad
Ingredients:
2 cups wheat berries
7 - 9 carrots (1 lb. bag)
1 small red onion
6 cloves garlic
melted ghee or your oil of choice
½ cup dark raisins or chopped dates
2 tsp. sea salt
flat leaf parsley
about 25 Kalamata olives (optional)
1/2 cup almonds (optional)

Dressing:
1 ½ lemons – juice and zest
3 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
1 Tbsp. raw honey
½ tsp. ground cinnamon
½ ground coriander
1 tsp. ground cumin
pinch of sea salt

Directions:
1. If possible, soak wheat berries overnight or for 8+ hours. Otherwise, rinse wheat berries well until the water is clear. Measure 6 cups water and add to a large pot with wheat berries. Add 1 tsp. sea salt. Bring to a boil, reduce to simmer until cooked, approx. 1 hour.
2. Preheat oven to 400˚F.
3. Wash and slice carrots lengthwise from top to bottom, then again once more on each half. Then slice the carrot across widthwise so you have eight carrots slices.
4. Mince garlic and combine with ghee or oil. Drizzle over carrots and toss to coat on a baking sheet. Season with 1 tsp. salt. Place in oven. Roast for 15-20 minutes, or until golden and slightly caramelized. YUM!
5. Make dressing by combining all ingredients and whisking well.
6. Remove wheat berries from heat, drain and rinse under cool water (you will know they are cooked when some of the berries have split open. They will still be very chewy). Combine wheat berries with dressing, raisins, slivered red onion, olives, and chopped parsley. Let sit and marinate for as long as possible, or fold in the carrots as soon as they are roasted to your liking. Serve warm or cold, garnished with roughly chopped almonds and a grind of fresh black pepper.

As a side note: remember that wheat berries contain gluten, so if you are gluten-intolerant try substituting with quinoa (which I did, it was delicious!!!), whole buckwheat, short-grain brown rice, wild rice, or amaranth.

So ya’ll, here is my first holiday dish that you can enjoy without feeling like you’ve done a serious disservice to your body…and that’s just the beginning! In my next post I think I will actually put a real menu together. Wow. Probably good timing too, as I am having a holiday dinner party this coming Saturday and should perhaps begin planning something? Really? Do people actually do that? I sense a New Year’s resolution coming on…

Minggu, 12 Desember 2010

Gluten-Free Cranberry Bread Recipe

Gluten free cranberry bread
Gluten-free cranberry bread for the holidays.

Christmas and cranberries. The two go together like Beatles and Sunday. Brad and Angie. Milk and cookies. I was imagining a tea bread that might work for gluten-free French toast, you see. The sort of breakfast you'd like to wake up to on Christmas morning. Something warm with melting butter and cozy cinnamon. Something festive. Special. Not your average grab-on-the-go with coffee nosh. A gluten-free bread worthy of a holiday. That's how it all started. When it dawned me. Cranberry bread. Why not? It's simple. And not too sweet. It flirts magically with maple syrup. So I started daydreaming about the tart little berry that is a bog's ruby jewel.

And a gluten-free cranberry bread recipe was born.


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Sabtu, 11 Desember 2010

RapidShare Manager 2.1166 En-De




Download and Upload Manager for RapidShare without installation.

Download Portable RapidShareManager from RapidShare (3.6 MB)

Auto-update bug fixed.



Needs Java Runtime Environment Portable or Installed.



Extract and run RapidShareManagerPortable.

Needs Java Runtime Environment Portable or Installed.

Settings of installed RapidShareManager should be preserved.

Kamis, 02 Desember 2010

Ghee Whiz!


Hey you. Yeah, you.
You’re still cooking with olive oil, aren’t you? Yup. Thought so.
I am sure you’ve heard the news that this is a bad idea, but you’re not sure why so you just keep doing it. Sounds familiar. Sounds like me. For years I thought I was doing myself a huge favour by switching from butter to olive oil, as my diet moved from a standard diet to an organic, plant-based, whole foods diet, but it turns out I was a little mislead.

First off, let me explain why cooking with olive oil, and eating other heated oils can be to our detriment.
There are many, many different kinds of fats, some of which are more delicate, or less “stable” than others, meaning that they will go off more easily. The three factors that cause fats to spoil are:
- heat
- light
- oxygen
No matter how stable a fat is, it will always in the end, succumb to one or more of these factors and putrefy. Unless we’re talking about margarine, but who would ever eat that anyway? Tee hee.

Now we can talk about extra virgin olive oil, which is a fairly delicate fat. It has a low “smoke point”, which means that it will begin to burn at a relatively low temperature. As soon as any fat reaches its smoke point, it begins to break down and create free radicals – those horrendous, carcinogenic, unstable molecules that damage cells and cell membranes, and are associated with the development of conditions like atherosclerosis and cancer. You thought I was kidding around?!

Extra virgin olive oil’s low smoke point (320ºF) means that is not suitable for stir-frying, sautéing, or any other high-heat cooking. Pour it all over your salads for sure, but stop using it to cook today. Seriously. There are other grades of olive oil (virgin, pure, pomace, light, refined) that are of lesser nutritional value that can be used for higher heat cooking because they have a lower concentration of fragile nutritive components. However, most people have one type of olive oil in their pantry, and it’s of the extra virgin pursuassion because that is the one we are “supposed” to buy. Am I right?

Okay, enough with the doom and gloom! I have a great solution! It’s called ghee, or clarified butter, and it’s been around for, oh, 5000 years.
Ghee has been used in Indian Ayurvedic cooking for centuries, not only as a totally delicious food, but as an aid for digestion, ulcers, constipation, and the promotion of healthy eyes and skin. It is used in Indian beauty creams to help soften skin, and as a topical for the treatment of burns and blisters, which really works! I burned myself on the oven at work and put some ghee on it a few hours later. It healed miraculously quickly.

Lovin’ me some fat
Ghee is essentially clarified butter, made by heating regular butter until the proteins (casein) and sugars (lactose) separate from the pure butterfat. Simple.
Depending on the source of the butter used, ghee can be very high in antioxidants, in additions to helping the body absorb vitamins and minerals from other foods, namely vitamins A, D, E, and K.

The reason ghee is considered one of the best oils for baking, sautéing and deep-frying is due to its high smoke point (up to 480ºF). Butter burns at a lower temperature because of the presence of casein and lactose. Once removed, butterfat’s smoke point increases substantially. The other benefit of this is that people who are allergic to dairy products, or have casein or lactose intolerance can often tolerate ghee. Groovy.

Ghee has a very long shelf life because of its low moisture content. You do not need to refrigerate it for 2-3 months if you keep it in an airtight container. This makes it ideal for traveling or camping (awesome). When kept in refrigerator, ghee can last up to a year.

Delicious, Liquid Gold
I guess I could go on forever about all the health benefits, long formidable, history, or how easy it is to make ghee, but the part I like best? IT TASTES INCREDIBLE. Think of that warm, nutty taste in a shortbread cookie, or a flaky croissant. Ghee is similar to butter, but you will be pleasantly surprised that it is even richer-tasting, and dare I say…cheesy? Oh you heard me. It’s crazy delicious. Spread a little on toast (guh) or drizzle it on steamed veggies, or cook with it! It’s totally safe for those of you who like a very hot pan when stir-frying, or for those that forget that you turned the element on full blast and left the kitchen to go write an email. Oops.

You can find ghee at most health food stores, but making it yourself at home is about as easy as boiling water. Plus, when you make it yourself, you can choose the quality of the butter; remember that organic, grass-fed cows are the healthiest and make the tastiest ghee.



Ghee

Ingredietns:
Organic, unsalted butter (this is important!) - I use 500g at a time (approx. 4 sticks).

Directions:
1. Heat the unsalted butter in a heavy-duty saucepan over low-medium heat without a lid until it’s melted. Let simmer gently until the foam rises to the top of the melted butter. The butter will make lots of spluttering sounds and perhaps splatter a bit, so be careful.
2. Over the next 20-30 minutes (depending on the water content of your butter), watch the butter carefully as 3 layers develop: a foamy top layer, a liquid butterfat layer, a milk solids bottom layer. You can remove the foamy top layer with a spoon if you like, which helps to see trough to the bottom, but this is optional – it will be strained out in the end anyway.
3. Once the butter stops spluttering, and no more foam seems to be rising to the surface, check to see if the bottom layer has turned a golden brown colour and there is an incredible aroma of freshly baked croissants in your kitchen. If so, the ghee is ready and must be removed from the heat immediately or it will burn.
4. Set a few layers of cheesecloth or gauze over a heatproof container, such a canning jar. Carefully pour the warm liquid butter through the cheesecloth into the container, leaving behind any solids from the bottom of the pan. Let sit at room temperature to cool and solidify before placing an air-tight lid on the container. Store in the fridge for 1 year or, out of the fridge for 2-3 months.



Now, you're probably wondering why the heck I have written many of my recipes for stir-frying or roasting with olive oil. Yup, good question. I guess part of me just wanted to encourage everyone to stop using Pam cooking spray, lard, and vegetable oil, and I wasn't sure how to tackle the enormous subject of cooking fat. Now, I will firmly stand by my ghee for future recipes and you will know what I am talking about because you'll have a jar of its golden goodness on your counter top too. Do we have a deal? Ghee whiz, I hope so.


OKAY! Question and answer time it is! I had a feeling that this would happen :)
#1 - I PROMISE to write a full article on vegetable-source cooking fats at some point in the very near future. This article was not meant to be about that. It was about ghee.
In the meantime if you would like to cook with a vegetable-source fat, I would recommend coconut oil. I will elaborate on that in another post.

#2 - Yes, ghee is better than cooking with butter because butter burns at a lower temperature than ghee. Please refer to paragraph #2 in the section called "Lovin' me some fat".