Selasa, 15 Maret 2011

Karina's Chocolate Truffle Cake

Chocolate truffle cake by Gluten Free Goddess Karina
Truffle Cake is a flourless chocolate cake worthy of Spring.

The intricate lace of bare oak branches reaching to the piece of schoolyard sky framed by my kitchen window is softening, filling in with bursts of tender green leaves so young and sweet you miss them at first glance. Spring has arrived. The oaks say so.

To celebrate the season of reawakening, I say we bake a cake.

Yes, another cake. I know, I know. I baked a luxurious Coconut Layer Cake for you just last week. But. It was a cake with flour (albeit gluten-free flours). And what do I feel like baking this week? A flourless cake. A cake so rich it tastes like a truffle. Not the infamous pig snuffled treasure. No, Darling. The chocolate truffle. That heavenly impostor, hiding in the guise of that woodsy French piggery fungi. Spoonfuls of deep, dark ganache rolled in cocoa powder (to look like dirt, of course).

And I didn't want just a chocolate cake topped with ganache, either. I wanted to bake the ganache itself. I wanted the cake to taste like a sweet and satiny truffle- I wanted the cake to live up to its name. Truffle Cake inspires expectations. So I fiddled around with my Flourless Chocolate Cake recipe and rustled up a divine and creamy chocolate cake so special you'll want to share it with company. It's simply too good to keep to yourself. Try it. It's shockingly easy to make. Just give yourself time to make it ahead. It is at its best chilled overnight.

Silky satin chocolate cake with a dusting of dirt- I mean- organic cacao powder with a secret ingredient. Raw maca powder.

Throw in a little superfood magic. Why not?


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Rabu, 09 Maret 2011

The My New Roots Library: No Membership Required



I sure love me some books. After many delightful emails from you curious readers asking me about my favorite reads on nutrition, cooking, healthy living and the like, I have finally decided to begin a library catalogue! For now, it’s a relatively small collection of my favorites, which I know will grow with time and your suggestions. Please send me your favorite titles too – I am always hungry for new material. Together we can create a space with the best and most honest health resources out there!
You will find the My New Roots Library link in the sidebar under my profile picture.

The other very exciting piece of news I want to share is that the incredible cookbook, Earthly and Divine, written by my friend and colleague, Eva Cabaca, (and designed by yours truly) is finally in print and available for purchase! It was truly an honor to be a part of such an inspiring project – this book is the lifework of someone so dedicated to holistic health and wellness, it blows my mind! Her recipes and methods are sincerely on another plane of consciousness, in addition to her in-depth nutritional knowledge, thought-provoking insights on health, and pure, vibrant love! Eva has had a profound influence on me and the way I look at food and cooking, inspiring me to always strive for greatness in my own kitchen. I know that Earthly and Divine will do the same for everyone who reads it. Of course, you can find it in the Library. And Eva has generously put a download-able PDF preview on her site - follow this link!

I hope that you all find the books and films in the My New Roots Library both informative and inspiring, as you educate yourself on the path to wellness!

Senin, 07 Maret 2011

Meatless Mondays with Martha Stewart - Best Lentil Salad, Ever



If you're a new friend of My New Roots, or you just haven't made the Best Lentil Salad, Ever yet...oh, it's time. Check out my post over at Whole Living!

In health, Sarah B.

Gluten-Free Coconut Layer Cake

Gluten free coconut layer cake
Coconut cake heaven. Gluten-free and dairy-free deliciousness.

Birthdays are complicated when you reach a certain age. Oh, don't get me wrong. You're grateful for another year. I mean. You're still alive and kicking, right? Waking up to a fresh start. Starting a spanking new year on the planet with one more number under your (slightly pinching) belt. A number that grants you a whisker more authority in the world. A tad more wisdom.

If you've been paying attention to the lessons life likes to offer up as experience, and not sleepwalking, that is. Not acquiescing to the expectations of others. Or choosing safety over the challenge of the new. Or worse- finding yourself somewhere, in some situation, or relationship, strictly for the sake of momentum, chafing inside a role you don't remember signing up for.

Birthdays can be markers like that.

Defining where we've been. And how far we've come. Or not.

It was my husband's birthday this weekend. And yes, I baked a cake. And as I stirred the batter and scooped it into cake pans, I thought about the other cakes I have baked for him. The chocolate cake in our first year of marriage. Children beneath our roof. Blue balloons and candles. The newness of each others' dreams. The shine of our ideas. The belief in what was possible.

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Minggu, 06 Maret 2011

InfraRecorder 0.52 32-64 bit Multilingual




Free CD/DVD burning solution for Microsoft Windows without installation.

Download Portable InfraRecorder from RapidShare (4.4 MB)


Extract and run InfraRecorderPortable.

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang (if you don't want: write UserDefaultLang=false in InfraRecorderPortable.ini).

32 or 64 bit files selected by launcher.

Settings of installed InfraRecorder should be preserved.

Jumat, 04 Maret 2011

Artichoke and Jalapeño Savory Pie

Artichoke and Jalapeño Savory Pie
Gluten-free pasta pie, a savory and delicious frittata style dish.

Happy first weekend in March! Spring is in the air. To celebrate, here's an eggy, savory pie for the coming greening season, spiked with the kicked-up heat of jalapeños. It's a hybrid of traditional kugel, quiche, and pasta frittata. Kinda postmodern eggilicious. And the best part is, it's a super easy recipe. Perfect for a light brunch, a weeknight supper, or any time you crave huevos. Which is less fraught with guilt, now that the Powers That Be have decided eggs are not the enemy they once touted. Especially if you use organic eggs from humanely raised, vegetarian fed free-range chickens. Happier eggs contain higher levels of omega-3 fatty acids, beta-carotene and vitamins A, D and E, it turns out. Which makes this frittata pie idea a nutritious way to use up leftover gluten-free spaghetti. 

Your mother's pasta frittata, this isn't. Your mother didn't make you pasta frittata? Babycakes! 

What are you waiting for?


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Selasa, 01 Maret 2011

Wild Mushrooms on Toast



Despite the fact that I spend five days a week cooking in a restaurant, and my thoughts around 8 pm on Friday night certainly turn towards the non-culinary, the most likely place you’ll find me on Saturday morning? At home in my kitchen. And I am almost always surprised at my sprightly enthusiasm for spending the majority of my free waking hours wielding a knife at the cutting board, a spoon at the stove. What is it that keeps me coming back, almost blindly, to cook another meal? I guess I feel like there is just one more thing I need to learn, some mystery to uncover in the next fold of batter, a discovery waiting under the skin of a single lentil.

This past weekend was no exception. Saturday found me curious and hungry, hankering for a hearty brunch dish, and a culinary adventure. My friend Elana got me to thinking about mushrooms lately, so I ventured out early to explore the market, which is all part and parcel of building the anticipation towards that first bite.
I was surprised to find everything I needed at my local shop, including a variety of wild fresh and dried mushrooms. I think they are just those things that I usually glaze past when I am looking for something else, but happily they do exist right down the street! I bet you can find everything you need for this recipe right at your local grocer too.



Mushrooms as Medicine
Mushrooms are an incredible group of edibles, as they are not only delicious and so versatile, but they are crazy-loaded with nutrition and powerful healing properties!
For one, most mushrooms have a fairly high protein content – often referred to as the “meat” of the vegetable kingdom for good reason. And despite their juicy richness, mushrooms are surprisingly low in calories - one cup of raw mushrooms contains approximately 20 calories (that’s it!!) and little to no fat. And because the small amount of fat that they do contain comes in the form of unsaturated fatty acids, they are an ideal food for those trying to lose weight, maintain a healthy heart and cardiovascular system.

All edible mushrooms contain medicinal qualities too, as most of them possess polysaccharides (complex sugar molecules) called beta-glucans that increase RNA and DNA in bone marrow where immune cells are made. The combination of compounds in mushrooms is believed to enhance the functioning of the immune system.
Three mushroom varieties in particular – reishi, shiitake, and maitake – have been studied extensively and are proven to possess strong medicinal properties. If you can get your hands on them (usually in dried form), definitely stash a few in your pantry – they keep forever and can instantly turn any dish into something exotic and health supportive.

A very interesting tidbit: all mushrooms have to be cooked to receive the nutritional value. The cell walls cannot be digested unless they are tenderized by heat, so cook ‘em up!



This recipe is totally flexible, so venture out to find some interesting varieties of mushrooms you’ve never tasted before - I tried a riotous mix of shiitake, beech, oyster, chanterelle, brown button, and crimini. Remember to look for dried mushrooms too, especially if you live in a region where wild mushrooms aren’t in season yet. I used a combination of both fresh and dried, and even threw in the run-of-the-mill brown button mushrooms just because I had some on hand. Happily, all kinds of mushrooms are buddies and play together quite well. Don’t make this more complicated than it is; use what you can get!

Wild Mushrooms on Toast
ghee, olive oil or butter
2 shallots, thinly sliced
11 ounces / 300 grams mixed mushrooms, (try including shiitake, reishi, or maitake) wiped clean
3 cloves of garlic – 2 minced, 1 sliced in half
¼ cup walnuts
a few sprigs of fresh thyme, leaves picked
sea salt
freshly ground black pepper
1 or 2 good pinches dried crushed chilis
1 lemon
2 slices of toasted whole-grain sourdough bread
balsamic vinegar (optional)

Directions:
1. Prepare the mushrooms: if fresh, simply wipe them off with a damp paper towel (do not wash them with water, as they will only absorb the liquid and get mushy when cooked). If dried, soak the mushrooms in lukewarm water for about an hour, until soft. Slice the lager mushrooms, leave the small ones whole.
2. In a large frying pan, heat ghee, butter or oil, then add sliced shallots. Sprinkle with sea salt and let cook on medium heat until the shallots begin to wilt and lose structure.
3. Add the mushrooms, making sure that they are not crowded in the pan (this ensures that the moisture that comes out of them can evaporate easily, and they will not boil in their own juices), toss a couple times to coat them in oil. Cook for a couple minutes, then add the walnuts, garlic, thyme, crushed chilis, some salt and pepper, and shake pan and leave to fry gently for 3 – 4 minutes.
5. When the mushrooms have browned nicely, add a knob of ghee or butter and a squeeze of lemon juice, and toss again.
6. Toast your bread until golden. Remove from toaster, and rub one side of each slice with the cut-side of a half clove of garlic.
7. Place toasts on a large plate and pile the mushrooms on top, sprinkle with extra thyme leaves, and a drizzle of balsamic vinegar, if desired.


This dish totally surprised me in its simplicity and palette-pleasing flavours. I know that I must be a little behind the time never having tried mushrooms on toast before, but I just never thought that something so seemingly basic could be so rich and delectably satisfying! In fact, I loved this meal so much, guess what was for breakfast on Sunday? Yup.
A glorious afterthought? Add a poached egg. Oh next weekend…hurry up and get here!

source: Haas, Elson M. Staying Healthy with Nutrition. Berkley, CA: Wiley, 2006.
Balch, Phyllis A. Prescription for Dietary Wellness. New York, NY: Penguin, 2003.