Archives for posts with tag: grain free

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This is AMAZING!
I’ve just come up with this ‘bar’ which has turned out to be more like fudge than anything else. It’s sugar and grain free and very low carb.
Try it.
You will need
120g butter- I used Goats…
120g xylitol
5g Stevia – I used Pure Via
1 tsp vanilla extract
30g ground Almonds
50g whole shelled pistachio nuts
40g whole macadamia nuts
20g dark chocolate I used 70% green and blacks
2 heaped spoonfuls of unsweetened cocoa powder

Melt the butter and xylitol in a pan over a medium heat until it bubbles.
Remove from heat.
Add the rest of the ingredients to the pan and stir.
Pour into a small square tin and spread out.
Pop into the fridge for 1/2 an hour.

To serve, remove from fridge and cut into squares.
It is quite rich and yummy. Give it to your kids, serve it with coffee.
Do it today.
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I made this noodle dish with brilliantly low carb but incredibly versatile new discovery of mine; noodles made from a vegetable fibre called Moyu (konjac) which has been consumed in Asia for many centuries.
This dish is fast and furious. I usually pre-make the chilli, tomato and onion paste and you can keep that in the fridge or freezer to use any time you please.
So – to make the paste you will need:

5 Medium sized onions roughly chopped.
5 Chillies
1/2 to 1 tin of tomatoes – omit the liquid – just use the tomato pieces. ( you can save the liquid for your bloody mary…)
2 tablespoons of olive oil
Large pinch salt

As a complete aside…This paste is a brilliant start to any curry too. You can add fresh ginger to the mix – utterly delicious. – for your curry sauce – throw in a tin of coconut cream/milk and the protein of your choice – try it with Paneer cheese or chicken thigh…And cook for however long you feel the meat/cheese takes to cook…

Right back to the noodles…Pop the paste ingredients into a blender or put them straight into a saucepan and whiz them up with a hand blender until you have a paste. Then cook over a medium heat and stir occasionally for a good half and hour or until the paste thickens. Let it cool and pop in a sealed container in the fridge (it will keep for a week or so). Or – more sensibly – you can pop it into an ice cube tray and freeze in useable portions).

Once this part is done you will need:

400g of Moyu noodles ( I used 2 packs of Eat Water’s ‘Slim Pasta – Spaghetti’)
olive oil or coconut oil
Splash water
300 g Salmon or whatever you have really – this will work well with already cooked chicken or pork (use left over roast) or whatever you can find really. For veggies – you can always pop an egg in it right at the end of cooking and give it a good stir.
A couple of cubes of frozen spinach – defrosted. Or a large handful of fresh spinach chopped.Squeeze or three of lemon juice.

That’s it.

So rinse your noodles – or follow instructions on your noodle pack.
While they are draining, pop 2 large tablespoons of your paste into a frying pan with the oil.
Then follow with the salmon and then the noodles. Give it a good stir and make sure that the paste is coating everything really well. Last of all – drop the spinach in.
Stir again – make sure everything is cooked through to your liking.

Et Voila!
Let me know what you think. I bought my noodles online, but you can find them at Holland and Barratt on the high street.

 

This recipe gives the impression of being a big and satisfying carb load, when in fact the rice is surprisingly tastily made of cauliflower. I know – I don’t even like cauliflower that much – but this is something special and I urge you to try it. 

If you are feeding the family or friends are coming for lunch/dinner and you need a one pot dish – this is astoundingly good and is both satisfying and tasty. For those more tender mouths, you can go easy on the chilli, and those wishing to deviate, do it – use fish or chicken or even (shock) go veggie by adding cashews to the rice (after frying with the garlic) and a soft boiled egg or two at the end for your protein.

The recipe is in three parts, and although there do seem to be a long list of ingredients, you could probably get away with a mixture of most spices you have in the cupboard. This changes every time I do it – I add whatever I have and it always works out well.

For the Onions

3 Onions – Chopped finely

50g coconut oil or 3 tbsp olive oil

For the Cauliflower Rice

1 head of Cauliflower

3 tbsp Olive Oil or 50g Coconut Oil

1 Clove Garlic finely diced

1 Medium Onion Diced

6 Peppercorns

3 Cardamom Pods

1 tsp Cumin seeds

3 Cloves

2 Bay leaves

1 Stick Cinnamon or 1/2 tsp

For the Curry:

50g Coconut oil or 3 tbsp Olive oil

2 tbsp Garam Masala

1 tsp Dried flaked Chilli

1/2 tsp Turmeric

8 Black peppercorns

5 Cardamom Pods

1/2 tsp Cinnamon 

6 cloves of garlic crushed

1 tin tomatoes

2 or 3 green chillies (optional) chopped finely or processed

a thumb sized peeled and grated piece of fresh ginger

Salt to taste

500g (or whatever you have left) of roast meat. I’m using left over should of pork.

Of course – you could pop some chicken thighs in the oven for an hour and use those if you have nothing left over, you could also use fish, or if you insist, keep it veggie and add some soft boiled eggs at the end…

Method

First cook the onions:

Add the finely chopped onions to the oil over a low to medium heat and cook until dark brown. (can take a good half an hour but so worth it).

Then prepare the cauliflower rice:

Wash and DRY the cauliflower florets and then either grate or preferably pop them in the food processor and pulse until ‘rice’ sized pieces are acquired. Don’t do too much of this as you don’t want it to go all mushy…Set aside.

Next heat the oil in a large pan (I like to use a nice wide frying pan) to a medium/high heat and add the chopped onion, fry gently for 5 minutes until soft, then add the garlic, bay, peppercorns, cardamom, cloves, cinnamon and stir over the heat for 1 minute until fragrant.

Turn the heat up so everything is really sizling and smelling incredible and add your pulsed Cauliflower and stir over the high heat for about 5 mins until cauliflower is cooked and crisp on the outside and al dente in the middle (much like rice). Add salt to taste and set to one side.

Next tackle the curry.

In a large casserole type dish heat the oil for the curry over a medium heat and add the garam masala,dried chilli, turmeric, peppercorns and cinnamon. Fry until fragrant (only about a minute. add garlic and tomatoes, fresh chillies and ginger and stir for about 3 minutes. Then cover and cook for 10 minutes. Add meat and a pinch of salt and stir briefly before covering again for another 10 minutes. Pop in the coriander and turn the heat down to low and pop the lid on for another 15 minutes. (Yes, I know, but while all this is going on you could have a little tidy up!) 

Turn off the heat and leave the curry in the pot and it’s time to assemble.

Scoop out half of the curry and set to one side. Spoon in half of the cauliflower rice and level. Sprinkle on half of the brown onions that you cooked at the beginning. Add the remaining curry and cover again with the rice and then again the onions.

Place over a low heat and steam with lid on for 5 -10 minutes making sure that the bottom doesn’t catch but resist the urge to stir.

Remove from heat and take it straight to the table sprinkled with chopped coriander leaves.

(I serve this with a thick Sheeps yogurt but you might like to dollop some of your favourite chutney on the side – whatever floats your boat.)

Enjoy.

Let me know if you tried this. I am making it again tomorrow so will post pics then.

20130123-165442.jpgThrough a huge amount of experimentation I have discovered some gems and some unbelievable disasters! Ok, well I could go into detail about me and stuff like that but I think I will christen this blog with a yumtious recipe that you can enjoy with absolutely no guilt.

If you are dairy free, then omit the butter and make with the same quantities of oil – you can even use a very mild olive oil but rapeseed or coconut oil are brilliant in this Choccy wonder.

So…I have given moist slices of this amazing cake to friends and family, only informing them later that it contains such minute morsel of sugar and absolutely no grain.

Do this today. It really is divine.

Goats Butter – 180g – you can also use cows butter. (or if you insist, coconut oil)

Xylitol 140g (you can get ‘Total Sweet’ from all UK supermarkets now.)

5g Pure Via Stevia (also available in all UK supermarkets)

(Optional) 40 g of dark muscovado sugar or dark molasses sugar

2 eggs (medium free range)

140g ground almonds

40g Cocoa powder

1 tsp Xanthium gum (powder)

1 tsp baking Powder

How to make this…

1. Pop on your oven set at 160-170 C

2. butter/oil a 6″ circular tin

3. Whip up a storm by combining very soft butter with the Xylitol and Truvia and the optional brown sugar until light and fluffy, (you can do this in a mixer or by hand with a wooden spoon).

4. Once fluffy, add the eggs 1 at a time whipping ferociously between each to ensure it stays as light as possible, don’t panic if it curdles, just carry on regardless (life’s too short).

5. Then add the ground almonds, the Xanthium gum and Cocoa powder (sieved) and Baking powder.

5. Place in a suitable well greased oven proof pyrex dish or a cake tin and bake on a low heat for what seems like an eternity…

It took mine a good hour, but keep the temperature fairly low around 160/170 degrees Centigrade as it will burn easily. you could pop a circle of greased baking paper (grease proof or similar) on top just to ensure this doesn’t happen. Be careful, keep checking.

Remove and check the middle with a skewer. If it doesn’t come out clean you’ll probably have to pop it back in for a bit.

Once cooked, leave it in the tin for 5 minutes before turning out very carefully and leaving to almost cool. (Almost, because this also tastes great just warm.)

Serve with cream or ice cream if you insist, or have it on its own with a nice cuppa. – Sooooooooo good.