Friday, April 18, 2008

  • Weekly Photo Challenge - What's Cooking?

    This week's subject is suggested by Furtherthoughts

    What's cooking?

    UPDATED BELOW WITH MORE PIE

    Y'know what's cooking around here now?  Nothing.  Know who's been cooking around here lately, since I've been sick?  Not me, and the kid doesn't cook, so much as he nukes, if you know what I mean.  So I don't have any fresh entries for this week's challenge, but I did want to enter, and I had something in the archives.  It even more or less goes with the "fall colors" theme we had a couple of weeks ago.

    A few Halloweens ago, I posted the recipe for this
    gluten-free, sugar-free, no-cow's-milk
    Body Part Pie

    Go ahead, follow the link, then follow the recipe.  Pie...yum.


    Late breaking food news:  I found another pie in the archives.  It's not a pretty pie, but it is yummy and good for you, as pies go.
    notaprettypie
    ...quick and easy, too, since I quit going for the flaky butter crust and switched to more healthful and easier to make crust with vegetable oil.  The essential fatty acids in the olive oil catalyze with the cholesterol in the eggs to produce better nervous system function instead of arterial plaque.

    Preheat the oven to 450 degrees Fahrenheit.

    Prepare the custard first:

    Beat together:
    2 cups milk (I use reconstituted non-fat dry milk if I don't have enough goat milk for this.)
    3 eggs
    1/3 cup Splenda (or sugar, if you can handle its glycemic effect and the addictive qualities of it)
    1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract (ethyl vanillin is nasty, toxic stuff)
    1/4 teaspoon salt

    Set it aside while you make the crust.

    In a 9-inch pie pan, preferably a deep one, stir together with a fork:
    1/2 cup garbanzo and fava bean flour (The only source I've found for this is BobsRedMill.)
    1/2 cup sorghum flour
    1/2 teaspoon salt
    1/2 teaspoon xanthan gum (to hold it together - it will still be grainy and crumbly anyhow)

    When the dry ingredients are thoroughly mixed, whisk together:
    1/3 cup olive oil
    1 1/2 tablespoons cold milk

    Pour the liquid over the flours in the pie pan and mix lightly with a fork until all flour is moistened.  Then press the crust evenly over the sides and bottom of the pan.

    Prick the crust with a fork to release steam that would deform it, and bake at 450 degrees for "about ten minutes" (that's what the old recipe says - 8 minutes works for me).

    Turn the oven heat down to 325 degrees F., and pull the rack out far enough to pour the custard mixture into the half-baked crust, then bake for another 35 minutes or so at 325.

     

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