Showing posts with label almond milk. Show all posts
Showing posts with label almond milk. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 13, 2012

Make Your Own Almond Milk (It's Really Easy)

OK, when we figured out my husband's corn allergy this summer, and realized that the almond milk we buy had corn-derived ingredients in it (Almond Breeze Unsweetened, if you're curious) he suggested we make it. I was immediately against it. What a pain in the ass.

Boy was I wrong.

It's really easy, and I actually like how this stuff tastes, which I can't say that I did for the Almond Breeze. Why bother? Yes, we also buy corn free soymilk (WestSoy Unsweetened, Trader Joe's Unsweetened, and Eden Soy Extra Unsweetened are nothing but soybeans and water)- but baking with soymilk is pretty bad. Baked goods have this weird, smooth texture that I don't like. Baking with almond milk is (to me) just like baking with regular milk- baked goods turn out fluffy and delicious.

You do have to plan ahead a little, but we go through this stuff regularly enough that I seem to always have a cup of almonds soaking.

Ingredients:
1 cup raw (non-salted) almonds, soaked from anywhere from 4 hours to several days
3 cups water
1 T honey
your blender
a nut milk straining bag

Yes, I know that ideally, you should only soak your almonds from 4-8 hours, but I've not noticed any difference in the finished product if I soak them longer. You just get weird white fatty stuff soaking in your water. I soak the almonds at the ratio of 1 cup almonds to 2 cups water, and just set it out in a Pyrex glass measuring container on the counter and leave it there.

Once your almonds are soaked, strain them (discard the soaking water) and rinse them off. Put in the blender with the water and the honey.

Puree that stuff. For a minute or two.

Once you've pureed it for a few minutes, pour it into a container through your strainer bag. The strainer bag is really helpful. I tried it with a mesh colander and it was all over the place.


Remove the bag from the milk and squeeze the milk out of the bag, discard the almond bits.
This recipe makes about 3 cups of milk.

Monday, November 12, 2012

Honey Oat Bread (Dairy Free)


Dairy free, delicious, honey oatmeal bread :)
Adapted from Bakingdom's Soft Honey Oat Bread and made in my new bread maker. Why a bread maker? With all our food allergies, it's hard to buy a bread that both my husband and I can eat. Clasen's bread, from Middleton, Wisconsin, comes closest, even nicely labeling when they use cornmeal on the bottom of bread, but we like a softer, honey oat type bread than the one variety of bread of theirs we can both eat. So, I bought a bread maker. I love the bread maker. It's so easy.

All you have to do is put the ingredients in the bread maker in the correct order and turn it on.

The bread maker requires correct layers of ingredients: bottom is the liquids, then the dry ingredients, and then the yeast.

This is a 1.5 lb loaf of bread, I set my bread maker to medium crust darkness.

So, in order to make this delicious bread, you need (in order):

1 cup almond milk (room temperature, not right out of the fridge- you can warm it to about 75-90F)
1/4 cup water (lukewarm/warm temperature)
2 tablespoons melted Spectrum palm oil shortening
1/4 cup honey (the tangier, the better)
2 & 3/4 cups bread flour
1/4 cup whole wheat bread flour
3/4 cup oats
1 & 1/2 tsp salt
1 package Rize yeast (no corn ingredients) it's about 2 & 1/4 tsp

The yeast actually goes into a little indentation you create in the top of your dry ingredients, a little well to hold the yeast.

Finished loaf!, a photo by zombie amelia on Flickr.
You can also opt to drizzle honey on top of your loaf and sprinkle oats- this can be done when your bread maker tells you the last rise cycle is starting- this is when you get the option to remove the paddles and reshape the loaf, sometimes I do this, sometimes I don't.

Either way, the bread is soft and delicious.

Monday, July 30, 2012

Indian Peach Rice Pudding

Indian Rice Pudding by zombie amelia

We attended a birthday potluck yesterday, with an Indian food theme. Now, I can't eat out Indian (ghee being a mortal enemy of mine) but I love Indian food, and it's easy enough to cook Indian at home. I made the delicious samosas recipe from Vegan with a Vengeance, which are pretty time consuming, but totally worth it (you can shorten the prep time by making a samosa pie instead of individual samosas...)

Anyway, we were brainstorming on what desert to bring and my husband found an Indian peach rice pudding recipe online that looked really good, so I modified it! It's called Peach Phirni, and you can indeed make it without corn starch and without cow's milk. I made a double batch, but I'm going to post the single batch recipe, since doubled it makes a LOT of pudding.

Ingredients
  • 1/4 cup rice
  • 3 cups almond milk
  • 3/4 cup sugar
  • 15 oz sliced fresh peaches (blanched and skinned)
  • 1/2 teaspoon arrowroot (or corn starch)
  • 1/8 teaspoon cardamom powder
  • 1/8 cup sliced almonds
  • 1/8 cup raw cashews
  • slices of peaches for garnish
  • mint leaves for garnish
Wash the rice and soak it in water for fifteen minutes or more. Once the fifteen minutes are up, drain the water and put the rice and a little almond milk in the food processor and puree to a fine texture. Set aside. Blanche the peaches in boiling water for 45 seconds, peel and slice. Set aside slices from one peach for garnish. Put the rest in the food processor with the arrowroot powder and puree. Set aside.

Boil the almond milk on medium high heat and let it simmer until milk reduces (the original recipe says to reduce from 3 cups to 2 cups, just watch it and make sure it reduces by about 1/3.) Take about 1/4 cup of hot milk and mix it with rice paste and mix. Add the rice/almond milk to the boiling almond milk slowly and stir continuously, making sure rice does not become lumpy and the almond milk doesn't burn. Add the almonds and cashews and stir.

Cook for about 20 minutes, the almond milk with reduce to about half it's volume and the rice will look and taste cooked (even though it's in tiny bits, you will be able to tell when it's cooked- looks almost like cooked tapioca.) Once the rice is cooked, add the sugar and cardamom and cook for about 4-5 minutes- make sure the sugar is completely dissolved and the cardamom mixes in completely. Turn off the heat. Mix the peach puree with the cooked rice and transfer to a serving bowl

Chill in the fridge for a few hours and then garnish with the peach slices and mint leaves! Enjoy!

Tuesday, September 14, 2010

Dairy-free Dutch Pancake

Or Dutch Babies, as the Joy of Cooking called the recipe.

I usually make breakfast on Sunday mornings, something a little more exciting than the regular frozen waffles or cereal... this past Sunday I was looking for something new, and stumbled upon the Joy of Cooking's recipe for Dutch Babies, or Dutch Pancakes. (I recall that the "Baby" reference was to the size of the pancake, but this was just right for two people, accompanied by juice, coffee, and our favorite, Gimme Lean.)

I have come to like the cooking abilities of almond milk, rather than soy, and I have it in the house all the time, unlike goat's milk. (Attention vegans- this recipe has eggs!) It worked great with almond milk- rose wonderfully, fell quickly, and tasted amazing. I'll be making this one again.

Whisk/beat together until smooth:
1/2 cup almond milk (we use Almond Breeze Original)
1/2 cup all-purpose flour (I did sift this, too, for extra smoothness)
1/4 cup sugar
2 large eggs, at room temperature

Melt in a 10-inch ovenproof skillet (the recipe says "cast iron is ideal" and yes it was) over medium heat:
4 tablespoons margarine (I prefer Earth Balance)

Tilt the pan so that the margarine coats the sides. Pour the mixture into the skillet and cook, without stirring, for 1 minute. Place the skillet in the oven and bake until the pancake is puffed and golden, 12 to 15 minutes (though mine was more like 18/20 minutes.)

Sprinkle with powdered sugar.

Serve immediately, for the pancake loses its puff, and therefore its drama, almost immediately. Eat with jam of your choice!