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Pistachio & Vanilla Bean Shortbread Cookies From Aran Of Cannelle Et Vanille Blog

August 9, 2013 by Zizi

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I found Aran‘s beautiful award-winning blog, Cannelle et Vanille on the internet a few years ago. I fell in love with it for the first time. I remember I saved so many recipes to make them (I did a few of them! :)). Even though I love her gluten-free recipes and travel stories, I always go back to her blog because of the breathtaking photos. I learn so much about food styling and photograpy just looking at Aran’s pictures.

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When I asked her to guest post on my blog I didn’t know how she will react. As I expected she was so nice and happy to help me out. She told me she was very busy with a big move (from Florida to Seattle) and travelling to teach at different workshops (one of my dreams is to participate in one!) but she would try her best!

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Here she is sharing one of her cookie recipes from her first incredibly photographed cookbook, Small Plates & Sweet Treats. Aran says: “This shortbread gathers two of my favorite ingredients – pistachios and vanilla beans – in one treat. They are coated in powdered sugar while warm, which creates a slightly creamy coating. I make batch after batch of these during the holiday season. They are great to give as gifts.”

Pistachio & Vanilla Bean Shortbread Cookies

Ingredients (makes about 50 cookies)

– 1 cup (140 g) superfine brown rice flour
– 1/2 cup (80 g) potato starch
– 1/2 cup plus 2 tablespoons (70 g) gluten-free oat flour
– 1/4 cup (30 g) tapioca starch
– 1 teaspoon salt
– 1/2 cup (80 g) unsalted natural pistachios
– 16 tablespoons (225 g) unsalted butter, room temperature
– 3/4 cup (90 g) powdered sugar, plus more for dusting, sifted
– 1 vanilla bean, split lengthwise and seeds scraped

Method

In a medium bowl, whisk toether the superfine brown rice flour, potato starch, oat flour, tapioca starch and salt. Measure 1 tablespoon of this flour mixture and add it to a food processor along with the pistachios. Pulse until the pistachios are ground to a fine powder.

Combine the soft butter, powdered sugar and vanilla seeds in the bowl of a stand mixer fitted with the paddle attachment. Turn the mixer on low speed for a few seconds so the powdered sugar doesn’t fly everywhere. Increase the speed to medium-high and cream together until light, about 2 minutes. Scrape down the sides of the bowl and the paddle.

Add the dry ingredients along with the ground pistachios to the mixer bowl. Mix until the dough comes together; it will be a sticky dough. Turn the dough out onto a work surface and shape it into a log that is approximately 13 inches long and 2 inches in diameter. Wrap the log in parchment and roll it, trying to make it as round as possible. Refrigerate the dough for at least 1 hour.

Preheat the ovent to 180C (350F). Remove the dough form the refrigerator and unwrap it. Cut disks that are 1/4 inch thick. Place them 2 inches apart on a baking sheet lined with parchment paper.

Bake for 10 minutes, until lightly golden on the bottom, but do not overbake, as they will become very hard. Let them cool on the baking sheet for about 10 minutes. Dust them with powdered sugar. Store tightly wrapped at room temperature for up to 3 days.

*****

Interview to get to know Aran a bit more…

Where are you from? Where do you live?
A: I was born and raised in Bilbao in the Spanish Basque Country and I currently live in Seattle, Washington.

What is the name of your blog?
A: Cannelle et Vanille.

How long have you been blogging?
A: I started blogging in January 2008, so that if over 5 years.

When did you start cooking/baking?
A: I started cooking and baking very young as I grew up with grandparents who owned and operated a pastry shop. I remember being as young as 6 or 7 and helping my mom in the kitchen. In my late 20s I attended culinary school and worked as a professional pastry chef for 4 years until I had my first son.

Who (where) did you learn cooking/baking from?
A: I learned to cook from my mother and grandmother and to bake from my uncles and grandfather who were all pastry chefs. We lived across the street from the pastry shop so I spent most of my time there with the smell of cinnamon, vanilla, simmering milk and fermenting yeast.

What is your signature dish?
A: Oh that’s hard to answer. My friends really appreciate my baking skills, but they usually ask me to make them tortilla de patatas, which is a traditional Spanish omelet with potatoes, onions and eggs.

What is your favourite vegetarian/vegan meal?
A: I love lentils and I make them all the time for my family, so I would probably say that lentil soup with lots of root vegetables and kale or Swiss Chard is one of my favorite meals. I love soups in general – anything I can eat with a spoon I love.

Where do you get inspiration from?
A: From many different places… the farmers market, restaurants where I eat, cookbooks, other makers and artists, ceramics… It’s endless.

What was the most memorable food you have eaten during your travels?
A: I absolutely loved the last meal I had at Martin Berasategui’s restaurant outside of San Sebastian a few months ago. It took my breath away.

Name three things you always have in your fridge!
A: Eggs, some kind of green like kale or Swiss Chard, and plain yogurt.

Is there a food that always reminds you of home?
A: Yes, tortilla de patatas, leeks and potato soup, arroz con leche…

What would people be surprised to find in your kitchen? Is there anything you want to share?
A: When I have chicken feet in my freezer I know it’s going to be a good day. The best stock to be made.

—

All photos are courtesy of Aran Goyoga.

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Filed Under: guest post, ovo Tagged With: baking, cookies, edible gift, sweet

Salad Niçoise

July 29, 2013 by Zizi

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Salad Niçoise is a French composed salad of tomatoes, green beans, tuna, hard-boiled eggs, Niçoise olives, and anchovies, dressed with a vinaigrette. It is served variously on a plate, platter, or in a bowl, with or without a bed of lettuce. The salad hails from Nice, on the Mediterranean Sea. This is a vegetarian version without tuna and anchovies (and minus the tomatoes).

It is an exceptional delicious and filling salad – with plenty going on. Come on… give it a try!

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I took the photos before adding the black olives! 🙂

Salad Niçoise

Ingredients (serves 2)

For the salad
– 250 g new potatoes, cut the larger ones in half or smaller
– 100 g French beans, cut into roughly 2-3 cm lengths
– 2 organic eggs
– 1 medium head of a lettuce (I used Salanova), lettuce leaves washed and separated
– small handful of black olives, pitted
– salt, freshly ground black pepper

For the dressing
– 1 clove garlic, crushed
– 2 tablespoons olive oil
– 1/2 teaspoon apple vinegar
– 1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard
– a pinch of salt

Method

Cook the potatoes in salted water for 8-12 minutes until tender, adding the beans for the last 4 minutes. Drain, tip into a bowl and leave to cool.

Cook the eggs in a pan of water for 7 minutes. Leave to cool, then peel and quarter the eggs.

To make the dressing, put all the ingredients into a small bowl, season with salt and pepper and whisk until emulsified.

In a bowl add the potatoes, the beans and some of the dressing. Toss gently together.

In another bowl toss the lettuce leaves with a little of the dressing. Arrange the lettuce, potatoes and beans on a serving plate and distribute the olives and eggs over the salad. Trickle over the remaining dressing and grind over some black peper. Serve straight away!

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Filed Under: ovo Tagged With: bean, cooking, salad

Coco-Cocoa Brownies from Emma Of The Poires Au Chocolat Blog

June 6, 2013 by Zizi

Let me introduce you my second guest, Emma who writes the wonderful dessert blog Poires au Chocolat.  I’m amazed by her recipes, photos and videos.  She has a degree in English Language and Literature but she also studied pâtisserie at Le Cordon Bleu in London. She offered to share a sweet recipe with us.  Here is Emma…

“These are tender cake-style brownies with a little crisp crust. I usually make them with butter but I thought it’d be interesting to see how coconut oil worked – I’m so glad I tried it out. Feel free to throw in some nuts or any other add-ins (probably around 100 g would be right) – though I like these plain.”

Coco-Cocoa Brownies
(adapted from Alice Medrich’s recipe in Chewy Gooey Crispy Crunchy)

Ingredients (makes 12 brownies)

– 200 g light brown sugar
– 130 g coconut oil
– 65 g quality unsweetened cocoa powder
– 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract or paste
– 1/4 teaspoon fine sea salt
– 2 eggs, cold from the fridge
– 65 g plain flour
– 1 tablespoon of toasted shredded coconut or handful of toasted coconut strips

Method

Preheat the oven to 160C/325F. Line an 8″ square tin with greased foil or baking parchment.

Place the sugar, solid oil, cocoa powder, vanilla and salt into a bowl and suspend it over a pan of barely simmering water. Stir together as it melts and keep heating until the mixture is uniform and hot to the touch. Sit aside to cool until the mixture is lukewarm.

Once the mix has cooled, beat in the eggs one by one, then stir in the flour. Beat for forty strokes – when you’re done, it should be silky, thick and generally glorious. Pour into the tin and sprinkle with the toasted coconut. Bake for 20-25 minutes until set and risen a little. Leave to cool then slice into bars.

*****

Interview to get to know Emma a bit more…

Where are you from? Where do you live?
E: I grew up in the countryside in Devon, England. I now live in Oxford, where I went to university. My mum has lived in the Swiss Alps since I left home (I’m the only child of a single parent, so she wanted a change of scene at the same time and we’d spent several winters there already) – so I also spend a lot of time there.

What is the name of your blog?
E: Poires au Chocolat.

How long have you been blogging?
E: I’ve been blogging for four years, since I was 19.

When did you start cooking/baking?
E: My mum taught me to cook and bake from a young age. I was always allowed to play in the kitchen (there’s a funny story from when I was three about a perpetually hungry house guest who used to sneak food from the fridge in the night and a pot of vegetable scraps I’d been cooking for my doll…). I also spent a lot of time cooking with my grandma as I grew up – making jam and that sort of thing.

Who (where) did you learn cooking/baking from?
E: As I said above, I learnt most of my savoury skills and basic baking skills from my family. I’ve since augmented my baking knowledge by reading, lots of practice and attending culinary school for six months.

What is your signature dish?
E: I’m not sure I have a signature dish to be honest – I guess baking and desserts in general.

What is your favourite vegetarian/vegan meal?
E: I’ve been craving ratatouille with couscous recently (perhaps an odd pairing, especially as we usually add cheese such as gruyere or strong cheddar on top).

Where do you get inspiration from?
E: From books (old and new, recipe and reference, fiction and non fiction), blogs and the ingredients themselves.

What was the most memorable food you have eaten during your travels?
E: I ate some really wonderful food when I spent six weeks in California last year – there were so many fresh, delicious dishes and interesting ideas. Other than that, I’m addicted to gelato.

Name three things you always have in your fridge!
E: Butter, milk and homemade jam.

Is there a food that always reminds you of home?
E: My mum makes an amazing fish pie with salmon, any firm white fish, a little bit of smoked fish, scallops and prawns in white sauce with a crisp herby-cheese-breadcrumb topping that always reminds me of home (though I guess this might not be the place to talk about that recipe!). It’s one of the few dishes she makes that I don’t seem to make myself.

What would people be surprised to find in your kitchen? Is there anything you want to share?
E: I’m not sure, really. Perhaps that I’m not a particularly adventurous savoury cook? I tend to make the things I’ve eaten all my life (and, contrary to my insistence on their use for baking, I never use scales to make them – I was taught by eye, not recipe).

—

All photos are courtesy of Emma Gardner.

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Filed Under: guest post, ovo Tagged With: baking, cocoa, coconut flakes, meals around the world, sweet

Date Olive Oil Banana Bread

April 7, 2013 by Zizi

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Banana bread is the all time favourite classic bread in our household. I tried many recipes and all of them gave the perfect result (like this vegan one with almond and chocolate). This one doesn’t contain sugar, it is sweetened with dates and bananas. It’s moist, delicious, also gluten-free and sweet enough without sugar. It’s also crisp because of the toasted sunflower- and pumpkin seeds on top. It’s perfect and wonderful for an afternoon tea/coffee session or for breakfast (toasted).

Make sure to use overripe bananas to get the best banana flavour.

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Date Olive Oil Banana Bread
(Recipe inspiration: My Darling Lemon Thyme)

Ingredients

– 1 cup dates (about 9 pieces), pitted, chopped
– 2 tablespoons boiling water
– 1 teaspoon baking soda
– 1 and 1/2 cups brown rice flour
– 1/2 cup millet flour
– 2 teaspoons baking powder
– 3 bananas, peeled and mashed with a fork
– 1/2 cup extra virgin olive oil
– 2 organic or free-range eggs
– 1 vanilla bean, split and seeded
– grated zest of 1 lemon
– sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds

Method

In a small bowl mix together chopped dates with baking soda and boiling water. Set aside. Line a 23 cm (9 inch) long loaf pan with parchment paper. Preheat the oven to 180C (356F).

In a bowl combine the dry ingredients: rice flour, millet flour, baking powder. In another bowl mix together the wet ingredients: mashed bananas, olive oil, eggs, lemon zest and vanilla. Pour the wet ingredients mixture into the dry one, stirring until just combined. Fold dates, hot water and baking soda in.

Pour the mixture into the loaf pan, sprinkle the top with sunflower- and pumpkin seeds and bake it on 180C (356F) for about 60 minutes. It’s ready when the cake tester (or toothpick) comes out clean.

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Filed Under: ovo Tagged With: baking, banana, banana bread, bread, breakfast, date, glutenfree, loaf, sugar free, sweet

Millet, Oat And Apple Muffins And Meeting Béatrice Peltre

April 6, 2012 by Zizi

These gorgeous, yum and moist muffins were baked for a picnic to Szentendre. This riverside town close to Budapest is known for its museums, galleries and artists. Due to its picturesque appearance and easy rail and river access, it has become a popular destination for tourists staying in the capital of Hungary.

This was the first time I used millet flour in baking. It has a subtle flavor, lots of vitamins and minerals, and adds a lovely creamy color to baked goods. I had a good experience with using it so I’ll give it a try next time too. Have you tried millet flour before?

Image is copyright of Béatrice Peltre and is used with author’s permission

This muffin recipe comes from my latest favorite cookbook of Béatrice Peltre “La Tartine Gourmande – Recipes for an Inspired Life. I’ve been a big fan of Béa’s award-winning blog for a while. The first time I found it I couldn’t stop reading her stories and admiring her photos. In a couple of days I went through all her posts! I think it was love at first sight.She is an icon in the food blogging sphere. I think everyone knows her name and wonderful blog. If somehow you don’t, hurry up and check it out, after reading this post. She is a friendly and chatty person, a great cook, a talented baker and knows her way around her camera. Béa’s styling is stunning and the mouthwatering photos she takes, make you jump and run into the kitchen.

I feel lucky because I had the chance to meet and see her at work last August at the Food Blogger Connect in London. I learnt so much from Béa and other speakers of the event. The biggest highlight of attending the conference was to meet my fellow food blogger friends in person. I came away with so much inspriation, idea, a whole group of new friends and ready for action attitude.

Béa at work

Béa’s book transports you to a word of bright colours, flavors and delectable, easy to make recipes. Although she is not vegetarian I hardly found meat or fish recipes in the book so I was happy that I could cook & bake all the recipes only with small changes. Like I did with these muffins. No quinoa flour is available in Hungary so I used millet flour instead. I changed the butter into coconut oil and Muscovado sugar into coconut flower sugar.

Millet, Oat and Apple Muffins

Ingredients (makes 10-12)

– 60 g millet flour
– 30 g oat flour
– 50 g rolled oats, plus more for topping
– 50 g coconut flower sugar (you can substitute with cane or Muscovado sugar)
– 1 teaspoon alkaline free baking powder
– 1/2 teaspoon baking soda
– 175 g apple (2 apples), peeled, cored and grated
– 2 organic eggs
– 50 g coconut oil (you can substitute with butter)
– 2 tablespoons tahini (sesame cream)
– 1 vanilla bean, split and seeded (you can substitute with 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract)
– pinch of sea salt

Method

Preheat the oven to 180C (350F) and line 10-12 hole muffin tray with paper cases.

In a bowl mix together the dry ingredients: flours, rolled oats, baking powder, baking soda and salt. In another bowl beat the eggs with the cane sugar until creamy and light, then add tahini, coconut oil, vanilla and mix. Pour the wet ingredients into the dry ones and with a wooden spoon mix until smooth (don’t overwork the batter!). Stir in the grated apple.

Spoon the mixture into the cases, filling them about two thirds full, dividing the batter evenly and topping each muffin with rolled oats. Bake the muffins for about 25 minutes on 180C (350F). Remove from the oven when a cocktail stick just comes out of the muffins cleanly. Leave them to cool on a wire rack.

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Filed Under: ovo Tagged With: baking, FBC, millet, muffin, sweet, tahini

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