Isolde's Baking Recipes
Coconut Macaroons
Preheat oven to 190 C (degrees celsius), grease flat baking tray or use baking paper
4 egg whites - whisk in narrow, high
bowl until peaks form
½ cup xylitol - add slowly while whisking for another 2 minutes
2 ½ cups shredded/dessicated/grated coconut and
juice of half a lemon - fold into egg mixture with a wooden spoon. Use same
spoon to place little individual macaroons on baking tray
Bake for 12 - 15 minutes, remove from tray, cool
Please note: macaroons will not be crunchy
Coconut Choco Icecream
Whisk one can good quality coconut cream with a few teaspoons real (not the sweetened variety) cocoa powder (experiment and decide how strong you want the chocolate taste to be) and two or three tablespoons Xylitol (again – experiment as you may like it sweeter or not so sweet). Whisk for a while, then fill into individual dishes, put into freezer for half and hour, take out and stir, put back into freezer. Take out 1 hour before eating and let it thaw at room temperature.
Hazelnut Muffins
Preheat oven to 190 C, grease muffin tray.
5 large eggs - separate and whisk egg
whites until stiff
In a bowl whisk/beat egg yolks with a little water and
½ cup xylitol until creamy. Using a wooden spoon mix into this
2 cups hazelnut meal, then fold in the egg whites. Spoon into muffin tin
Bake for 12 mins (24 small muffins) or 15 mins (12 normal sized muffins). Remove
muffins from tin, cool
Experiment with the following:
a) Add some cocoa powder or vanilla extract or frangelico liqueur or cinnamon
or crushed pecan/walnuts/macademias to mixture
c) Add more xylitol for sweeter biscuits, or use half almond meal and half hazelmeal
d) To make biscuits pour mixture on flat baking tray and cut into squares after
baking (same temperature but maybe only 12 mins).
Pecan Cinnamon Biscuits
Preheat oven to 190 C, grease flat baking tray
2 handfuls Pecan nuts – crush,
add to this
2 eggs – mix well, add to this
3 teaspoons cocoa powder (unsweetened) and
3 heaped teaspoons Xylitol and
1-2 teaspoons cinnamon powder, then add some
Almond Meal until pastry thickens (1/2 – 1 cup)
Spread out on flat baking tray and
Bake at 190 C for 12 –15 mins, cut into squares, cool
Note: Before cooling you can cut out stars or other shapes
Baked Ricotta Cheesecake
Preheat oven to 190 C, grease round cake tin
5 large eggs – beat with a little
water and slowly add
½ - 2/3 cups Xylitol, beat until creamy, stir into this
350 g smooth Ricotta Cheese (Pantalica brand tastes good) and juice of 1 lemon,
mix until smooth, add to this
1 ½ cups Almond Meal, fill into cake tin
Bake at 190 C for about 35 mins (check - do not overcook)
Experiment by adding some blueberries, apple, banana, apricots, raisins or chopped
nuts to cake mixture prior to baking
Berry Baked Cheesecake
Cake as above. Pour pastry into greased baking dish, sprinkle 1-2 cups of frozen
mixed berries on top and gently mix into pastry with fork so berries are just
covered. Bake as above.
Hazelnut Cream Cake
Preheat oven to 190 C, grease round cake tin
6 eggs – separate and whisk whites
until peaks form, slowly add 20g Xylitol to whites, beat for another minute,
then beat the egg
yolks with a little water and
80g Xylitol until creamy, use wooden spoon to fold into this
250g ground Hazelnuts and some crushed Macademia nuts (optional), fold in the
eggwhite mixture, pour into cake tin,
Bake at 190 C for about 35 mins (check) or until done, take out of cake tin
immediately, slice twice to make 3 layers, open up and let layers cool separately.
When cool whip 300 ml of Pure Cream and just before it stiffens add to cream
a handful of hazelmeal and a little xylitol (also nice is PORT added to the
cream instead of nuts and xylitol). Use spoon to put cream between layers, use
large knife to spread remaining cream on the outside and on top (for a very
decorative cake you may need to whip some more cream), decorate the top with
more cream and whole hazelnuts. Cool cake in fridge before serving.
(Note: For a sweeter cake add a little more xylitol).
Festive Cherry (Berry) Cake
sometimes called ‘Blackforest Cake’
(This cake is best if made the day before and kept in the fridge)
Preheat oven to 190 C, grease round cake tin
6 eggs – separate and whisk egg
whites until peaks form, beat
egg yolks with a little water and
100g xylitol until creamy, use wooden spoon to add
250g Almond Meal and
5 teaspoons unsweetened Cocoa powder,
fold stiff eggwhites into this mix, pour into cake tin and
Bake at 190 C for about 35 mins (or until done), remove from tin, cut into 3
layers, cool layers separately. When cool whip 300 ml pure cream, spread bottom
layer with cream and top with well drained sour cherries (Morello cherries),
add some Kirsch (clear Schnaps – not liqueur) if you want, fill second
layer with cream only and use remaining cream around edges and on top (if a
decorative look is required whip more cream and use decorating tool, you could
also grate some dark chocolate on top).
Note: Experiment with other berries
and
if you don’t add the cocoa powder you can make a
Pineapple cake
using pineapple pieces and cream between layers or just make a plain Almond
Cake with no filling (add some crushed macademia nuts before baking and some
Vanilla extract).
Add Rose Water for Marzipan
Pancakes (with ricotta)
3 eggs, place in bowl and mix with
125 g smooth ricotta (for example Pantalica), add
some pure cream (to your liking,1-5 tablespoons), add
some almond meal (judge quantity to achieve a gooey consistency) and maybe some
lemon juice or some xylitol
Pour three little pancakes into hot buttered pan, cook on med heat on one side
until firm, then turn and cook other side. Serve with fresh berries and cream
or any other way you like ie with cinnamon. You can exclude the ricotta if you
wish and add another egg instead.
Apple Pancake (served Dutch style)
This is one large delicious pancake for 2-3 people baked partly under the griller.
Heat 2 tbl spoons butter in a large
frypan (heatproof handles or no handles) on med hotplate and add 1 large chopped
apple. As apple cooks whisk 4 -5 eggs with either 4 tablespoons yoghurt or 100ml
coconut cream (or 100ml buttermilk or any kind of milk, or with good quantity
pure cream.) Add 1 teaspoon cornflour (optional) and ½ cup - 1 cup (or
more if you like) almond meal. Pour mixture over apples, turn hotplate down
to low and turn on griller (on high). After 2-3 mins on hotplate place frypan
under griller (quite close to heatsource), remove when pancake is golden brown
(maybe 2-5 mins), shake pancake loose and slide out onto large plate. Cut into
halves, sprinkle with a little Xylitol, or cinnamon, or add honey (fruit, jam
or whatever you like) on top.
Serve hot.
SOME SAVOURY DISHES
Prawn Cakes (as an entrée for 4)
16 large green prawns, peel, wash thoroughly
and dry on kitchen paper, in a bowl mix together
2 –3 eggs and
half to one full cup crushed Macademia nuts. Add the prawns and gently mix,
do not tear prawns, stand. In a large frypan heat on med heat
3-5 tablespoons Macademia oil (or butter, but oil is better), pour in prawn
mixture, cook for 2-3 mins then turn prawns over for another minute or so, do
not overcook, serve immediately (garnish with parsley if you like)
Variation: instead of Macadamia nuts add to the egg and peeled prawn mixture
some chopped fresh ginger, garlic, shallots, soy sauce, sesame oil, fresh chilli,
mix all together in the bowl, let stand a few minutes before frying in maca
oil or butter.
Savoury Nutslice (main course, serve with green salad)
In a large frypan fry 1 large chopped onion in butter or oil, add 3 chopped tomatos (or tinned chopped tomatos), mix into this 2 cups crushed nuts (ie cashews,walnuts,pine nuts), 1 cup rolled oats, salt, a handful grated cheese (optional), 2-3 eggs, mixed herbs, put mix on greased oven tray or in pie dish and bake for 40-50 mins at 170 celsius,cut into 6 squares while hot, serve immediatlely. Note: don’t spread mix out too thinly while baking as it will dry out if too thin. Again, experiment with different herbs, different nuts and different quantities.
FEEL FREE TO COPY THESE RECIPES AND SHARE THEM WITH YOUR FRIENDS.
YOU MAY EVEN EMAIL ME OTHER GREAT LOW CARB RECIPES AND RECIPES WITH XYLITOL OR COCONUT.
THERE IS A COCONUT FLOUR AVAILABLE NOW, I HAVE YET TO EXPERIMENT WITH IT. SO FAR I HAVE JUST ADDED SOME TO PANCAKES AND TO CAKE MIXES, I FIND IT VERY VERY DRY – SO LESS IS MORE IN THIS CASE.
ABOUT BAKING CAKES AND BISCUITS WITHOUT FLOUR & SUGAR
Sweets and cakes do not have to be ‘off limits’ when you eat a low carb diet or need to watch your weight. Prepared without sugar and flour they can be part of a balanced diet. I have experimented with alternative ingredients and found that I could have some sweet things AND eat in a healthy way. I am now ready to share some of these recipes with you for your enjoyment and health. I am not a qualified dietary expert, so please do check with an expert if you have any doubt about my suggestions.
I want to emphasise that the recipes reflect my personal style of eating and therefore include dairy products, cream, eggs and nuts (but not peanuts). But in many of the recipes you can simply exclude the dairy or the cream. The Hazelnut cake, for example, does not require cream and tastes delicious just on its own. You can bake flans and sponge cakes and muffins just with almond meal, eggs and xylitol. I suggest that you experiment with any ‘normal’ recipe you like, just substitute flour with almond meal and sugar with xylitol. Also experiment with quantities, as xylitol is almost twice as sweet as sugar. Don’t limit yourself to cakes and cookies. I also make delicious breakfast pancakes, icecream, and savoury dishes such as nutslice and prawn cakes.
I like the fact that Xylitol is not
artificial and has a low GI value. But it is more expensive than sugar. On balance,
however, I think that the inclusion of Xylitol in the diet can make the difference
between eating no sweets at all (and maybe feeling cheated and left wanting)
and having some guilt free sweets some of the time.
Some references I have consulted:
THE NEW GLUCOSE REVOLUTION by Jenny Brand-Miller
LIFE WITHOUT BREAD by Christian Allan and Wolfgang Lutz
XYLITOL – OUR SWEET SALVATION article by Sherrill Sellman in Nexus Magazine
No 27, December 2002.
ATKINS NEW DIET REVOLUTION by Dr. Atkins
COCONUTS – any book by Mike Foale or Bruce Fife on coconuts
Stephen Eddey - ATMS seminar on fat loss and obesity, October 2009
Also several other books and articles on low GI foods, insulin resistance, syndrome
X and low carb diets, for example by Dr. Sandra Cabot.
A VERY PERSONAL VIEW/COMMENT ON ‘LOW
CARB’ EATING:
No diet is right for everyone and there are ‘horses for courses’.
You may need to design your own ‘diet’ based on your individual
physiology (ie your blood group and your genetics), health issues (ie some foods
aggrevate some conditions such as IBS), your aims (ie to shed excess fat or
to reduce cardiovascular problems) and your beliefs, likes and dislikes (ie
being vegetarian or not liking the feeling and taste of a lot of fat in your
food).
For example - if your aim is to shed excess bodyfat, eat initially (for 2-3
weeks) very few carbs until some fat is lost and your body has adjusted and
switched to fat burning mode (see Atkins). After that time modify the diet to
suit yourself ie by adding more fruit, starchy vegetables and limited legumes,
some low carb sweets now and then (eg cakes baked with xylitol), nuts, maybe
the odd slice of wholemeal bread here and there. I prefer to call this way of
eating ‘LOW STARCH’ and not ‘low carb’, because you
are reducing or omitting starches, grains and sugar, but not vegies, salads
and fruits. Please use real butter instead of margarine, and olive oil and nut
oils (for example macadamia oil) instead of vegetable oils - as margarine, most
processed foods and foods cooked in vegetable oils contain transfatty acids
(warped fat molecules) which are now being identified as a major contributor
to heart disease and other major ailments. So, reduce or cut out sugar, processed
foods, starches and trans-fats and feel the difference. I think it’s maybe
what you don’t eat (rather than what you do eat) that can make all the
difference. Some people suggest that low carb diets are difficult to follow
for vegetarians. If you are a vegetarian, you too could possibly benefit from
fewer starches, refined flour products, transfatty acids and from less sugar
in your diet.
Note:
These are my personal experiences based on my own research and years of trial
and error. I have no formal qualifications in cooking, diet, nutrition, medicine
or biochemistry. Please consult a professional if in doubt.