Entries Tagged as 'Recipes'

Recipe: Bread Machine Banana Bread (Wheat or Gluten Free)

This is the recipe that I have improvised for use in my Zojirushi bread machine.

Ingredients:

2 cups of flour (if gluten free or corn free, substitute gluten freen flour mix)
1 tsp. baking powder (make sure you find a corn free/gluten free kind at your health food store)
3/4 cup sugar
4 tbsp. oil (I normally use coconut oil, but you can use butter or any vegetable oil on hand
2 eggs
2 1/2 bananas (pre-mashed)
1/2 tsp. baking soda

Directions:

If you have a Zojirushi, add the ingredients into the baking pan, use the “cake” cycle, and it will do the rest!

If you have a programmable bread machine you can try this program:

Mix for 24 minutes
Bake for 80 minutes
Cool for 16 minutes

Of course every bread machine and altitude is different!  Let me know how this works for you :) - my kids love it, and we think the gluten free option is very tasty too.  This makes more of a pound style, cake-like banana bread.  Happy baking!

Gluten Free, Corn Free Bread Machine Recipe

Well, we’ve officially been asked for our gluten free, corn free bread machine recipe, so here it is!

We have a Zojirushi that we make this in, and I’ve never owned another bread machine, so I can’t vouch for results in other makes/models, but do try it out, and let me know how it goes in the comments with your brand of machine!  The Zojirushi does a bang up job of gluten free bread, that is for certain!

  • 1 1/2 cups milk
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 tbsp. apple cider vinegar
  • 1/8 cup oil (we use melted coconut oil, but any veggie oil is fine, butter etc.)
  • 2 tbsp. sugar
  • 3 cups white rice flour
  • 1/2 cup tapioca starch
  • 1/4 cup arrowroot powder
  • 1/4 cup potato starch
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 1/2 tsp. egg replacer
  • 1 tbsp. xantham gum
  • 1 tbsp. yeast

Follow the directions for your bread machine as to the order to add your ingredients.  Bake on a regular white bread cycle.  The Zojirushi handles a fairly large loaf, so you may need to reduce this recipe for your particular machine.  Again, if you try this recipe let me know how it turns out for you in your machine.  We’ve been very pleased with the results!

Gluten Free Pancake Recipe

This must be the best gluten free pancake recipe in the world! Again, thanks Mom! We were trying to ‘wing it’ with our own rice flour concoction, but these pancakes are so much better. No grainy texture, gluten and corn free. Very tasty!

  • 2 cups gluten free flour mix
  • 2 cups milk
  • 2 eggs
  • 2 tbsp. oil
  • 4 tsp. baking powder
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 2 tbsp. sugar
  • 1 tsp. vanilla

Mix all of the dry ingredients together. Add wet ingredients and mix with a hand blender until relatively smooth. Lightly oil a pain and heat until hot, but not smoking, pour out batter to desired size of pancake. Wait until bubbles form on the surface of the pancake, flip. Wait until the pancake rises and browns a bit, remove from pan. Oil will need to be reapplied lightly to the surface of the pan from time to time between pancakes. Stack your pancakes on a plate with another plate on top to keep them warm until serving.

Your gluten and corn free kids will love these pancakes! Ours do!

Gluten and Corn Free Basic Flour Mix Recipe

The long awaited, but promised basic gluten free flour mix recipe. This recipe is from my Mom, and she adapted it from somewhere else to her liking, and converted it to corn free as well. My Mom is really THE gluten free master baker. She has been eating gluten free for many years, so when we learned our oldest daughter was wheat and corn intolerant, thankfully we had someone who had walked the way before us. I love you Mom!

We use this for gluten free cookies, cakes, muffins, tortillas, pizza dough, pancakes, cakes it is the super mix! In case you don’t remember, we called for it in our Gluten Free Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe, now here it is!

  • 4.5 cups rice flour
  • 1/2 cup potato starch
  • 1 1/3 cup tapioca starch
  • 1 1/2 cup glutinous rice flour
  • 2/3 cup arrowroot powder (if your family can eat corn, you may substitute corn starch)
  • 4 tsp. xanthan gum

Mix all of the ingredients together in a large container, and seal stored until needed. If you do a half batch a ziploc bag will work. I tend to do a double batch in an empty ice cream pail from the ice cream parlour (not the gallon size, it’s much larger). A single batch should fit in a regular ice cream pail.

In some recipes you can make a successful gluten/corn free alternative simply by substituting this flour mix in place of wheat flour.  We get our rice flour and tapioca starch at the Extra Foods (Superstore if you live in a larger Western Canadian city, Loblaws out East).  It is in the ethnic foods section, glutinous rice flour in a green bag, rice flour in a red bag, tapioca starch in a blue bag.  The other ingredients may need to be sourced at a natural/health food store, and they can be a bit pricey, but they are essential to the results of the recipe.

How to Make Lady Rose Relish - Make Money, Save Money

Work at Home Business Idea for Homeschoolers #1, Condiment Making
Or Make Your Own Relish – Frugal Friday

This is a combination post! A bit of cooking, small family home business idea, saving money, and homesteading all in one! It is also a combination of authors, Larry originated the post idea and wrote much of it, I edited, filled in a few details and supplied the recipe.

Over the years our family has had many small home based business to earn extra money and allow us to stay at home, and I would like to share with other home schooling families some of our experiences.

The first home business idea I’d like to share is making food stuff at home and then selling it at farmer markets or other venues like that – local fairs, craft shows etc. Our families first experience with selling food items would be my wife Jennifer when she was a small girl and helped her mother to make and sell home baking, my sisters also did this as a way of earning their pocket money. My our experience started back in the late 1980’s when I had a few honey bees and sold honey at the local farmers market. I very much enjoyed keeping bees and selling the honey.

What I want to share in this post is the business opportunity to make and sell condiments (relish, jams, pickles etc.). While we were down visiting my family, my mother had bought some relish at the local farmers market and we all enjoyed it very much. My oldest daughter liked it very much but we found out that it had wheat flour in it and she has a very hard time with wheat. So I asked Jen to look on the Internet for a recipe to make our own, she found a recipe and we took a morning to make some, replacing the wheat with rice flour. It was a great hit, our first batch was so close to the relish my mother had bought that we knew we had something our whole family could enjoy.

Now the reason that I thought this would be a great home based business was when I sat down and crunched the numbers. The relish my mother bought was $7.50 for a one pint jar and the lady making it has a hard time keeping up with the demand. We had made 17 pints that morning following the recipe we got off the Internet and the ingredients cost about $30.00 not counting the jars. So 17 times $7.50 is $127.50 less the ingredients is $97.50 then you have to take out the cost of the jars at $.65 each times 17 giving you $16.35 for a net total of $81.15 - not bad for about 4 hours in the kitchen, that is $20.28/hour!

*This is also my Frugal Friday post! Making your own condiments saves a LOT of money over buying it at the store. Our family could not afford $7.50/jar of relish at likely 1 jar/week at the way our family eats it! Making your own brings the cost down to $2.00/jar (not counting the jars, which are re-usable), which is far more affordable! And there is a very high vegetable content in this relish, which is wonderful!*

Of course, you may need to take your fuel and marketing costs out as well ?. If you grow your own veggies you could half your ingredient costs, and then you could add other kinds of relish, pickles and jams. Depending upon the regulations in the part of the world where you live you may need to prepare the condiments in a commercial kitchen (either one in your home, or you can rent space in some locations) in order to sell at a farmers market. Here in Alberta that is the way food regulations are going, so you should check into the requirements in your state/province for small scale food processing. People love home made condiments and there is no end to the kinds you can make.

If you have teenage daughters this is a wonderful business idea for them! It is simple, fun, and profitable!

So here is the recipe for the relish we made (we did modify the recipe we found, so this is the revision) if all you do is try a batch for yourself you will I hope find it very enjoyable, just be careful who you give a jar to for they will want more. Jennifer’s grandparents just adore it, we shared some with them on our visit to the city yesterday, and they will be needing more on our next visit for certain!

Lady Rose Relish Recipe

This is the recipe that we will be using next time as a result of our learning experiences – the batch we made this time is slightly different, but we’d like it better with these changes.

Ingredients

4 cups of chopped, peeled cucumbers
4 cups chopped, peeled onions
2 heads celery, cut fine
3 sweet red peppers, cut fine
3 green peppers, cut fine
1 large cauliflower, cut fine
5 cups white vinegar
6 ¾ cups white sugar (we used organic which is ‘tan’ sugar)
¼ cup yellow mustard seeds
1 cup rice flour (you can also use wheat)
4 tbsp. dry mustard powder
2 tbsp. turmeric powder
¼ cup salt

Instructions

Wash, peel and trim all vegetables as needed. Either cut fine by hand, with a chopper, or in the food processor with the chopping blade (we used a food processor – the girls loved helping!) to get the above measures necessary for the recipe.

Place all ingredients in a non-reactive pot (we used stainless steel), stir well and let stand for 24 hours. Heat until the relish comes to a boil, stir regularly to prevent burning. Pour into scalded canning jars, leaving ½” headspace, and ensuring that the rim is wiped clean, place scalded seals and rings on jars, sealing until finger tight. Place jars in a boiling water canning bath for 10 minutes. Remove with tongs and place on counter undisturbed for 24 hours. Tighten any loose rings, and put any unsealed jars into the fridge for immediate consumption.

Mmmm, enjoy!

Gluten Free Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe

This is my husband Larrys’ gluten free peanut butter cookie recipe! Our oldest daughter is on a restricted diet, when she eats corn or wheat her skin reacts badly - almost instantaneous eczema with corn, and she can have blood in her bowel movements (wheat). She also has some miscellaneous other allergies that we work around, like almonds. We are blessed to have realized her corn allergy at a young age (8 months), but I do kick myself for letting her eat corn alongside of us at meals at such a young age. I wonder if we had followed a stricter allergy prevention diet with her at a young age we would have had different results. With our second child, she wasn’t exposed to very many allergenic foods before the age of 18 months, particularly corn and wheat.

Gluten Free Peanut Butter Cookie Recipe

  • 1 1/2 cups peanut butter (we like the natural kind without added oil or sugar)
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 cup chocolate chips (we like to use the mini chocolate chips, but any will do)
  • 1 tbsp. baking powder
  • 1 tsp. salt
  • 1 cup of gluten free flour mix (you may need 1 1/2 cups if your peanut butter is quite oily)

Mix peanut butter and sugar, then add eggs and mix it all together. Then add everything else and mix it all up! After you mix it it is sort of a playdough consistency. The chocolate chips may drop out, so just keep pushing them in. Make the dough into balls and put onto a greased cookie pan, and flatten with a fork.

Bake at 350 for 10 - 15 minutes. Be very careful not to overbake, or else they will be hard by the next morning. Gluten free baking is a tricky business, and in this recipe using the gluten free flour mix is essential - it is a blend of tapioca, rice, potato starch, and we use arrowroot powder because of our daughter’s corn allergy. I believe you can buy an all purpose baking flour mix that is gluten free pre-made, though we haven’t tried any pre-made mixes, we make ours from all the different flours, and I’ll need to post the recipe for that. This does make a nice soft cookie, that holds together well, and isn’t crumbly. DH dictated this recipe to me, it’s in his noggin’ as he likes to say. Sometimes I chastise him, but I understand, because I have an ‘all in my head’ alfredo sauce recipe that everyone loves.

If you have gluten and corn free children, they will love this cookie recipe!

Beany Tomato Stew

It seems like all of my recipes are approximations only! But here is something I’ve been making a lot of lately, it is cheap, and tasty.

Beany Tomato Stew
2 cups beans (any type you have on hand, assorted, etc)
1 cup brown rice
1/4 cup - 1/2 cup Tomato paste or concentrated crushed tomatoes (we buy this in a approx 1 gallon can for around $3 - $4)
3 Carrots
3 Sticks Celery
1 Onion
1 Bell pepper (any colour)
Salt and pepper to taste, normally I put 1 - 2 tsp. of salt, it can take a lot
Hot sauce - a few dashes
Celery seed
Basil
Oregano
Garlic
All of the above dried spices just sprinkle in liberally until it tastes good :). Maybe 1/2 tsp celery seed, 1 tsp each basil, oregano, and 1/2 tsp garlic powder. But taste it and see.

Put the beans on to soak the day before, and the rice in a separate container. The night before throw the beans into the crockpot on low with more than enough water to cover, and leave on overnight. In the morning, if you are ambitious you can sautee your onion in a large pot until it is golden, (or just chop it up and throw it in with everything else) transfer the beans to a large pot with some of the soaking water if there’s some left. Drain the rice, and put it in, chop the veggies, put them in, make sure there is enough liquid to keep the food moist so it doesn’t stick to the bottom of the pot. Add the tomato paste/crushed tomatoes and spices and stir.

Bring to a boil, then reduce to low to cook througout the morning. And it should be done by lunch! Yummy, and cheap :). It also freezes well for reheating - you may just need to add a bit of water to prevent sticking. Easy peasy to double the recipe for freezing!

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