Brownies
Last Wednesday, the NYT showcased these brownie recipes; they look so simple and easy you want to go right out and bake a batch. (I wonder if rice flour can be done in a 1:1 swap with wheat flour. Gluten-free cooks, thoughts?)
But brownies and I have a past and it's not a pretty one.
Whilst in college overseas, I tried to bake Real Gourmet American Brownies for my Euro-boyfriend. I found an American recipe and dug in. There was the metric conversion thing to tackle and the fact that English teaspoons and American teaspoons are not the same measurement but as an overly confident young cook I thought, “I can wing it.”
So wrong.
Baking is chemistry. If your measurements are off, well, as any of you bakers know your soufflé falls, the crumb is crumby, and grit thy name is cake. Some chefs have made good on their mistakes, the molten chocolate cake of recent years is a great example. But I'm no Vongerichten.
First issue, the chocolate seized. This was pre-internet, so there was no one to check with about how to unseize it. And I had never seen chocolate do that on Fred Smith or Julia Child. [Now I know, add more liquid and it will calm down].
As I had used expensive imported chocolate I felt I needed to soldier on. I should have quit whilst I was ahead-chocolate covered strawberries would have worked for the boy.
I added the requisite dry ingreds and baked the mess, I mean mix.
Did I mention the oven was an exercise of guess-my-heat level? Oven temperature gauges over there were, yup, not the same.
Needless to say, this lovely chocolate brownie concept was a complete disaster in reality. I didn't even show the boy the bad result; I binned the whole thing. Big sigh.
However, and this is a big but, the recipes in this article are fairly uncomplicated and I wonder, if I found a nut-free chocolate and some rice flour, do I dare to attempt it?
But brownies and I have a past and it's not a pretty one.
Whilst in college overseas, I tried to bake Real Gourmet American Brownies for my Euro-boyfriend. I found an American recipe and dug in. There was the metric conversion thing to tackle and the fact that English teaspoons and American teaspoons are not the same measurement but as an overly confident young cook I thought, “I can wing it.”
So wrong.
Baking is chemistry. If your measurements are off, well, as any of you bakers know your soufflé falls, the crumb is crumby, and grit thy name is cake. Some chefs have made good on their mistakes, the molten chocolate cake of recent years is a great example. But I'm no Vongerichten.
First issue, the chocolate seized. This was pre-internet, so there was no one to check with about how to unseize it. And I had never seen chocolate do that on Fred Smith or Julia Child. [Now I know, add more liquid and it will calm down].
As I had used expensive imported chocolate I felt I needed to soldier on. I should have quit whilst I was ahead-chocolate covered strawberries would have worked for the boy.
I added the requisite dry ingreds and baked the mess, I mean mix.
Did I mention the oven was an exercise of guess-my-heat level? Oven temperature gauges over there were, yup, not the same.
Needless to say, this lovely chocolate brownie concept was a complete disaster in reality. I didn't even show the boy the bad result; I binned the whole thing. Big sigh.
However, and this is a big but, the recipes in this article are fairly uncomplicated and I wonder, if I found a nut-free chocolate and some rice flour, do I dare to attempt it?
Comments
-steve-i totally should have spent the 10p and called you right over. drat.
Now I want a brownie!
Now I do have a box of GF Pantry brownie mix at home. Dessert tonight??
I'm not a huge fan of the garbanzo or fava bean flavours, they tend to taste...beany (but they can be good in a mix).
Oh my goodness. Yum.
They were gone in half a day. Thankfully, I sliced them up and gave them away. Everyone who ate them can eat gluten. Everyone loved them.
(Still, it's best if you make them at night and let them sit in the refrigerator overnight. The brownies settle into themselves and taste fantastic.)
Try it.
ok looks like i've got some serious baking to do, and then a party because i can not eat an entire pan of bronwies myself.
still have to nail down some high qualty nut-free chocolate...
thanks everyone, great ideas!
one cup white rice flour
1/2 cup cocoa
one tsp. Xanthan Gum
1/2 tsp. salt
1/2 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. baking soda
1/2 cup water
1/2 cup oil
1/2 tsp. vanilla
7/8 cup honey
The chocolates are totally nut free, but may have traces of dairy because they also make milk chocolate products.
I have never ordered their baking chocolate. I've only ordered the dark chocolate. The dark chocolate is not as smooth and sweet as some other brands. But it's still okay.
hipmama--hmm not exactly a rave review for vermont...but still maybe worth contacting them again. thanks!