Paleo Nut-Free Chocolate Sandwich Cookie Valentines

February 9, 2013 in Cookies, Nut-Free Baking, Treats

The thought process behind these cookies:  let’s take two delicious, sweet paleo cut-out cookies and make it ridiculously decadent by making a cinnamon white chocolate ganache to go in the middle!  It is Valentine’s Day after all!  The best part?  These cookies can go with your kid into a nut-free school!

White chocolate chips are very difficult to find without at least some milk ingredients.  Two brands to look for are Lieber’s Decorating Chips and VeganSweets White Chocolate Chips .  Both of these are available relatively inexpensively online.  Another option is to buy pure cocoa butter and make your own white chocolate (check out this cookie recipe for directions, you’ll probably want to triple or quadruple the batch), which is nice because homemade is definitely less sweet.  Another option would be to sub dark chocolate for the white chocolate (this is my favorite 80% soy-free chocolate bar–you would need two bars or about 7 oz to equal the 1 cup of chips).

Makes 20 cookies.

Paleo Nut-Free Sandwich Cookie Valentines | The Paleo Mom

Ingredients:

  1. Heat chocolate chips and coconut milk in the microwave on medium power (or do this on the stove top on low heat).  Heat for 30 seconds at a time and stir because white chocolate can seize more easily than regular chocolate.
  2. Add cinnamon.  Stir well.  Let cool slightly before assembling cookies (maybe 20-30 minutes… if you let it cool too much, the cookies will be hard to assemble).
  3. Assemble sandwich cookies by spreading the white chocolate filling over the bottom of a cookie and then placing another cookie over top (so the tops are both on the outside).  Repeat!

 

Nut-Free Yeast-Based Paleo Bread

August 18, 2012 in Paleo Bread

My original yeast-based paleo bread recipe has received so many enthusiastic comments.  I know that having a delicious paleo bread recipe has been essential in my home.  It can be a life saver with kids and for people struggling to adhere to a paleo diet.  Many of you have reported success making it without a Bread Machine, using the recipe as the base of a pizza crust, adding raisins and cinnamon to make cinnamon bread, and even using the recipe to make dinner rolls! 

This recipe is very similar, except it has no nuts.  I had several reasons for creating a nut-free yeast-based paleo bread.  Many of you have asked for a nut-free bread recipe for you children with allergies or to send with your child to their nut-free schools.  My mother-in-law is allergic to nuts and I want to have a good bread option for her visits.  I seem to be very sensitive to almonds especially, so while I can eat a slice of this bread occasionally, I can’t even eat a bite of my original yeast-based paleo bread recipe.  Plus, almond flour is very expensive.  This loaf is definitely cheaper to make.  Why use yeast?  Because that’s what makes this really taste like bread.  If you haven’t read it yet, you may be interested in my post Is Yeast Paleo? (hint: the answer is yes).

I spent over two months baking 2 or 3 variations of this recipe each week.  This recipe was much trickier to perfect than my original yeast-based paleo bread recipe (which wasn’t easy either!).  As such, I recommend measuring your ingredients carefully.  You may be able to get away with some substitutions (I think sunflower seeds would work in place of pepitas, for example), but if you make a lot of substitutions, I can’t promise your bread will turn out.

This bread holds together beautifully, so it’s great for sandwiches and toast (it takes a while in the toaster, but be patient because it’s worth it).  It’s also closer to a normal loaf size than my other recipes.  My loaves are typically a little over 3” high, equivalent size or slightly smaller than a 1.5 pound loaf in your Bread Machine (but it is denser).  My Bread Machine does 2-pound loaves, but I am very confident this would work in a 1.5-pound loaf machine (if anyone tries it in a 1-pound loaf machine, please comment as to whether or not it cooks through and fits into the loaf pans for those machines).  As with all gluten-free bread recipes, it doesn’t rise much.  That’s okay.  It also will never have a dome top.  That’s okay too.

I make this bread in a Bread Machine, which is certainly the easiest way to make this bread (gluten-free bread can be tough to get a pretty surface with made the old fashioned way, but it’s certainly possible!).  As with all homemade bread recipes, the temperature, humidity and altitude of your kitchen can impact how the bread rises.  You may need to subtract or add 1 Tbsp of water to this recipe to make it work in your kitchen.  You’ll know to subtract a little water if your loaf is a little concave on top.  You’ll know you need to add water if the top is crumbly looking.  You can optionally use Mineral Water to add a little extra rise and lightness to your loaf, but the difference is small compared to regular water, which is what I am in the habit of using. 

I hope you love this bread as much as my family does (it’s now the only bread recipe I bake on a regular basis).  I store this bread in a plastic resealable bag with a piece of paper towel wrapped around it in the fridge.  I’ve also sliced and then frozen loaves with great success.

Ingredients:

1.    Pulse pepitas in a food processor or blender until powdered (should be anywhere between the consistency of sand and finely ground nut flours). 
2.    Mix water, eggs, ground flaxseed, salt, honey, and vinegar in the bottom of your Bread Machine pan.  Use a fork to break up the eggs and mix the ground flaxseed in well.  Let sit 2 minutes before adding the dry ingredients.
3.    Add coconut oil, coconut flour, ground pepitas, tapioca and arrowroot flour on top of wet ingredients.  Sprinkle yeast on top of the flour (or follow your Bread Machine’s directions).
4.    Use the whole wheat cycle on your Bread Machine.  Very Important:  My Bread Machine had a hard time mixing these ingredients because the dough is fairly stiff.  Check during the initial knead that the ingredients are mixing well and none are sticking to the edge of the pan (if they are, use a spatula to gently push them down into the rest of the dough and maybe even help mix the dough, depending on your machine). 
5.    Remove promptly after your Bread Machine is done.  Enjoy!

If you want to bake this bread without a Bread Machine, these instructions reflect the best results reported by those of you who left comments on my original yeast-based paleo bread recipe or sent me emails to report on your success:

1.       Proof your yeast by warming the water (should feel comfortably warm and not too hot) and adding the yeast to the water.   You can do this in the bottom of your mixing bowl.  It should start to foam in 5-10 minutes.
2.       Add the flax meal and the rest of the wet ingredients to the proofed yeast.  Let sit for 2 minutes.
3.       Add your dry ingredients and stir to fully incorporate (you may want to use a standing mixer with a paddle attachment or you could do this by hand).  It would be helpful if your ingredients were room temperature or slightly warmer.
4.       Let rise in a warm corner of your kitchen for 45 minutes to 1 hour.  A great way to rise bread is to put in on your oven with the oven off but the oven light on.
5.       Pour the batter into a greased standard-sized loaf pan.  Spread out the top evenly.
6.       Let rise another 45 minutes (toward the end of that time, take it out of the oven if that’s where it was and preheat your oven to 350F).
7.       Bake for 55-65 minutes, until golden brown on top and a toothpick comes out clean.

Paleo Mallomar Ice Cream Sandwiches

June 18, 2012 in Frozen Treats

These are a wonderful decadent treat (great one to pull out for a summer barbecue or birthday party!).  My kids love helping me dip the ice cream sandwiches into the chocolate magic shell.  

This magic shell so versatile, you will love it!  You can make it with semi-sweet, bitter-sweet even extra dark chocolate, depending on your taste and how you plan to use it.  It is amazing for dipping frozen fruit into or pouring over ice cream.  You can also make little balls of ice cream with a Melon Baller, stick with a toothpick, freeze hard, dip into the magic shell and then roll in your favorite chopped nuts for delicious ice cream bonbons.  You can even add it to your Ice Cream Maker just before your ice cream is ready to get delicious melt-in-your-mouth chocolate chunks mixed right into your ice cream.  As long as you don’t dip into the jar (pour into something else if you want to dip), it will keep indefinitely at room temperature.  But, my favorite use for this magic shell is for these Mallomar Ice Cream Sandwiches.  Yield: 18. 

 

Ingredients (Chocolate Magic Shell):

 

1.    Melt chocolate and coconut oil in a small saucepot over low heat or in the microwave on medium power.  Stir well.  Let cool (depending on your room temperature, it may stay liquidy).
2.    Store for at least several months in a jar at room temperature.

Ingredients (Mallomar Ice Cream Sandwiches):

1.    Make a batch of paleo graham crackers.  Allow to cool.  Find pairs of crackers that are similar size and shape.
2.    Make a batch of Best Ever Paleo Vanilla Ice “Cream”.  Fresh out of the ice cream maker, gently spread about ½”-3/4” thick onto a graham cracker.  Place the second cracker on top and gently squeeze together. 
3.    Place in the freezer to harden (I placed on a cookie sheet lined with wax paper), at least 20 minutes.
4.    Repeat with remaining graham crackers (or however many you want to make).
5.    Remove the frozen graham cracker ice cream sandwiches from the freezer one at a time.  Hold on one end and dip into the chocolate mixture and then allow to drip while the chocolate hardens (doesn’t take long).  Turn around and dip the other side, overlapping the chocolate with the first dip.  Dip as many times as you want for however thick chocolate coating you like (I found once for each side, four times total, with overlap yielded a perfect thickness chocolate coating for our taste). 
6.    Place back in the freezer (again on wax paper) and repeat for the rest of the sandwiches.
7.    Keep in the soft zone of your freezer or allow to warm for about 5 minutes after taking them out of the freezer (if you don’t eat them immediately upon making them!).  You can individually wrap them in wax paper if you want (also makes them easier to eat), or just toss them all into a plastic tub for storage.  They will keep for a good long time.  Enjoy!