Skip to main content

Rosewater Shortbread & Chocolate Madeleines

I bet you all think I have tons of gluten-free cookbooks.  With all the baking I do, you would think so. But alas, this is not true.  I really wish there were more gourmet GF cookbooks out there.  All I find when I go to the book stores are textbook like big books filled with black and white typed out recipes. Pictures made with pen and ink as a diagram.  Blech!  These kinds of cookbooks are not inspiring at all.  Looking at these makes you NOT want to cook gluten-free.  Where are the gourmet cookbooks filled with colorful pictures and luxe ingredients?

No one wants to read a cookbook in textbook form.  I certainly don't.  I really wish that publishers would get a bit more creative with the idea of gluten-free.  If I go to Borders or Barnes and Noble I am directed to the medical health section to rummage through shelves of textbooks? Ugh.  I wish there would be more cook books that have colorful pictures and glossy pages with a selection of mouth watering recipes.  I never find this.  If you go to any baking section of a bookstore you will find gorgeous cookbooks for Macrobiotic, Dairy-Free, Lactose-Free, Casein-Free, Vegan and others.  But when it comes to gluten-free you are lead to a whole other section.  So I stick to regular gluten filled cookbooks and bake books and I convert the recipes myself.  It's so much better.  The more attune you are to your gluten-free lifestyle the more you will become comfortable converting recipes on your own.

During one of my adventures to the bookstores, I luckily found this gorgeous cookbook called Gluten-Free and Easy by Robyn Russel.  A book filled with 90 recipes divided by category.  Chapters like My GF Kitchen, Breakfast and Brunch, Salad, Soups and Snacks, Main Dishes and other categories.  Each page consists of a easy and amazing recipe and the other page has a full page colorful photograph.  It really makes you want to make these recipes.  And isn't that the point?  Robyn starts her book with all the GF essentials: what you should have in your kitchen, then she ventures to different flour blends and baking tips.

This is the ONLY GF cookbook I own.  You can purchase Robyn's cookbook at Barnes and Noble.
Online or in-store.

My favorite recipe from this book are the Madelines and the Rosewater Shortbread. Yum!  This recipe calls for Rosewater Extract, but I have never used that with these cookies.  I have tried Cocoa Extract, Orange Extract, Mint Extract and Vanilla Extract, often mixing two at the same time.  Playing with different extracts can be an fun, experimental and creative if you let it.

CHOCOLATE MADELEINES

Ingredients:
1/2 cup Rice Flour Blend
2 Tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
1/4 cup ground almonds
1/4 Tsp xanthan gum
pinch of salt
3 eggs
1/3 cup superfine sugar
1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract (can be mixed or sub'd in with another extract)
1 tsp. plain yogurt (can be low fat, fat free, or greek)
3 1/2 oz ( 7 Tablespoons) butter, melted and cooled (unsweetened butter)
confectioners' sugar (powdered sugar)

Method:

1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees
2. Grease a madeleine tin or cupcake pan
3. In a bowl sift together the flour, cocoa powder, ground almonds, xanthan gum, and salt.  In a seperate bowl beat the eggs, sugar, vanilla, and yogurt until thick and pale.  Stir in the dry ingredients, then add the melted butter and beat only until all the ingredients are incorporated.
4. Pour the mixture into the prepared pan, filling each hole half full, and bake for 7-8 minutes until just cooked through.  Allow the madeleines to set in the tin for a few minutes then carefully remove to a wire rack to cool, shell side up.
5. Dust with confectioners' sugar to serve

Makes about 20


ROSEWATER SHORTBREAD

Ingredients:
4 1/2 oz (9 Tablespoons) butter, softened
1 cup confectioners sugar, sifted
1 egg
1 tsp. Rosewater
 1 1/2 cups white rice flour, sifted
confectioners (icing) sugar, extra

Method:
1. Beat the butter and confectioners' sugar until pale, then add the egg and rosewater and beat well.  Add the sifted flour and beat until the mixture is smooth.  Cover and refrigerate overnight.
2. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees
3. Line two cookie sheets with parchment paper.
4. Roll the mixture into little balls and flatten slightly, or place into a frosting bag and pipe small shapes onto the prepared sheets, allowing room for the cookies to spread.  Bake for 8 minutes or until just starting to color.
5. Leave the shortbread to set on the trays for a few minutes then transfer to wire racks to cool.
6. Dust with extra confectioners' sugar to serve.

Makes about 30

Some of my other favorite titles from this book are:
Curried Sweet Potato Cakes with Raita
Cheddar Shortbread
Mellow Beef and Red Wine Casserole
Poached Salmon with Hollandaise Sauce
Soy Sauce and Honey Glazed Chicken

and more...

Enjoy!

xoxo Julie

www.goodiegoodiegluten-free.blogspot.com

Comments

  1. Check out the following cookbook:

    A Taste of Tradition: Pesach -
    Over 350 gluten-free & wheat-free recipes
    by Tamar Ansh

    Not all the recipes are gf but many are and they are very good

    ReplyDelete
  2. Hi there.

    Wheat free and gluten-free are differnt. Are there gluten-free recipes?

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Hey friends! We got a dot com! I have moved to goodiegoodieglutenfree (dot) com - Visit me there!

Popular posts from this blog

Magnolia Bakery-Cream Cheese Frosting

Another amazing frosting recipe from Magnolia!  I swear by these recipes, this is my go-to book for icing when I bake!! 1 pound (two 8-ounce packages) cream cheese, softened and cut into small pieces 6 tbsp. unsalted butter, softened and cut into small pieces 1 1/2 tsp. pure vanilla extract 5 cups sifted confectioners' sugar In a large bowl, on the medium speed of an electric mixer, beat the cream cheese and butter until smooth, about 3 minutes.  Add the vanilla and beat well.  Gradually add the sugar, 1 cup at a time, beating continuously until smooth and creamy.  Cover and refrigerate icing for 2-3 hours, but no longer, to thicken before using. Makes enough for one 2-or 3-layer 9-inch cake Enjoy! xoxo Julie www.goodiegoodiegluten-free.blogspot.com  

Not All Advil Is Gluten-Free!!!

After last night's POST , GF Advil was on my mind and I decided to call Advil/Pfizer this morning to get some more clarification.  In response to my post last night I advised through the website that Advil Liqui-gels, Advil Migraine and Advil Liqui-Gels PM contain a wheat derivative.  After my phone call with a lovely representative I received more information. - ALL ADVIL LIQUI-GELS contain a wheat derivative .   ALL LIQUI-GELS.  So stop these immediately if you are taking the Liqui-gels.  You maybe getting sick from a medication rather then a food and this is so important to recognize!  Just steer clear of Liqui-Gels. -ALL FORMS OF ADVIL MIGRAINE contain gluten .  There is no further information if it is just the Liqui-Gels or the Tablets, Caplets and Gel-Caps.  Pfizer does not have this info therefore they informed me to steer clear of all Advil Migraine pills. Here is what IS GLUTEN-FREE FROM ADVIL: All Advil Tablets, Gel...

What's in The Gatorade You Are Drinking?

I don't know why I never blogged about this, but I have known it for some time.  And was just reminded of this the other day while I was at CVS and felt the need to spread the gluten-free word.  I also tweeted it. Did you know that certain Gatorade flavors like the fruit punch (red) flavor has caramel coloring in it?  Yup! It totally does. In the U.S. a processed product considered gluten-free has 20 or below 20ppm ( parts per million ).  Therefore products can seem gluten-free and even say gluten-free, even if they are not 100% gluten-free because our standards allow that and consider it Gluten-Free.   And different processed foods contain different levels of gluten-some contain less then 10ppm or even 5 parts per million.  That's lower but still...no cigar. The less you consume the better and the article I just found on Celiacdisease.about.com  points that the more under 20ppm/10/5ppm products you consume, the more gluten in your system...