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Low Carb Cheese and Onion Pasty

Claire87

Well-Known Member
Messages
124
Location
UK
Type of diabetes
Type 2
Treatment type
Other
Dislikes
Brain tumours
Low Carb Cheese and Onion Pasty

Total carbs per pasty: 5.5g
Serving size: 2 pasties

Low Carb Short Crust Pastry
Ingredients:
• 1 cup (60g) of soya flour (I use roasted soya flour that has only 16g of carbs per 100g http://www.hollandandbarrett.com/pages/product_detail.asp?pid=3107&prodid=3749&cid=432)
• 20g of chilled unsalted butter, cubed
• Pinch of salt
• Approx 1 tbsp of chilled water
Method:
• Mix flour and salt.
• Cut in butter and rub butter into flour incorporating air as you go. Make sure all the butter is rubbed into the flour. Unlike normal flour it won’t look exactly like breadcrumbs, but it will be close enough.
• Gradually add water until it comes away from the bowl and forms small balls without being too sticky. (I added a ¼ cup of chilled water and then bound it together gently with my hands into a big ball)
• Dust it with a little baking powder and keep it in the fridge for about 30 mins.

While you wait for the pastry to chill, make the filling.

Cheese and Onion Pasty Filling and Finishing
Ingredients
• Short Crust Pastry (see above)
• 2 tablespoons of sunflower oil
• 1 x medium onion
• 75g cheddar cheese (1cm thick slice off a block, cut into cm cubes)
• 1 tablespoon of Paprika
• A pinch of salt and pepper (add to taste)
• 1 egg

Method
• Chop onions as small as possible
• Cut the cheese in to 1cm cubes
• Put the sunflower oil in the frying pan and gently fry the onions until they are soft
• Mix the softened onions, cubed cheese, and sunflower oil from frying pan with paprika, salt and pepper in a bowl – until you have a chunky red filling. It’ll look like red cheese chunks, red oil and red onions in a bowl.
• Get the pastry out of the fridge.
• Don’t roll it out. Roll half of it into a ball in your hands and flatten onto a sheet of greaseproof paper. Flatten into a disc the size of a small plate with your hands.
• Put 2 tablespoons of filling into a pastry circle.
• Fold the greaseproof paper in half to fold over the pastry and press down around the edges to make a sealed pasty. (a half circle)
• Repeat for second pasty.
• Put the greaseproof paper with pasties on onto a baking tray carefully. They do break apart easily in this state.
• Whisk up the egg and glaze each pasty with it.
• Cut lines in the top of the pasties to stop them exploding in the oven
• Cook in the middle of the pre-heated oven for about 30 minutes at 200°C (180C in fan assisted ovens), or until golden

I just tried these and it tasted great. The pastry is a bit nutty, but you can't taste it with the filling. It's nice and crumbly and very filling. I might try putting some grated cheese into the pastry next time, to see how it turns out. You can make a lot of these and freeze them after cooking, to be reheated in the oven for a quick meal later on.

You can also change up the fillings and get creative; Cornish pasties, leek pasties, steak pasties etc. It’s just a case of using different fillings.

Most of the carbs are in the pastry (with 0.7g per onion in each pasty), so remember to add on carbs if you have any in your fillings.

It looks like a pasty and tastes like a pasty. A fab addition to the low carb diet

If you want to use the pastry for sweet things (like cherry pie) just add some sweetner to the dry flour mix, before you rub in the butter.

To ensure you don't miss out on nutrients, having it with boiled vegetables or salads are a good nutritious meal.
 
That sounds so nice and filling.

I have tried a ready made Free From pasty and it was awful to taste, really tasted bad and also expensive.

I'm off into town tomorrow, so I will pop into Holland and Barratt. I wonder, would it be sold in local family run Asian shops,I know one is Ghurkha, as we have a couple in the town, might be cheaper as well :idea:

Thanks :thumbup:

RRB
 
Definitely one to try. I do like cheese and onion. It's one of those great combinations. The short crust patry recipe should work as a good substitute for the Hairy Bikers cornish pasties too. I did these before diagnosis and they were brill. Just up the swede, onion and skirt steak and reduce the potato and use thinly sliced new potato. Something to do at the weekend.

http://www.goodtoknow.co.uk/recipes/396 ... nish-pasty
 
Wow! :thumbup: I am definitely trying that! I like the idea of cheese and onion but I will also make some using butternut squash as the main ingredient of the filling. I can hear the oven in the background cooking a garden picked rhubarb and shop bought apple crumble. Do you think this pastry mix would make a crumble topping? I am more than willing to be a guinea pig (well, pig anyway :lol: ) if you think it might.
Lee.
 
Just a quick update: I made a second batch because they were yummy, and the second batch looked a bit like they had been run over. They still tasted great, but the pastry cracked during baking. So, it's still a great pasty, but it may not come out looking perfectly round. Still as a good meal goes, it was lovely.

Also, if anyone has a problem with the nutty flavour in the flour, I'm thinking of trying out garlic salt in the pastry or Italian herbs to be a bit different. Just something to think about trying.

Thanks for the additional recipe Yorksman. I'm sure people craving a cornish pasty will love those.

@Irw60: The flour is a really crumbly flour, so it should work in a crumble. It's got a nutty flavour, but it's not overpowering, so yep. I can't see why it won't work in a crumble. If the flavour doesn't work, some seasoning or sweetening in the flour mix should sort it out.
 
oh oh oh oh oh....i just cant wait to try these i always loved pasties, thankyou
 
any reccomendations for an alternative to the Soya flour? Can't tolerate it at all. On my "Must avoid at all costs" list
 
Here are the values from "Dr. Atkins Carbohydrate Gram Counter":

----all these values are for 1/2 Cup of cooked rice-----

Brown - 20.6 grams of carbohydrate
Arborio - 25 grams
White - 21.9 grams
Wild - 16 grams
Here are the per slice values for different breads (understanding that this may vary according to brand - check the label on the bread):
French - 13.9 grams
Oatmeal - 12.6 grams
Rye - 12.1 grams
Wheat - 12.2 grams
White - 13.4 grams
Whole grain - 12.2 grams

*Remembering that Dr. Atkins starts out the diet with a total of 20 grams of carbohydrate a day, that's one big sock-it-to-me as far as carbohydrates are concerned. Why bother with the diet if you're going to do this to it?

I'm here all week.
 
Claire87 said:
It looks like a pasty and tastes like a pasty. A fab addition to the low carb diet

I made a couple of these today and indeed it does make a very tasty short pastry.

Sadly, I am new to pastry making and I'm afraid I found it difficult to work with so my pasties looked a little, ermm .... rustic. Doesn't affect the taste of course which I found impressive. I just wish I could make it look prettier. Something to work on. It tastes better than the Hairy Dieters' idea of using pizza dough for a pie base. That tastes OK and, being tougher, you can work with it more easily, but this tastes much better.

I couldn't get it thin enough to use all the cheese and onion mix but I simply used the left over with the left over egg and made a spicy cheese and onion omlette which went down a treat whilst the pasties were in the oven.

I bet it would taste good made into little parcels filled with a mushroom and a garlicky mayonaisse sauce.
 
Hi I'm at the ball in the fridge stage........I have no paprika, I have cumin, coriander, Korma curry powder, cinnamon, turmeric, thyme, oregano, nutmeg, cloves and cardamom pods will any of these do do you think? Urgent please lol I want my dinner
 
Andy12345 said:
Hi I'm at the ball in the fridge stage........I have no paprika, I have cumin, coriander, Korma curry powder, cinnamon, turmeric, thyme, oregano, nutmeg, cloves and cardamom pods will any of these do do you think? Urgent please lol I want my dinner

salt and pepper will do nicely, black pepper that is. The cheese and onion is already quite strong.
 
Oh my.... They are terrific! Wife agrees best thing I've cooked yet, never made anything like this before, I'm putting one in the fridge for tomorrow, and I'll be experimenting with some other flavours, Thankyou so much for the recipe 1st pastry I ate since diag



Maybee steak and veg me thinks next
 
Andy12345 said:
Maybee steak and veg me thinks next

They are good yes. The pastry is a little difficult to handle but practice will help and not overfilling it. Or just make more pastry, it's not difficult

I posted earlier a Hairy Bikers recipe for a cornish pasty. Their recipe has too much potato for someone with diabetes but reducing that and using thinly sliced new potato should be OK. Skirt steak is the best meat as it makes a good gravy and when thinly sliced cooks quickly. The problem with a pasty is that the meat, potato, swede, onion and pastry all have to cook from raw at the same time. You can slice skirt steak accross the grain into thin sheets and just stack slices of all the ingredients alternating them. Just add a little dollop of butter before you fold the pasrty closed.

That's a great tip by Claire to use baking paper and fold using that. Stops the short pastry from completely falling to pieces.

http://www.goodtoknow.co.uk/recipes/396 ... nish-pasty
 
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