- Messages
- 4,384
- Location
- Suffolk, UK
- Type of diabetes
- Type 2
- Treatment type
- Tablets (oral)
- Dislikes
- Diet drinks - the artificial sweeteners taste vile.
Having to forswear foods I have loved all my life.
Trying to find low carb meals when eating out.
Hi @LittleGreyCat,
I make something similar called potato pancake in German (picture below to make sure we are actually talking about comparable foods) using zuchini, a bit of carrot (instead of potatoes) and onion. As zucchini also contains a lot of water (such as celeriac), this might might work for you too. To bind the batter, I use eggs and psyllium husk (which usually takes the role of gluten in baking, so don't use too much) as a binding agent -- so virtually no extra carbs.
Do you pre-cook the onions or just mix them in raw?
I was wondering if this was based on a recipe using grated raw potato instead of mash.
I've never tried psyllium husk so I foresee interesting times ahead.
http://allrecipes.co.uk/recipe/31266/easy-potato-cakes.aspx
for a standard potato cake recipe.
I think I will try just adding an egg first, to see if that binds enough.
Before I was diagnosed, I used to make rösti potatoes. You have to shred the potatoes and squeeze them in a cloth. Lots of starch pours out, so I wonder if you could use that method to make lower carb potatoes for the cakes.
Mixed in a couple of eggs and a load of grated cheese.
This resulted in something not too far off a stiff batter.
Fried it in a frying pan and finished it off under a grill.
Another time I think that I would just bake it in an oven.
Still very flexible; posting this while it cools a bit.
This is something like a frittata which hopefully will be nice but was not really what I was aiming for.
Edit:
Well, that was interesting. Very eggy and fluffy and soft.
Took me a while to work out where I'd tasted it before.
It was like the filling from quiche (or egg and bacon pie if you can't be doing with foreign muck).
It does make me wonder if there is scope for a quiche without pastry, eaten hot or cold.
It was OK but needed a few more flavours to be truly great.
Just had a quick check and a quiche without pastry looks simple and very low carbohydrate!
Essentially eggs beaten with milk and cream.
Add tomatoes, fried bacon, etc. to the pastry case (or lack of) before pouring on the egg mix and baking in the oven.
I seem to have arrived at a point where that celeriac doesn't add anything to the traditional recipe.
However I think I will try that recipe to see how it goes without pastry.
This doesn't, of course, get me any further with potato cake recipes although it is interesting that the celeriac may add a lightness to what would otherwise be mainly baked egg.
I make a similar quick crustless quiche adding a few walnuts which give a bit of a crunchCeleriac chips are delicious too- chop as usual, add a bit of olive oil and bake till nicely browned!
Also, quick quiche....line tin with baking paper, add grated cheese, beaten eggs and anything else you fancy that's low carb (if bacon/lardons etc then cook up first so crispy). I like adding mushrooms, broccoli, green peppers, feta chunks. Good for picnics too.
OMG, i now know what's for dinner tonight! That looks absolutely delicious, i just don't really like the grating procedure.Hi @LittleGreyCat,
I make something similar called potato pancake in German (picture below to make sure we are actually talking about comparable foods) using zuchini, a bit of carrot (instead of potatoes) and onion. As zucchini also contains a lot of water (such as celeriac), this might might work for you too. To bind the batter, I use eggs and psyllium husk (which usually takes the role of gluten in baking, so don't use too much) as a binding agent -- so virtually no extra carbs.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?