Yup! As does salad.Does your word "sla" have any connection to the Americo/English "slaw"?
@ziggy_w , the like for yesterday’s food was for menu and tips on thickening not the impending hard lockdown. @shelley262 thanks for the tag and bread recipe. B= Assam TWAMIS: Dockey CWCSFCS and coffee walnut Fatt Bar - it very definitely wasn’t either of those. Chewy, gooey more like. L: None. Eventually munched a Waitrose soft cheese stuffed mini pepper - oh, so very much my “thing”; EM: Belly pork, roast veggies, (sprouts and chorizo, kale, broccoli) gravy, Vits. Red wine. Being very generous, 6 ish/10 - top score for cooked LC atm. Currently watching White Christmas- (had to buy for £4.99 ) - please don't think badly of me.
Cheers for that - looks lovely - enjoy! are you taking any orders?@Mrs T 123 and @ianpspurs - think you were interested in the results of todays modified recipe. I've cut out the egg and butter completly and now using Olive oil and increased the fibre stuff and believe that it will keep better using the ingredients in there. It has developed a great crust and also a light texture and good crumb. OH tried it just with butter and marmalade! and said it was delicious and best to date so that is great. Think the smell wafting around as it is proving and cooking definitley make you feel tempted!
Low carb bread using vital wheat gluten and inulin to ‘feed’ the yeast
I used a stand mixer to knead the bread mixture. I used a loaf tin 30cms in length and 11cms in width you could use two small tins if prefer. I also use a bread slicer to cut the bread into even slices. Bread freezes well once cut into slices I tend to pack small batches of slices together kept separate by kitchen towel pieces.
Carb content of the whole mixture is 28g per loaf – I managed to slice the loaf into 28 reasonable size slices which worked out as 1g per slice.
Yeast starter - Start 30 -40 mins before making the bread Put in a jug or small mixing bowl
Two cups of warm water
One tablespoon of inulin dissolved in the warm water
15g (3 teaspoons) of dried yeast (traditional – not fast acting) sprinkled on the water and cover with cling film or similar
Should quickly form a froth - if warm place may be in 20 mins but cooler places can take up to 40 mins.
While the yeast is proving
Put to one side a cup of warm water with salt dissolved in it – I use 2 teaspoons but individual preference
in the big stand mixer bowl add:
150g of milled seeds (I use organic flax/linseed)
80g of oat fibre
60g of psyllium husk the fibre variety not the powdered one (NB make sure that it is the Blond variety as some can turn the bread purple!)
230g of vital wheat gluten
3 tablespoons of extra virgin olive oil.
Mix the dry ingredients together with a dough hook then *slowly add the proven yeast starter, the extra virgin olive oil and finally the extra cup of water mixed with salt (Salt kills yeast so add after yeast mix is beaten in.) *I also added the proven yeast mix to the dry ingredients and let it stand for about 5 mins before I started machine up to give the yeast adjustment time!) Knead for at least 5 mins until mixed and stretchy. I kneaded for 10 mins in total at different speeds.
Prepare a buttered loaf tin with baking paper at bottom. Add the dough to the tin, add some sprinkled seeds to the top of the loaf, if liked, and cover with buttered Clingfilm (or reusable silicone sheet) and tea towel. Leave until doubled in size this can take 1 – 2 hours depending on how warm it is.
Meanwhile heat oven to 190 fan and then add to oven for 10 mins, then reduce temperature to 180 and cook for further 25 mins and then tip out of tin and put back in for 5 mins to finish off. (Cooking time 40 mins in total)
Cost – I bulk buy ingredients and use organic if possible - which work out at around £4 a loaf
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Good luck with the Morrisons order - I received mine last night missing the selection boxes I had wanted and which had been the main reason for doing the order online as believe it or not decent selection boxes are almost impossible to get here (I managed to source 1 I needed today from elsewhere) and pepsi max (yeah really - I couldn't believe it)Evening all.
TMAD again today.
Lunch was roast beef. Slightly less pink than I’d have liked, but still delicious with a sizeable crispy, fatty crust. The juices were rich and delicious also.
Dinner involved an experiment, namely a taste of Branston pickle for the first time since diagnosis 4 years ago. Used to be a staple and saw it in Lidl yesterday. Added about a heaped teaspoon full to the side of a plate with 1 slice Mestemacher bread (buttered), a few small pieces of leftover beef and a couple of slices of cheese. The pickle tasted unbelievably sweet. Left about half of it and won’t be inclined to eat it again. Cheese/beef excellent though.
Large Morrison’s order due tonight. No substitutes or missing items so all good.
You prompted me to check out if it’s being shown this Christmas and white Christmas the film is on on the tv on the 20th on channel 4 at 2.30 or plus one at 3.30 made a note as never seen the film so going to watch with mum she’ll love it. Thank you for mentioning it. We have started watching talking pictures on channel 81 loads of old classics just about to watch spring and port wine.@ziggy_w , the like for yesterday’s food was for menu and tips on thickening not the impending hard lockdown. @shelley262 thanks for the tag and bread recipe. B= Assam TWAMIS: Dockey CWCSFCS and coffee walnut Fatt Bar - it very definitely wasn’t either of those. Chewy, gooey more like. L: None. Eventually munched a Waitrose soft cheese stuffed mini pepper - oh, so very much my “thing”; EM: Belly pork, roast veggies, (sprouts and chorizo, kale, broccoli) gravy, Vits. Red wine. Being very generous, 6 ish/10 - top score for cooked LC atm. Currently watching White Christmas- (had to buy for £4.99 ) - please don't think badly of me.
Shan't think badly of you, if you won't think badly of me for forgetting to mention that I used to enjoy traditional jazz (not the way it has developed in the last 40 or so years) and some country and western - those parts of it that hark back to the old folk songs from previous centuries. It's the harmonies that I enjoy. White Christmas - not for me, but each to his own.
Breakfast was porridge - probably said that before. Lunch was a quesadilla with some of the ragout and processed cheese (the only processed cheese in the house was Dairylea slices - Em's favourite which I had to use because I can't get processed American cheese at a reasonable price and the cheddar I have at present is far too sharp) - one tortilla, filled and folded in half and fried in butter. Evening meal still to come and I am wondering what to put with my scrambled egg or omelette. Don't want more cheese. Don't have any mushrooms. I do have some tomatoes and onions but not feeling keen on that. Hhmm. BGs high today. Me getting back to normal then.
I vote chorizo. It's fab, with finely chopped onion in an omelette !
Hey - they look fab - what is the recipe please for the chocolate and nut one?Made two batches of LC granola this afternoon, one chocolate and nut and the other chocolate and raspberry
Breakfast: my usual low carb coconut ‘porridge’ with strawberries and cream washed down with a black coffee
Late morning: black coffee and chocolate phd bar.
Skipped lunch.
Mid afternoon: black coffee and a few pecans.
Dinner: pork and apple stuffed chicken with 3 mini roast potatoes followed by SF jelly, cream and LC chocolate granola.
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