Good luck with your coffee experiment I hope that it doesn’t turn out to be coffee that causes your higher BG levelsGood evening all.
I’ve had a day of lovely low bgs - average for the day is 4.8 I’ve had pretty much the same sort of meals I always have, so it’s with a sinking feeling that realisation is dawning: that I haven’t had coffee since breakfast, and even then it was 1 mug rather than2. I’ve been drinking mostly tea and almond milk today, might try the same tomorrow (if I can).
B: smoked salmon, scrambled egg, avocado. Coffee with cream
L: peppered mackerel with salad of rocket, avocado, radishes, walnuts and a tomato from the garden with olive oil and acv dressing. SF jelly and cream.
G&T with a few olives
D: roast pork, cauli cheese, buttered cabbage and roast celeriac with a glass of red wine.
Hi all. Hungry day which ended with me baking the flourless chocolate cake posted by @maglil55 pretty tasty and works out about 4g carbs a slice. Didn’t bother with the margarita cream (not much appeal to a teetotaller) and settled for plain old clotted cream.
Breakfast - none
Lunch - 2 boiled eggs, Coop chorizo and Gouda rollitos (new product line, come in a pack of 4), 50g Trader Joes 85% chocolate
Snack - bag of pork crunch
Dinner - fathead pizza, adapted recipe with no egg, fewer ground almonds and 30% less ingredients. Topped with pepperoni and Polish sausage
Just tested the flourless chocolate cake with some clotted cream. Remainder will be taken to work on Monday.
@DJC3 I have the ingredients and new loaf tin ready to bake the lemon zucchini cake tomorrow. Seeking advice from the more experienced bakers. Recipe calls for 1 and a quarter cups of sugar. Looking up conversions granulated sugar (erythritol in my case) would be 250g and powdered sugar would be 160g. I have the granulated erythritol but 250g sounds an awful lot. Thinking of splitting the difference and using 200g. Does that sound about right?
I’d use weight for weight ie 250g I also add a couple of stevia drops to cakes made for family to give a bit more sweetness but wouldn’t if doing it just for me! I also normally would use a cup measure to check the weight needed the first time I did it - but that’s me! Hope it goes well chocolate cake looks very tempting.Hi all. Hungry day which ended with me baking the flourless chocolate cake posted by @maglil55 pretty tasty and works out about 4g carbs a slice. Didn’t bother with the margarita cream (not much appeal to a teetotaller) and settled for plain old clotted cream.
Breakfast - none
Lunch - 2 boiled eggs, Coop chorizo and Gouda rollitos (new product line, come in a pack of 4), 50g Trader Joes 85% chocolate
Snack - bag of pork crunch
Dinner - fathead pizza, adapted recipe with no egg, fewer ground almonds and 30% less ingredients. Topped with pepperoni and Polish sausage
Just tested the flourless chocolate cake with some clotted cream. Remainder will be taken to work on Monday.
@DJC3 I have the ingredients and new loaf tin ready to bake the lemon zucchini cake tomorrow. Seeking advice from the more experienced bakers. Recipe calls for 1 and a quarter cups of sugar. Looking up conversions granulated sugar (erythritol in my case) would be 250g and powdered sugar would be 160g. I have the granulated erythritol but 250g sounds an awful lot. Thinking of splitting the difference and using 200g. Does that sound about right?
I’d use weight for weight ie 250g I also add a couple of stevia drops to cakes made for family to give a bit more sweetness but wouldn’t if doing it just for me! I also normally would use a cup measure to check the weight needed the first time I did it - but that’s me! Hope it goes well chocolate cake looks very tempting.
I invested in a cheap set and use it to convert recipes first time I do them to grams so don’t have to mess with cups but your computer calculator sounds like a good solution. Hope it goes well look forward to seeing end resultThanks @shelley262 and @DJC3
250g it is! I don’t have any cup measures (and wish Americans would just use normal weights!)
(and wish Americans would just use normal weights!)
The cake looks good, was it a success and as nice as the Nigella choc olive oil cake.?Hi all. Hungry day which ended with me baking the flourless chocolate cake posted by @maglil55 pretty tasty and works out about 4g carbs a slice. Didn’t bother with the margarita cream (not much appeal to a teetotaller) and settled for plain old clotted cream.
Breakfast - none
Lunch - 2 boiled eggs, Coop chorizo and Gouda rollitos (new product line, come in a pack of 4), 50g Trader Joes 85% chocolate
Snack - bag of pork crunch
Dinner - fathead pizza, adapted recipe with no egg, fewer ground almonds and 30% less ingredients. Topped with pepperoni and Polish sausage
Just tested the flourless chocolate cake with some clotted cream. Remainder will be taken to work on Monday.
@DJC3 I have the ingredients and new loaf tin ready to bake the lemon zucchini cake tomorrow. Seeking advice from the more experienced bakers. Recipe calls for 1 and a quarter cups of sugar. Looking up conversions granulated sugar (erythritol in my case) would be 250g and powdered sugar would be 160g. I have the granulated erythritol but 250g sounds an awful lot. Thinking of splitting the difference and using 200g. Does that sound about right?
The cake looks good, was it a success and as nice as the Nigella choc olive oil cake.?
I think it’s probably liquids as lemons vary in size and courgettes hold a lot of water I’d experiment with using less liquid! Great that tastes good thoughView attachment 27674 View attachment 27675 View attachment 27676 Ok everyone, some more baking advice needed after a minor disaster with the zucchini lemon cake. @maglil55 @shelley262 @DJC3 @jayney27 @ianpspurs any ideas?
Pics of my rapidly collapsing cake attached.
Original recipe:
https://www.momontimeout.com/lemon-zucchini-cake-recipe/
I made lots of substitutions to keep it low carb and followed some advice on this website to try and keep proportions right:
http://www.paleopantry.org/article-replacing-flour-with-ground-almonds-in-baking-recipes/
So this was my final list of ingredients:
250g erythritol, 106ml olive oil, 2 eggs, 80ml almond milk (plain, unsweetened), juice/zest 2 lemons, 225g courgettes, 250g ground almonds, 15g chia seeds, 1 tsp vanilla extract, 2 teaspoons baking powder, half teaspoon salt. Following the website advice I cooked at gas 3 instead of 4.
All looked fine but when I lifted the cake after the requisite 15 minute initial cooling period, it sank into the parchment paper and was obviously too heavy to stay in shape. The good news is that it tastes good - couldn’t resist a bit of a taste! Might tone the lemon down a bit, but not too sweet so will give it another go. Clean out of ground almonds and erythritol though!
Any thoughts on what I should try adjusting?
Thanks.
I think it’s probably liquids as lemons vary in size and courgettes hold a lot of water I’d experiment with using less liquid! Great that tastes good though
Hi, I would tend to agree with @shelley262 as it still looks very moist, it does look good though almost like a sponge pudding, yummyView attachment 27674 View attachment 27675 View attachment 27676 Ok everyone, some more baking advice needed after a minor disaster with the zucchini lemon cake. @maglil55 @shelley262 @DJC3 @jayney27 @ianpspurs any ideas?
Pics of my rapidly collapsing cake attached.
Original recipe:
https://www.momontimeout.com/lemon-zucchini-cake-recipe/
I made lots of substitutions to keep it low carb and followed some advice on this website to try and keep proportions right:
http://www.paleopantry.org/article-replacing-flour-with-ground-almonds-in-baking-recipes/
So this was my final list of ingredients:
250g erythritol, 106ml olive oil, 2 eggs, 80ml almond milk (plain, unsweetened), juice/zest 2 lemons, 225g courgettes, 250g ground almonds, 15g chia seeds, 1 tsp vanilla extract, 2 teaspoons baking powder, half teaspoon salt. Following the website advice I cooked at gas 3 instead of 4.
All looked fine but when I lifted the cake after the requisite 15 minute initial cooling period, it sank into the parchment paper and was obviously too heavy to stay in shape. The good news is that it tastes good - couldn’t resist a bit of a taste! Might tone the lemon down a bit, but not too sweet so will give it another go. Clean out of ground almonds and erythritol though!
Any thoughts on what I should try adjusting?
Thanks.
Just what I was going to say. It has a wet look about it. You did right trying to get as much water out as possible from the courgette. I'd increase the oven temperature too.I think it’s probably liquids as lemons vary in size and courgettes hold a lot of water I’d experiment with using less liquid! Great that tastes good though
You could up the chia seeds a little too. Wonderful little things for absorbing liquid.Just what I was going to say. It has a wet look about it. You did right trying to get as much water out as possible from the courgette. I'd increase the oven temperature too.
@DJC3 Re our exchange yesterday about the crime against humanity that is cupcakes - this is much more tasteful.@Goonergal my first thought was the liquid in the courgettes too, but everyone else has said the same I see.
I agree it looks like a yummy sponge pud though - perfect with a dollop of clotted cream I’d say.
@DJC3 Re our exchange yesterday about the crime against humanity that is cupcakes - this is much more tasteful.Courgette recipe may be an idea as it seems to be a bumper year. Also, does the batter come out crispy as that is something I sorely miss in my life
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