Other food loves (from previous food hates) are… herbal
teas, peanut butter and dark chocolate.
There is one thing that I still just can’t get my head around, and
that’s mushrooms. It’s a shame as I have seen so many amazing and versatile
recipes that use mushrooms, often as a meat substitute. I have come far though
since I now enjoy mushrooms raw with a dip, but just not cooked (yeah, it’s ok
I think I am odd too!)
Anyway, back to dried fruit. Namely currants. Classic
Easter biscuits are reminiscent of garibaldi biscuits with a delicate crumb and
the sweetness of the currants coming through. The tops are often glazed and
sprinkled with a little extra sugar and the biscuits have a subtle warming
spice.
These classic biscuits are also classically filled with
refined sugars, flours, butter and egg.
Not here!
I wanted to play around with achieving a moist delicate
and slightly chewy biscuit using unrefined sugars, whole grain GF flours and
coconut oil. I made a couple of different batches and each work really well, so
it would seem this is a pretty versatile recipe.
The first batch I made used my classic mix of GF flours
(buckwheat, ground almonds and tapioca flour) plus polenta to give a slight
crunch to the texture. The second batch used predominantly blanched almond
flour that I have had some fun playing with recently. The almond flour, along
with various other flours and GF ingredients came from The Real Food Source, and now I have the pleasure of my almond
flour variation being featured on their blog in the run up to Easter…..please check it out here.
Recipe: Classic Easter biscuits
Makes approx. 12 biscuits (depending on size and shape of
cutter)
Ingredients
½ cup coconut butter- melted (if using coconut oil reduce to slightly
over ¼ cup)
¼ cup agave plus a pinch of
stevia if necessary
2 tsp vanilla extract (or make your own)
2 tbs ground flax or chia plus
3 tbs hot water (mix and allow to sit for 1 min)
3 tbs polenta
1 ½ cup GF flour mix (see above
or use you own)
½ tsp baking powder
¼ tsp baking soda
½ cup currants
1 tsp cinnamon and mixed spice
mixed
Pinch salt
Method
Mix dry ingredients (except
currants) together in a large bowl. Mix wet ingredients together in a small
bowl and then add to the dry. Add the currants last (my currants were partially
blended into smaller pieces but you can keep them whole if you prefer). Bring
the dough into a ball with your hands. Roll out on a lightly floured surface to
a little under 1cm thick. Cut into shapes and place on a parchment lined baking
sheet.
Lightly brush the tops with soy
milk and sprinkle with a little coconut sugar or rapadura if desired.
Bake in a pre-heated oven at
180C for approx. 10mins until slightly golden.
These biscuits will store in an airtight container for up to a week, there will also freeze. The biscuits are dense and chewy by nature and so do not need to retain their crisp 'freshly baked' feel.
For tips and info on recipe measurement conversions, ingredients, substitutions and the methods behind how I do things.... check out my 'baking tips' tab at the top of the page.
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