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Gluten Free Sourdough Discard Crumpets

Gluten Free Sourdough Discard Crumpets

Congratulations! If you are on this page, it means that your gluten free sourdough starter has started bubbling! Now it’s time to use your discards to make some yummy sourdough bakes!

This is the easiest discard recipe and I use it all the time. Usually I use it to make sourdough crumpets which my girl absolutely loves! They can be eaten on their own or with jam. The family loves the garlic version. (The picture is a garlic crumpet). If you have muffin rings, you can use them to make muffins. I have used them as pizza bases as well.

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Gluten Free Sourdough Discard Crumpet Recipe

Ingredients

– 1 cup (270g) gluten free sourdough starter or discard

– 1tsp sugar

– 1/2 tsp salt

– 1/2 tsp baking soda

– 1/2 tbsp ghee/cooking oil

Method

1. Whisk to combine discards, sugar and salt.

2. Heat up your pan. Add baking soda into the batter and whisk it in lightly to make sure that it has been thoroughly mixed in.

3. Pour 1/2 tbsp oil onto the hot pan and spread it to coat the pan. Ladle the batter onto the pan. I use the tablespoon (1-2 tbsp). You can make a few crumpets depending on the size of your pan.

4. Cook for a few mins until you see the top is set (you will see some bubbles on top).

5. Flip crumpets to lightly brown on the other side.

6. Cool the cooked crumpets on the rack. Or… if you can’t wait, like my girl, you can eat them when they are hot… If you don’t want to eat them immediately, you can freeze them in a single layer on a silicon mat in the freezer. Store them in a box when they have been frozen. You can toast them straight from the freezer next time.

*For garlic crumpets, you can combine with the garlic butter here. Or just mix minced garlic with butter, spread them on top of the crumpets and toast them in the oven.

Happy baking! All suggestions and questions are welcome. Just write them in the comments.

Other gluten free sourdough projects

Other fermentation projects

Gluten Free Sourdough Starter

Gluten Free Sourdough Starter

All sourdough breads start life…. from a sourdough starter. Hehe. Ok, that was lame. Anyway, before you can bake a loaf of sourdough bread, you need the starter. The starter replaces the commercial yeast found in the normal bread. It is full of bacteria that do all the work in the bread for you and it is natural.

Creating a sourdough starter isn’t easy. Starting one that is gluten free is even more difficult. If you are leading a gluten free lifestyle, you will know that gluten free flours cost a lot more than the normal wheat flour out there, especially during the covid 19 lockdown period. They are even harder to find than gold! (exaggeration…)

I went through a lot of trial and error and trawled through lots of literature (online or in print, there are a lot of information on normal sourdough but very little on gluten free ones! So frustrating!) before I finally have a successful gluten free sourdough starter (which I named Scooby Dough) that doubles every time it is fed. By then, I have already used up sacks of various gluten free flours, literally, to create it.

Create a gluten free flour mix

I created a gluten free flour mix because I wanted my starter to be easily adaptable to any sourdough recipe and also imbued with various kinds of bacteria present in the different flours. You don’t have to do this. You can have a pure brown rice starter or a buckwheat starter or just a mix of 2 flours. The gluten free flours you can use are as follows : brown rice flour, buckwheat flour, sorghum flour, teff flour, millet flour. The most common starters are made of 50/50 brown rice/buckwheat. If you are allergic to any of these flours, just leave them out when creating the starter.

Setting up the gluten free sourdough starter

You will need :

– a sterilised clean glass jar or bowl with a cover

– weighing scale

– gluten free flour mix

– room temperature water (I have a filtration system at home, so I am using filtered water)

Day 1

In the morning, weigh out 20g gf flour mix, 20g water. Mix them thoroughly in a small bowl. The texture should be yoghurt like. Carefully, transfer the mix into the sterilised glass jar. Cover it loosely without screwing the cap. Leave it in a cool corner without direct sunlight.

In the evening, weigh out 20g gf flour mix, 20g water. Add them to the mix in the jar and mix them thoroughly. The proportion is always 1:1:1 – starter : flour : water. Put a rubber band around the level of your mix, so that you can tell if the starter has increased in volume and the amount of increase.

Day 2

Morning : Weigh out 20g starter, 40g flour, 40g water. Put the rest of the starter into a glass jar or container and keep it in the fridge. For the first few days, the bacteria has not been activated so it is not advisable to make anything with them yet. Wash the glass jar so that there aren’t any remnants in the jar which may cause mould to form. Mix everything in a bowl and transfer into the clean jar.

Evening :Weigh out 40g flour, 40g water and add them into the mix in the jar. Mix thoroughly.

Repeat the steps until your starter starts to bubble. This usually takes about 7-14 days. Once your starter starts to bubble, you can start using the discards in your fridge to make sourdough discard bakes.

Continue with the steps until your starter doubles in volume after 1 feeding. That means it is now ready for baking. Congratulations! You can give your pet starter a name (it is alive after all!) and start baking with it.

Q: What if it still doesn’t rise after 7-14 days?

A: Normally, it should. If it doesn’t, try replacing water with a fermented liquid such as yeast water, kombucha, ginger bug, whey. Another way is to add 5g of sugar every feed.

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Meet my pet starter, Scooby Dough!

Here is a picture of my pet starter Scooby Dough! Look at all his beautiful bubbles! If you find it too tedious and expensive (gluten free flours aren’t cheap) to create your own starter, you can buy an offspring of Scooby Dough here! You can use it to bake immediately. It is a very versatile starter and you can also change it to a starter of your own liking because it has been infused with a variety of gluten free flours.

Hibernating Sourdough Starter in Fridge

If you find that you don’t bake every day and the sourdough starter can be a very hungry pet, just pop it into your fridge after your last bake. It will go into hibernation mode. Just be sure to take it out once a week and feed it once. Let it double in volume then put it back in the fridge.

Plan ahead for your bakes. Take the starter out of the fridge 1 day in advance and feed it once in the morning to reactivate it. If it doesn’t double after that feed, you will need to feed it again in the evening. Once it doubles, it’s ready for a bake.

Other gluten free sourdough projects

Other fermentation projects

 

 

Gluten Free Sourdough Projects

Gluten Free Sourdough Projects

I have never been good in the kitchen, be it baking or cooking. My home economics teachers can attest to that. It was extremely difficult when my little one was diagnosed with multiple food allergies, including wheat. I discovered that wheat was anywhere and everywhere. And the food industry in Singapore was poorly equipped to deal with such an allergy. So I didn’t have much of a choice but to cook them myself.

It has been a pretty amazing journey since. I don’t profess to be a master chef but the food have been decent enough for my little kiddos.

To me, baking bread is like the ultimate nirvana, not to mention sourdough. But now, I can even bake gluten free sourdough which is even harder than the regular sourdough because of the lack of gluten in it. So, if I (a complete baking idiot) can do it, I believe anyone out there can.

Here is a list of my gluten free sourdough projects.

Gluten Free Sourdough Starter

Gluten Free Sourdough Discard Crumpets

Gluten Free Sourdough Cinnamon Flatbread

If you are interested in other fermentation projects, just click here.

My Fermented Food Projects

My Fermented Food Projects

I have been intrigued with fermented food ever since I came across it on my quest to cure 宝贝’s eczema. I have even brought love for fermented food further by founding Craft & Culture with Winnie, so that we can reach out to more people out there who loves it but have no time or passion to make them.

Here are some of the books that got me started on fermentation.

Wild Fermentation – the Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods by Sandor Ellix Katz

Sandor Katz is the Father of Fermentation. His books details the science behind fermentation and various kinds of fermented food. It’s not a pretty book though because it is wordy and doesn’t have many pictures to follow. But it is very detailed and is a wealth of information.

The Art of Fermentation : An In-Depth Exploration of Essential Concepts and Processes from around the World

This is his 2nd book.

Fermented Vegetables by Kirsten K. Shockey & Christopher Shockey

I use this book extensively for fermentation of vegetables. It is very detailed with step by step information and beautiful pictures.

My Fermentations

Milk Kefir

Kombucha

Sauerkraut

Gluten Free Sourdough

Miso

Honey Garlic Ferment

Honey Cranberry Ferment

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Raspberry Almond Cake (Gluten Free)

Raspberry Almond Cake (Gluten Free)

Gluten Free Raspberry Almond Cake Recipe

I must really thank Juan (Check out her instagram @juanspantry for more recipes) for this wonderful gluten free Raspberry Almond cake recipe. Anyone who is on a gluten free diet will totally understand how difficult it is to find a tasty and yet gluten free cake! What’s more, it’s super easy to bake! This is especially important to me because I am such a dunce in the kitchen!

Ingredients for Raspberry Almond Cake (Gluten Free)

  • 2 1/2 cups frozen raspberries, thawed
  • 6 eggs
  • 1 cup sugar
  • 2 cups almond meal (or ground almonds)

Method for Raspberry Almond Cake (Gluten Free)

  1.  Preheat oven to 160 deg C. Grease a 16cm or 22 cn round springform cake tin. Line base and side with baking paper.
  2. Place 2 cups of raspberries in a bowl  and mash them with a fork.
  3. Using a mixer, beat eggs and sugar on high speed for 8-10 mins or until thick and glossy. Gently fold in raspberries and almond meals. ALTERNATE the two until everything is combined.
  4. Pour the mix into a prepared tin. Bake for 60 mins or until it is golden and firm. Cool it in the tin for 10 minutes.
  5. Transfer to a wire rack for cooling. Decorate the top with the remaining raspberries. Serve.

Gluten Free Raspberry Almond Cake Recipe

Check out the centre of the cake. It’s moist and pink. The crust is a little crisped. Thumbs up from my kids. I am, henceforth, given the permission to bake this cake again. :p

Back to School…

Back to School…

My friend posted an article on Isaac Newton used the time closeted at home (during the Great Plague of London) to work on mathematical problems and had several breakthroughs. Here I am… not going out often because of the Covid19, studying the new  method of heuristics and modelling or whatever fancy name for P5 maths. Haha, nowhere near the Newton standard though. Nevertheless, it is fun to learn new stuff.

Nowadays, we even discuss about maths questions in whatsapp chat groups. It was especially busy during PSLE prep time when we were busy helping friends work out answers to the challenging PSLE maths questions.

However, it would help a lot if the teachers set the questions properly and without ambiguity. Sometimes we kill a lot of brain cells to come to a conclusion that, the teacher must have set it wrongly. And lo and behold, we are usually right…

Tolong teachers! When you anyhow set questions hor, you kill a lot of parents’ brain cells (and their friends’) leh…

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Guess What I’ve Made?

Guess What I’ve Made?

He can play with almost ANYTHING under the sun. Leave him alone with a rubberband and he would find 101 ways to entertain himself with it. Yes, that includes shooting me with it and getting it confiscated.

He dug out some of his old toys. And built all sorts of things with them… watch, cup, box, car etc.

Before you scroll down to see the answer, what do you think he’s built??

I sent the picture to his father…

Me: check this out! Guess what he’s made!

Hub: hmmm…. Chun Li??

Me: 😑 no lah.

Hub: Princess Leia??

Me: 🤦🏻‍♀️ NO! Why are you guessing all the female characters??

Hub: cinnamon rolls…

Me: sigh… they are headphones.

Hub: then why aren’t they at his ears??

Me: eh… not enough building blocks…

Fermentation : Sauerkraut (fermented cabbage)

Fermentation : Sauerkraut (fermented cabbage)

I have always wanted to make sauerkraut, but as usual, procrastination set in and before I knew it, it’s year 2020! I bought an organic cabbage yesterday. It cost a bomb… seriously. I have never paid so much for vegetables before… Maybe I should start growing cabbages at home. *ponder*

There it sat on my counter, staring at me, daring me to let it rot. I couldn’t stare it down, so I moved my ass and chopped it down. Ha da! And it’s actually surprisingly easy to do! So all of you out there, if you are still thinking (for the longest time ever) of starting but not, JUST DO IT!

Ingredients:

Cabbage (Organic if possible. Or else you will need to use vegetable wash to clean pesticide and yuckies off and also kill off the natural bacteria needed for fermentation)

Salt (I used Himalayan Pink Salt. That’s what I have at home anyway. You can use other mineral rich salts. I draw the line at refined salt.)

Before you start, make sure you have all the tools and containers ready.  Wash them down with soap. Sterilise them if it makes you feel better.

Tools:

Fermentation jar (I use the Lock&Lock Fermentation Jar that comes with a one-way air lock. I prefer to use food grade glass jars due to the high acidity of the ferment and it’s going to stay in it for a while.)

A long stick or spoon (for packing the cabbage into the jar)

Mixing bowl

A weight (to make sure your cabbages stay under the brine. I used a glass jar filled with water.)

7 Easy Steps:

1. Wash your organic cabbage under running water.

2. Pull out the biggest leaf. Cut it down so that it can cover the cabbage slices.

2. Finely slice the rest of the cabbage.

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

3. Add in some salt over the shredded cabbage.  Massage it in with your fingers. (Oh yes, please wash your hands and the parts of your arms that will touch the cabbage, if you are making a big batch. But don’t use antibacterial soap which will interfere with the fermentation process.) Slowly you will see a puddle of liquid polling at the bottom of the pool. Speaking of which, it’s quite therapeutic to massage the cabbage. *lol*

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

4. Taste the cabbage. If you feel that it’s not salty enough, add in more salt. If the brine is still very little, add in more salt and massage until there’s enough brine to cover the cabbage. If it’s already VERY salty but still not enough brine to cover the cabbage, you can add some lemon juice. If you have shredded your cabbage finely enough, you will usually have enough brine.

5. Grab the cabbage and start stuffing them down the fermentation jar. As you do that, use your stick or spoon to push the bits down to make sure there aren’t any air pockets. This stick that I bought from Daiso to roll my pastry dough is just nice for the job.

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

6. Once you have filled your jar, put your big cabbage leaf or leaves over them and press down so that all the bits remain below the brine. I use a clean glass jar, filled with water, to weigh down the leaves. I am buying some glass weights from Amazon. Hope they come soon! Then I capped it with my air lock lid. If you do not have this, you can cover it with a cloth and snap a rubberband over the opening. Or you can just cover the lid loosely over so that air can escape.

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

 

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

7. I put my precious jar in a dark corner of my kitchen. The best temperature for fermentation is between 20-24 degree C. So that the cabbage has time to ferment nicely and not turn out to be too tart.

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

How do you know if it’s done? Typically, it’s done if it reaches 4.6pH or lower. I keep a stack of ph paper at home to test for new ferments. Usually for old ferments, I would know the estimated amount of time. Alternatively, do the eye-taste-smell-touch test, which I usually do!

Eye – should look a little yellowish

Taste – nicely sour and a little picklelike (if there’s such a word), but not to the extent of becoming vinegar….

Smell – Sour

Touch – firm or slightly soft but not slimy. Slimy = bad news

Once you feel that the ferment is ready, you can bottle them and keep them in the fridge to hibernate the bacteria so that you can stop the fermentation process.

Fermented Cabbage Sauerkraut

 

The best thing is – it puts good microbes into your body which boosts your immune system which is extremely important during times like this. Take that, Coronavirus!!! AND most importantly, you will have some food at home and you don’t have to fight with the long queues of hoarders at the supermarkets!! Right now, the supermarkets are the most dangerous places in Singapore – what with the long queues and close proximity to dunno-who-is-already-infected.

Besides, I’m trying to work in more fermented food into our diets as these prove to be beneficial to my 宝贝 who is battling the eczema monster!!

 

 

Pinocchio in His Own Words

Pinocchio in His Own Words

I have never read a Michael Morpurgo book in my entire life. Heck! I have not heard of him until Hwee’s Book Club in FB mentioned about him. And Sistic started blasted ads about “War Horse”, which is an award winning play based on a children’s novel he had written. So, the last time I went to the library, I headed to the children’s section and borrowed 3 of his books off the shelf. The intention was to introduce his books to my children. I usually read the books before I pass them over.

I grew up reading Pinocchio books and watched the Disney Pinocchio. Seriously, I wasn’t expecting much from the book, but yet another retelling of the well-loved tale. I couldn’t have been more wrong. Sure, the important parts of the story remained true to the original story but he’s rewritten it from Pinnochio’s angle. It’s like walking around in Pinnochio’s shoes and feeling it as a first person.

You won’t know it yet, but when you get older, your childhood will seem like a long dream; sometimes a happy dream, sometimes a bit of a nightmare, sometimes so unlikely you can hardly believe it happened. But it did. You were there, you know. My dream of childhood was just like that. But I know it happened. I was there.

Pinnochio in his own words – Michael Morpurgo

It’s not just a children’s book, it’s for adults as well. When I read the book, I could totally emphatise with Pinnochio – the trials and tribulations of being a child, the temptations of money, sweets, school truancy and the draw of wanting to be Mr. Popularity, all the stupidity, lying, broken promises and regrets. I was seeing myself going through similar situations and making dumb decision just like Pinnochio. I am sure a young reader who hasn’t been through that much in life won’t be able to identify with most of it. To him or her, it will just be a fairy tale.

I teared (yes, this children’s book made me tear) when I read about how Gepetto sold his only warm coat to buy a book for Pinnochio so that he could use it in school, because it reminded me of my late father, the sacrifices he had made to give me the best that he could.

And at the end of the day, irregardless of all the follies and sins Pinnochio had committed, his parents still loved him unconditionally. If there is one takeaway from this book by my children, this is what I want them to know.

So yeah, Pinnochio in His Own Words, is not just meant for kids, adults can read it too and reflect on our own experiences. And Michael Morpurgo has been elevated to the status of being one of my favourite authors. Although I didn’t read his books as a child, reading them now gives them a a different flavour.

Ming Ming’s Diary – I Don’t Want to Go to School

Ming Ming’s Diary – I Don’t Want to Go to School

Super moody today…. 😩

Even the yummiest cookie tastes like 💩 without girls. What’s the meaning of life??

Wha..aaattt?! I’m overreacting?? Ok ok. Since I’m in a monk’s class, I’ll meditate to cool down. 🧘🏻‍♂️

Orhmm orhmm… where are the girls… orhmm orhmm… where girls… orhmm orhmm….

I haven’t been posting because I’ve been so so so depressed. Sigh….. 😞

Why?

Look at this 👇🏼

Depressing right??

What do you mean what’s wrong???

Look carefully (don’t blink!) 👇🏼

See the Problemo???

Nooo..?!

All the Mei meis are MISSING!!!

See!!! All boys in the class!!! Oh my Mei meis are gone! Oh Laura! Oh Taylor!!

Before the school holidays, my class was full of babes who milled around me for my attention and now…

Only boys!! I’m in an all boys class!! I’m in depression!! It’s what they call a monk’s class!!

Mama!! I want to change class! Or I’m going on STRIKE! No more going to school for me!!

Mama do you hear me???

Na ah! I’m not going to change my mind.

No school for me until you bring the girls back.

Meanwhile I’m going to homeschool myself. *reads my car car book*

And so… I went to school, to my monk’s class because Mama said the school fee has been paid and I must go to school, with or without girls in class.

Tough luck!

“Are you going to school to learn or to see girls?!” She asked.

I wanted to say “beo girls, of course!” But she looked so….

That I thought I’d better keep my big mouth shut….

Hey wait!! Who do we have here??? Looks like there’s a bit of rainbow 🌈 after the rain 🌧.

A Mei Mei! Someone up there must have heard my prayers.

Hey babe! My name’s Ming Ming. What’s yours? Can we be friends?

Awww owl, are you fine? Can I keep you for a pet?? *pats the owl lovingly.* what? Ok ok. Mustn’t get distracted. F.O.C.U.S.

Eating together at snack time.

Nom nom nom. Say, how do you find this class? Cool, right?? Will you stay? I can protect you. 💪🏼💪🏼💪🏼

I can even give you my biscuit 🍪! Nah!

Huh? What do you mean? I’m coming on too strongly? Scare her away? Ok ok. Chill chill!

It wouldn’t do if she leaves the class and I’m back to facing 7 monks. 😱 Kill me pulease!

Gosh! There are owls lying everywhere. I just rescued one from the floor.