darkemeralds (
darkemeralds) wrote2010-12-14 12:53 pm
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I found Garam Masala Chocolate Ginger Cookies via this post by
aquinasprime in
omnomnom, and instantly changed my office party potluck plans from Crack Pie to these little darlings.
(For those who don't know, as I didn't know: The composition of garam masala differs regionally, with wide variety across India. Some common ingredients are black & white peppercorns, cloves, malabar leaves, long pepper (also known as pippali), black cumin (known as shahi jeera), cumin seeds, cinnamon, black, brown, & green cardamom, nutmeg, star anise and coriander seeds. Thank you, Wikipedia. I sent a donation.)
Oh my lord, they're good. Spicy, warm, dark, crisp... I made up the dough last night and baked a trial of four cookies, two snowflakes and two teddy bears. The snowflake I ate was excellent.
Like most gingerbread-style cookies, these aren't super rich (and would probably be just as good with a third less butter), so the calorie count per cookie is reasonably low--100 or so, not counting frosting, which I haven't added yet. I made them gluten-free with excellent results.
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(For those who don't know, as I didn't know: The composition of garam masala differs regionally, with wide variety across India. Some common ingredients are black & white peppercorns, cloves, malabar leaves, long pepper (also known as pippali), black cumin (known as shahi jeera), cumin seeds, cinnamon, black, brown, & green cardamom, nutmeg, star anise and coriander seeds. Thank you, Wikipedia. I sent a donation.)
Oh my lord, they're good. Spicy, warm, dark, crisp... I made up the dough last night and baked a trial of four cookies, two snowflakes and two teddy bears. The snowflake I ate was excellent.
Like most gingerbread-style cookies, these aren't super rich (and would probably be just as good with a third less butter), so the calorie count per cookie is reasonably low--100 or so, not counting frosting, which I haven't added yet. I made them gluten-free with excellent results.
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The beauty of gluten-free baking, I've discovered (among its many tricks and drawbacks) is that you don't need to worry about overworking the flour in recipes depending on unactivated gluten for their tenderness (pie crust, biscuits...)
The down side is that things just don't hold together very well. But hey. I can eat them without heartburn, and that's a win.
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For the rest of cooking: pasta so far is a no-go--I haven't yet found a GF pasta that's worth eating. Everything else is easy. Potatoes and rice are not a hard way to go (at least not for me), cornstarch is a good thickener, and really the only thing I miss are croissants. Sigh.
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Also, this time of year is good for a hearty dish of kasha, which not only is GF but isn't even really a grain.
sffan: Ahern says that the real key to successful GF baking is weighing ingredients instead of trying to eyeball them in a measuring cup.
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If I see a splendiferous GF croissant in front of me, I'll eat it and cut elsewhere. But my standards of splendiferousness are pretty high. I lived in France.
SFFan: definitely use a kitchen scale for GF baking. Weighing rather than measuring my flours has been the key to successful results.