This is a more advanced sugar-free pancake syrup formula.
You will need to source some CMC powder for this recipe. You can find CMC easily online. CMC is useful for thickening many things, not just syrup. It is also a secret ingredient in some gluten-free and low-carb bakery items.
This syrup recipe is very easy to make, it just uses more specialty ingredients. It's a shame to make low carb pancakes or waffles for breakfast and then drown them in sugary syrup. You could add a touch of natural dark maple syrup to this base if you wanted to for more authentic flavor. Just be aware that the real maple syrup is sugar.
You could also add natural butter flavoring to this syrup, to taste.
If you do not yet have CMC, here is an earlier recipe for sugar-free pancake syrup from this blog. See it HERE. It will not be as clear but it is still a good choice.
Here at Kitchen Cheetahs, we like to have several options for making the same thing. Having various choices will make it more convenient for you too.
Clear Sugar-Free Pancake Syrup Recipe:
1 c. Table-top Sugar Replacement blend (or Lakanto Golden Sugar Replacement, to taste)
1/4 t. CMC (carboxymethyl cellulose)
1/8 t. Sea salt or BioSalt
7 T. Water, plus more. if desired
2 T. Vegetable glycerine
3/4 t. Mapleine flavor extract
Method:
Premix the Table-Top sweetener blend with the CMC powder.
In a small sauce pan pour the 7 T. water and vegetable glycerine. Stir to mix.
Add the Table-top Sweetener blend and salt. Carefully stir over medium-high heat.
Gently stir to dissolve, while bringing to a boil. It will start to bubble and then get a foamy appearance. Remove from heat. On my gas stove, this took 4 minutes total.
Let cool down a bit and then add 3/4 t. Mapleine flavoring, to taste.
If you want to thin the syrup further add more water one teaspoon at a time and mix in well.
Pour finished syrup into a jar with a tight fitting lid and store in the refrigerator. The air bubbles will subside with time.
Note: The CMC that you will find and buy online will likely be different from what we have used. You may need to use more than what we used. The first time you make this syrup, make a batch 1/4th the size of this one to make sure you get it the way you like it.
Enjoy,
Leila & Nancy.
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query syrup. Sort by date Show all posts
Showing posts sorted by relevance for query syrup. Sort by date Show all posts
Wednesday, June 10, 2015
Friday, February 27, 2015
EASY & Delicious Low Carb Pancake Syrup - Sugar-Free
Make your own TASTY Sugar Free Maple Syrup
Why ruin perfectly good low-carb pancakes with sugar bomb syrup, when you can easily make this healthy version yourself?
I will not use commercial syrups that are sweetened with artificial sweeteners, and I hope you don't either. The healthier versions are expensive and hard to find, BUT, once you stock your healthy pantry, you will never need or want go back to buying pancake syrup. Party!
Low Carb Pancake Syrup Recipe:
Ingredients
1/2 c. xylitol
1/2 c. erythritol (or Lakanto Golden Zero-Calorie Sweetener)
1/4 t. glucomannan (Konjac)
powder (up to 1/2 t. for a thick syrup)
1/4 t. xanthan gum or guar
gum
1/4 t. BioSalt or sea salt
(recipe on blog), to taste
2 c. purified water
2 t. maple flavoring
1 t. real vanilla extract
1 t. butter flavoring,
optional
1 t. stevia glycerite , to
taste (recipe on blog)
Instructions
1.Premix the xylitol, erythritol, glucomannan, xanthan or guar gum, and salt. Sift or whisk together well. This prevents the glucomannan and xanthan or guar gum from clumping.
2.Place the sweetener/gum mixture in a small saucepan, on the stovetop. Add the water with stirring. Heat on medium heat until sweeteners are completely dissolved, stirring frequently. Do not boil.
3. Remove from heat. Add the flavorings to taste.
4. Add the stevia glycerite, starting with 1/2 t. and adjust to taste (note that a little stevia goes a long way).
5. Serve immediately or store in a sealed container in the refrigerator.
Notes
- You may use
just xylitol or erythritol if that is all you have. The sweetening profile
is improved by combining the 2 sweeteners however.
- You may use just the glucomannan to thicken the syrup. Start with only 1/2 t., adding up to 1 t. for a thick syrup.
- If the syrup
isn't as smooth as you would like, pour the syrup into a blender
and gently blend together a few seconds.
- I would
start with 1/4 teaspoon glucomannan. If you want a thicker syrup, add up to 1/4 t. more and blend it in a blender, it will thicken nicely.
- Note that
erythritol is tolerated much better by most people's digestive systems,
compared to other sugar alcohols. Erythritol
is also lower in carbs than xylitol, but xylitol is sweeter. Mixing the 2
is synergistic.
- You can omit the butter flavoring and just stir in 1 T. organic butter at the end.
Enjoy, Leila
Thursday, August 6, 2015
Copy Cat Tiger's Milk Bars - Part 1 - How I incubate a formulating idea
I have a confession. I love Tiger's Milk Bars.
But as a Kitchen Cheetah (which is in the cat family), and considering the fact that I am a LEO, I guess I should not be surprised.
My mom would shop at health food stores when I was little (she still shops at health food stores) and would often let me pick out a treat there. I would often select one of these Tiger's milk Bars. I love the chewy texture they have. They used to make a flavor called Peanut Butter & Jelly that I absolutely loved. They stopped making this flavor many years ago. A sad day. My mom did not have candy, chips or soda pop in the house. We rarely had desserts either. We did eat fruit, and I remember pulling homemade buttery honey taffy with my mom. My tiny hands could hardly pull that slippery warm taffy. I sure loved eating it though! Anyway, she did us a favor in keeping junk food out of the house.
As I look at a Tiger's Milk Bar ingredient label, I'm now inclined to think that Tiger's Milk Bars are not much elevated above junk food status. Hmmmm, I don't think the ingredients were exactly the same as when I was a child. No matter, I want to remake them.
So here is what I'm thinkin'...
I think I will keep the carob coating. this is one of the rare places where I would actually choose carob coating over chocolate... It's a nostalgia thing. About the only other time I like carob is over bananas,which are then rolled in sunflower seeds and frozen (another treat my mom made me when I was little). Carob pods grew (on trees) in Southern California where I grew up. I remember a friend of my moms picked some and told me I could eat the carob pods. I did, and soon after got sick and threw up. Let's just say I never ate carob pods again.
Anyway, I will start with an organic smooth salted peanut butter.Tiger's Milk Bars also list peanut butter powder. I do not have any of that right now, so ill just pour off the oil that floats on top of my peanut butter, and call it good for now.
For the protein component, I will experiment with a combination of non-fat dry milk powder, soy protein isolate (or whey protein isolate), and a touch of calcium caseinate (which is also in my homemade healthy High Protein Coffee Creamer Powder). Maybe I will even add collagen powder! Good idea.
Then I think I will make a binding syrup of IMO syrup, raw honey, a little vegetable glycerine, a touch of stevia extract powder, and gums for added soluble fiber and binding power. I'll heat it up gently, adding the raw honey last.
I may use inulin or IMO powder in place of the maltodextrin and use Hi-Maize resistant starch (a dietary fiber) instead of the rice flour they use.
And I'll add a little calcium/magnesium powder for good measure.
Last, I'll melt down some some naturally sweetened carob coating from the health food store and en-robe the formed protein bars.
Sounds like a good rough sketch to me.
I included the ingredient labels for the Protein Rich and peanut butter & honey flavor. I like these too.
I'll let you know how it goes!
Author, Leila.
P.S. This post on Tiger's Milk Bars and the 2 subsequent trials that follow are being moved to my new blog called beauteandthefeast.blogspot.com.
Due to the brown sugar and corn syrup these copy-cat recipes contain, they do not belong on Kitchen Cheetahs, which is a clean eating blog.
When I remake these bars using healthy sweeteners like IMO, Erythritol, Stevia, and such, I will post the healthified Tiger's Milk bar recipes here on Kitchen Cheetahs. T-T-F-N!
Tiger's Milk Nutrition Bars, Protein Rich Flavor
|
High Fructose Corn Syrup, Peanut Butter (roasted peanuts, salt), Corn Syrup, Carob Coating, Brown Sugar, Partially Hydrogenated Palm Kernel Oil, Whey Powder, Carob Bean (Ceratonia Siliqua) Powder, Soy Lecithin (as an emulsifier), *, Soy Protein Isolate, Peanut Flour, Dry Milk (nonfat), Rice Flour, Contains Less Than 2% of calcium caseinate, Calcium Phosphate (Calcarea Phosphorica), Magnesium Phosphate, Dextrose, Natural Flavors, Vitamin C (ascorbic acid), Ferrous Fumarate (Iron), Vitamin A (Retinyl Palmitate), Niacinamide, Calcium D-Panthothenate, Vitamin B12 (cyanocobalamin), Copper Gluconate, Thiamine Monohydrate (Vitamin B1), Riboflavin (Vitamin B2), Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Biotin (Vitamin H) |
Peanut Butter & Honey Flavor |
- 1.23 oz Bar
Nutrition Facts
Serving Size 1 Bar (35 g)
Servings Per Container 24
Servings Per Container 24
Amount Per Serving | |
Calories 140 | |
Calories from Fat 50 | |
% Daily Value |
Total Fat | 5g | 8% |
Saturated Fat | 2g | 10% |
Trans Fat | 0g | |
Cholesterol | 0mg | 0% |
Sodium | 80mg | 3% |
Potassium | 150mg | 4% |
Total Carbohydrate | 19g | 6% |
Dietary Fiber | 1g | 4% |
Sugars | 14g | |
Protein | 5g | |
Vitamin A | 15% | |
Vitamin C | 10% | |
Calcium | 10% | |
Iron | 20% | |
Thiamin | 40% | |
Riboflavin | 40% | |
Niacin | 20% | |
Vitamin B6 | 30% | |
Vitamin B12 | 30% | |
Biotin | 6% | |
Pantothenic Acid | 15% | |
Phosphorus | 20% | |
Magnesium | 30% | |
Copper | 20% |
Percent Daily Values are based on a 2,000 calorie diet. Your daily values may be higher or lower depending on your calorie needs.
Ingredients: Peanut Butter (Roasted Peanuts, Salt), High Fructose Corn Syrup, Honey, Carob Coating [Sugar, Palm Kernel and Palm Oil, Carob Powder, Whey Powder, Milk, Nonfat Dry Milk, Soy Lecithin (as an emulsifier), Salt, Natural Flavor], Nonfat Dry Milk, Peanut Flour, Maltodextrin, Corn Syrup, Soy Protein Isolate, Rice Flour, contains less than 1.5% of Brown Sugar, Calcium Caseinate, Calcium Phosphate, Magnesium Phosphate, Dextrose, Natural Flavors, Vitamin C (Ascorbic Acid), Ferrous Fumarate, Vitamin A (Retinyl Palmitate), Niacinamide, Calcium d-Pantothenate, Vitamin B12 (Cyanocobalamin), Copper Gluconate, Thiamin Mononitrate, Riboflavin, Pyridoxine Hydrochloride, Biotin, Salt.
Saturday, January 10, 2015
Chia Blackberry and Raspberry Sugar-Free Jam Recipes
Chia Blackberry Jam
Sugar-Free, Raw, Gluten-Free
A very easy and delicious raw-food jam that is great to use as a topping for yogurt, frozen desserts, and of course toast! Chia seeds are a great alternative to using thickening starches and large amounts of sugar. Our sweetener blend is healthy, sugar-free and chemical-free,
So slather on!
CHIA BLACKBERRY JAM Recipe:
1/2 c. WARM water
1/4 c. vegetable glycerin
2 T. IMO syrup (or other desired sweetener)
2 T. whole black chia seeds
1/2 c. powdered White LAKANTO brand sweetener (or erythritol, or xylitol, or 50/50 blend of both)
18 ounces crushed fresh blackberries
1 T. Black Cherry Concentrate, optional
1/16 t. BIOSALT, to taste
Ascorbic acid powder (Vitamin C), to increase tartness if needed, to taste
Natural berry flavor, if desired
Stevia glycerite, to sweeten taste
Method:
Blend together the warm water, glycerin, and IMO syrup.
Stir in 2 T. chia seed. As soon as it thickens (3-5 minutes), stir in your desired healthy sugar substitute, crushed blackberries, and blackberry concentrate, if using.
Adjust the flavors: Add approximately 1/16 t. BIOSALT (recipe on blog). Add to taste, the ascorbic acid, natural berry flavor, and stevia glycerite.
Allow to thicken in the refrigerator for 12 to 24 hours. Stir.
Store in the refrigerator up to one week. Freeze jam for long-term storage.
Note:
Using 2 T. chia seeds gives the consistency of a freezer jam.
Using 4 T. chia seeds makes a thicker jam.
Variation:
Instead of blackberries, use fresh crushed raspberries. Use white chia seeds for the raspberry jam.
Sources:
You can buy IMO syrup online. Kitchen Cheetahs hopes to be able to provide you with IMO syrup and IMO powder at a better price, at a later date. Please contact us and let us know if you are interested.
www.bionutra.ca
www.fitnesstreats.com
www.busybuthealthy.com
www.mysweetit.com
Enjoy!
Author, Leila
Sugar-Free, Raw, Gluten-Free
A very easy and delicious raw-food jam that is great to use as a topping for yogurt, frozen desserts, and of course toast! Chia seeds are a great alternative to using thickening starches and large amounts of sugar. Our sweetener blend is healthy, sugar-free and chemical-free,
So slather on!
CHIA BLACKBERRY JAM Recipe:
1/2 c. WARM water
1/4 c. vegetable glycerin
2 T. IMO syrup (or other desired sweetener)
2 T. whole black chia seeds
1/2 c. powdered White LAKANTO brand sweetener (or erythritol, or xylitol, or 50/50 blend of both)
18 ounces crushed fresh blackberries
1 T. Black Cherry Concentrate, optional
1/16 t. BIOSALT, to taste
Ascorbic acid powder (Vitamin C), to increase tartness if needed, to taste
Natural berry flavor, if desired
Stevia glycerite, to sweeten taste
Method:
Blend together the warm water, glycerin, and IMO syrup.
Stir in 2 T. chia seed. As soon as it thickens (3-5 minutes), stir in your desired healthy sugar substitute, crushed blackberries, and blackberry concentrate, if using.
Adjust the flavors: Add approximately 1/16 t. BIOSALT (recipe on blog). Add to taste, the ascorbic acid, natural berry flavor, and stevia glycerite.
Allow to thicken in the refrigerator for 12 to 24 hours. Stir.
Store in the refrigerator up to one week. Freeze jam for long-term storage.
Note:
Using 2 T. chia seeds gives the consistency of a freezer jam.
Using 4 T. chia seeds makes a thicker jam.
Variation:
Instead of blackberries, use fresh crushed raspberries. Use white chia seeds for the raspberry jam.
Sources:
You can buy IMO syrup online. Kitchen Cheetahs hopes to be able to provide you with IMO syrup and IMO powder at a better price, at a later date. Please contact us and let us know if you are interested.
www.bionutra.ca
www.fitnesstreats.com
www.busybuthealthy.com
www.mysweetit.com
Enjoy!
Author, Leila
Labels:
Chia,
Fruits,
Gluten Free,
High Fiber,
Low Carb,
Sugar Free
Tuesday, September 1, 2015
Copy Cat Olive Garden Italian Salad Dressing - Formulated and tasted side-by-side for accuracy! Fresher tasting than the original.
This is not just another average copy cat recipe. This dressing actually tastes like the real deal!
Copy-Cat Olive Garden Salad Dressing |
This is the best copy cat version of Olive Garden's Italian salad dressing that I have tasted so far. I actually like this better than Olive Garden's bottled version. Their bottled version does not taste as fresh as my version does. Their soybean oil tastes a bit funky (usually rancid) and has some other off-taste in there that I'm not sure of where it is coming from...
Anyway, I have tasted many copy-cat versions of Olive Garden's dressing. There are a lot of versions online. They are not it. Most of them are too sour (too much vinegar), or are flat tasting, or are too runny, or have too much mayonnaise in them... They just aren't right.
My version has a zesty punch, but is balanced with all the other flavors. You need to have a hint of sweet to tame the vinegar, and enough salt to blend all the flavors and keep the dressing rich and tasty when it is actually dressing your salad. This dressing is thick and creamy enough to cling to the lettuce and not just end up as a watery mess at the bottom of your salad bowl.
I like my blend of seasonings but I may actually smash a clove of fresh garlic with the salt called for in my recipe next time. I do not taste fresh garlic in Olive Garden's version, but I think it would taste better with fresh garlic.
I used a blend of both Parmesan and Romano cheeses. I may just go back to using only Romano, increasing the portion to 3 T. (21 grams). Romano is stronger tasting, so you decide what you'd like.
The xanthan gum is critical to my recipe. The dressing will be very runny without it. Notice that the first ingredient in Olive Garden's version is WATER. That is why water is the first ingredient in my dressing too. It is much too vinegary if you do not add the water. Olive Garden's trick to thicken their dressing is adding the xanthan gum. Go get yourself some xanthan gum, I use it in almost all of my salad dressing recipes. Guar gum is an alternate option to using the xanthan gum. Look in your local health food stores or in the gluten free baking section of grocery stores to find it.
The annatto powder is used to give a richer color to the salad dressing, omit it if you choose to.
Olive Garden's ingredient listing on their salad dressing bottle:
water
distilled vinegar
soybean oil
high fructose corn syrup
salt
eggs
Romano cheese
garlic
sugar
xanthan gum
spice and spice extracts
parsley
lemon juice concentrate
calcium disodium EDTA (to protect freshness)
extractives of annatto.
(Contains milk, eggs).
I used my formulating background to recreate this dressing for my family and for yours. I hope you enjoy it! I conducted side-by-side taste test comparisons. I also compared ingredient lists. My version is healthier, although not sugar-free. I may formulate a sugar-free version later. My goal for this recipe was to as closely duplicate the original as I possibly could at this time. Let me know your thoughts on this recipe after you try it for yourself.
Leila's Copy Cat Version of Olive Garden's Italian Dressing:
1/2 c. (100 grams) purified water
1/2 c. (128 grams) Best Food's Mayonnaise (contains eggs)
about 1/2 c. (87 grams) white distilled vinegar (I prefer white wine vinegar)
1/4 c. (60 grams) extra-light olive oil (regular olive oil tastes too strong)
2 T. (36 grams) IMO syrup to replace corn syrup
2 T. (16 grams) Parmesan cheese
2 T. (14 grams) Romano cheese
1 T. fresh squeezed lemon juice
2 t. sea salt
2 t. xylitol, or slightly more, to taste
1/2 t. + 1/8 to 1/4 t. xanthan gum (3/4 t. xanthan gum makes dressing thicker than Olive Garden's)
1/2 t. Italian seasoning
1/2 t. parsley flakes
20 grinds fresh ground black pepper
1/4 t. granulated garlic
1/16 t. red pepper flakes
1/16 t. annatto powder (Mexican foods section of grocery store)
Method:
Mix the water, mayonnaise, vinegar, oil, and IMO syrup together until fully combined with a stick blender (or blend by hand).
Add the cheeses and lemon juice.
In a small bowl, mix together the salt, xylitol, xanthan gum, Italian seasoning, parsley,black pepper, garlic, red pepper flakes, and annatto powder.
Sprinkle the dry seasoning blend over the liquid and mix until well combined.
Chill in a jar with a tight fitting lid to allow the flavors to blend.
Serve over a salad of romaine lettuce, roma tomatoes, vidalia onion slices, black olives, pickled pepperoncini, garlic croutons, and freshly grated parmesan cheese.
Enjoy!
Leila.
Friday, May 15, 2015
Crazy Good Low-Carb Fluffy Buttermilk Pancakes (with variations) - Gluten-Free, Sugar-Free, Guilt-Free!
First we nailed making delicious low-carb pancakes. Exciting. But, what we really love are Buttermilk Pancakes!
It took a little more experimenting until we nailed a fabulous buttermilk pancake recipe too.
Our buttermilk pancake recipe is similar to our regular low-carb pancake recipe. The gluten-free "flour" blend is the same, for example. The leavening system is different to allow for the acidity of the buttermilk. We were aiming for the ultimate fluffy pancake...and we got it! We are very excited to share this recipe with you. we are still in pancake recipe creation mode. We are experimenting with using different liquids in the pancake mix, like almond milk, soy milk, yak milk (just kidding).
We have even created cinnamon roll pancakes! Seriously, topped with our sugar-free Cream Cheese Frosting... You could be arrested for eating one of these in public, if you don't have enough to share! These are so over-the-top. You won't believe they are healthy. A recipe for these will be made available soon, I promise.
Benefits of this Buttermilk pancake recipe:
Tastes amazing!
Low carb
High fiber
Sugar free
Gluten free
High protein
Curbs cravings
Aids in weight loss
Helps blood sugar levels stay even
Good for athletic training
Can make dry pancake mix in advance
Can make pancakes in advance and freeze them
First get out all your ingredients first and pre-weigh them (weighing is best for consistency).
Putting together this dry pancake mix is SO worth the effort. You can easily make a bulk batch of this pancake mix. Just make sure you weigh everything accurately. When you are ready to make some pancakes, all you do is add some fresh buttermilk and egg. They are easy to mix up, easier to cook, and the easiest to e-a-t.
Your kitchen will smell wonderful as these cook. You and your family will feel satisfied for a long time after you eat these pancakes. They are high in fiber and high in protein too. These are also helpful for those who are aiming to slim down. They even taste great with just butter and no syrup. Most fake pancakes have to be drowned in syrup to be at all palatable.
These pancakes taste even better the next day. Just refrigerated or freeze them and when you want a quick breakfast, microwave a couple pancakes a few seconds to reheat them.
We hope you enjoy this recipe for years to come!
To see the original post on our Low-Carb Pancakes, click HERE.
See a sugar-free pancake syrup HERE.
See an improved clear pancake syrup HERE. (coming soon!)
Low-Carb Buttermilk Pancakes Recipe:
Makes 4 medium sized pancakes (serves 2).
Dry Mix Ingredients:
13.0 grams (2 T.) stirred coconut flour
11.0 grams (2 T.) oat bran flour (finely ground)
11.0 grams (2 T.) white almond flour (lightly packed)
8.0 grams (1 T.) Hi-Maize brand resistant starch from National Starch **
4.0 grams (1 T.) whey protein isolate
3.0 grams (1 T.) psyllium husks (flakes, not powdered) ***
3.5 grams (1 t.) gelatin powder (like Knoxx brand plain gelatin)
4.0 grams (1 t.) Table Top Sugar Blend (or 1 1/2 t. of a 50:50 mix of erythritol and xylitol) ****
0.9 grams (1/4 t.) BioSalt or sea salt
0.9 grams (1/4 t.) baking powder
0.9 grams (1/4 t.) baking soda
0.9 grams (1/4 t.) konjac powder
0.9 grams (1/4 t.) Wheat Bread Flavor Powder, optional (a proprietary flavoring for GF breads *)
Wet Ingredients:
1 medium egg
1/2 c. fresh buttermilk
Method:
In a small mixing bowl, sift all the dry ingredients together very well and set aside.
Preheat a 12-inch or larger non-stick skillet to 350 degrees (medium heat). Oil pan with coconut oil.
Whisk the egg until emulsified.
Add the buttermilk to the egg and mix together well.
Add the egg mixture to the dry mix in the mixing bowl and blend together until there are no lumps.
Immediately pour all 4 pancakes into the prepared skillet. Let them cook without shaking the pan.
The pancake batter quickly becomes thick, so they will not bubble like thinner pancakes do to indicate when to flip them over. You'll need to peek at the bottoms, and flip them when they turn nicely brown.
Cook the other side until they are golden brown and spring back in the center when lightly touched.
If you did not cook all the pancakes at once, do not stir the batter down. Just portion it with a food portioning scoop (an ice cream scoop) onto the oiled skillet. You may gently pat down the batter a bit with wet fingers. Again, do not shake the pan to settle the pancakes or they will be misshapen.
Enjoy with butter and a good sugar-free syrup or preserves.
Buttermilk Pancake Variations:
These pancakes are the ultimate when fresh buttermilk is used. However, that being said, all the rest of these variations taste terrific. I like to have a lot of versatility in my recipes, so that you can use what you have on hand. There are other variations too, like using unsweetened soy or almond milk.
1. With reconstituted buttermilk powder
Instead of fresh buttermilk use:
4 t. powdered buttermilk
1/8 t. guar gum
1/2 c. water
Mix together the powdered buttermilk and guar gum. Mix with the water to form a buttermilk. add to the medium sized egg and beat until foamy. mix into the dry pancake mix above.
2. With Powdered milk
Instead of fresh buttermilk use:
4 t. Non-Instant powdered milk
1/8 t. guar gum
1/2 c. minus 1/2 t. water
1/2 t. apple cider vinegar or fresh lemon juice
Make your own sour milk by first mixing the powdered milk with the guar gum. Then mix the dry milk mixture into the water and vinegar. Let this sit about 5 minutes. Proceed to mix it with the beaten egg and add this to the dry pancake mix.
3. With fresh milk
Instead of fresh buttermilk use:
1/2 c. minus 1/2 t. fresh organic milk
1/2 t. apple cider vinegar
1/8 t. guar gum (mix with the dry ingredients)
Mix the milk and vinegar together and let it sit while you whisk your egg and get the pan ready. Proceed with the recipe above.
Tips:
You may double the recipe and use only 1 extra-large egg. It works fine if you use a 2-burner sized skillet to cook all 8 pancakes at once.
Notes:
* "Wheat Bread Flavor Powder" is a proprietary flavor my mother created for all gluten free bread-type products. It is not available to the public (unless we get a large amount of requests for it...). You may add a touch of real butter flavoring instead,,,
** Honeyville grain carries the HiMaize Resistant starch. This ingredient is not absorbed like regular starch and is a wonderful ingredient for low carb, gluten free baking. You can use up to 25% HiMaize in your flour blends to cut carbs.
*** If you do not have the 1 T. psyllium husk flakes, substitute with 1 teaspoon psyllium husk powder. The texture will not be quite as bread-like, but it is still good.
**** You may substitute Lakanto white sugar substitute for the tabletop sugar blend called for.
Looking for bubbles in these cooking pancakes is not an indicator of pancakes being ready to flip. Check the bottoms for doneness.
Lower heat is needed for cooking these pancakes, compared to regular starch-filled pancakes. Too high a temperature will burn the outsides before the insides are cooked through.
Grind the oat bran until very fine, unless you want more texture to your pancakes.
Making these pancake with just liquid egg whites is not a good idea. They won't act like, look like, or taste like pancakes at all.
Mixing in an additional t. dry egg white protein powder resulted in rubbery, eggy pancakes. Don't do it.
Using less oat bran flour results in a pancake with compromised texture. We do not recommend less than 2 T. oat bran flour for this recipe.
The added gelatin makes a nice, flexible pancake, nearer to a wheat-like texture.
Whey protein isolate is higher in protein and has mush less lactose in it than whey protein concentrate, and usually the lactose-intolerant can eat it in this recipe.
Shaking the pancake batter in the skillet will result in flattened pancakes that may also run together. Just pour them, or portion them with a food portioning scoop (ice cream scoop). If the batter has thickened a lot, gently pat the pancake batter down a tiny bit with wet fingers.
Pictures of the process:
Preheat the griddle with coconut oil. |
Mixing the wet ingredients into the dry pancake mix. |
Stir until there are no lumps. |
Use the pancake batter immediately after mixing. |
Portion pancakes with an ice cream scoop. |
Flip when the pancakes are golden brown underneath. |
Cook until the second side is golden brown. Pretty, aren't they? |
Butter the fluffy pancakes. |
Top with home made sugar-free syrup. |
Dig in! |
YUM |
YUM.. |
Enjoy!
Leila & Nancy.
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