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Our dear friend PeteA has coeliac disease, and a pre-diagnosis history of passionate chocolate brownie consumption.  For the past fifteen years, I’ve been trying to bake him a really good gluten-free brownie.

I didn’t want something which was nearly as good as, or a reasonable substitute for, a regular brownie. I wanted a recipe that was moreish, irresistible and absolutely delicious in its own right.

By substituting chestnut flour for the plain flour in our fudge brownie recipe, I think we’ve finally succeeded!

The litmus test was my husband Pete. The fudge brownies are his personal favourite, yet he felt the chestnut version was as good as, if not better than, the original.  The chestnut flour adds a subtle nuttiness and richness which we both found very appealing.

Please remember that this recipe works best with 50 – 60% cacao dark chocolate – anything higher than that, and you could end up with an oily brick.  I discussed this in depth in the original post here.

The batch I baked for PeteA had chocolate chips stirred through the batter, but the recipe should work equally well with added nuts instead.

The  reworked gluten-free version is as follows:

  • 90g (6 tablespoons) unsalted butter
  • 225g (8oz) 50 – 60% cacao semisweet chocolate (I used Callebaut 54%)
  • 150g (¾ cup) sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 2 large (59g) eggs, at room temperature
  • 40g (¼ cup) chestnut flour (sifted)
  • 135g (1 cup) toasted and chopped nuts, OR 150g (1 cup) chocolate bits (Note: for the all chocolate version, I used 100g Callebaut 44% bake stable sticks, broken up AND 50g Callebaut 70% callets)

1. Preheat oven to 175C/350F or 160C/320F with fan.

2. Measure out all your ingredients and have them ready to go.  Line a 20cm (8″) baking pan with parchment paper.

3. In a medium saucepan, melt the butter, then add the chocolate and stir over low heat until melted and smooth.  Remove from the heat and stir in the sugar and vanilla until combined.

4. Stir in the eggs one at a time.  Add the sifted chestnut flour all at once and stir vigorously until you can feel the batter “snap”.

The batter starts out grainy and fairly loose.  As you beat it by hand, it will initially feel like nothing is happening, and then it will suddenly feel a bit stiffer – that’s when you’ll know a state change has occurred.  This might take one minute, or it might take several.  Stop occasionally to check how it’s going. Unlike true fudge, it’s not a huge “snap”, but the texture will definitely change noticeably – it will feel stiffer, look smoother, and pull away from the sides and bottom of the pan.

Edit Jan 2019: It’s been eight years since I wrote this post, and my hands are eight years older as well, so these days I use a handheld mixer to beat the batter. It only takes a minute or two, but it’s just easier.

5. Gently stir in the inclusions.

6. Scrape the batter into the lined tin and smooth out the top.  Bake for 25 minutes until just firm.   Do not overbake. Allow the brownies to cool completely before lifting them out of the pan and slicing.  Enjoy with gluten-free abandon!

If you’d like to do an In My Kitchen post on your own blog, please feel free to do so!  You’re most welcome to use the same format as I do, and to leave a comment on my monthly IMK post linking back to your blog.   I’d love to see what’s happening in your kitchen every month!

. . . . .

In my kitchen…

…is a copy of Zen and the Art of Raising Chickens, a gift from my lovely friend Becca, the InTolerant Chef

In my kitchen…

…is a bag of dark malt flour, a recent discovery from Harkola.  I used a teaspoon in yesterday’s sourdough – it gave the white bakers’ flour a creamy grey tone and added a delicious nuttiness to the finished loaf…

In my kitchen…

…are cornmeal English muffins, made to a modified Dan Lepard recipe.  On Joanna’s advice, I reduced the water in the recipe from 425ml to 300ml.  The slightly drier dough cut well and held its shape in the frying pan…

We ate them with Joy’s delicious plum jam…

…which she made with plums harvested from her dad’s farm…

In my kitchen…

…are treasures from Chefs’ Warehouse.  These 10cm/4″ crumpet rings were calling to me…

…as were these absolutely gorgeous terracotta dishes.  I already had the larger version, and wanted a couple of smaller ones to complete the set.  The little one measures 15cm/6″ in diameter and cost just $5.95.  The dishes are oven safe and clean up perfectly in the dishwasher…

In my kitchen…

…are pots of green apples, being turned into pectin for this year’s jam making.  The apples are from Christina’s dad Lloyd, who was kind enough to give us enough for dozens of jars of pectin, along with several kilos of gorgeous crabapples for jelly!

In my kitchen…

…is a tin of Turkish apple tea.  I’ve been drinking this sweet tangy tea at Turkish restaurants over the past few months, and couldn’t resist buying some for home…

In my kitchen…

…is a basket of green figs from our new neighbour Marco, whose trees are laden and groaning with fruit!

Tell me, what’s happening in your kitchen this month?

In two weeks time, Fig Jam and Lime Cordial will be two years old.

To celebrate the occasion, I had some custom labels made for these tins of Book Darts.   Each contains 75 darts in a mix of metals – brass, bronze and stainless steel.  I’m a big fan of these brilliant little linemarkers, having waxed lyrical about them in several posts.

I have two tins to g1ve away!

To make this fun, please enter by telling us in a comment what you like to read.  Please be really specific – if you’re a fan of romance novels, please let us know if you enjoy Regency bodice-busters, or time travel romances (astonishingly, Amazon list this as a genre), or vampire tales.

Similarly, if the only thing you read is cookbooks, what style or cuisine do you enjoy the most?  Are you a crime fiction buff, and if so, which author or detective do you follow?

I am a huge fan of old Ellery Queen detective novels, set in the 1940s – 60s.  I’m also a collector of comic books – Peanuts, Doonesbury, Calvin and Hobbes, The Far Side and Footrot Flats.  What about you, what do you like to read?

I’ll leave this open until 25th February 2011, which is our anniversary date, and I’ll happily ship the darts anywhere.  And if you’d like custom labels for your book darts, please contact Aaron via the Book Darts website.  They provide free bespoke labels with any order of ten tins or more!

Final lantern post, I promise!

I wasn’t going to make any more, but couldn’t resist these two YouTube tutorials.  Plus we were in the middle of a 40C heatwave in Sydney last week, and it was really too hot to cook or go out!

The second tutorial is in Cantonese (I think), which I don’t understand, but the instructions were easy to follow nonetheless.  I’m posting them here, so that I can find them again next year!

 

A headsup to Sydneysiders – Johnny at the Paesanella Cheese Shop in Haberfield has asked me to let you all know that he has free ham bones to give away on an ongoing basis.

These are absolutely wonderful for hearty soups – we use them as the basis for our survival soup at least once a week. They last for ages in the freezer, and have provided us with many an emergency meal.

Johnny said the bones will be available on a “first come first serve” basis, so if you’re driving from a distance to get them, it might be worth a call first to make sure he has some in stock.  Please also note that the bones will be available only from their Haberfield store (and not through their online website).

While you’re in the shop, do check out all the other wonderful things they have in stock. I came home today with a tub of warm ricotta, freshly made this morning!

. . . . .

Paesanella Cheese Shop
88 Ramsay Rd
Haberfield  NSW   2045
Tel.  02 9799 8483
or visit their online store:
DeliVer, Gourmet Food Distribution