Thanks for visiting our blog! My mom taught me that a good meal, made from scratch, can solve just about everything.The recipes on this blog are gentle on tummies, tasty, weight-loss promoting, and can be made without a fuss. Most of them are free of gluten, dairy, corn, and sweeteners. Best of all, they help those that eat them become more patient, more loving, and more kind. Please, keep in touch! Thanks again for visiting.
Showing posts with label Gf. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gf. Show all posts

Monday, June 22, 2015

Sprouted Rice Sourdough Roll

As promised, I am back with a sourdough bread recipe! Since my readers probably haven't amassed much starter yet, and to keep it simple, we will start with a single serving of sourdough bread. You will love the recipe because it is super easy to memorize. 

1/4c bubbly sourdough starter (any water poured off)
1/4c sprouted brown rice flour 
1/4c filtered water
1/4t salt 

Combine all ingredients. Pour into a well-greased ramekin (I use coconut oil) and allow to culture around 6 hours. Don't worry if it doesn't appear to rise; much of the rise will happen during baking. Place a metal pan or measuring cup of water in the oven (during baking, refill with boiling water if necessary). Preheat oven or toaster oven to 425 degrees. Place bread in the oven and bake until completely golden brown with no pale spots (about 45 minutes). 

I'm fortunate to be able to buy sprouted brown rice flour in bulk at my local coop. Their source is Hummingbird Distribution, which serves the Pacific Northwest. Sprouted brown rice flour is also for sale on this website: http://healthyflour.com/product/organic-sprouted-brown-rice-flour/

Net carbohydrate is 41 grams, but this doesn't account for the starch eaten by the wee yeasties (nom nom nom), so this is a generous estimate. 

Bon appetit! 



Friday, January 2, 2015

Super Easy Dairy-Free Cheesecake

Even if a gal is a Trim, Healthy Mama with mulitple food sensitivities...even if she can't do sugar or sweeteners...once a year, she needs a birthday cake!

Well, I am blessed, to say the least. In the (long!) time since I've last posted here, I had a birthday, and my loving partner made me an amazing on-plan, allergen and sweetener-free dessert! This recipe is her creation, and it has now become a weekly staple. I'm excited to share it with you here.


FINALLY, I have a suitable on-plan, dairy, egg, nut and sweetener free replacement for all the indulgent dairy-based THM desserts. It is definitely a decadent, calorie-rich S. I freeze the filling in half-cup Ball jars and bring it in my lunch on super long days. That way, I am not at risk of eating it to excess, as I would be if an entire cake were calling me from the fridge. It is perfect for those leading a very active lifestyle, and would also be great for pregnant and nursing moms. Others may want to limit consumption to once or twice a week. It has enough protein to count as a complete snack. 

I hope this simple, adaptable recipe will bless you and help you succeed on your journey to health! 

Dairy-Free Cheesecake Filling
1c seed or nut butter (unsweetened sunflower seed butter works great, and has the advantage of not tasting as tempting straight out of the jar as almond butter or peanut butter.)
1c coconut cream (store a can of full fat coconut milk in the fridge until ready to make recipe. Skim off solids, which will amoung to about a cup.)
2T coconut milk liquid (from the same can)
2c frozen berries (I like raspberries, or mixed berries)
1 t vanilla (or contents of 1/2 vanilla bean, for special occasions)
1/4t salt

Blend all ingredients on High until well-combined. You will need to stop and stir often, and you may need to add more coconut milk liquid to blend, however, add as little as possible. No Vitamix required! My little beehive blender needs patience and encouragement to complete this task, but it does the job just fine. 

Dairy-Free Cheesecake Crust
2c nuts or seeds, ground in a pint jar attached to the blender
2T coconut oil
1/2c coconut butter
Dash salt
1t cinnamon
1/2t vanilla
Gently melt the coconut oil and butter, then stir in other ingredients. Press into a pie plate, reserving a small amount to sprinkle on top. Add filling, decorate with remaining crust and fresh berries if desired, and refrigerate overnight. This cheesecake has a lovely texture, just a bit softer than conventional cheesecake. 

Bon appetit! 

Tuesday, December 30, 2014

Super Easy Dairy-Free Cheesecake

Well, I am blessed, to say the least. In the (long!) time since I've last posted here, I had a birthday, and my loving partner made me an amazing on-plan, allergen and sweetener-free dessert! This recipe is her creation, and it has now become a weekly staple. I'm excited to share it with you here.

When I started Trim Healthy Mama, I was eating dairy, and I loved the Chunky Cheese Pops. It was sad to give them up, but now, FINALLY, I have a suitable on-plan, dairy, egg, nut and sweetener free replacement. It is definitely a decadent, calorie-rich S. I freeze the filling in half-cup Ball jars and bring it in my lunch on super long days. That way, I am not at risk of eating it to excess, as I would be if an entire cake were calling me from the fridge. It is perfect for those leading a very active lifestyle, and would also be great for pregnant and nursing moms. Others may want to limit consumption to once or twice a week. It has enough protein to count as a complete snack. 

I hope this simple, adaptable recipe will bless you and help you succeed on your journey to health! 

Dairy-Free Cheesecake Filling
1c seed or nut butter (unsweetened sunflower seed butter works great, and has the advantage of not tasting as tempting straight out of the jar as almond butter or peanut butter.)
1c coconut cream (store a can of full fat coconut milk in the fridge until ready to make recipe. Skim off solids, which will amoung to about a cup.)
2T coconut milk liquid (from the same can)
2c frozen berries (I like raspberries, or mixed berries)
1 t vanilla (or contents of 1/2 vanilla bean, for special occasions)
1/4t salt

Blend all ingredients on High until well-combined. You will need to stop and stir often, and you may need to add more coconut milk liquid to blend, however, add as little as possible. No Vitamix required! My little beehive blender needs patience and encouragement to complete this task, but it does the job just fine. 

Dairy-Free Cheesecake Crust
2c nuts or seeds, ground in a pint jar attached to the blender
2T coconut oil
1/2c coconut butter
Dash salt
1t cinnamon
1/2t vanilla
Gently melt the coconut oil and butter, then stir in other ingredients. Press into a pie plate, reserving a small amount to sprinkle on top. Add filling, decorate with remaining crust and fresh berries if desired, and refrigerate overnight. 

Bon appetit! 

Saturday, November 8, 2014

Seafood Vegetable Chowder (GF, DF)

Some recipes are love-at-first-try. This was one of them! So wonderfully tasty. I don't throw the word "scrumptious" around without meaning it, and this nourishing, lowfat, carb-reasonable dinner earned it fair and square. It's quick to make, too.


2c homemade chicken broth, mainly free of fat
1/2t salt
4-inch long section of a large leek (white part)
5-inch parsnip
1 c cauliflower (cauliholics might want a bit more)
1 handful of whitefish, cut into bite-sized pieces (frozen okay)
1 handful of wild baby shrimp (frozen okay)
1 handful of green beans
1 clove garlic, chopped fine or put through a garlic press

Place a small pot on the stove over medium heat. Cheerfully make your way down the list in order, cleaning each item, chopping it, and adding it to the pot. Chop everything fairly fine except the cauliflower and green beans, which can be bite sized. Once everything has been added, make sure chowder comes fo a vigorous boil and stays there 2-3 minutes. Check the fish to make sure it is opaque, taste a bit of parsnip to make sure it is tender, and make sure the broth is to your liking. Serves one or two; best when served immediately. 




Tuesday, October 21, 2014

Sprouted Brown Rice Yeast Bread (A Bread Recipe for Family)

I found a great, super simple sprouted brown rice flour bread recipe! It is not THM, but is a good compromise for family members that don't need to lose weight. Hope your family will  enjoy this lots! Since it is not my recipe, I'm including a link to the source. However, please note my changes here: 

A Few Notes / Changes 
I greased the pans VERY well with coconut oil. Instead of kefir, I used 1 1/2 c warm water and 1/2 c coconut milk. Since I had them on hand, I also tossed in a couple extra egg yolks. Instead of baking powder and soda, I used 1 1/2t dry yeast. I combined it with the liquids and let it sit for about 15 minutes before combining with the other ingredients.  I preheated the oven to 115 and then turned it off, and rose the bread for an hour, reheating the oven and turning it off again once mid-rise. Then, without taking the bread out of the oven, I turned the oven on to 350. I allowed it to bake until the crust was uniformly very brown. Enjoy! :)





Thursday, September 18, 2014

Sprouting Grains Day 1

"Why bother?" You may be asking. I understand, for the longest time it seemed like too much trouble for me, too. However then I started loving my food, gaining health and losing weight on Trim Healthy Mama. I was on a roll, and I wanted...a roll. A really good roll. A nice big yeasted one. And pancakes, with a texture I love, but great kindness to my steadily shrinking waistline. A muffin that didn't contribute to my muffin top. 

Since I'm allergen free as well as gluten free, this posed a real challenge. I like to read cookbooks for fun (really!) and in my searches, I found it challenging to find gluten free recipes that didn't also feature a whole bunch of cornstarch, tapioca starch or arrowroot powder (none of which are weightloss friendly). In fact I didn't find any.

Back at the ranch, I experimented. If you've baked gluten-free before, you know that gluten-free flours can be finicky. But here is the exciting news. Sprouted gluten free flours are very friendly to bake with. They are forgiving, cooperative, tractable. I can improvise with them, in different proportions, and some are more amazing  than others but I haven't had to throw any away. They have all tasted good. This is amazing!!!

Sprouted grain flours have lots of nutritional benefits, too. Apparently, I'm in it for the taste and portion size and weightloss, though. I have known about the nutritional benefits for many years thanks to the Weston A. Price Foundation, and have always soaked my hot cereal overnight as an adult, but haven't acted on sprouting until now.

In the last few weeks, I've developed a pancake recipe that will knock your socks off. You will not believe how many pancakes you get to eat for breakfast, or how delicious they are, or that they contain enough protein to help you sail through your morning with aplomb. The portions are so generous, I was SURE it was two servings, at least one and a half, until I ran the numbers tonight. In short, you will love it, and its' cousins, THM E gluten free yeast bread that can be made in an afternoon and THM E berry muffin. I am salivating just thinking about them. 

But I digress. The point is, to make this quality and generous portion size of THM E gluten free baked goods, you'll need sprouted grain flour. There is a high-quality source for it here: http://www.organicsproutedflour.net/sproutedflour.html
The grains and flours are about $5 for a one pound bag, some more and some less. Plus shipping. A wee bit out of my budget for the time being. To make the recipes I mentioned above, you'll need sprouted millet and sprouted buckwheat flours. So, place your order at Organic Sprouted Flours, or let's get sprouting! I would be sad it you had to wait and wait for your flour to be done once I posted that pancake recipe. 

My method for sprouting is the same for every grain. These pictures are of millet. Once sprouted and dried, grains can be easily ground to flour using a normal blender (no vitamix required). What follows is day one. Not sure if you'll have the necessary tools? You will need: the grain itself, water, a big bowl or pot (preferably glass, second choice stainless steel), a mesh strainer, a dehydrator or a cookie sheet and oven.

Start with a nice big bag of the grain you want to sprout. 


Put it in a bigger bowl than you think you'll need (it will swell a lot) and fill to the top with filtered water if you have access to it. 


Stir a bit to make sure none of the grains are left floating (floatijg grains won't absorb water enough to sprout). 


Place bowl in an undisturbed part of the kitchen and place a cooling rack on top.


Tuck into bed by covering with a kitchen towel to keep out dust. 



If you like, say a little blessing and think loving thoughts. It is the love that helps it grow and later nourish your family. 

There, was that easy enough? See you tomorrow for next steps, dear reader! 


Sunday, June 29, 2014

Simplest GF Sourdough Pan Bread (THM E)

From the files of simplicity, here is another foolproof three ingredient recipe. Super tasty, too! When you crave toast, this is your go-to. The panbreads can be shaped into any size you prefer. I like making them sanddollar sized, but they could definitely hold their own as sandwich or mini-pizza material. They are delightfully chewy and have the rich sourdough flavor of sharp cheese (a huge plus for this dairy free girl!).


1/3c active sourdough starter, allowed to settle and any clear liquid poured off*
1t psyllium husks
2 pinches of salt

Heat a cast iron skillet until very hot. Meanwhile, combine all ingredients and let sit just a moment, for batter to thicken. Shape breads with your hands- I like to make little balls the size of walnuts and then make them as thin and flat as I can. Place three in the pan (more if they fit) and cover. Flip with a good spatula when bread is golden and pan releases bread. Cook until golden color is achieved on the other side. Enjoy!! 

*To create your own sourdough starter, visit here to see the first day in the wild sourdough series: http://barcodefree.blogspot.com/2013/12/gluten-free-wild-sourdough-day-1.html?m=1

Friday, June 27, 2014

Cookie Dough!! (gf, df, sweetener free, THM FP)

Ohhh I nearly lost my countenance tonight. Supper was very good, but not filling enough for this hungry gal, and my usual stand-bys were not going to cut it. I craved variety. I headed on over to the blog Whole New Mom because I was thinking of making her Chocolate or Carob Chia Seed Pudding into a FP recipe, and this somehow resulted. Mmm. I have a feeling I'll be making this again very soon!!! :) When I do, I'll snap a photo.

FP Allergen Free Cookie Dough
1T chia seeds
Pinch salt 
1T carob
contents of 1 capsule sunflower lecithin
1/4t vanilla
2T water
1T brazil nut protein powder

Using a ball jar attached to your blender, grind chia seeds alone until powdery. Add other ingredients except water and brazil nut protein powder and blend again. Remove from blender and stir in remaining ingredients. Eat with a spoon and feel decadent. :)

5.12g fat
4.6g usable carb
7g protein

Saturday, June 21, 2014

Cran-Raspberry Pudding (FP, GF, DF, purist-friendly, sweetener free)


This beautiful FP pudding brings back childhood memories of yummy juiceboxes at lunch. It is so light, it is the perfect slimming late-night snack!

Editorial note: I had been sugar- and sweetener-free for a couple of months before developing this recipe. It is tart. If you like, you can add a desired amount of sweetener along with the salt and the lemon extract, or use a full Tablespoon of coconut butter to make the recipe a sweeter-tasting S treat. 

1c warm water
2T gelatin
1/4t salt
1/4t lemon extract
1t coconut butter (or 1T for a sweeter, S treat)
Handful frozen raspberries (1/4c)
Handful frozen cranberries (1/4c)
4 or more ice cubes

Whiz warm water in blender, and while blender is running add gelatin. Add salt, lemon extract and coconut butter. Assemble frozen goods on the counter, and working quickly, add cranberries, raspberries and 4 ice cubes. Allow blender to run. It may thicken after a few moments. Turn off blender and pour into bowl. Depending on the temperature of your water and the size of your ice cubes, you may need to add more ice to achieve a temperature low enough to thicken. Serves one. Enjoy!!! 

Thursday, April 24, 2014

Cafe Mocha Pudding FP (gf, df, sweetener free)

This pudding is in honor of my mom. She taught me that a good meal, made from scratch, can solve just about everything. Thanks to her, I learned how to keep a proper pantry, always eat good food and never run out of eggs. ;) 

This recipe reminds me of her because she loves coffee ice cream, and has had a lifelong love of France and all things French since first visiting there in college. Despite working full-time and raising three daughters she has followed her heart and returned there many times. She has been married to my dad for more than forty years. 

My mom is super creative, and even during the busiest times she had projects going... handknits for us girls, handsewn clothes for herself. These days her medium of choice is quilting. 

And she can teach, and raise kids well. What have I not learned from my mom!? I am SO blessed. 

(I have a wonderful dad too. I'll tell you about him sometime when I develop a great recipe for roasted cashews ;) ).

And now for the Cafe Mocha Pudding recipe. Isn't it pretty? 


It is also packed with protein and ready in minutes. Best of all, though it is FP, it always seems like a big treat!

3/4 c warm prepared coffee (or warm water if using an espresso ice cube)
2T gelatin
1T cocoa powder 
1/2t vanilla
1/4t salt
1t coconut butter (optional; feel free to omit or increase to 1T for S)
Ice cubes (one espresso if not using warm coffee)

Whiz warm liquid in blender. Add gelatin and remaining ingredients except ice cubes; allow to combine well. Add 3 ice cubes in quick succession until only slightly thicker, like a frappe. If it doesn't thicken at all, even after blending for a few moments, add one more ice cube and watch carefully for signs of thickening for a while longer. The more ice cubes you add, the thicker it will be, and it's possible to add too many-- it is better to err on the side of too few. I personally find that I prefer a light, fluffy pudding. Immediately pour into your serving dish as it will set in just a moment. Serve immediately; this dish is quick to make and does not store well. Bon appetit!

Espresso Ice Cubes
2T coarsely ground coffee
I devised this method because I am a clueless non-coffee-drinker and don't own a funnel, filter etc. I'm also thrifty, and want to extract the maximum coffee goodness from my fair trade organic coffee (please buy this!). Put ground coffee in a tea ball. Pour 2c boiling water over the top and let steep until cool. Pour liquid into ice cube tray. Then, boil more water and rebrew the coffee, allow to cool, and freeze that too. You'll end up with some espresso ice cubes and some coffee ice cubes, which is handy so you can choose the best amount of caffeine for you at any given time. 

Wednesday, April 9, 2014

Sprouted Brown Rice Tortillas

This week I set off in search of a cheap, organic, sprouted, homemade-with-love, gluten free, low-glycemic, lowfat tortilla recipe and.... didn't find one. So, I made one up. And it worked! Huzzah. 



These are replacing Food for Life Brown Rice Tortillas in my diet. They are a lovely product, but I knew a homemade version
could be cheaper, healthier and better.

No further ado, as I must go to bed, and really want to post this tonight. It is a generous serving for one, but you could probably make it last two meals. Or make little ones and toss them in the dehydrator after stovetop cooking, to make crackers. Enjoy this recipe!! 


2T sprouted brown rice flour
2T sprouted millet flour*
2T sprouted buckwheat flour*
1t psyllium husks (not powder-- I understand you would only need to use a rounded 1/4t of the powder, but haven't tried this myself)
1/4t salt
3T water

Heat seasoned cast iron skillet on the stove (do not add any oil). In a small bowl, whisk together dry ingredients. Stir in the water, a tablespoon at a time, with a fork. Divide and roll into 2 or 3 balls. One at a time, place the ball of dough between pieces of parchment paper. Roll out through the paper with a rolling pin. Place the whole thing, paper and all, in your skillet. Safety note: stay right near the stove to keep an eye on things no matter what! Flip tortilla in the parchment paper after a couple of minutes. Then, once it is apparently fully cooked, remove it from the parchment paper to brown a little. Repeat rolling and cooking steps with remaining ball(s) of dough. 


Scrumptious if I do say so myself!! And at least as flexible as the Food For Life Tortillas, if not more flexible. :) I ate them on their own tonight but burritos are in my future now.



p.s. Full disclosure: I do not yet have sprouted millet or buckwheat flours. I ground hulled unsprouted raw buckwheat in my blender, then unsprouted raw millet, to accomplish this recipe. I did use sprouted brown rice flour from the bulk foods section of my coop. I'm sure this will work with sprouted millet and buckwheat flours. I'm going to start soaking those grains tonight, so I can sprout, dehydrate and grind them. I will report back with an update later. In the meantime, these flours are available pre-sprouted and ground here: http://www.organicsproutedflour.net

P.p.s. I'll leave you with an image of my kitchen, when I am in mad scientist mode. Many thanks to my partner for patience and photography. :) 



Note added in August: finally got my millet and buckwheat sprouted and dried. Tried this recipe again. My goodness, it was wonderful! Chewy, flexible, moist. Delicious. Instead of dividing into 2-3 balls, I kept it in one piece for a regular-sized tortilla. 

Note added 9/18/14: I just double-checked that this recipe serves one for a THM E meal. It came out at 33.75g net carbohydrate, which leaves a little room for 1/3c beans in your burrito. Yaaay! 

Monday, April 7, 2014

Instant Gratification Chocolate Tootsie Roll Pudding



Move over, post-it notes. I have made the most wonderful accidental invention. I was making a smoothie one day, did things in a slightly different order, and ended up with (...drumroll...) chocolate pudding! And please don't tell me because I think it is a HUGE dessertey treat but it is (whispered) fuel pull!! Other fine qualities: except stevia, ingredients can be bought at any grocery store at affordable prices, contains 20g protein. 

So, without further ado, lets get started! 

3/4c very warm tap water (not scalding or boiling)
2T gelatin
1-2T presweetened cocoa powder (combine 1c cocoa powder with 1/2t stevia; great in any recipe!)
1T almond meal
dash lemon flavoring (I use frontier)
dash vanilla
10 drops liquid stevia
1/4t salt
4 or more ice cubes

Place very warm water in blender. Put on cover and turn on. Carefully lift up cover and gradually pour in gelatin. Mixture will turn white and frothy, and smell strongly of gelatin. Don't worry, just let the blender keep running while you get the other ingredients assembled on the counter. 

Add remaining ingredients except ice cubes and allow blender to run until the mixture looks creamy and uniform. Add ice cubes two at a time. After either four or six ice cubes, your mixture will start to look very thick (if it doesn't, keep adding ice cubes until it does). Turn off blender immediately (otherwise you'll get shredded jello). Pour into your bowl-- yes, you get to eat all of this deliciousness!!! :) 

Nutritional information: 3g carbs, 5g fat (7 if using 2T cocoa), 20g protein 

Variation: Blackberry Green Tea Pudding (FP)
Necessity was the mother of this invention. I slept maybe four hours last night and have an important business meeting this morning, so I brought out the Matcha powder for wakefulness. The result is super... wouldn't have thought it could be as delightful as the original but it totally is. Yum. 
Omit chocolate and almond meal. Add 2t Matcha powder. After adding first two ice cubes, add 1/4c (or less) frozen blackberries. Pudding will probably set immediately; if not add one more ice cube. This is a fp recipe, too, and it is even lower fat than the original.... there is no source of fat in this recipe. 

Variation: Decadent Thin Mint Pudding (S, not fp)
Use 2T chocolate, 1/2t salt, 20 drops stevia, and substitute peppermint oil for the lemon oil. 

Variation: Lovely Lemon (FP)
Omit almond meal and chocolate, add 2 t lemon juice. Beautiful white fluffy cloud of yum! 


Variation: Egg Nog (S)
Omit cocoa, almond meal, and lemon extract. Add cinnamon, freshly grated nutmeg, 1/4 c coconut milk, 1 pastured egg yolk and extra vanilla. This is the most scrumptious of all!