Skip to main content

GFree Favorite Meal of the Year so far!

I promise to take a few weeks off from cooking-talk after this one, so as to not cram my gluten free life down your necks... but these two recipes were made in the K-house last night, and are just too darn good not to share! Although these recipes are both a little more labor-intensive than I normally go for, they're WELL worth the extra work/time.

Steps: Start the cookie dough the night before, letting it soak up all the flavors through the night. Start your enchiladas the next morning, making your house smell amazing all day. Bake the cookies while you're eating (they take longer than most cookies). This is a great meal to make for a very busy-day schedule, come home to a 2-minute dinner and dessert!

Recipe #1: Slow Cooker Chicken Enchiladas (adapted from Prevention recipe)













INGREDIENTS:

  • 1 pound(s) boneless, skinless chicken breast tenders
  • 2 Tablespoons chicken broth
  • 1/2 cup finely chopped onion
  • 2 cloves minced garlic
  • 1 can of Rotel tomatoes and jalepenos mix
  • 1 cup whole kernel yellow corn, drained
  • 2 teaspoons chili powder
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 1 teaspoon lime zest
  • 3 Tablespoons lime juice (approximately 2 limes)
  • 1 teaspoon dried oregano
  • fresh cilantro
  • corn tortillas (medium size if you can find them)
  • sour cream
  • shredded mexican cheese blend
  • 2 cps cooked rice
DIRECTIONS:
1. Place chicken on a cutting board and chop into bite-sized strips. Place in a crockpot on low. Stir in the broth, onion, garlic, Rotel, corn, chili powder, cumin, zest, lime juice, and oregano. Simmer on low for 5 hours.

2. Place equal portions of chicken mixture in the center of the tortillas. Sprinkle with cheese, cilantro and sour cream. Roll burritos and place in deep cooking dish (8x8 for 2-person meal, 9x13 dish for more).

3. Sprinkle with shredded cheese. Broil for 2 minutes until cheese is bubbly. Serve with Rice.


Recipe #2: 36-hr Chocolate Chip Cookies (adapted from Gluten-Free Girl and the Chef)













INGREDIENTS
:
  • 1 cup rice flour
  • 1 cup tapioca starch
  • 1 cup potato starch
  • 1 cup almond flour
  • 1 Tablespoon xanthan gum
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons baking soda
  • 2 teaspoons baking powder
  • 1 1/2 teaspoons kosher salt
  • 2 1/2 sticks unsalted butter, softened slowly
  • 1 1/4 cup brown sugar
  • 1 cup plus 2 Tablespoons sugar
  • 2 large eggs
  • 2 teaspoons vanilla extract
  • 16 ounces chocolate chips
  • sea salt

DIRECTIONS:
Put all dry ingredients in a separate bowl, whisk together thoroughly.

Combine softened butter (allow it to soften naturally throughout the day) and sugars, mixing well but not over-creaming which leads to spreading in the baking stage. Add the eggs, 1 at a time, mixing each in fully before adding the next. Pour in the vanilla extract and mix for a beat.

Sift the dry ingredients into the batter, about 1/2 cup at a time, and then mixing. When the all the dry ingredients have been incorporated, add the chocolate chips and mix for just a moment.

Cover the dough with plastic wrap and put it in your refrigerator, allow up to 36 hours preferably, the longer time allows for all the ingredients to blend in flavor.

Preheat the oven to 350°. Scoop generous balls of dough from the bowl (a little larger than a golf ball). Poke any errant chocolate pieces into the dough. Sprinkle the top of each cookie with the sea salt.

Bake the cookies about 18 minutes, or until the tops have turned golden brown. The middles should still be somewhat soft. Take the baking sheet out of the oven. Allow the baking sheet to sit on the counter for 10 minutes. Transfer the cooling cookies onto a cooling rack and allow them to cool for a few more moments. These extra steps make a difference!



ENJOY!

Comments

  1. The cookie look amazing! I can't wait for your next ideas!!

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

DIY Bath Salts

A few weeks back I added two posts for making your own face products. Along that same home-factory-idea line is the typical bath salt. I laugh when I see them in the store for $15, when it's often only $1 of Epsom or Sea Salt and a few drops of essential oil, plus $10 of preservatives you DON'T want on your body! I making salt baths more regularly after a car accident several years ago that left my back in a pretty poor state of health. I was taking a pain-bath about 3-4x a week and it helped immensely. Now I take them for all sorts of reasons: relaxation, menstral cramps, headaches, chest colds, aching muscles, and psoriasis flare-ups. The salt is the base to this so let's start there! SALT First, all salts are sea salts either mined as rock or evaporated from the saline solution. Sea salt is sodium chloride, and is used in cooking and cosmetics. "Dead Sea Salt" is proven to have the highest content of body-healing minerals it it, from the Dead Sea. Table s

Gluten Free for Psoriasis

Recently I've been putting my researching brain cells to work on studying the Gluten Free way of life. Since the age of 14 I have had psoriasis, and recently it's been showing signs of progression to psoriatic arthritis, a progression that occurs in about 20-40% of the cases (studies are still incomplete, although the reverse is 80% of PA patients have had psoriasis, so the two are definitely linked). I've been tested for allergies in the 1980s (none), and I'm a pretty natural consumer as well, so I don't use body products with harmful ingredients like parabens or sulfates. Herbal and homeopathic remedies and dead sea salts have all helped reduce my inflammations, but have never eliminated the disorder completely. I was vegetarian for 7 years in the 1990s, and that never cleared up my psoriasis either. Because of its progression I've started researching the diet and how it relates to the disorder, and stumbled upon several articles and studies that now link

Gluten-free Sourdough bread adventure

Throughout my decade of being gluten free, I had never heard this before, but recently at a friends house, I heard a rumor that the gluten in bread breaks down in the process of fermentation with sourdough. The study that this rumor has seemingly sprouted from was done on just 15 subjects in Italy. I won't get into how the wheat in the US is far different from the wheat in Europe, but suffice it to say, it's not the same. At first, this rumor was exciting. Could I actually have bread again? I was sure willing to try! So I took a chunk of my friends long-aged sourdough starter, fed it for a few days (that's the fun part!), and made some sourdough bread! Much to my dismay, the answer is no, I can not, but it sure was an exciting thought! I've been GF long enough to know the immediate physical sensations when I'm going to have a reaction, and I don't press my luck. I had a small piece of this DELICIOUS bread and gave it away, knowing full well tha