Showing posts with label Macadamia Nut. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Macadamia Nut. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Flour Power - Grinding Almond Flour

Something has been tugging at my subconscious over the last week.  I am sure the seed was planted when I made Maple-Nut Macaron and, having Maple Butter-Creme remaining, Dios Torta.  Both of which contained Walnut "flour", though the Macaron could have just as easily utilized Almond Flour or Hazelnut Flour.  Thus, I began contemplating Nut Flour.

True, you can grind nuts fairly finely in a food processor, if there is enough sugar to prevent "butter" from forming as the oils are released and the nuts heat up.  The chopping of the blade and the swirling around the processor bowl causes a lot of friction which heats the nut's oils.  But what if your recipe is devoid of confectioners' sugar?  Well, there is the smashing method for the softer nuts, like Walnuts and Pecans, wherein you place nuts in a zipper bag and crush them, like cookie crumbs, with a rolling pin.  This too causes some friction and actually squeezes the oil out of the nuts leading to a slightly "sticky" nut flour/meal.

And that is the underlying problem... 

True nut flours are light and airy, just like wheat flour (thus the term "flour") and neither the crushing method nor the processor method make fine, fluffy "flour" out of nuts.  They really produce more of a "meal".  This is not really an issue for me, in most cases.  I tend to use nut meal a lot as a coating instead of bread crumbs, but sometimes you NEED the flour.  So how do you get it?

You can buy it, of course, if you can find it.  There's nut "meal" a plenty on the market, but the finer ground flour can be troublesome to track down.  It's available on the internet, but I get tired of having to "order" everything ALL the time simply because I cannot find a local distributor.  I am one of those people who needs to see, smell and touch what it is I am purchasing when it comes to food.  Nuts go stale fairly quickly after shelling & grinding, and I don't want to end up with a 15 lb bag of stale flour.

For the home cook who doesn't need 15 lbs of flour at a time, there are the nut graters... Not grinders, but graters.  (available on Amazon)  Composed of a fine grating cylinder ensconced in a plastic housing with a hand crank and a hopper for gravity feeding that can clamp to your counter.  You feed the nuts into the top, crank the handle and fine nut flour drifts out the side and into your bowl.  I decided that it was kind of a uni-tasker, as Alton puts it, so moved on to other pursuits.

Then, the other night, I awoke from a dream at 3:30 in the morning, completely gobsmacked by the implications of my subconscious nighttime revelation.  I've noticed that I often experience food related epiphanies in the middle of the night.  (yes, I do dream about food.... a lot... when I am not dreaming about computer geek stuff)  The point is, that I woke with a single thought in my head.

"HEY, I have a rotary grater for Parmigiano-Reggiano!"

Satisfied, that I had solved one of the "great mysteries of the baking universe" and restored peace to the kitchens of the world, I returned to my slumber.

Thus it was, the next morning, armed with raw almonds, a cheese grater and a lot of elbow grease, I manufactured my own Almond Flour.  (technically, I should have blanched them first, but Almonds don't have the extremely bitter skin that Hazelnuts have, so I didn't worry so much about it)

Almond Flour

What you need:
Almonds (or other nut of your choice)
Rotary Cheese Grater (with the fine cylinder attached)
Elbow Grease
Zipper Bag for storage

It helps if you know how much flour you are gong to need, by weight.  Since the whole almonds would weigh the same amount.  That is the nice part about weights in baking.  If your recipe is based on volume measurements, like most American recipes, you are going to have to kind of guess a little.  1 cup of whole almonds will be almost 1 3/4 cups of almond flour due to the amount of "air" you are incorporating into the finished product. (I need 200 grams or 7oz of flour, so I grabbed 200 grams of whole almonds)

Cold, not frozen, nuts work best, as there will still be some heat produced by the spinning grater drum. (it's primarily a precaution)

So, simply fit the smallest grater blade into your rotary grater.

Add almonds.

Press down gently on the arm and turn the handle. (and turn and turn and turn and turn and turn and re-fill the hopper, and turn and turn and turn)

Yes, it's a little bit of work, but it only took about 10 minutes of grating to produce 7 oz (200g) of Fluffy, Light, Finely ground Almond Flour!

As opposed to the much coarser "meal" you often find in the grocery store... (even though it is often labeled as "flour")

Since the flour will begin to go rancid quickly after being so finely ground/grated, I suggest moving it to a zipper bag and storing in the refrigerator or freezer until needed. (even if it's only overnight, 'cause fresh is always best)

Now I'm ready for another Torte.

Mangia!!
~~

Monday, May 18, 2009

Comfort Cookies - Lemon White Chocolate Macadamia

Cookies are not my forte. I love them, but I very rarely make them, because something always seems to go horribly awry. I suffer from some sort of Crazy Cookie Curse either that, or I am the victim of the Biscuit Banshee. Whichever it may be, I am usually better off simply saving my butter for other pursuits.

That being said, there are a few special cookie recipes that I do make, mainly because I have made them so many times I can do it with my eyes closed... Zucchini Cookies with Lime glaze, Shortbreads, Potato Chip Cookies (thanks to Grandma), Linzer Augen, Gingerbread and, more recently, thanks to Spryte, Rolo cookies.

These cookies are in my list as well. I picked them up awhile back and somehow these have become a comfort cookie to me. I still don't understand why, as I am not a big fan of White "Chocolate", but when mixed with Lemon, Macadamia nuts and just a hint of Molasses... Yeah, Baby!!! I am ALL over it!!

So why am I am making comfort cookies? Well, my dinner, this evening, was annoying at best. I had grandiose ideas of Baby Artichokes and Pasta. What I ended up with was 45 minutes of my life lost forever as I pulled leaves and trimmed stems, dunking the resulting hearts in lemon water. Incidentally, I have decided that I am not fond of fresh artichokes... Too much work for too little return. They were horribly bitter last night. Yeah, I am over 'em...

So after failed dinner, I decided I needed cookies. See, makes perfect sense, don't it? :)

The nice thing was that I got to play with some of my vanilla beans. I haven't really been baking anything that warranted using them. I had purchased 3 Tonga Vanilla beans several months ago, so I used one of those this evening. Normally I use extract, but one of the advantages of Vanilla caviar,

is that is adds to the texture. I figured, it's a "tropical" cookie, so why not add a little "sand" to the texture.

Lemon White Chocolate Macadamia Nut Cookies


Topping:
1 1/2 TB Demerara Sugar; I usually use "Sugar in the Raw" for this but any large crystal'ed sugar will do.
1/8 tsp Lemon Oil (You can try to use 1/4 tsp Lemon Zest, but I find that it burns in the oven)

Toss these together in a small bowl, cover with plastic and set aside to meld.


Cookies:
2 cups AP Flour
1/2 tsp Baking Soda (This will help control spread and keep the cookies from being too soft)
1/2 tsp Kosher Salt
3/4 cup butter; softened
1 cup Light Brown Sugar
1/2 cup Granulated Sugar
1 Large Egg
1 Large Egg Yolk
Zest of 1/2 Lemon
1/2 tsp Lemon Oil or increase the Lemon Zest to a whole lemon
1 Vanilla Bean Scraped or 1 TB Vanilla Extract
10 oz Macadamia Nuts; Rough chopped
10 oz White "Chocolate" Chips (make sure they contain Cocoa Butter and Not Palm Oils)

Preheat the oven to 325 degrees.
In a medium bowl, whisk together, the flour, baking soda, and salt; set aside.

Beat softened butter until slightly fluffy, add Brown Sugar and Granulated sugar, continue beating until homogeneous

Add egg and egg yolk, mixing well, to combine.

In a small bowl, combine lemon oil, lemon zest and vanilla bean caviar (or Extract).

Add to the batter, mixing well to ensure even dispersion.

Add the flour 1/4 cup at a time, with the mixer on low, beating until everything is thoroughly mixed.

Remove bowl from mixer and add the Macadamia nuts and White "Chocolate" Chips

Fold them in by hand.

Line 2 pans with Parchment and drop spoonfuls onto lined baking sheet.

Press down lightly, just enough to level them slightly then sprinkle with Lemon Infused Demerara sugar.

Bake for 13-14 minutes or until the edges look golden brown.
Allow cookies to cool on sheet for 10 minutes before moving to a cooling rack to cool completely.

Your gonna have about 3 dozen cookies.

Oh, in case your wondering what I did with the scrapped Vanilla Bean pod, I wrapped it tightly and placed it in the refrigerator, because I am going to use it for some hot cocoa later.


Mangia!!
~~