The wet ingredients |
The dry ingredients |
Meringue! |
The workstation set up. |
I regularly scrape the sides of the bowl down and scrape the batter from the plate back into the bowl. Then I give the batter a little "fold" to ensure that the heavier ingredients don't settle at the bottom. If the children are not "helping" I am able to make a weeks worth of sandwiches in an hour, start to finish.
My favourite waffle iron |
This waffle iron has been used, roughly, once a week for 7 years! It is irreplaceable. See, it is a true "regular" waffle iron. Rectangular waffles with small, shallow pockets. All irons on the market today are "Belgian" waffle irons. Even the non-round ones have these wide, deep pockets. While our other/newer waffle iron works, to use the same amount of batter I have to spread it around to fill out the square. Then, it doesn't rise as well and you don't get the deep pocket anyway.
This is 8 days of sandwiches for 3 children (aka 48 waffles) |
Jensen Family Gluten Free Waffles
adapted from Eating Gluten Free
2 Tbs Ground Flax
1/2 Cup Water
3 Egg Yolks
2 Cups Milk *
2 Cups Water *
1 Cup Pumpkin Puree **
1 Cup Sorghum Flour***
1 Cup Buckwheat Flour
1 Cup Brown Rice Flour
1 Cup Tapioca Starch ****
2 Tbs Baking Powder
1 tsp Salt
1/2 tsp Xanthun Gum, rounded
6 Egg Whites
1/4 Cup Sugar*****
Beat together flax, water, egg yolks, milk, and pumpkin. Add flours, baking powder, salt and xanthan gum. Mix to become a batter.
In a separate bowl, beat egg whites until stiff. Slowly add sugar, until the whites form soft peaks. Fold into batter.
Bake on a hot waffle iron.
Keep waffles in a warm oven (with the door cracked open) until you are ready to eat. Any leftover waffles may be placed in Ziploc bags and frozen. They may then be reheated in the toaster, or made into sandwiches in the morning, to defrost in time for lunch.
* Really it's just 4 cups of liquid. If I have leftover coconut milk I will add that, if I am at the end of the milk jug, I will just finish it. I do try to have at least 2 cups be something other than water though.
** You can also use applesauce. If I want to get fancy, for eating waffles not sandwich waffles, I will add pumpkin spice with the pumpkin: 2 tsp cinnamon, 1 tsp ground ginger, 1/2 tsp ground clove or allspice.
*** Our supplier of Sorghum flour stopped stocking it, we now use white rice flour, but preferred the sorghum.
**** You can substitute another starch, perhaps potato or corn.
***** When we are doing the "fancy" waffles, we will sometimes use brown sugar in place of the regular and then add 1 tsp of vanilla extract.
And those 3 extra egg yolks? With a can of coconut milk and a 1/3 cup of sugar I make an ice cream base.
2 comments:
I've been looking for your "classic" waffler for a while to make just what you do-waffle sandwiches! I hope someone out there starts manufacturing some soon! We have a belgian waffler, and love it, too. Sounds delicious! I have a simple recipe for waffles using tapioca flour I'm going to try (using up the last of the tapioca flour from the cheese bread puffs)....gluten free I'm assuming.
Thanks Stacy! Now I just need a waffle iron. I've been looking for one in anticipation of your recipe... to no avail. Now I know why, they just aren't making them anymore. I'll have to hit the internet in the hopes of finding a non-Belgian one.
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