by Slow Cooked Pittsburgh
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Slow Cooked Pittsburgh's Notes:
Expand1 cup white or brown rice flour Ask a question about this ingredient
1/2 cup coconut flour Ask a question about this ingredient
2 tablespoons tapioca starch/flour Ask a question about this ingredient
2/3 cups coconut oil (solid, room temperature) Ask a question about this ingredient
1/3 cup pure maple syrup Ask a question about this ingredient
Combine flours and tapioca starch. Using your fingers, blend coconut oil with the dry mixture until you have a course crumb with some pieces no larger than a pea (you can also pulse this mixture in a food processor). Drizzle maple syrup over dry mixture, working it through with your fingers until a crumbly dough forms.
Ask a question about this stepGather dough and place on a single piece of plastic wrap, cover with another sheet of wrap. Roll the dough until ¼ inch thick. Remove top layer of plastic wrap and carefully slide dough into tart pan. This dough is extremely crumbly and it will break! Don’t worry, just gather as many large pieces as you can to fill in any cracks or seams, pressing gently to seal. (You can also simply press the dough into your tart pans—this is a much quicker method but the crust will be slightly uneven in some places). Bake tart shells in preheated oven at 325 for 15-20 minutes (until just beginning to brown).
Ask a question about this step1 cup freshly squeezed blood orange juice Ask a question about this ingredient
skin from oranges, cut into thin strips Ask a question about this ingredient
1 cup pure maple syrup Ask a question about this ingredient
13 ounces full fat coconut milk (reserve 4 oz.) Ask a question about this ingredient
2 tablespoons tapioca or corn starch (see note in introduction) Ask a question about this ingredient
For garnish: Cut skin from blood oranges into thin strips, place in pot with cold water and bring to vigorous boil. Allow skins to boil for approximately 30 seconds, strain and repeat this process two more times, starting with fresh cold water each time. (This process softens the peel and removes bitterness). Return the orange skins to the pot and add the maple syrup. Simmer on medium low heat for 20-30 minutes (until syrup is reduced by 1/3). Strain orange peel, being certain to reserve the syrup, and leave to dry on a metal rack. This garnish is particularly lovely the first day when still soft, though it continues to be delicious as it dries and becomes more chewy.
Ask a question about this stepFor custard: Simmer blood orange juice in a pan over medium heat until reduced by ½. Add reserved maple syrup, allow to simmer on low heat. Whisk reserved coconut milk with tapioca or corn starch (this is a slurry), being certain to combine thoroughly. Add remaining coconut milk to blood orange and maple syrup mixture, raising heat to bring mixture to a slow simmer. In a steady stream, slowly pour slurry into heated orange maple mixture, whisking vigorously and constantly to prevent lumps. When the slurry is fully incorporated, increase heat, bringing mixture to a boil, stirring constantly the entire time. Boil and whisk for approximately 1-2 minutes until mixture is thick and you can no longer taste the starch. Pour custard into pre-baked tart shells and chill until well set (4 hours or so). Garnish with candied peel.
Ask a question about this stepI am super excited to try this! My husband has recently gone gluten-free AND vegan, he's been craving a delicious treat that isn't hard and stale, but we are in the country side of France and I can't find coconut flour to save my life here, is there a good substitute? And why is coconut flour so popular in gluten-free & vegan confections?
Mollie is the best-selling author of many (mostly) vegetarian cookbooks, including the original Moosewood Cookbook, The Enchanted Broccoli Forest, and a trilogy of cookbooks for kids. Her most recent title is Get Cooking : 150 Simple Recipes to Get You Started in the Kitchen.
@Mexicanmutt, I use coconut flour (and other coconut products, such as oils and purees) because the saturated fat content mimics (at least to my tastebuds) the texture and mouthfeel of non-vegan ingredients such as butter and cream. Plus, they taste great and have lots of healthful benefits (particularly for folks who need to maximize nutrition within a limited diet). I also avoid soy at all costs. With that said, coconut flour is a pretty new thing here, too, so don't feel so behind the times! I feel your pain, I've lived in the south of France, vegan AND gluten free can't be easy. I am not a vegan expert, but I think I'd go for a high fat nut flour (almond might be available there? macadamia would be so yummy, but that is Hawaii...). Pastry is really just a blend of flour and fat and a bit of moisture, I see no reason why almond flour rubbed with coconut oil, vanilla and a bit of cold water couldn't yield a pat-in-the-tart-pan crust worthy of this custard. Please do let me know how it goes and if there is anything else I can do to help!