feed-icon-28x28.png Subscribe to this blog's feed
[What is this?]

Enter your email
address for updates:

Delivered by FeedBurner

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.
Powered by
Movable Type 3.35

All content copyright © 2006–2008 by Tami Yu & fête à fête™, all rights reserved.

Site developed by uiNNOVATIONS.

« Biotherm | Main | Givenchy Summer 2008 »

Baking with Agave Nectar

Being healthy with the sweet stuff doesn't have to be hard (or taste yucky) anymore. Thanks to Ania Catalano's new book Baking with Agave Nectar, you don't have to compromise your taste buds with strange-tasting sugar substitutes in your baking. With over 100 recipes featuring this wonderful sweetener, you will be amazed at how the All-American Apple Pie and French Pear Frangipane Tarte recipes will taste, or try the Lemon Chiffon Cake. There is a chapter on using agave in buttercreams and other types of frosting and sauces.

BakingWithAgaveNectar.jpg

Agave nectar carries plenty of health benefits, along with having a low glycemic index. Its taste is sweeter than sugar, and it's ideal for diabetics and those with hypoglycemia. It's also perfect for those who are trying to lower their sugar intake, and the texture is great to work with in baked goods. Try the refreshing sorbet recipe below - it's a great start to toast the start of summer...

Watermelon_Sorbet.jpg



Watermelon Sorbet

Makes 1 quart
Vegan & Gluten-Free

This particular sorbet is like really good Italian ice. It’s got an icier 
texture than some of the other 
sorbet recipes because it’s made from fruit that has a naturally high water content. It’s most appealing and quite refreshing on a hot 
summer day.

Half of a small seedless watermelon, 
rind removed, cut into pieces
½ cup light agave nectar
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
Pinch of sea salt

Place the watermelon pieces in a food processor and blend until liquefied, about 1 to 2 minutes. Measure out 3 cups of the watermelon purée into a large bowl. Add the agave nectar, lime juice, and salt and combine well. Refrigerate for several hours or overnight until ready to freeze. Pour into the ice cream maker and follow the manufacturer’s instructions for freezing. Freeze 20 minutes. Transfer to a plastic storage container and place in a regular home freezer to firm up. Remove the sorbet from the freezer 10 minutes before serving to allow time to soften up.


Reprinted from Baking With Agave Nectar: Over 100 Recipes Using Nature’s Ultimate Sweetener by Ania Catalano, photographs by Lara Hata. Copyright © 2008. Ten Speed Press, Berkeley, CA.


-Tami

Tagged as: baking, cake, cookbook, cookies, cooking, cooking techniques, health, pie

feteafete.com

TrackBack

TrackBack URL for this entry:
http://feteafete.com/cgi-sys/cgiwrap/tamiyu/managed-mt/mt-tb.cgi/205

Post a comment

(If you haven't left a comment here before, you may need to be approved by the site owner before your comment will appear. Until then, it won't appear on the entry. Thanks for waiting.)