As promised, albeit a little late, here is the recipe for low carb pecan pie. This is one of my favorite desserts. I love pecans, but I am picky about my filling. I’ve had some with a pale filling that is too sweet. This one is a nice caramel color. In this instance, I did not cook my crust long enough, so it got soggy while the pie was cooking. The dough is only on the bottom or slightly up the sides. Make sure your crust is lightly browned in the middle. I used sugar-free maple pancake syrup to add a little more flavor. I’ve used this same recipe to make individual tartlets. They cook in about 15 minutes and are lovely individual-sized pies.
Southern Pecan Pie
Crumble Dough
3/4 cup Almond Flour or other Low Carb Flour
1 tablespoon Butter
3 tablespoons Sugar Substitute
Filling:
3 Eggs
2 tablespoons Butter, melted
1/2 cup Sugar-free Maple Syrup
2/3 cup Sugar Substitute
1 cup Pecans, broken into pieces
1-1/2 teaspoons Vanilla
Pinch Salt
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Prepare an 8″ pie pan by spraying with baking spray.
Mix flour, sugar, and butter together with a fork, cutting through to make a crumbly dough. Press dough into the bottom of the pie pan. Bake in the oven for 7 to 10 minutes until lightly browned.
Combine all filling ingredients. Spoon the filling over the dough. Bake for 40 to 45 minutes at 350 degrees. Check to see if the pie is fully set and done.
Let cool for about 10 minutes. Use a pie server to get the pieces out easily. Serve with whipped cream or ice cream.
For Valentine’s Day, I wanted to put out something a little special and heart-shaped that is delicious. I ran across a recipe for Marbled Cheesecake Hearts in an old Eagle Brand Sweetened Condensed Milk recipe booklet and thought about how I would adapt it to a low carb recipe. Right off, the sweetened milk is a problem, but one you can work around. LC Foods offers a substitute version mix and although I’ve got one on hand, I haven’t tried it yet. But I wanted to try making this just using extra sugar substitute and heavy cream instead.
I followed the original recipe instructions (see them here), but cut them in half to make a smaller cake. It came out more like a layer of chocolate and vanilla than a marble swirl. I concluded a few things while doing this:
The recipe says to use half the cream cheese mixture as vanilla and add the chocolate to the rest and swirl it in. It’s too much chocolate, which is why mine came out with an almost solid chocolate top. I didn’t have enough vanilla to pull through. So I’ve changed it to 1/3 mixed with the chocolate to swirl through.
The top got a little dry in the oven, which gave it a flaky appearance. Adding a pan of water underneath will help to keep it moist and prevent the drying out.
Using heart cookie cutters results in a quite a few small pieces of your cheesecake being left over and not so pretty.
So I suggest making it in heart-shaped molds or cutting it into bars and putting a sugar-free candy heart on top. You can also cut a strawberry down the middle and place it face down on the top to make a strawberry heart if you can to use it for a special occasion. When you do this, you’ll have less mess, less work, and eight servings.
You also don’t need to put it in the foil liner. Just put a piece of parchment paper on the bottom of your pan and spray the sides with baking spray so it will come out easily.
Layered Chocolate and Vanilla Cheesecake
1 Chocolate Shortbread batch (recipe below)
12 oz. Cream Cheese, softened
1 cup Heavy Cream
1 1/2 cup Sugar Substitute
1 Eggs
1 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
1 oz Unsweetened Chocolate, melted
Preheat oven to 300 degrees (F.) Line a 6″ x 9 1/2″ (or close to it) deep-sided baking pan with heavy foil (see note 4 above), cut a piece of parchment paper to fit the bottom, and set aside.
Make the chocolate shortbread crust as described below.
In a large bowl, beat the cream cheese until it is fluffy. In a small bowl, combine the cream and sugar substitute and mix together. Beat into the cream cheese until it is smooth. Add the eggs and vanilla and mix until blended. Pour 2/3 of the batter over the crust and smooth with a rubber spatula.
Melt the chocolate in a double boiler until it is smooth. Stir the melted chocolate into the remaining batter until it is mixed in. Spoon this in six mounds over the vanilla batter in the pan. Use a table knife or spatula to gently swirl the chocolate batter through the vanilla batter so it looks marbled. Put a pan of hot water under the rack in the oven, then put the cake above it.
Bake for 50 to 60 minutes or until the cake is set. Cool for about 10 minutes, then put into the refrigerator to chill for at least an hour. Lift out of the pan using the foil to slide onto a cutting board. Use a heart-shaped cookie cutter to cut hearts. Or you can just cut into bars. Cover and store in the refrigerator until ready to serve.
This makes 6 heart-shaped cakes and the rest is pieces that you can cut into pieces and mix with whipping cream in a bowl for a not so special-looking dessert for two more servings. (See note 3 above.)
Makes 8 servings.
Nutrition Information (Filling Only)1 serving Calories: 428.4 Fat: 43.4 g Net Carbs: 3.4 g Protein: 7.9 g
Chocolate Shortbread Crust
3/4 cup low carb flour
1/4 cup Almond Flour
1/2 cup Butter
3/4 cup Sugar Substitute
2 tablespoons Unsweetened Cocoa Powder
Pinch Salt
Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
In a medium bowl, mix the baking mix, almond flour, whey powder, sugar substitute, and salt together. Cut the butter into the flour mixture until you have a soft dough.
Press into the bottom of your prepared baking pan.
Bake for 8 to 10 minutes. Let cool for about 10 to 15 minutes.
Nutrition Information (Crust Only) 1/8 recipe Calories:150.6 Fat: 15.1 g Net Carbs: 1.2 g Protein:2.8 g
Pumpkin season is upon us, as if I actually wait for pumpkin season to enjoy one of my favorite flavors. I usually buy extra canned pumpkin in the fall in case there’s a shortage by the beginning of summer. Just recently, I read that the pumpkin in the can isn’t pumpkin, but a mixture of winter squashes. That could be. I do know that jack-o-lantern pumpkins aren’t like cooking pumpkins and there is a pie pumpkin that is a better flavor and texture for it. But even if the pumpkin is really a mixture of various squashes, which could include pumpkin, the real flavor comes from the spice combination you add to it. So butternut squash, acorn squash, kobacha, or pumpkin, you still get a delicious result.
I often miss the muffins that are big, moist, and loaded with carbohydrates. No matter how you cook it, the low carb muffin won’t be the same, but I have come up with a plan to make a big, tasty low carb muffin that is satisfying. It uses a muffin-in-a-minute approach to get a big fluffy muffin, then you bake it for a short time to finish it off and it magically resembles a baked muffin in flavor and texture. Try it and you might find it will become a favorite.
While I use a combination of flours to make my muffins, you can use all one type of low carb flour or baking mix. I don’t recommend all coconut flour.
In a microwaveable bowl, break the egg and add the oil, then stir vigorously with a whisk or a thin spatula until the egg is well mixed. Add the seasonings, salt and sugar substitute and mix well. Then add the flours and stir in until completely mixed.
Microwave for one minute. Let cool and set a few minutes. Prepare a baking pan by spraying with cooking spray. Turn the partially cooled muffin onto the pan. Bake for 5 to 6 minutes until lightly browned.
Sprinkle with powdered sugar substitute or cinnamon and sugar substitute mix and serve warm or cooled.
Makes 1 muffin.
Nutrition information per muffin: Calories: 346 Fat: 33 g Net Carbs: 4.2 g Protein: 17.6 g
If you give this a try, let me know how you like it.
Recently, I watched a Food Network Show in which one of the chefs on the show made a Chocolate Avocado Mousse and I was intrigued. For one thing, they talked about the creamy, rich flavor of the dessert. I decided to try to make a low carb version. I found three slightly different recipes, including one from Food Network’s site, and I combined them with my low carb ingredients to make four servings.
To be honest, I’m undecided about this as a flavorful chocolate dessert. It’s not bad, but it isn’t your grandma’s chocolate mousse. The avocado makes it taste richer in fats, but doesn’t really add any flavor to it. What I did notice was the texture, which is creamy, but also has a little grit even though I thoroughly processed it in the food processor until it was smooth. The roomie wasn’t thrilled, agreeing that it didn’t taste bad, but it wasn’t the tastiest mousse either.
Where this might be beneficial to people would be if you are lactose intolerant, since you can use almond or coconut milk to make this version, or if you want to get the benefits of avocado, but you don’t actually care for the taste. The chocolate masks it well. Ultimately, it’s up to each person to decide if they think this is a delicious dessert or not.
I have eaten it two or three times and find that a little makes a pretty good topping on a scoop of low carb ice cream. If you layer it in a glass with orange or cherry flavored whipped cream, it might be a better balanced flavor that cuts the extreme chocolate richness. If you give it a try, post a comment before to let me know what you thought and how you served it.
Chocolate Avocado Mousse
1/2 cup Sugar-free Chocolate Chips
1 tablespoon Butter
2 very ripe (8 ounce) Hass Avocados, peeled and pitted
6 tablespoons granulated Sugar Substitute
1/3 cup Almond Milk or Coconut Milk
2 tablespoons Heavy Cream (optional)
1 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
1/8 teaspoon fine Salt
Melt the chocolate chips with a little butter in a double boiler or put in a microwave safe bowl in a microwavable container with water in it for about 1 minute, then stir. Stir until the chocolater is completely melted. You may have to microwave a couple of time in 30 seconds increments
Here comes the hard part. Put all the ingredient in a food processor or blender and process until it is creamy and smooth. I actually added the cream to it because it was so thick and too chocolaty for my tastes. You can add additional almond milk instead if you want it thinner.
Spoon into four 1/2 cup serving bowls or glasses. Chill in the refrigerator for a couple of hours before serving. It keeps a couple of weeks in the refrigerator.
Would be great layered with cherry-flavored whipped cream (or orange flavored) and a fresh cherry on top.
Nutrition Information per serving:
Calories: 341 Fat: 23.7 g Net Carbs: 4.4 g Protein: 2.5 g