Tuesday, 27 August 2013

Gluten Free Baking- Double-baked Cheese Soufflé

Souffle is not something I’ve eaten much of, even before diagnosis, but something that I’ve always found quite intriguing. The mousse like texture of soufflé is appealing and I thought I’d give it a try. I made the double-baked cheese soufflé from the Hamlyn all colour cookbook ‘200 gluten-free recipes’. These are the ingredients I used:

The recipe involved making a rice flour based cheese sauce, into which whisked egg whites are folded. The cheese I used was a Cheshire blue and the mixture also contained chives, thyme and mustard. This was then baked for 15 minutes at 180C, here they are in the oven:



After the first bake they had gone golden, but not risen very much. They looked like this:



The soufflé then had to be left to cool completely before the second bake. Before baking again, a mixture of double cream and grated Parmesan was poured on top. Here they are just before the second baking:



This time they were cooked for 10 minutes at 220C. This is what they looked like when they came out:


They have risen a little but unfortunately soon sunk. The soufflé had a really great flavour, very cheesy and creamy complemented well by the herby flavour of the chives and the subtle hint of mustard. The texture was very pleasing; the lower layer was a dense mousse, thick and creamy. The upper layer was quite wet and cream like still, it probably needed a little longer which would have allowed it to stay up after it had risen. The Parmesan in the upper layer had melted to a stringy consistency, which made eating it even more interesting. Here is a picture of the texture inside:



You can see the mousse like texture lower down with the wet cream above and Parmesan skin on top. The soufflé was very good and surprisingly easy to make, definitely something I’d try again, maybe a sweet one next time.

No comments:

Post a Comment