Today I have a review of one of my new favorite cookbooks on the market: my pal Silvana Nardone’s new cookbook, Silvana’s Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Kitchen: Timeless Favorites Transformed. I’ve been a fan of hers ever since I got my hands on her first book, Cooking for Isaiah: Gluten-Free & Dairy-Free Recipes for Easy, Delicious Meals which she wrote when her son was diagnosed as gluten-sensitive and was told to also eat dairy free to help his body heal from the damage gluten had been causing.
I’ve known Silvana since around the time she came out with her first book and then when she launched her online gluten-free magazine, Easy Eats (which is sadly defunct). I had the good fortune to get to know her and be able to write for the magazine.
With Silvana’s Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Kitchen, Silvana has brought us another excellent cookbook. I often get questions about what “general” gluten-free cookbooks (i.e., not just baking) I recommend–and this is now one of them. Importantly for me, as a former pastry chef and bakery owner, Silvana knows her baking stuff. And as a mom, she knows how high of a bar kids have for food–especially gluten-free and dairy-free food. With this book, she has perfected family-friendly recipes that are wonderful for meals throughout the day. Because Silvana’s son is dairy-free, she has to avoid or find substitutes for dairy (like many other gluten-free people) in addition to gluten. This is not easy–but Silvana has done her homework and has developed recipes that will pass the taste test for anyone. One of my favorite lines from the book is: “Reclaim the rights to your favorite foods now”—to which I say a resounding “Yes!!” We gluten-free (and dairy-free) folks not only want, we deserve our favorite foods.
I think I’ve told you that I tend to mark recipes I want to try or have tried/loved with Post-It notes along the edges of the cookbook. As per usual with my favorite cookbooks, my copy of this book is a forest of Post-It notes. In fact, I’m not really sure if they are all that helpful anymore—because I think I’ve marked just about every recipe!
Her book covers meals and snacks throughout the day. It starts off with a Pantry Essentials section that I find to be quite helpful. This section includes a list of flours, gluten-free “dough enhancers,” dairy free “enhancers,” and miscellaneous off-the-beaten-track gluten-free and dairy-free ingredients that make meal preparing that much easier. She also includes a list of her favorite store-bought gluten-free and dairy-free products like breads, non-dairy cheeses, milks, creamers, and yogurts, and non-dairy spreads and oils.
The rest of the book is divided by meal or meal components. It’s got:
“The Breakfast Club” (breakfast and brunch), including recipes for Classic Fluffy Pancakes, Waffles, Buttermilk Biscuits, and Blueberry Muffins, as well as Cinnamon Swirl Pancakes (kind of like a cinnamon bun in pancake form—yum!), Cinnamon Crunch French Toast Sticks (hello easy and yummy breakfast!) and savory options like Scrambled Egg Potato and Spinach Breakfast Tacos.
“Plenty of Dough” (breads) contains recipes for things like Pull Apart Rolls “Rye” Sunflower Seed Bread, English Muffins, Bagels, Bready Corn Tortillas and Salt Soft Pretzel Poppers.
“Let’s Get this Meal Started” (appetizers and salads) includes recipes for Cheesy Spinach Artichoke Dip with Garlic Béchamel (which I am planning to make for the Super bowl party I’ve been invited to—yay!), and Crispy Shrimp and Pork Pot stickers with Chili-Soy Dipping Sauce (I’m making this one on the weekend especially for my Chinese take-out loving husband), Corn Dog Nuggets, and Crispy Chicken Taquitos (something our family loves as a snack!).
In “You’ll Be Bowled Over” (soups, pasta, and rice) she gives us some classic and some welcome surprises—I was especially taken with the Chicken Cup of Noodles recipe. She also includes Nachos Mac and Cheese and One Pot Chicken-Parm Rice. Her “Meal Makeovers (Fake-Out Takeout; TV Dinners, and Restaurant Classics)” contains re-imaginings of classic takeout and quick meals like Mushroom Veggie Burgers, Moo-Shu Vegetables with Sesame Pancakes, Crispy Fish Sticks with Sweet-Relish Tartar Sauce.
“Sweet Success (Dessert Classics)” includes cookies like Slice and Bake Gingersnaps, and Black and White Cookies (I so remember those from when I lived in NYC!), to things like Brownie Bark (recipe below); Pumpkin Pie Cannoli and Cherry Pie Popovers. Finally, her “Back to Basics (Reinvented Baking Mixes and Dairy-Free Favorites)” chapter includes foundation recipes such as that for her gluten-free flour mix, her sandwich, bread, and pizza mix, homemade cashew milk, dairy-free condensed milk, and dairy-free sour cream.
One recipe that caught my eye over and over again as I flipped through the book is the Brownie Bark recipe. It’s a reimagining of something called “brownie brittle” that is kind of a cross between a brownie and a crisp cookie. So, I made it–and it is fabulous! The recipe makes two fairly large (8 by 14 inch or larger) pieces of bark that are then broken up into smaller pieces. The key is to spread the batter as thinly as possible on the pans (and you really do need to use 2 large pans). It’s a good thing it makes a lot–because boy oh boy, is this stuff is addictive. The first pan of bark was gone by the end of the afternoon I made it. The second pan disappeared soon after—all three of us loved it! This recipe is definitely going into regular rotation here at our house.
As you can see, this book is a hit with me and with my family! I highly recommend it! As Silvana says, use it to “Spoil yourself and your family while making new food traditions.”
Brownie Bark
-from Silvana’s Gluten-Free and Dairy-Free Kitchen: Timeless Favorites Transformed
Ingredients
1/2 cup dairy-free, semisweet mini chocolate chips, plus more for sprinkling (I used 2 tablespoons for sprinkling)
2 tablespoons unsweetened cocoa powder
2 1/2 tablespoons canola oil (I used brown rice oil)
1 1/2 tablespoons water
2 large egg whites, at room temperature, beaten until frothy
1/2 cup granulated sugar
6 tablespoons “Silvana’s My Gluten-Free All-Purpose Flour” (I used my own mix because I didn’t have the ingredients to make hers—but hers is awesome, too!)
1/8 teaspoon baking soda
1/4 teaspoon salt
- Preheat the oven to 300 degrees F with racks in the middle and upper third. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper.
- In a medium microwavable bowl, melt together the chocolate chips, cocoa powder, oil and water on medium power until almost melted, about 30 seconds; whisk until smooth and let cool.
- Whisk the egg whites, sugar, flour, baking soda and salt into the melted chocolate until smooth and shiny. Spread the batter evenly on the baking sheets and sprinkle with some chocolate chips. [I used 1 tablespoon extra chocolate chips per pan]. Bake, switching the pans from top to bottom and front to back halfway through, until crisp around the edges, about 25 minutes. Cool completely on a rack. To serve, break apart into pieces. (The bark will keep in an airtight container for up to 1 week) [Jeanne’s note: I don’t think they will last anywhere near to a week—in our house they barely made it through 2 days before we ate them all!]
Note: if you buy the books via the above links to Amazon, I receive a tiny percentage of each sale.
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credito pessoal
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Connie
Jeanne, thank you for sharing this. I made these a few days ago and my husband and I really enjoyed them. I only used a single half sheet pan and they seemed cookie thickness. I cooked them the recommended time and after they cooled they were that perfect chewey cookie consistency. I’m not sure if they were supposed to be crisp, but we really liked them this way! The bonus was how fast and easy it was to mix up the batter. Fast, easy, chocolate, and yummy! I have your first book and can’t wait for your new one!
Jeanne
Connie: They are supposed to be very thin–so they are crunchy like a cracker versus chewy like a cookie. I would use 2 sheet pans and spread the dough quite thinly (thinner than you think it should be). Also, thank you for buying my book!! Yay!
Kat
I too agree with you about this wonderful book. I had preordered it and read it cover to cover the day it arrived. Recently I returned from a month at my daughter’s home in NYCity. This was the one cookbook I took with me. Even though I had made up all her flour blends, I decided to order her premade flours when they came on the market. Now that I am home I will try out her boughten flour mixes and see if they are as great as I hope.
This is one recipe I haven’t tried yet so thanks for posting it-guess it will be the next one I make. Thanks for sharing.
Jeanne
Kat: Yay!
Laurel
Thanks for the wonderful review. This book really does look like a keeper for most of us gluten, dairy free types. My question is (having purchased way too many books in the past few years) is how useful do you think it would be for egg and soy free peeps? Could one say, make use of half the recipes? I ask because while it’s pretty easy to replace 2 eggs many authors use more for structure. Unfortunately trying to replace more than a couple of eggs usually has poor results. So, be my bookstore since I haven’t got one here to look through?
Thank you so much. P.S. I’m already jealous of all those amazing recipes.
Jeanne
Laurel: Well, it’s not an egg-free book. But as I peruse it, I don’t see any recipes that have a crazy amount of eggs. Recipes that you’d expect eggs in (muffins, bread, scrambled eggs) have normal amounts of eggs for those recipes. Also, I don’t see any soy in as a casually page through the recipes. That said, it might be a good idea to get it from the library to make sure it fits your needs before you commit to buying it. 🙂
Kat
To answer your soy question-no I too can’t eat soy and this book is great, few if any recipes use ingredients with soy. However, since I can eat eggs as I glanced through it quickly a number do use eggs. Why don’t you contact the author directly concerning the egg and structure question.