Chickpea Flour (a new book) August 14, 2016 Ann Tudor
  In case you hadn't noticed, there's been a lot of hoopla the last few years   about wheat. Everybody and her brother avoids bread and pasta. And, full   disclosure, I admit that I have stopped making bread, stopped eating wheat, and   have a cupboard overwhelmingly stocked with the non-wheat baking staples: rice   flour (brown and white), teff flour, millet flour, buckwheat flour, sorghum   flour, potato starch, tapioca starch, and almond flour. Plus a few others for   good measure.
  I just found a new cookbook that might change everything. Chickpea Flour   Does It All, by Lindsey S. Love (New York: The Experiment, LLC, 2016).  The   subtitle describes it as "Gluten-Free, Dairy-Free, Vegetarian Recipes for Every   Taste and Season." I highly recommend this book.
  Divided by seasons and subdivided by months, the book features soups,   appetizers, main dishes, crackers and breads, and desserts for every season.   Spices and herbs from many cultures enliven the dishes, so you will never get   bored. The vegetarian dishes are inventive and inviting, full of flavour and   colour.
  Most of us know, however, that you can eat gluten-free very easily in all   categories except bread. So what's particularly helpful in this book are the   variations on the "bread" theme: in addition to the expected socca (also called   farinata or panisse) you'll find flatbreads, wraps, pancakes, crackers, pie   crusts, biscuits, brownies, and muffins--all made with chickpea flour.
  One of the recipes I tried was for "Ratatouille Tartlets".  I'm a   sucker for tarts, tartlets, pie crusts in any form, and I particularly hunger   for them because making wheat-free versions is a royal pain. Lindsey Love's   tartlet recipe was so easy and so delicious that I'll be making it for other   kinds of fillings as well. Here's her tartlet recipe:
  1 1/2 c. (GF) rolled oats
  1 c. chickpea flour
  1/2 c. sunflower seeds
  2 T sesame seeds
  1 t. sea salt
  1/4 t. freshly ground pepper
  1/2 c. extra virgin olive oil
  1/4 c. ice water
  Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Lightly grease six tartlet pans and place   them on a baking sheet; set aside. In a food processor fitted with a metal S   blade, pulse together the oats, flour, seeds, sea salt and pepper until finely   ground, about 30 seconds. Place the pulsed mixture in a large bowl, pour in the   oil and water, mix thoroughly with a fork until mixture is wet and clumpy.   Divide the dough evenly among the tart pans, pressing the dough into the bottoms   and sides. Bake for 30 minutes, until golden brown. Remove from the oven and let   cool completely.*
  The remainder of the recipe tells how to make the ratatouille filling   (which is added, cooked, to the already baked tart shells, with no further   baking needed). I'll let you find your own version of ratatouille. Mine, that   day, consisted of a leftover mixture of red and yellow pepper that I had sauteed   with onion and garlic. For my tart filling, I cooked an additional half an onion   in olive oil, then added a thinly sliced zucchini and my last tomato, chopped,   and I let these cook for six or so minutes, at which point I chopped and stirred   in the leftover pepper mixture. A quick trip to the back yard gave me some basil   and parsley to throw in to the mix. When the tart shells were done I removed   them from the pans and filled them with my eggplant-free ratatouille. The nutty,   slightly crunchy, very tender tart shells were delicious.
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  *The tart shells are pretty fragile, so if appearance is important to you,   it might be useful to allow for breakage by making a few extra. Any broken tart   shells can be crumbled and saved to sprinkle on top of a gratin some day, or to   add to your breakfast granola.
   
 

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