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  3. What easy things can I make with almond meal?

What easy things can I make with almond meal?

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  • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

    So I got a small bag of almond meal and I know nothing about it, except that it’s mainly used for baking (which I’m hopeless at). I’m broke and low on food so I can’t afford to not eat it, or get a recipe really wrong. Is there anything with almond meal I can cook in a fry pan or in a grill?

    FuglyDuckF This user is from outside of this forum
    FuglyDuckF This user is from outside of this forum
    FuglyDuck
    wrote on last edited by
    #3

    You can dredge salmon or chicken in it for a nutty crust and then grill or pan fry it. Especially if it’s a coarse meal.

    I do want to encourage you to try baking this, though: It’s a fairly simple recipe for a fudge crustada with a raspberry sauce. Yes, it’s pilsbury. if you can turn your oven on, you can make this (especially if you buy the crust like they want you to.) (King arthur flour tends to be better for scratch recipes, their pie crusts are near foolproof if you want to try your own pie crust.)

    Use a dark-ish chocolate with the raspberry and it’s too die for.

    1 Reply Last reply
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    • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

      So I got a small bag of almond meal and I know nothing about it, except that it’s mainly used for baking (which I’m hopeless at). I’m broke and low on food so I can’t afford to not eat it, or get a recipe really wrong. Is there anything with almond meal I can cook in a fry pan or in a grill?

      tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
      tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
      tal@lemmy.today
      wrote on last edited by tal@lemmy.today
      #4

      When I’m making bread in my bread machine, I’ll sometimes replace a portion of the flour with almond meal. Add some wheat gluten to keep it as cohesive. I imagine that that’d probably be true of other foods that use flour. I don’t do anything in a frying pan with it, but maybe pancakes?

      Almond meal has a lower glycemic index than grain flours, so if you know someone who is diabetic, it can be useful.

      EDIT: I assume that this is finely-ground, like flour. Someone else mentioned that it might be coarse. I’ve never used it for this, but I’ve sprinkled chopped almonds on yogurt, and I assume that one could do the same with coarsely-ground almonds.

      M FritzApolloF 2 Replies Last reply
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      • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

        So I got a small bag of almond meal and I know nothing about it, except that it’s mainly used for baking (which I’m hopeless at). I’m broke and low on food so I can’t afford to not eat it, or get a recipe really wrong. Is there anything with almond meal I can cook in a fry pan or in a grill?

        FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
        FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
        FritzApollo
        wrote on last edited by
        #5

        It looks like a fine powder. Pancakes I can do, I might try that. Cheers.

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        • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

          So I got a small bag of almond meal and I know nothing about it, except that it’s mainly used for baking (which I’m hopeless at). I’m broke and low on food so I can’t afford to not eat it, or get a recipe really wrong. Is there anything with almond meal I can cook in a fry pan or in a grill?

          FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
          FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
          FritzApollo
          wrote on last edited by
          #6

          Milk, some eggs, cheese, onion, carrot, butter, pasta, small amount of rice, bread, some herbs… That’s basically it.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • tal@lemmy.todayT tal@lemmy.today

            When I’m making bread in my bread machine, I’ll sometimes replace a portion of the flour with almond meal. Add some wheat gluten to keep it as cohesive. I imagine that that’d probably be true of other foods that use flour. I don’t do anything in a frying pan with it, but maybe pancakes?

            Almond meal has a lower glycemic index than grain flours, so if you know someone who is diabetic, it can be useful.

            EDIT: I assume that this is finely-ground, like flour. Someone else mentioned that it might be coarse. I’ve never used it for this, but I’ve sprinkled chopped almonds on yogurt, and I assume that one could do the same with coarsely-ground almonds.

            M This user is from outside of this forum
            M This user is from outside of this forum
            morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
            wrote on last edited by
            #7

            I was thinking about trying that, so I’m glad to see it works! Do you have a particular ratio or just by feel for the amount of gluten?

            tal@lemmy.todayT 1 Reply Last reply
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            • M morbidcactus@lemmy.ca

              I was thinking about trying that, so I’m glad to see it works! Do you have a particular ratio or just by feel for the amount of gluten?

              tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
              tal@lemmy.todayT This user is from outside of this forum
              tal@lemmy.today
              wrote on last edited by
              #8

              I’m probably not a very good role model, but I tend to make bread on a “more-or-less-randomly-throw-things-in-and-see-what-comes-out” basis. The water, flour, yeast, and sugar get measured, and the rest of the stuff — egg, poppyseed, milk, oil, butter, nut meal, wheat gluten, whatever — gets more-or-less arbitrarily thrown in, and if it turns out different this time, hey, that’s all part of the novelty. I recall one time having family chuckling at my rye bread having a very low proportion of actual rye in it.

              I don’t encourage people to follow my example, though, if they want consistent outcomes. 🙂

              But on gluten — if you add more, it’ll send the consistency further in the direction of high-gluten breads — chewy, like bagels or pizza dough. If you decrease it, it’ll make the thing more crumbly, more like cornbread. I’m sure that there are recipes out there that have settled on ratios that their authors were happy with, but I’ve never done that personally.

              M 1 Reply Last reply
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              • tal@lemmy.todayT tal@lemmy.today

                When I’m making bread in my bread machine, I’ll sometimes replace a portion of the flour with almond meal. Add some wheat gluten to keep it as cohesive. I imagine that that’d probably be true of other foods that use flour. I don’t do anything in a frying pan with it, but maybe pancakes?

                Almond meal has a lower glycemic index than grain flours, so if you know someone who is diabetic, it can be useful.

                EDIT: I assume that this is finely-ground, like flour. Someone else mentioned that it might be coarse. I’ve never used it for this, but I’ve sprinkled chopped almonds on yogurt, and I assume that one could do the same with coarsely-ground almonds.

                FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                FritzApollo
                wrote on last edited by
                #9

                It looks like a fine powder. Pancakes I can do, I might try that. Cheers.

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                • J just_another_person@lemmy.world

                  Can you name some other old things you may have around in the pantry?

                  FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                  FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                  FritzApollo
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #10

                  Milk, some eggs, cheese, onion, carrot, butter, pasta, small amount of rice, bread, some herbs… That’s basically it.

                  J 1 Reply Last reply
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                  • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

                    Milk, some eggs, cheese, onion, carrot, butter, pasta, small amount of rice, bread, some herbs… That’s basically it.

                    J This user is from outside of this forum
                    J This user is from outside of this forum
                    just_another_person@lemmy.world
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #11

                    I would search for something like “Savory Pancakes almond flour”.

                    Seems like you have all the ingredients for something like a Korean Savory Pancake, but using almond flour. Sounds like a delicious winner.

                    FritzApolloF 1 Reply Last reply
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                    • J just_another_person@lemmy.world

                      I would search for something like “Savory Pancakes almond flour”.

                      Seems like you have all the ingredients for something like a Korean Savory Pancake, but using almond flour. Sounds like a delicious winner.

                      FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                      FritzApolloF This user is from outside of this forum
                      FritzApollo
                      wrote on last edited by fritzapollo@lemmy.today
                      #12

                      I was thinking sweet pancakes, because you could add sugar to almonds and it would be desserty (maybe?). But you seem to know more about this than I do, so I’ll try some savoury ones. Cheers.

                      1 Reply Last reply
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                      • tal@lemmy.todayT tal@lemmy.today

                        I’m probably not a very good role model, but I tend to make bread on a “more-or-less-randomly-throw-things-in-and-see-what-comes-out” basis. The water, flour, yeast, and sugar get measured, and the rest of the stuff — egg, poppyseed, milk, oil, butter, nut meal, wheat gluten, whatever — gets more-or-less arbitrarily thrown in, and if it turns out different this time, hey, that’s all part of the novelty. I recall one time having family chuckling at my rye bread having a very low proportion of actual rye in it.

                        I don’t encourage people to follow my example, though, if they want consistent outcomes. 🙂

                        But on gluten — if you add more, it’ll send the consistency further in the direction of high-gluten breads — chewy, like bagels or pizza dough. If you decrease it, it’ll make the thing more crumbly, more like cornbread. I’m sure that there are recipes out there that have settled on ratios that their authors were happy with, but I’ve never done that personally.

                        M This user is from outside of this forum
                        M This user is from outside of this forum
                        morbidcactus@lemmy.ca
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #13

                        I’m pretty much the same way, sometimes I write it down just to get nutrition info (have diabetic family who like my baking), I tend to target a hydration and go from there so I’ll experiment with it, thanks. Totally get you on the fun part, been experimenting with adding a bunch of seeds and different flours for a while, keeos it interesting!

                        Lots of the commercially sold rye around here also doesn’t have a ton of rye in it, lots of commercial whole wheat bread is also pretty low percent wise too.

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                        • FritzApolloF FritzApollo

                          So I got a small bag of almond meal and I know nothing about it, except that it’s mainly used for baking (which I’m hopeless at). I’m broke and low on food so I can’t afford to not eat it, or get a recipe really wrong. Is there anything with almond meal I can cook in a fry pan or in a grill?

                          Øπ3ŕO This user is from outside of this forum
                          Øπ3ŕO This user is from outside of this forum
                          Øπ3ŕ
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #14

                          Vegan concrete?

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