Practically everything that is store bought will have added sugar in it. It frustrates me. Yoghurts, drinks, spreads, sauces, practically everything. Check the ingredients for a yoghurt with fruit in it. Sugar will be the second or third ingredient. Before the fruit. I understand why food producers do it, but all the same, it just makes it very difficult for me to buy things, especially for Lily.
I used to be able to find a 100% peanut only peanut butter in the supermarkets here, but I can't seem to find it anywhere now. So I thought about making my own nut butters. They're not just good on toasts as spreads, but useful for dressings as well - see my very first post here.
Anyway, I settled on making a walnut butter after reading various blogs - this one has honey and cinnamon in it whilst this only has cinnamon in it. This one only has walnuts and salt in it, which the one I decided to go for. I think the oils that the other two recipes called for would bind the walnuts and would make it into more of a paste. I wanted my walnut butter to be as unadulterated as possible, so I decided against adding any oils, honey or spices. I did add a pinch of salt, which enhanced the taste.
This is what I ended up with:
What you would have noticed from the photos of the butters from the different recipes I referred to is that my walnut butter looks very different from the other homemade walnut butters. Which is interesting, and makes it all the more appealing in my opinion, but I can understand why the lack of uniformity would not work for a mass food producer.
Anyway - this is probably the easiest thing to make, and there's no real reason why you would ever want to buy nut butters from a shop again - apart from the cost of course. 500gms of walnuts cost me $35 ($7/100gms). That made enough butter to fill a jar that once had about 450gms of peanut butter. 500gms of Planters peanut butter costs about $5 at the moment. I don't know what walnut butters cost in the shop, but I suspect a lot less than $35. You can see why making your own nut butters is not an attractive financial choice. However, the way I see it, I don't eat a jar of peanut butter a day. That jar of walnut butter will last us months. And if I don't have to have the nasty added refined sugar in my food, then I'll pay extra for it.
Anyway:
Ingredients:
500g raw walnuts
A pinch of salt - to taste
Tools:
A food processor
How:
I soaked the walnuts for about half an hour.
Drained them, put them on a tray and into an oven at 180 degrees for about 20 minutes.
Let the walnuts cool, while you go out and get a food processor ;-)
Stick walnuts in food processor.
Process until it becomes a paste. It really takes very little time (3 minutes maybe?) before it becomes this:
And another 1 min before it becomes this:
Add salt to taste.
This is what I got:
I think it's delicious. Ben doesn't. It needs sugar, he says. Sigh...
Let me know how yours turned out.
xAJ
Update: I used the walnut butter to make a salad dressing. The ingredients I used for it were: walnut butter, soy sauce, sesame oil and honey. (Note: I used a little bit too much sesame oil that it overpowered the taste of the walnut butter, so use very little). I then made a salad like so:
Tossed it with the dressing, and served the salad with some half boiled eggs, like so:
Verdict: Ben liked it. Said I can make it again. :-) xAJ
I used to be able to find a 100% peanut only peanut butter in the supermarkets here, but I can't seem to find it anywhere now. So I thought about making my own nut butters. They're not just good on toasts as spreads, but useful for dressings as well - see my very first post here.
Anyway, I settled on making a walnut butter after reading various blogs - this one has honey and cinnamon in it whilst this only has cinnamon in it. This one only has walnuts and salt in it, which the one I decided to go for. I think the oils that the other two recipes called for would bind the walnuts and would make it into more of a paste. I wanted my walnut butter to be as unadulterated as possible, so I decided against adding any oils, honey or spices. I did add a pinch of salt, which enhanced the taste.
This is what I ended up with:
What you would have noticed from the photos of the butters from the different recipes I referred to is that my walnut butter looks very different from the other homemade walnut butters. Which is interesting, and makes it all the more appealing in my opinion, but I can understand why the lack of uniformity would not work for a mass food producer.
Anyway - this is probably the easiest thing to make, and there's no real reason why you would ever want to buy nut butters from a shop again - apart from the cost of course. 500gms of walnuts cost me $35 ($7/100gms). That made enough butter to fill a jar that once had about 450gms of peanut butter. 500gms of Planters peanut butter costs about $5 at the moment. I don't know what walnut butters cost in the shop, but I suspect a lot less than $35. You can see why making your own nut butters is not an attractive financial choice. However, the way I see it, I don't eat a jar of peanut butter a day. That jar of walnut butter will last us months. And if I don't have to have the nasty added refined sugar in my food, then I'll pay extra for it.
Anyway:
Ingredients:
500g raw walnuts
A pinch of salt - to taste
Tools:
A food processor
How:
I soaked the walnuts for about half an hour.
Drained them, put them on a tray and into an oven at 180 degrees for about 20 minutes.
Let the walnuts cool, while you go out and get a food processor ;-)
Stick walnuts in food processor.
Process until it becomes a paste. It really takes very little time (3 minutes maybe?) before it becomes this:
And another 1 min before it becomes this:
Add salt to taste.
This is what I got:
I think it's delicious. Ben doesn't. It needs sugar, he says. Sigh...
Let me know how yours turned out.
xAJ
Update: I used the walnut butter to make a salad dressing. The ingredients I used for it were: walnut butter, soy sauce, sesame oil and honey. (Note: I used a little bit too much sesame oil that it overpowered the taste of the walnut butter, so use very little). I then made a salad like so:
Tossed it with the dressing, and served the salad with some half boiled eggs, like so:
Verdict: Ben liked it. Said I can make it again. :-) xAJ
We made peanut butter exactly for this reason and guess what- we used it in our salad dressing too! :D
ReplyDeleteHow is it that I didn't get your comment until now?! Almost a year later?! Hhmmm... I haven't made a nutty butter in a while. Maybe it's time I got the packet of cashews out!
DeleteHope you're well Aditi, and continuing with your lovely food blog:-)