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I have recently ordered coconut flour and have printed some of the recipes from

Bruce Fife's website. They use 3 eggs to make 6 muffins.

I was really surprised how good the coconut flour is and the muffins are great!

the website is www.simplycoconut.com<http://www.simplycoconut.com/>. If you

don't want to used coconut flour it might give you an idea of how much egg you

can use.

Allyn

egg recipes

Hi,

My son is a picky eater. He won't eat visible eggs, but I discovered

if I bake muffins with eggs he'll eat them. Recipes often call for

milk and vegetable oil. (He gets enough dairy so I'm trying to promote

eggs) So far, I've substituted one egg and water for the milk and olive

oil for the vegetable oil.

How many eggs could I substitute for 8 oz. of milk and still have the

dozen small muffins turn out acceptably?

What could I substitute for the veg. or olive oil and how much would I

use? (e.g. butter plus water?)

Do you think some bone marrow would work as fat? Would it spoil the

taste?

Thanks from an inexperienced cook,

Alan

land

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I don't bake often, so I can't answer your question directly but my

son won't eat eggs either, but does eat custard and he drinks what

he calls " custard drink " (aka egg nog).

I gently heat one cup of raw milk to body temperature and add a bit

of vanilla. I separate an egg, save the white for merengue, and use

the yolk for the custard. I add some honey to the yolk, stir it,

and then slowly add the milk and mix. Taste for sweetness. You can

bake it (nest your baking dish in a second dish, put an inch of

water in second dish). It seems like I bake it at about 300 and it

takes about an hour.

But these days I often never bake it. He's drinking it raw and I

make a new batch fresh every day.

Alternatively, you can prepare a large batch and cook it as

custard. Custards typically have half milk and half cream but it is

forgiving and I use whatever I have.

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I don't think bone marrow would spoil the taste as long as you were using a

good amount of spice, like cinnamon. People used to make baked goods with bacon

fat (pioneer times, war rationing, etc) and it worked as long as it was

masked with something. Maybe you can make savory muffins with the marrow, and

add

some cheese and some green onion? I;d eat that! But, of course, I'll eat pretty

much anything (healthy, that is!)

Danae

" Mother's milk and mother's arms have always been available, patiently

waiting for the passing of man's foolhardy arrogance, which tried to convince us

that his inventions were superior to nature. "

Tine Thevenin

Baby boys are the only group in society having medically unnecessary

surgery without their consent.

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I use melted butter or sometimes lard as a substitute for oil in

baking. The butter if it's salted can make it too salty so if you

use salted butter cut back some on adding salt. Be careful putting

too many more eggs in than the recipe calls for, my friend once had

a cake explode in the oven from using too large eggs.

My kids eat meringue - you beat the egg whites until they're stiff

and then add just enough powdered sugar that it tastes pleasingly

sweet; probably can use brown rice syrup or honey if you prefer. I

think the latest is you're supposed to cook the white and leave the

yolk raw; but you can bake meringues at 350 for about 10 min. for a

fragile but delicious treat.

Yolks can be added to sauces, gravies, and puddings, they're a great

thickener. Also ok in homemade ice cream, if you do that.

>

> Hi,

>

> My son is a picky eater. He won't eat visible eggs, but I

discovered

> if I bake muffins with eggs he'll eat them. Recipes often call

for

> milk and vegetable oil. (He gets enough dairy so I'm trying to

promote

> eggs) So far, I've substituted one egg and water for the milk and

olive

> oil for the vegetable oil.

>

> How many eggs could I substitute for 8 oz. of milk and still have

the

> dozen small muffins turn out acceptably?

>

> What could I substitute for the veg. or olive oil and how much

would I

> use? (e.g. butter plus water?)

>

> Do you think some bone marrow would work as fat? Would it spoil

the

> taste?

>

> Thanks from an inexperienced cook,

> Alan

> land

>

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Just remembered my grandmother's recipe for pound cake - a pound

each of eggs, flour, butter, and sugar with a bit of vanilla and a

dash of nutmeg. I don't know how many eggs are a pound, I guess the

days of cooking with a kitchen scale are over.

>

> I have recently ordered coconut flour and have printed some of the

recipes from Bruce Fife's website. They use 3 eggs to make 6

muffins.

> I was really surprised how good the coconut flour is and the

muffins are great! the website is

www.simplycoconut.com<http://www.simplycoconut.com/>. If you don't

want to used coconut flour it might give you an idea of how much egg

you can use.

> Allyn

> egg recipes

>

>

> Hi,

>

> My son is a picky eater. He won't eat visible eggs, but I

discovered

> if I bake muffins with eggs he'll eat them. Recipes often call

for

> milk and vegetable oil. (He gets enough dairy so I'm trying to

promote

> eggs) So far, I've substituted one egg and water for the milk

and olive

> oil for the vegetable oil.

>

> How many eggs could I substitute for 8 oz. of milk and still

have the

> dozen small muffins turn out acceptably?

>

> What could I substitute for the veg. or olive oil and how much

would I

> use? (e.g. butter plus water?)

>

> Do you think some bone marrow would work as fat? Would it spoil

the

> taste?

>

> Thanks from an inexperienced cook,

> Alan

> land

>

>

>

>

>

>

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Which is too bad, since scales are far more accurate than cups!

One pound of eggs is approximately 8 eggs.

-Lana

On 6/27/06, haecklers <haecklers@...> wrote:

>

> Just remembered my grandmother's recipe for pound cake - a pound

> each of eggs, flour, butter, and sugar with a bit of vanilla and a

> dash of nutmeg. I don't know how many eggs are a pound, I guess the

> days of cooking with a kitchen scale are over.

>

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>

> I don't think bone marrow would spoil the taste as long as you were

using a

> good amount of spice, like cinnamon. People used to make baked

goods with bacon

> fat (pioneer times, war rationing, etc) and it worked as long as it

was

> masked with something. Maybe you can make savory muffins with the

marrow, and add

> some cheese and some green onion? I;d eat that! But, of course,

I'll eat pretty

> much anything (healthy, that is!)

>

> Danae

>

> " Mother's milk and mother's arms have always been available,

patiently

> waiting for the passing of man's foolhardy arrogance, which tried

to convince us

> that his inventions were superior to nature. "

> Tine Thevenin

> Baby boys are the only group in society having medically

unnecessary

> surgery without their consent.

>

>

>

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In a message dated 6/28/2006 10:41:12 AM Pacific Daylight Time,

alan.lichtman@... writes:

Now, if only I could put liver in the muffins for my son, I have it

made: )

Oh, wouldn't we all! The only way my liver-hating husband will eat it is if I

make pate with chicken livers. My two-year-old loves it. The secret, I think,

is to put in a pinch of sweetener (I used Rapadura) and puree the cooked

livers and onions with plenty of good butter and raw cream. Then just puree the

heck out of it. Fab-u-lous (if I do say)

Danae

" Mother's milk and mother's arms have always been available, patiently

waiting for the passing of man's foolhardy arrogance, which tried to convince us

that his inventions were superior to nature. "

Tine Thevenin

Baby boys are the only group in society having medically unnecessary

surgery without their consent.

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Thanks for your help Allyn, Lana, , Haelers, and Danae. I now

have some ideas from which to experiment.

Now, if only I could put liver in the muffins for my son, I have it

made: )

Alan

land

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You can use unsweetened applesauce in place of oil in cake and muffin

recipes. Use the same amount the recipe calls for, and it works fine. It

doesn't

change the flavor either.

Dawn Bynum, Homeschooling Mom of 5 in MS

Visit my ebay auctions at_ http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/welovebooks/_

(http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/welovebooks/)

Visit my daughter's ebay auctions at

_http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/lmb1128/_

(http://members.ebay.com/aboutme/lmb1128/)

We specialize in BOOKS, especially older, out of print children's books

homeschooling families love!

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I might eat it that way as well. I still go for liver in my nice little

gelatin pills. LOL

Allyn

PRIORITY INVESTMENTS N' KOLLATERAL,INC.

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From:

[mailto: ] On Behalf Of lichtmanad

Sent: Wednesday, June 28, 2006 1:34 PM

Subject: Re: egg recipes

Thanks for your help Allyn, Lana, , Haelers, and Danae. I now

have some ideas from which to experiment.

Now, if only I could put liver in the muffins for my son, I have it

made: )

Alan

land

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Hi Alan

Don't forget coconut oil as a replacement for the veg oil.

We just love it for our baking. It doesn't have an overbearing coconut flavor

for most recipes. Even when we make peanut butter, you can smell it but you

really don't taste the coconut.

Blessings

P

---------------------------------

Want to be your own boss? Learn how on Small Business.

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But the next day they get really hard.

>

> You can use unsweetened applesauce in place of oil in cake and

muffin

> recipes. Use the same amount the recipe calls for, and it works

fine. It doesn't

> change the flavor either.

>

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