Guest guest Posted January 16, 1999 Report Share Posted January 16, 1999 > Yes thats true, I grew some last year in my minigarden. > I know that the seeds are good for cakebaking if you put them in water for > some time it becomes thick and can be used instead of eggs, they are also > good in bread, but what means Omega 3? > Your servant Gunamani d.d. I have been obsessing on cholesterol lately. Someone made a disparaging comment about ghee, and I have been scouring the net for info. Not to get into any detail, but ghee ki jaya! Much of what you have heard about the fat in milk is false, and much of what is spoken about the diet heart connection is misleading and out dated. Omega 3 is an essential fatty acid found in cold water fish and flax seed. Highly recommended. Still learning about all this stuf. I will eventually produce an article about ghee sometime this winter. Unfortunately distracting things like making a living, staying warm, etc slow down progress. Check out this website. The Margarine Hoax -- trans fat and your health http://www.drcranton.com/nutrition/margarin.htm It is a little boring but ultimately glorifies ghee and recommends butter over margarine. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 27, 1999 Report Share Posted January 27, 1999 Adding linseed to bread. Suggested amount is 5 grams per kilogram of flour. Soak the seed in water for one hour before using. To replace eggs in cooking with linseeds. To 3 cups of water add 1 cup of ground flax seed. Bring mixture to boil stirring constantly. Boil for 3 minutes, allow to cool. Store in fridge in a sealed jar. Where recipe calls for beaten egg, substitue one tablespoon of the above mixture for each egg. Your servant Gokula das Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted January 31, 1999 Report Share Posted January 31, 1999 COM: Gokula das (New Nandagram - AU) wrote: > [Text 2049412 from COM] > > Adding linseed to bread. Suggested amount is 5 grams per kilogram of flour. > Soak the seed in water for one hour before using. > To replace eggs in cooking with linseeds. To 3 cups of water add 1 cup of > ground flax seed. Bring mixture to boil stirring constantly. Boil for 3 > minutes, allow to cool. Store in fridge in a sealed jar. Where recipe calls > for beaten egg, substitue one tablespoon of the above mixture for each egg. > > Your servant > Gokula das My wife did this as an egg replacer and it worked so well she was excitedly calling several friends to tell them. She made cupcakes with flax as egg replacer and apple sauce as butter replacer and they were unexpectedly light. C* chip cookies with flax as egg replacer and 1/2 apple sauce, 1/2 ghee as butter substitute were delicious and soft. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.