THE GOOD CARBS COOKBOOK 
The Good Carbs Cookbook (by Alan Barclay, Kate McGhie and Philippa Sandall) published by Murdoch Books
 helps you choose the best fruits, vegetables, beans, peas, lentils, 
seeds, nuts and grains and explains how to use them in 100 refreshingly 
nourishing recipes to enjoy every day, for breakfast, brunch, lunch, 
dinner and dessert. The recipes are easy to prepare, (mostly) quick to 
cook, long in flavour and full of sustaining goodness, so you feel 
fuller for longer. There is a nutritional analysis for each recipe and 
tips and helpful hints for the novice, nervous, curious or time-starved 
cook.
FREGOLA AND BLOOD ORANGE SALAD WITH FENNEL 
Every
 ingredient in this lively salad says Italy. Red-fleshed blood oranges 
were developed in Sicily, while subtle, aniseedy fennel is everywhere in
 Italy. Fregola is a type of Sardinian pasta, not dissimilar to 
couscous. During processing, the durum wheat flour is mixed with water, 
rolled into tiny pebbles, sundried and roasted giving it a rustic 
quality. The flavour is improved if the fregola is cooked in a 
flavoursome stock. It should take no more than 10–12 minutes of cooking 
to be al dente. You can substitute with Israeli (pearl) couscous or orzo
 if you wish. Preparation time: 25 minutes •Cooking time: 12 minutes • 
Serves: 6
2 cups fregola
4 blood oranges
4 flat anchovy fillets, drained
1 garlic clove, peeled
½ teaspoon chilli flakes
3 tablespoons lemon juice
3 tablespoons olive oil
1 medium fennel bulb, trimmed and thinly sliced
freshly ground pepper
Bring
 a medium pan of salted water to the boil and add the fregola. Boil for 
about 15 minutes or until cooked through. Drain, refresh under cold 
water and set aside to drain and dry. • Slice the peel and white pith 
from the oranges and slice into thin rounds. Arrange in a circular 
pattern on a serving dish. • Mash the anchovies with the garlic and 
chilli flakes and then whisk in the lemon juice and oil. • Put the 
well-drained and cooled fregola and the fennel in a bowl, add the 
anchovy dressing and toss to combine all the ingredients. Pile the 
mixture on top of the oranges and season generously with pepper.
Per serve 
1050kJ/250
 calories; 6g protein; 10g fat (includes 1.5g saturated fat; saturated :
 unsaturated fat ratio 0.18); 33g available carbs (includes 8.5g sugars 
and 24.5g starches); 4.5g fibre; 165mg sodium; 315mg potassium; sodium :
 potassium ratio 0.52
ANNEKA MANNING’S BAKE CLUB 
Anneka Manning is an author, food editor, cooking teacher, home 
economist, mother of two and the founder of BakeClub. With over 27 
years' experience, she specialises in teaching the ‘why’ behind the 
‘how’ of baking, giving home cooks the know-how, understanding and skill
 to bake with confidence and success, every time. You can follow her on Twitter, Facebook or check out her website.
MANDARIN ROASTED ALMOND CAKES. 
These
 gluten-free cakes are a play on the original (and wonderful) Middle 
Eastern orange cake from the one-and-only Claudia Roden. The ground 
roasted almonds give a lovely ‘toasted’ flavour but you can substitute 
pre-ground almond meal. To roast and grind the almonds, spread on an 
oven tray and place in an oven preheated to 180°C/350°F for 8-10 minutes
 or until aromatic. Cool on the tray before processing in a food 
processor until finely ground. Makes: 12 • Prep: 20 minutes (+ 30 
minutes simmering and 15 minutes cooling time) • Bake: 15–18 minutes
2 large mandarins
olive oil spray, to grease
½ cup instant polenta
80g (2½oz) natural almonds, roasted, finely ground
½ tsp baking powder
3 eggs, at room temperature
¾ cup raw caster sugar
2 tsp natural vanilla essence or extract
icing sugar, to dust (optional)
Put the mandarins (skin
 and all) in a small saucepan and cover with water. Bring to the boil 
and simmer for 30 minutes or until very soft when tested with a skewer. 
You may need to place a small saucer over the mandarins to keep them 
submerged. Remove from the water and set aside to cool slightly. • 
Meanwhile preheat the oven to 180°C (350°F). Brush a 12-hole 80ml 
(⅓-cup) muffin tin with the melted butter to grease. • Combine the 
polenta, roasted almond meal, and baking powder in a medium bowl and mix
 well to combine evenly. • Quarter the mandarins and remove and discard 
any centre core or seeds. Puree in a food processor or blender until 
smooth. • Put the eggs, sugar and vanilla in a medium mixing bowl and 
use an electric mixer with a whisk attachment to whisk until very thick 
and pale and a ribbon trail forms when the whisk is lifted. Add the 
mandarin puree and use a spatula or large metal spoon to fold in until 
just combined. Add the polenta mixture and fold together until evenly 
combined. • Divide the mixture evenly among the muffin holes (pouring 
the mixture from a jug or using a ladle works well). • Bake in preheated
 oven for 15-18 minutes or until the cakes are firm to the touch on the 
top and cooked when tested with a skewer. Remove from the oven and cool 
in the tin for 10 minutes. Use a palette knife to ease the cakes out of 
the tin and transfer to a wire rack. Serve warm or at room temperature 
dusted with a little icing sugar if you wish.
Per cake 
Energy:
 560kJ/130cals; Protein 3.5g; Fat 5g (includes 1g saturated fat; 
saturated : unsaturated fat ratio 0. 25); Available carbohydrate 18.5g 
(includes 15g sugars, 3.5g starches); Fibre 1g; Sodium 40mg; Potassium 
95mg; sodium to potassium ratio 0.42
1 May 2018
IN THE GI NEWS KITCHEN
Posted by
GI Group
at
5:01 am
 
