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egg substitute
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Desperate_Housewife_2-2
Posts: 1,787 Forumite

I have been doing my own baking lately in an attempt to cut down on grocery spending and seem to be using up a lot of eggs as a result.
I usually buy free range so that bumps up the cost even more and I am now looking round for a cheap ('cheep cheep'! sorry!) source of eggs.
I came across this egg substitute http://www.goodnessdirect.co.uk/cgi-local/frameset/detail/316644_Orgran_No_Egg_200g__equal_to_66_eggs_.html and wondered if anyone had tried it, apparently its the equivalent of 66 eggs for £2.19.
I have looked at a couple of slimmers recipes and realised that they don't use eggs either. Any info would be great! Many thanks and apologies for the lame chuck joke!
I usually buy free range so that bumps up the cost even more and I am now looking round for a cheap ('cheep cheep'! sorry!) source of eggs.
I came across this egg substitute http://www.goodnessdirect.co.uk/cgi-local/frameset/detail/316644_Orgran_No_Egg_200g__equal_to_66_eggs_.html and wondered if anyone had tried it, apparently its the equivalent of 66 eggs for £2.19.
I have looked at a couple of slimmers recipes and realised that they don't use eggs either. Any info would be great! Many thanks and apologies for the lame chuck joke!
Save £12k in 2012 no.49 £10,250/£12,000
Save £12k in 2013 no.34 £11,800/£12,000
'How much can you save' thread = £7,050
Total=£29,100
Mfi3 no. 88: Balance Jan '06 = £63,000. :mad:
Balance 23.11.09 = £nil.
Save £12k in 2013 no.34 £11,800/£12,000
'How much can you save' thread = £7,050
Total=£29,100
Mfi3 no. 88: Balance Jan '06 = £63,000. :mad:
Balance 23.11.09 = £nil.

0
Comments
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I've been baking egg-free cakes and biscuits for 7 years now after my dd's head swelled to the size of a rugby ball after eating egg for the first time:rolleyes: She can tolerate it in a cake now but I've grown used to egg-free baking.
I have never tried a substitute except soya flour. To use soya flour (available from health food shops) simply replace each egg with 1 heaped tbsp of soya flour + 1 tbsp water.
I find it best and cheapest to just use recipes that don't require eggs. Favourites are; eggless chocolate buns (on this thread post 3), Norfolk vinegar cake which is on this thread post 3 again. Post 6 has my muffin recipe which I make nearly every week without eggs. I make a batch of muffin mix in a traybake tin quite often and cut up.
Biscuits I make regularly are flapjacks, fork biscuits and Anzac biscuits.
Another good source of eggless recipes is to be found by googling 'vegan cakes'
HTH0 -
Thanks so much for this thriftlady, my ds also has egg (and nut/seed) allergy so I like you, try and make my own.
Do you have any more ideas for foolproof nice tasting birthday cakes / fairy cakes??? DD and DS both have bdays in the next few weeks;)
I do already use a couple of recipes but am always looking to broaden my collection:D0 -
Hi Jammygirl
-my sympathies to you, my daughter also has an allergy to peanut and pinenut as well as to eggs.
For fairy cakes I find the chocolate bun recipe works well. Obviously you can ice them or melt a bit of chocolate over them (Kinnerton do a completely nut-free dark choc). I've tried it without the cocoa-replacing the amount with more flour and added sultanas.
For a big cake the chocolate bun mixture works well. I think the whole amount will make enough for two 7 inch sandwich cakes. You can also use the muffin mixture in a sandwich tin.0 -
A wartime tip was to use vinegar. I have never totally done this but for a recipe using 2 eggs I have used 1 and a splosh of vinegar. The mixture looks curdled but it still rises and tastes OK.
Sorry I am not too good at measures. I usually use "rack o' ee" untill it looks OK.0 -
thriftlady wrote: »Hi Jammygirl
-my sympathies to you, my daughter also has an allergy to peanut and pinenut as well as to eggs.
For fairy cakes I find the chocolate bun recipe works well. Obviously you can ice them or melt a bit of chocolate over them (Kinnerton do a completely nut-free dark choc). I've tried it without the cocoa-replacing the amount with more flour and added sultanas.
For a big cake the chocolate bun mixture works well. I think the whole amount will make enough for two 7 inch sandwich cakes. You can also use the muffin mixture in a sandwich tin.
Thanks Thriftlady, will give these buns a go today.....;) I sometimes use the choc you are talking about and sometimes giant choc buttons:D0 -
Thanks for the tips everyone, I've made 3 cakes and substituted a banana for egg in one of them and its lovely. I have bought some soya flour today so next time I bake, I'll try it.Save £12k in 2012 no.49 £10,250/£12,000
Save £12k in 2013 no.34 £11,800/£12,000
'How much can you save' thread = £7,050
Total=£29,100
Mfi3 no. 88: Balance Jan '06 = £63,000. :mad:
Balance 23.11.09 = £nil.0 -
hi everyone, i've searched but can't find what feels like a mythical reference i saw on here for using a special type of flour instead of egg or oil in cake recipies.
I'm not sure about using a precious egg just for a cake, and have had great success with some eggless vegan recipies i've used.
Could someone help? Or even just point me to the right place to look? I think it was gram flour (chickpea flour) or soya flour, but i can't remember. Thanks!Relax, Breathe, Love 2014 Challenges:Cross Stitch Cafe Challenger 23. Frugal Living Challenger. No buying cleaning products. I used MSE advice to reduce my car insurance from 550 to 325!! & paid it off in full!!!0 -
One heaped tbsp of soya flour and one tbsp of water are supposed to be a substitute for an egg in baking. I have never tried it myself, so I can't tell you if it works though....0
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I've used a tablespoon of veg oil and a few drops of milk (maybe a teaspoon) instead of an egg in a sponge recipe. Not sure how this would work in say pancakes though.
Other ideas here.
It's only a game
~*~*~ We're only here to dream ~*~*~0 -
You can get egg substitute powder in health food shops.0
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