Every year I eagerly await Fall so that I can go apple picking and make all the apple things. And inevitably, we'll either have the hottest and longest summer ever, or we'll just seemingly skip autumn altogether and go straight to winter.
Despite Mother Nature's ridiculousness, nothing will stop me from making apple turnovers. Apple turnovers are basically the way I justify eating apple strudel for breakfast. Because really, there's no difference.
So, it's not some sort of car accident or hip skateboard move. A turnover is pastry dough (usually puff pastry, as is the case with this recipe) that is filled with a sweet or savory filling. And in this case, it's an apple cinnamon filling! Apple turnovers with puff pastry are far less intense than making a full apple pie.
Now, you don't have to drizzle vanilla glaze over your turnovers. You can leave them naked and they'll be perfectly delicious. But the issue I have is that they just seem incomplete. It's like they need just a little something.
I think the perfect weekend breakfast (or brunch) spread includes lots of both savory and sweet options. We usually have bacon or sausages, scrambled eggs or a keto frittata, fruit salad and then a sweet treat- like these delicious Blueberry Turnovers with Lemon Icing.
For a variation, instead of the blueberry filling, you can try my Strawberry Compote for another low carb option or if you are doing Trim Healthy Mama my Apple Pie Filling would make these a tasty crossover! Both of which are made with the slow cooker or Instant Pot- super easy!
This recipe uses the internet's favorite mozzarella cheese dough, also fondly known as "fathead" dough. I have also made these with my almond flour pie crust dough, but I like the fathead dough better. It has a chewy quality to it that is delicious and hard to find in any other low carb recipe.
I like using coconut flour in my fathead dough instead of almond flour because it's so much less expensive than almond flour. Also, my son's school is nut-free so I can't put anything made with almond flour in his lunch bag. These Blueberry Turnovers with Lemon Icing (made with coconut flour fathead dough) are fair game!
Don't try to use the stovetop for this recipe- it works better if you use the microwave. I add the mozzarella cheese, cream cheese, and butter to a microwave-safe bowl and nuke it for 2 minutes with a quick stir at the 1-minute mark.
I sandwich the dough between 2 large pieces of parchment paper and roll it out so it doesn't stick to the rolling pin. I roll it out pretty thin for this recipe, about " thick. Then I peel off the top piece of parchment paper and put it on the cookie sheet for baking. Easy peasy!
I cut the dough into little circles with a large 4" diameter, which is the perfect size. If you don't have a round cookie cutter this size, you can use the lid from a wide mouth mason jar. Or you could also just use a knife. If circles are too hard to cut freehand, you could also just cut them into 4" squares.
The perfect finishing touch on these scrumptious little treats is the lemon icing. It is super easy- just take your favorite confectioner's style sweetener (Lakanto Powdered Monk Fruit Sweetener is my favorite) and mix it with lemon juice until it has a nice consistency for drizzling.
I start with cup sweetener and 1 tablespoon lemon juice and then keep adding more lemon juice a teaspoon at a time until it is perfect. Then use a piping bag or a spoon to drizzle a generous amount of lemon icing onto each blueberry turnover.
Just like my Lemon Cream Cheese Frosting, this icing is very lemony. (Which I love!) But if you prefer the lemon taste to be more subtle, I recommend using half lemon juice and half water to make your icing.
Was so eager to try this recipe but found it VERY goopy and wet...so much so that there was no way I could roll it out or cut the circles. Taste was good but the batter was too wet to manage for these. Could it be that the recipe should have listed more than 1/2 cup of flour? Doubt I'll try this again.
Thanks.
Just last week, the European Parliament endorsed a Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive, or CSDDD, the latest unwieldy moniker among a portfolio of initiatives that govern corporate reporting and marketing claims.
Corporate Sustainability Due Diligence Directive (CSDDD) aims "to establish a European framework for a responsible and sustainable approach to global value chains, given the importance of companies as a pillar in the construction of a sustainable society and economy." Simply put, it requires companies to take responsibility for their environmental and social impacts as well as those of their suppliers.
Who must comply: European companies meeting two of the following three conditions: $43 million in net revenue, $22 million in assets or 250 or more employees. It applies to non-EU companies if they have substantial activity in the EU, including a physical presence: specifically, net revenue of $161 million in the EU for each of the last two consecutive years and a listed EU subsidiary that generated a net turnover greater than $43 million in the preceding year.
What it mandates: Companies must disclose information on "sustainability matters" that affect the company, including such matters as the resilience of the company's business model and strategy to sustainability risks; and plans that align with the 1.5 degree Celsius global warming target under the Paris Agreement.
European Sustainability Reporting Standards (ESRS) aims for interoperability with various reporting standards, such as those from the International Sustainability Standards Board, the Task Force on Climate-related Financial Disclosure, and the Global Reporting Initiative, to avoid double disclosure efforts by companies. Sector-specific standards are planned for release starting in 2024.
Let us consider the margin of safety. This ratio measures whether the company is in profit, break-even or in a loss state. One of the financial ratios leverage assesses if the company is capable of meeting financial obligations.
These can be expressed in the value of decimals or in percentages. For all ratios, experts take numerical values from income statements, balance sheets, statements of cash flows and sometimes from statements of changes in equity. Let us now learn about each ratio in detail.
The inventory ratio indicates the number of times the business sells and replaces the goods during a particular time period. If the inventory turnover ratio is high, it means the goods are selling fast. If this financial ratio is low, then it means that goods are selling slowly indicating that the business is not growing.
The leverage ratio measures whether the company can meet its financial obligations. It indicates at the amount of capital coming from debt. Once you are aware of this amount, you can evaluate whether a company can pay its due debts.
Current or Working capital ratio indicates the capability of the business to fulfil its short-term obligations due within one year. This financial ratio explains how companies can maximize the liquidity of their current assets to settle payables. It considers the weight of current assets versus current liabilities.
It is a performance ratio that reflects the profit percentage of the company that is produced from operations before reducing taxes and interest charges. This is also known as the (Earnings Before Interest and Tax) EBIT margin.
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One important SaaS indicator is customer acquisition cost (CAC), which calculates the whole cost of gaining a new client, including marketing and sales costs. Understanding the profitability of your client acquisition efforts and streamlining your SaaS marketing and sales procedures depend on knowing your cost of acquisition (CAC).
The annual contract value (ACV) indicates the average income produced by each client annually, whereas the cost of acquisition (CAC) reflects the expense of gaining a new customer. Finding the CAC to ACV ratio might give you important information about how profitable your customer acquisition efforts will be in the long run.
This measure determines how long it takes to recover the cost of acquiring new customers through the monthly recurring revenue (MRR) that they bring in. It is preferable to have a shorter recovery period since it allows you to reinvest the income from new consumers faster.
One important SaaS marketing indicator is the lead-to-customer rate, which indicates how well your sales and marketing campaigns turn leads into paying customers. It is computed by dividing the quantity of leads generated by the number of paying clients.
Gaining clients is only the beginning for your SaaS company; keeping and interacting with them is just as important. Engagement metrics, often referred to as SaaS customer engagement metrics or SaaS product use metrics, give you important information about how users interact with your product and may be used to pinpoint problem areas and encourage product uptake.
These stats calculate how many distinct consumers are using your product actively on a daily or monthly basis. DAU and MAU can assist you in identifying use trends and possible churn threats in addition to offering insights into the degree of user engagement.
A composite indicator known as the customer engagement score is created by combining many engagement criteria, including feature adoption, product usage, customer happiness, and customer retention. It gives you a comprehensive understanding of consumer involvement and might point you to areas that need work.
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