Archives for posts with tag: dessert

This recipe is for the chocolate snobs (go on, own it – it just means that you have great taste).

It’s all about using the best quality raw cacao ingredients that you can find.  In Australia, that means Loving Earth – their single origin, fair trade, organic and truly raw cacao products are insanely amazing.  Unfortunately I don’t know about overseas suppliers but feel free to share your favorites in the comments (without being spammy please).

Chocolate and hazelnuts were meant to be together.  There’s not too much more to explain here, except to note that as usual I’ve opted for natural sweeteners and minimal processing.  The result?  Dark, rich, decadent, chocolaty, nutty, not overly sweet, and chock full of minerals, antioxidants and natural bliss chemicals.  What’s not to love?

Equipment:

  • Food processor
  • Mixing bowl
  • Plate or tray
  • Large pyrex or metal bowl
  • Large saucepan
  • Mixing spoon
  • Parchment paper

Ingredients for Filling:

  • 1/2 cup hazelnuts plus 16 whole nuts
  • 1/2 cup brazil nuts
  • 8 juicy medjool dates
  • 2 Tbsp coconut oil
  • 2 heaped Tbsp raw cacao powder
  • large pinch of himalayan or sea salt

Ingredients for Coating:

  • 1/2 cup raw cacao butter
  • 1/2 cup raw cacao powder
  • 2-3 Tbsp honey or agave (to taste)
  • drop or two of vanilla extract

Step-by-Step:

  1. Set aside 16 hazelnuts for the inside of the truffles.
  2. Combine the remaining 1/2 cup hazelnuts and brazil nuts in food processor and whir until crumbly (even better if it gets smooth like nut butter).  Add dates and coconut oil and whir some more until fully combined.  Add cacao powder and salt, whir a bit more, and remove to a mixing bowl.
  3. Form the filling dough into a large ball.  Divide in half and half again.  Repeat until you have 16 little portions.  Use your hands to form each little ball around one of the whole hazelnuts.  Set aside.
  4. Add about an inch of water to the saucepan and bring to a simmer.  Put cacao butter into the pyrex or metal bowl and suspend the bowl over the saucepan.  Stir constantly until the cacao butter has melted.  Reduce the heat if the cacao butter gets too warm.
  5. Turn off the burner but leave bowl suspended over saucepan.  Add cacao powder, sweetener to taste and vanilla.  Stir until fully combined.  Add more sweetener if you like.
  6. Remove molten coating from heat.  Dip the filling balls into the coating one at a time, then place on a plate or tray covered with parchment paper.  Place plate into the freezer for 5-10 minutes.
  7. Take the truffles out the freezer and give each one another coat of chocolate.  You can reheat the coating over the double boiler again if it gets too thick – but remember you don’t want to coating to get hot, just melty.  Repeat 2-3 times, freezing in between layers, until you have a nice thick layer of chocolate around each truffle.  If you have extra chocolate coating, why not dip some strawberries or dried fruit in it?
  8. Store in an airtight container.  If you live in a warm climate you may like to keep these in the refrigerator, otherwise they will be fine at room temperature.  If they last that long.

Chances are if I say the word “chia” to you, it conjures up this image:

Amazingly, it turns out that this same little seed that gave us not only the Chia Pet, but also the Chia Mr. T, Chia Britney and Chia Obama – I know, quite a miracle seed! – is also a serious nutritional powerhouse. But why eat something that you can grow into a decorative piece of greenery? Here’s a few reasons:

1. It’s a complete protein, containing all the essential amino acids (including the famous omega-3 and omega-6) that our body needs to survive but can’t produce itself. There are very few plant foods that fall into this category, so it’s a fantastic food for vegans or anyone looking to decrease their meat and dairy intake – or just anyone looking for low-cal, high-energy protein source. Chia has been reported to contain twice as much protein as any other seed or grain.

2. It has more iron than spinach! Again, great for those who don’t go to red meat for iron.

3. Chia is really high in those good old antioxidants, which we know help fight free radicals and keep our lovely cells stable and cancer-free. It is reported to have three times more antioxidants than blueberries! Further, all those antioxidants help keep chia really stable at room temperature, and can be stored in the cupboard for years without going rancid (unlike flax and many other seeds and nuts).

4. It contains way more calcium than milk (and none of the dubious hormones found in conventional dairy). Don’t get me started on the dairy = calcium myth! Let’s suffice it to say, it’s a big industry with a powerful lobby and a long, strong history. Getting calcium from chia is a much better choice for many reasons. For starters, it also contains the trace mineral boron that helps our bones absorb calcium.

5. Chia has more potassium than bananas. Mix these two together in a smoothie and you’ll be cramp-invincible!

6. It slows the release of sugars into the bloodstream, helping to prevent energy spikes. Great for diabetics or anyone, really. Add some chia into your sweet foods or drinks, and the chia creates a barrier between the carbs and the enzymes that digest them. It also means your carbohydrate energy becomes longer lasting, so you feel stronger for longer.

7. As above, because chia slows the release of carbs, it seems to be a great exercise food. If I eat chia and go running or practice yoga later that day my endurance and strength seem to be increased. Perhaps this is also due to chia’s water absorption capacity, which keeps the body hydrated and full of electrolytes during exercise. In Mayan tradition, chia was eaten by runners carrying messages over far distances – they always had a little pouch of this “running food” with them.

8. Chia is great at cleaning out your intestinal tract. It acts like a little broom, sweeping into those out-of-the-way corners and removing accumulated waste (yuck, I know, but so much better to get it out of there!).

Chia is one of my favorite superfoods because it is not only packed with nutrition and a source of endless energy, but it is also incredibly versatile in terms of culinary creativity. Here’s what the little salvia hispanica seeds look like when dry:

And here’s what they look like when soaked in water:

They go all gell-y when soaked and can absorb up to 10 times their volume in water (or juice, or any other liquid). Chia doesn’t have much flavor of its own but has a kind of tapioca-like texture, which makes it great to use in recipes. I especially like to create all kinds of puddings using chia as the base, or add the gell to smoothies or juices for some extra slow-release energy.

Black Sesame Chia Pudding

Black Sesame Chia Pudding

Chia Pudding, Three Ways

Serves 4 for a light breakfast or dessert, or 2 for a hearty breakfast

Basic Recipe

5 Tbsp chia seeds

2 cups almond milk*

1-2 Tbsp raw honey, agave or maple syrup (adjust to taste – sweetness is a very personal thing!)

For Middle Eastern Chia Pudding

1 tsp rosewater

1/2 tsp ground cardamom

1 tsp ground cinnamon

Add the vanilla, rosewater and cardamom to the basic recipe. Stir well and set aside for at least 10 minutes. Stir again. Serve in shallow bowls, sprinkled with cinnamon.

For Vanilla and Nectarine Chia Pudding

4 nectarines

2 Tbsp agave nectar, honey or maple syrup

1/2 vanilla pod

Cut nectarines in half and remove the stone. Drizzle with sweetener and place, cut side up, on dehydrator screens. Dehydrate for at least 4 hours, or overnight if eating for breakfast.

Scrape the seeds from the 1/2 vanilla pod and add to basic recipe. Stir well and let sit for at least 10 minutes. Serve in shallow bowls, topped with 2 nectarine halves each.

Variation: Omit the nectarines. Mascerate 1 cup of berries in orange juice to cover for 1 hour. Spoon on top of pudding to serve.

For Black Sesame Chia Pudding

1/2 cup +1 Tbsp black sesame seeds

2 cups water

1/4 cup dried coconut

Omit the almond milk from the basic recipe. Instead, grind the black sesame seeds in a spice mill or coffee grinder. Blend the ground seeds with the water in a blender. Add the black sesame milk to the chia seeds and sweetener. Stir well and set aside for at least 10 minutes. Just before serving, mix through the dried coconut. Serve in shallow bowls, garnished with a sprinkle of black sesame seeds and a dusting of dried coconut.

As you can see, chia is highly adaptable. For more sweet chia inspiration check out:

Chia can also be added to savory recipes. Carmella’s (of The Sunny Raw Kitchen fame) Chia House Dressing is so beautiful, and it has inspired me to being adding chia to all of my favorite salad dressing recipes to thicken them without adding more oil. I recently created the following adaptation and served it tossed through a salad of raw rocket, zucchini and red onion mixed with cooked millet.

Sweet Sunny Chia Coriander Dressing

2 Tbsp chia seeds

1/4 cup sunflower seeds

1/4 cup olive oil

1/4 cup lemon juice

2 Tbsp apple cider vinegar

3 Tbsp tahini

2 Tbsp honey

1 1/2 Tsp himalayan salt

1/4 cup (packed) coriander/cilantro leaves

1 cup water

Place everything into the blender and blend away. Mmmmmm. This would also be lovely over sweet potatoes, or any salad really.

Chia are really one of most versatile, remarkable and nutritious foods I’ve ever come across. I eat the slippery seeds nearly every day, and I suggest you give them a try. And if by some off chance they don’t do it for you, you can always use them to do this:

Chia Mr. T

"I pity the fool who don't like chia."

I’ve been having fun creating superfood recipes lately, and this one was inspired by a box of ripe mangoes and a dinner party invite. Almonds, coconut, lucuma, honey, mango, banana, macadamias, vanilla – this cake is more chock-full of nutrients than most people’s meals. Protein and mineral rich almonds, immune-system and weight-balancing coconut, vitamin-C packed lucuma and mango, enzyme-rich raw honey, and much more.

All that goodness and three delicious, complex textures and flavors to tantalize the taste buds to boot! The bottom layer is a dense, cakey coconut lucuma extravaganza, topped with smooth mango puree swirled with a beautiful coconut macadamia vanilla creme. This is why raw desserts are amazing. Every bite is packed with yumminess and vitality.

Coconut Lucuma Cake with Mango and Coconut Vanilla Crème Swirl

Cake Layer:
1 cup almonds, ground to powder
1 cup dried coconut, ground to powder
½ cup lucuma powder
6 dried apricots
2 Tbsp honey
2 Tbsp coconut oil
2 Tbsp water

Mango Puree:
4 cups fresh diced mango (2 large)
2 dried bananas
1 Tbsp coconut oil

Coconut Vanilla Crème:
1 cup macadamia nuts
1 cup Thai young coconut meat (1 large)
½-1 cup young coconut water or plain water
1 vanilla bean
2 Tbsp honey
1 Tbsp coconut oil

Method:

Grind the almonds to a powder in a coffee grinder or high powered blender. Set aside. Grind dried coconut to a powder using the same method. Combine the almond, coconut and lucuma powders in a food processor and add apricots, honey, coconut oil and water as needed. Whir until combined. Press into a springform cake pan and place in the refrigerator.

Combine mango, dried bananas and coconut oil in food processor or high powered blender and whir until completely smooth. Place in a bowl and set aside.

Rinse your food processor or blender, then combine coconut vanilla creme ingredients and whir until smooth. Add more coconut water or water as needed to achieve a very smooth, creamy consistency.

Spread the mango puree over the cake layer. Then make little wells and add the creme a little bit at a time until it is well distributed. Using a chopstick, swirl the mango and creme together. Place the entire cake in the freezer to set for about an hour, then remove to the refrigerator. Serve chilled and eat within 4 days.

Check out this cake!

I’ve been thinking for a while about what I’d like to call the Fun Principle. So often this whole raw-health-nutrition scene gets so serious. And yeah, on one level it IS incredibly serious. We’ve talking about our health here, and as the old saying goes, what have we got if we haven’t got our health? So eating the optimal diet is most definitely a worthy goal that ought to be among our highest priorities.

But at the same time, we have to lighten up. I don’t necessarily mean by compromising and eating less healthy foods, though there are times when that might be a worthy decision if it supports your social life and lessens stress – but that’s not what I’m talking about right now. What I’m talking about is looking at food from the pleasure angle. The Yum Factor. The joyful, blissful, pure enjoyment of really amazing food that makes us feel great and buzz with happiness. The kind of food that makes us want to shout because it tastes so good and is so freakin’ full of nutrition you can feel your cells dancing. This is happy food! And it ought to be celebrated.

Hence the celebratory cake above. This is Hi-Cake: full of raw cacao, lucuma and nuts, and topped with a rich raw chocolaty icing made of avocado! I made this cake in honor of my brother, Alex, traveling almost as far as one can possibly go around this little earth of ours to visit me in Australia. After spending 30 hours in transit, doesn’t he deserve a joyful cake? I thought so. And what is more joyful than chocolate cake – what, that is, other than raw chocolate cake full of bliss chemicals and heaps of vitamins and minerals.

The recipe comes from one of my heroes: Kate Magic Wood. Her middle name is Magic! How cool is that? Kate is a super raw foods educator, writer and entrepreneur who lives in the UK and operates the funky website Raw Living. But it’s not just her passion for raw and superfoods that I dig about Kate. It’s her holistic view of things. The way she really gets that the whole point behind this whole nutrition thing is to allow people to fully realize themselves and reach their highest potential, and to provide a basis for the flowering of humanity – the real revolution. And her website is pink and purple – I dig that too. Her superfood recipes are so innovative and have such a sense of FUN flowing right off the page. If only I were in the UK to try some of her food. For now I will have to settle for deriving creative inspiration – like this amazing cake. I added the goji berry spirals because they just seemed to be in the spirit of Kate! I also subbed cashews for brazil nuts and used honey instead of agave – about half as much as called for. Divine.

Look, nutrition is a serious matter. But at the same time it’s a laughing matter! Because joy is the true path to vibrant physical, mental and emotional health. So here’s to utmost nutrition, unspeakable pleasure, and true creativity, which ultimately are all one and the same. Talk about having our cake and eating it too!

Hi-Cake

by Kate Wood

(published at Raw Living)

Time needed: 30 mins, 3 hours setting time
Equipment needed: blender
Makes 8 large slices

By popular demand, here is a raw chocolate cake recipe for you, so you can see what all the fuss is about. These cakes are so nutrient-dense, one slice is a meal in itself, packed with vitamins, minerals, proteins and healthy fats. Easy to make, and even easier to eat! Remember the Hi-bar? The first raw chocolate bar to be sold in the UK (and beyond!), made with cacao nibs and brazil nuts, this is the Hi-bar in a Cake.

Cake:

  • 250 g cacao nibs
  • 250 g brazil nuts
  • 250 g lucuma
  • 6 tbsp agave nectar
  • 150 ml water

      Icing:

      • 2 avocadoes
      • 30 g raw chocolate powder
      • 2 tbsp agave nectar
      • 60 ml water

        Decoration:

        • 2 tbsp goji berries
        • 2 tbsp dried cranberries

          Grind up the nibs and nuts separately in a high power blender or coffee grinder. Transfer to a mixing bowl with the lucuma and agave. With your hands, mix the all the ingredients so you have an even powder. Add the water gradually, kneading the mixture into a ball with your hands. It should end up as a fairly thick dough-like consistency. Press into a springform cake tin, and leave in the fridge to set for a few hours.

          To make the icing, put the avocado flesh in the blender along with the chocolate powder, agave and water. If you haven’t got chocolate powder, you can substitute carob or mesquite. Blend until you have a thick cream. Once your cake is set, you can remove it from the cake tin, and spoon the icing evenly over the top and the sides. Decorate with dried goji berries and cranberries sprinkled over the top. Uneaten cake can be stored in an airtight container in the fridge for up to two weeks

          I’ve got a bit of a bakery habit. While I rarely feel any pull to actually buy one of the gorgeous cakes – I know that despite their lovely appearances, they’re made of low-energy, dead food products like white flour, sugar and butter – I really love to ogle them. I admire the artistry that is patisserie. In fact I know that many of the master bakers out there, while they may differ with me on matters of diet, hold the same core philosophy close to their hearts: namely, using the best quality ingredients and preparing their little delicacies with the utmost attention to detail. Ultimately, it comes back to that old hang-up of mine: integrity.

          Look, I’m not trying to argue the merits of pastry. No matter if your baker is using the finest flour and organic butter imported from France. That croissant is still nutritionally dead. Despite its beauty, it’s not doing anything to make you a glowing diva radiating an aura of earthly energy. I’m just giving credit where credit is due: to the creativity and artistry of the patissiere.

          My latest addiction is a little cake shop on Little Collins Street in Melbourne. They make the most delicate, gorgeously petit cakes – miniature versions of French classics with contemporary twists. One that I’ve really admired lately is the “cosmopolitan:” a layer of carrot cake, a layer of cheesecake, and a topping of raspberry jam. I just had to have a go at rawifying it.
          I’ll be the first to admit that mine didn’t come out nearly as pretty as the delicacies on display at Le Petit Gateaux. Then again, I haven’t been disciplined under the exacting eye of a French patissiere! So I’ll give myself a break in terms of design, and suffice it to say that the flavors are HOT. Sweet, spicy carrot cake, given a depth of flavour with the additional superfood boost of mesquite meal, layered with lemony cashew cheesecake and tied together with the sweet-tart, lip smacking sensuality of raspberry-honey sauce. This is a super-powered cake. Carrots, coconut, mesquite, cashews, lemons (from my lemon tree!), dates, berries, honey – this cake is seriously nutritious. Yup, my cake packs more vitamins than most people’s so called “healthy” meals, but don’t eat it for that reason. Eat it because it’s delicious, it makes you feel great, and because there’s absolutely no reason that every single bite you put into your mouth shouldn’t satisfy on every level.

          Cosmic Carrot Lemon Cheesecake with Red Raspberry Sauce

          Crust

          1 cup dried coconut
          1/2 cup macadamia nuts
          1/2 cup dates
          pinch himalayan salt

          Carrot Cake Layer

          3 1/3 cups finely grated carrot
          1 cup sunflower seeds
          1 1/2 cups medjoool dates (pitted)
          1 1/3 cups shredded coconut
          2/3 cup mesquite meal
          1 tsp grated nutmeg
          2 tsp ground cinnamon
          Cheesecake Layer

          2 cups cashews
          1/3 cup lemon juice
          1/2 cup honey
          1/2 cup coconut oil
          1 small vanilla bean
          water, as needed

          Raspberry Sauce

          2 cups raspberries, fresh or frozen and defrosted
          2 Tbsp honey, softened

          For the crust: Grind macadamias and coconut in food processor. Add dates. Press into the bottom of a cake pan.

          For the carrot cake layer: Squeeze as much moisture as possible out of the shredded carrots. Grind the sunflower seeds to a powder in the food processor. Add dates and process to combine. Add shredded coconut, mesquite meal, nutmeg and cinnamon, and pulse a few times. Add carrots and process until combined, leaving some texture.

          Press half (or all, of you prefer 2 layers) of the carrot cake mixture on top of the crust, and place the cake in the freezer to set a bit while preparing the next layer.

          For the lemon cheesecake layer: If honey and coconut oil are firm, melt over a double boiler. Combine cashews, lemon juice, melted honey and coconut oil and vanilla bean in food processor or high powered blender and whir until smooth, adding water slowly as needed (up to 1/2 cup).

          Smooth half of the cheesecake mixture over the carrot cake layer. Place in freezer for 10 minutes to solidify, then top with the remaining carrot cake mixture. Again, freeze to solidify, then top with remaining cheesecake mixture.

          Will keep frozen for a few weeks, about 1 week in the refrigerator.

          Make sauce just before serving: Soften honey over a double boiler, then combine with raspberries and mash with a fork. Drizzle over each serving of cake.