Showing posts with label frosting. Show all posts
Showing posts with label frosting. Show all posts

Monday, 28 November 2011

Double Chocolate Ice Cream with Fudge Sauce

As far as decadent goes this takes the cake. YUM. This is not entirely raw so if you are a very strict raw foodist you may wish to omit this recipe. However; this is gluten and sugar free goodness with lots of rawness. Mmmmm!

For the ice cream; you will need...

240 Ml (1 cup) Corn Flour
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) Cacao Powder
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) Rice Milk (or breast milk or almond milk, whatever)
3 Tbsp Maple Syrup
2 Tbsp Organic, Local Honey
3-4 Dried, Pitted Dates
1/2 of A Sun Dried Vanilla Bean Pod (I am sure you could substitute with a teaspoon or so of vanilla extract if needed)
6-8 Pecans (OPTIONAL, if you have nut allergies avoid this)

Blend all dry ingredients (incl dates & vanilla) except the pecans in a food processor until well mixed. Now transfer to a bowl and stir in the liquid ingredients...or you may do as I did and do it in the food processor BUT be forewarned it will require plenty of stirring and creates a hard to clean food processor if you do it this way. Now chop some pecans, stir them in, and let freeze for an hour (create your fudge sauce in the mean time).

Fudge sauce:

240 Ml (1 Cup) Dates
120 Ml (1/2 Cup) Rice Milk
80 Ml (1/3 Cup) Cacao Powder
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) Water
4 Tbsp (Virgin, Cold-Pressed) Coconut Oil (AKA Coconut Butter)
1-3 Tbsp (depending how sweet you want it) Maple Syrup or Honey ect
1 Tbsp Cornflour or Arrowroot, to thicken
1-2 Cashews, optional, to thicken

Everything goes on a blender at high speed-you will need t scrape the sides a few times, and give this at least a few minutes of nonstop high speed blending to really get the consistency right. This fudge sauce tastes just like the real thing.

After the ice cream has frozen for about an hour, drizzle in fudge sauce and serve. Serves 2-3 (or 1 if you love chocolate, ha ha) you will probably find you have some fudge sauce left over, feel free to refridgerate this and use as a dip for fruits or a frosting for something else.

Thursday, 17 November 2011

The Ginger Mother's Frosting

Here is some frosting calling for the very healthiest ingredient in all of human kind-HUMAN mother's milk (breastmilk). This is nutrient packed and great for toddlers-and adults too.

115-120 Ml (1/2 Cup) Expressed Mothers' Milk
180 Ml (3/4 Cup) Cashews
2 Large Handfuls of Dried, Pitted Dates
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) Water
4 tsp Agave Nectar
4 tsp Cold Pressed Virgin Coconut Oil (AKA Coconut Butter)
1 tsp Organic Locally-Harvested Honey (Commercial bees are kept and treated in a manner that is inhumane and definitely inconsistent to veganism)
1/8 to 1/4 tsp Dried Ground Ginger(not raw)-depending how strong you want it to taste-optional

Everything goes in the blender at high speed, you must scrape the sides repeatedly and continuously burst air pockets with a spatula when blending to ensure everything gets thoroughly blended. Blend for several minutes, until smooth and velvety-it will have the consistency of a thick yoghurt (if you need it thicker, add more Cashews as needed). This would go great with my "Honey Butter" Cakes, the frosting for which I made was more fruity and caroby. This would also taste great as a dip with banana slices or berries. 

A footnote; don't worry if you don't produce enough milk to whip out  this much breastmilk all at once. Eat some organic apricots (known to increase breastmilk production) and accumulate it in the fridge one pumping at a time if you must. I pumped (expressed) breastmilk twice, one in each day, to get this much simply because I am breastfeeding a 1 year old which as I'm sure you can imagine, requires a LOT of milk. This recipe is well, well, worth it but make sure you keep the breastmilk in the fridge and do not leave it in the refrigerator for more than a total of a week, after which it will go bad.

Monday, 14 November 2011

Frosted Honey Butter Cakes...mmm

Delicious! This is easily one of our new favourites, my husband the honey bear just LOVES it.

1 Cup Pitted Dried Dates
1/2 Cup Cashews
1/2 Cup Brazil Nuts
1 Tablespoon Honey
1 Tablespoon Desiccated Coconut
A couple pinches of Fleur De Sel (or sea salt)
1/4 Teaspoon Allspice
Dash of Cinnamon
Dash of Nutmeg

Process in a food processor, starting with the nuts and salt (you want the salt to mix in evenly, this is integral-and add them in slowly. Slowly add in the dates, then everything else. Use measuring cups (of any size you like) to form round cakes. Frost (if you want):

180 Ml (3/4 Cup) Dates (dried & pitted)
60 Ml  (1/4 Cup) Dried Mangoes
120 Ml (1/2 Cup) Rice Milk
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) Water
60 Ml (1/4 Cup) raw Carob Powder
4 Tbsp Virgin Coconut Oil
1/2 Tsp Honey or Agave Nectar

Blend on high speed in your blender for several minutes, poking at the top of the mixture with a spatula repeatedly to make air pockets so that the entire mixture gets down to the blades. This takes a while to blend thoroughly but it is very worth it. Once it has a smooth, velvety consistency, frost those cakes...and enjoy! This also would taste great with bananas or strawberries. Mmmm.

Thursday, 27 October 2011

Moist Carrot Cake

mmm...

Cake:
4 Organic Carrots
240 ml/1 cup Desiccated Coconut
240 ml/1 cup Dried, pitted Dates
1 Cup Mixed Nuts
1 tsp Cinnamon
1/3 tbsp raw Carob Powder
1-2 tbsp Maple Syrup

Wash & finely grate the carrots into a large bowl. Tedious, but this recipe is well worth it, believe me. Grind (pulse, stir, pulse, stir...) Dates & Nuts together in a blender or food processor until they are a relatively smooth mush. Add this and the rest of the ingredients to your large bowl. You may whisk or stir this until it is very well blended, but I found it easier to just get in there with my hands and mix it up. Press the cake mix into a glass pan and even it out with your fist. Alternatively, you could turn these into cupcakes! Frost and enjoy. Will easily serve 4-6, or more...but not if you're hungry like we were when I made it. The two of us ate about half of it in one sitting. :))

Frosting:
About 1 cup Ground Almonds (you may grind them yourself in a food processor if you wish, but they were cheaper to buy pre-ground at Tesco's. Easier too.
4 Tbsp Maple syrup
2 Tbsp Desiccated Coconut
Rice Milk

Add all ingredients into a bowl & stir, add rice milk gradually until the desired consistency is obtained. Recipe may be doubled if you want a sweet cake or you just want some extra frosting for whatever else. Smooth onto the cake with a knife or the back of a spoon.