Monday, August 31, 2009

Chocolate Fix




Oh my. Chocolate is one of my absolute favorite foods in the world. Just ask my oldest and dearest friend, Allison, about how I tried to give it up for Lent one year back in early high school. Not pretty. :) Thankfully raw cacao is easy to find and easy to make. And it's fun to make!! So, I have two recipes to share. Get your smocks on and have fun.




A couple weeks ago Nicole and I made the Maca Malt Cups from Sweet Gratitude:

Maca Malt
3/4 C brazil nuts
1/3 C agave
1T liquid vanilla
1/4 C maca
1/4 tsp salt
1/4 C melted cacao butter

*Cacao butter can be melted two ways. First, grate it up or scrape it off the block with a fork and put it in a measuring cup...fill the cup a little higher than the melted amount you are going for. Next, either stick it in your dehydrator and relax, or start your teapot full of water. When water is hot, pour it into a bowl and add your measuring cup or bowl of cacao butter and stir until melted. Should your cacao butter freeze up on you, just add more hot water to the bigger bowl and let it sit or stick it back in the dehydrator. *


Process the brazil nuts in a food processor until they are broken down. Add the agave, vanilla, and salt and process until smooth. (This alone is freaking fantastic) Transfer to a bowl and by hand add the melted cacao butter and maca. Make sure there are no chunks. (I use less maca than called for-I would start with 1T and start adding to taste) Let the mixture sit at room temperature for a bit while you get the cacao coating ready.


Cacao Coating
1 C melted cacao butter
1.5 vanilla beans, scrape the insides...or use 2 T liquid vanilla
1/2-1 c sweetner (honey, agave, yacon syrup)
2 pinches salt
2.5 C cacao powder


Blend the cacao butter and vanilla together until vanilla is broken down. Add rest of ingredients and blend well.

Okay, so you've got your maca malt and your cacao coating ready...what next? If you have chocolate molds, get them out. Line them with the cacao coating and scrape a bit up the sides so the whole thing is coated. Freeze for about 10 minutes. Take molds out of the freezer and scoop some of the maca malt into the molds and cover with more cacao coating. Freeze for a bit longer before thoroughly enjoying.


If you don't have molds, using a small ice cream scoop or your hands, make little truffles out of the maca malt and place them on some parchment paper on top of a cookie sheet or a pyrex, whatever will fit in your freezer. Next, using a fork, dip the truffles one by one into the coating and shake off any excess. Place on parchment paper and freeze for about 10 minutes, or until the coating is hard. This stuff is a.ma.zing!!! It so hits the spot when the kids are driving me a bit batty and I'm looking for some bliss.

Next up is one of my all time faves, a chocolate everyone should try, especially if you love goji berries!!!


Orange Goji Berry White Chocolate Fudge


My version after seeing Carmella from The Sunny Raw Kitchen use chocolate molds with her creation:


1/2 C melted cacao butter
1/2 C dry cashews
1/2 C agave
3/4 C goji berries
1/4 C cacao nibs
Gratings of 2 oranges

While cacao butter is melting, grind the cashews in a coffee grinder or blender until well ground. Transfer powder to a bowl. Briefly grind cacao nibs and add to bowl with cashew powder. Grate two oranges and add to bowl with nibs and cashew powder. Grind goji berries. Add allllll ingredients to the blender and whir until smooth. There will be a little grit from the nibs, and that's cool. Pour into molds or use a spoon and scoop dollops out onto some parchment paper. Sprinkle with goji berries and freeze for about 10 minutes. This will be the yummiest, most gorgeous chocolate treat ever! And it's full of antioxidants!!



Enjoy,
Mary

Tuesday, August 25, 2009

Slushies!


Woo-hoo! Slushies! One day we came home a sticky, sweaty mess from playschool & looking for something cold to drink. All of a sudden a desire for a DQ slushy hit me and I came up with this simple concoction. Besides being super quick to make, I love that you can add stuff in without it being noticed. Add ons such as a handful of spinach, vitamineral green, marine phytoplankton, vegan dha, etc. So when Luc asked for one this morning I was stoked!


Basic slushie recipe:

3/4 c fresh squeezed oj

1 C frozen raspberries

1 C frozen strawberries


Put everything in blender and go to town. Add a tsp of water if you need a little extra to get it moving. If the mixture is runny, add more frozen fruit. This is so yummy eaten with a spoon so make it thick. Now, if you want to add something in, like greens, blend them with the juice before adding the fruit. Anything else like green powders, hemp protein powder, or other liquids can be added with the fruit. This amount makes two big drinks, or 3 smaller ones. Enjoy!

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Milk & Cookies







A serious favorite, right? An old standby. A comfort. Milk and cookies. These two foods are staples in our house, especially for my 4 year old. He is very particular about what he eats and loves to help make the cookies. My 1 year old also helped make the milk today! He loves to put one object into a container so I asked him to put the dates in the blender today and he did! Go baby Leo!






The cookies pictured here are actually my version of Alissa Cohen's almond butter cookies, made into the shape of mini scones. I loved going out for coffee with my parents when I lived at home, and my mom and I would often split a scone. So I had to find something to satisfy that craving. These scones or cookies are made from buckwheat and almond butter, both being a great source of calcium. We also use currants which have lots of iron! Perfect for my little growing boy.

How I made them:
1 C soaked and dehydrated buckwheat groats
1/2 C almond butter
1/2 C currants
couple pinches sea salt
several dashes cinnamon
1 tsp liquid vanilla
1/4-1/2 c sweetner (yacon, honey, agave)
1 T lucuma powder, optional



In a food processor, process the buckwheat and salt until well ground up. Add the almond butter, vanilla, lucuma, sweetner, and cinnamon and process until kind of doughy. Add the currants and let it get well mixed. Shape into cookies or scones and refrigerate. (You can use raisens here too, I just really love the currant flavor!) Enjoy on own, or add some yummy nut milk. :)


Our favorite Brazil Nut Milk:
4 C fresh spring water
1 C soaked brazil nuts (we soak overnight, but a couple hours is just fine too, as sometimes one cannot wait)
1/2 C pitted dates
couple pinches sea salt
Blend and strain. It's fun and yummy to add extras after straining, such as:
2 T coconut butter
vanilla
raw cacao powder
lucuma/maca powder
carob powder
Luc usually requests chocolate brazil milk so I add coconut butter, dash vanilla, 2T cacao powder, carob, lucuma, and 1/2 tsp maca powder.



My friend Nicole (a fantastic dessertress) came over today to make chocolates and we had an awesome time! We created two recipes from Sweet Gratitude, and I will post the pictures soon. Have fun creating!!
Mary

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

New Beginnings & Raw Carrot Cake Muffins


Hi-Di-Li-Ho Neighbors!


It has been quite some time since I looked at my blog. Started with the best of intentions, little did I know that I was actually pregnant at the time of the last post. :) All those good intentions flew right out the window, and here we are today: new posting, new member of the family. Actually, he isn't so new. Leo turned 1 last weekend! What a joy! He is my little raw baby.


My thoughts and desires have changed and I decided to use this space to hold all my fun creations! Having grown up with a mom that loved to bake, it seems as though I'm following in her footsteps. Every other day I come up with something sweet and nutritious for us to devour. Raw cakes, pies, ice creams, chocolates, cookies, etc. Raw cacao is my friend! So, I will be posting pictures and recipes as they come up. Lots of times I am very inspired by other bloggers, and many times I use Cafe Gratitudes sweet recipes.


This week we ran into Whole Foods for some fruit and a wheatgrass shot and I noticed some vegan muffins I used to love. As I waited for my shot I pondered the ingredients and decided to try making them raw. The results are amazing! Raw carrot cake muffins!


Give it a whirl:

3/4-1 C raw sunflower seeds

3-4 medium carrots

1 C pitted dates

2 pinches sea salt

a few swirls of yacon syrup

1 T lucuma powder

2-3 T pumpkin pie spice

2 T liquid vanilla

(extra: 2 T cinnamon)

(extra: poppyseeds for topping)


Grind the sun seeds in your blender until fine. Transer to food processer and add dates. Slowly add rest of ingredients and process until the mixture is kind of doughy. Plop mixture into muffin liners or make into cookie shapes and drop onto dehydrator sheets. Dehydrate as long as desired. The longer you leave them in, the crispier on the outside they become. I say give it a couple hours at least. Enjoy!