Posts Tagged ‘cacao powder’

Faint-With-Satisfaction Choc Sorbet

recipe from Raw Food Lifestyles

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup raw organic cacao powder
  • 1/2 cup Water
  • 1/2 cup organic agave
  • 1 vanilla pod
  • 2 cups frozen ripe pineapple (Diced into small cubes before freezing)

Directions:

Blend everything in a high powered blender, pour into the most beautiful glass you can find in the house, pop a straw in and then flung yourself into your favorite sofa/chair/mat/rug/kennel/cave etc.

Raw Walnut Chocolate Bark

A delightful treat from the LabRAWtory.

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup coconut oil
  • 2 Tbsp raw cacao powder
  • 1 tsp maca powder (optional)
  • 2 tsp lucuma powder
  • 1/2 tsp stevia
  • pinch of sea salt
  • 1/4 cup chopped walnuts

Directions:

Place coconut oil in double boiler or bain marie to melt very, very slowly (keep at 40C!). Stir in powders. Mix in stevia & salt to taste. Transfer to a plastic container to coat the bottom. The bark thickness will depend on the container size you chose. Sprinkle in chopped walnuts. Place in freezer for 30 minutes. Remove from freezer, flex plastic container to release & chop into small pieces.

Durian Ice Kream

I’m on my 4th durian of the season. I don’t even want to even think of how much I will have spent on this fruit this year – they do not come cheap in Japan! Like so many people who eat a lot of raw vegan food, I have become a big fan of this stinky fruit. My local grocer has started importing a lot of lovelies from south east Asia this year, and I can’t help myself! I wanted to try something special with this spiky fruit, and decided to try this recipe from Frank Ferendo (see him on YouTube). This recipe was totally awesome, though very rich (high in calories and fat)… Worth it! I hope you enjoy it, too. (well, make sure you like durian, first.)

Ingredients:

  • 1 cup of durian
  • 1/2 cup water
  • 1 cup cashews
  • 1/2 cup agave syrup
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tbsp coconut butter
  • dash of celtic salt
  • 2 tbsp raw cacao powder (optional)
  • cacao nibs (for topping, optional)

Directions:

Blend ingredients in a food processor or blender. Chill for a mousse; chuck into an ice cream maker for ice kream (Or just freeze if you don’t have one of those).

Chocolate Pudding

This is probably the most introduced recipe for newbies to raw food. Why? Because it is absolutely delicious, simple to make, and has surprising ingredients.

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 cup raw cacao powder
  • 1/2 cup carob powder
  • 1 big ripe avocado (or 2 small ones)
  • 1/2 cup (or more, if you like) agave nectar or maple syrup
  • a few tbsp water, if needed
  • 1/4 tsp sea salt or Himalayan pink salt

Directions:

Blend and serve on a nice plate or bowl. The pudding in the picture shown here is topped with home-dehydrated pineapple, coconut flakes, and cacao nibs.

You can play with this recipe a lot,  adding fruit such as plums, and/or sprinkling coconut flakes, nuts, raspberries, shredded almonds, cacao nibs, fresh mint, or whatever takes your fancy. This is just one recipe. I personally add much less cacao and use mesquite instead of carob powder, which is essentially white carob. If you use a full cup of cacao powder it will be way too rich. Play around with different ingredients (maca, lucuma, coconut butter, etc.)  to find your ideal chocolate pudding. It’s really nice if you add a few frozen berries into the mix. Yummm.

Warning: high fat and sugar content (good fats and sugars, but fats and sugars none the less!)

Yes, as you have probably figured out by now from the few photos I have taken, I don’t actually own many dishes…

Barfi

a healthy version of a classic Indian sweet by Rohit and Rishi

Ingredients:

  • 1/2 pound almonds
  • 1/2 pound cashews
  • 4 cloves cardamon or cardamon powder (to taste)
  • 1 1/2 tbsp agave nectar
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • cacao powder (optional)

Directions:

Using a food processor, grind down the almonds and cashews until they are as close to a powder as you can get them. Shell the cardamom cloves, and grind down the seeds to a fine powder using a mortar and pestle. In a large bowl, place the almond powder, cashew powder, cardamom powder, salt, and agave nectar. Mash everything together with your hands until all ingredients are evenly distributed and nothing is sticking to the bowl. Lay the mixture out on a large cutting board and flatten in down to about 1/2 inch thickness. Cut in whatever shape desired. (Optional) Roll individual pieces in cacao powder. Top each piece with whatever you’d like. I suggest cashews, almond, walnuts, pecans, dates, or bananas.  Simple!

Trine’s Chocolate Date Balls

This is probably my most often-made, sinfully delicious, raw-food sweet treat. With raw and organic dates and nuts as the base, they are based on the LARA health food bar. Mine are better I think. :) They are perfect for the road. The problem is avoiding eating them all before you leave home, which for me is challenging. Although they are raw vegan and packed with nutrition, be aware they they are also sky high with calories, fat, and sugar (albeit good fats and sugars).  You can indeed have too much of a good thing with these babies! A basic recipe follows below, but I personally don’t measure so much. It depends on the water and fat content of the nuts and dates, as well as the quantity of other goodies you elect to put in. Variation ideas for the recipe follow later. Actually, there are so many variations that none of my balls ever turn out the same!

Ingredients (for basic recipe):

  • 1 cup of nuts
  • 1 1/2 cups of coursely-chopped dates
  • 1/4 cup or more of cacao powder
  • 2 tbsp or more of cacao nibs (optional)
  • a pinch or two of Celtic salt
  • agave syrup (used to bind if mixture is too dry)

Directions:

Ideally you should soak and dehydrate all nuts except cashews. Soaking makes nuts easier to digest and activates dormant enzymes. Dehydrating brings back the crunch that soaking took away without cooking them. If you are using a wet or fattier nut, such as Brazil nuts, you will need to add more dates and/or other wet ingredients.

Blend the nuts up until you get what looks like a powder at first glance. Unless you have one of those fancy high-speed processors, you will still get lots of nut pieces. Next, add the cacao powder and nibs and any other dry ingredients (such as coconut flakes) and blend in with the nuts. My food processor dies under strain, so I try to chop my dates as much as possible before adding them to the dry mix. Actually, until you get used to making this, I recommend processing the dates completely separately first, putting them aside, and then processing the nuts (no need to wash between; you don’t want any water remaining in the plastic/glass container before the nuts go in anyway) Pre-soaking your dates is a great idea (you can chuck the soak water into your morning green smoothie!), but I like small date chunks, and even if you drain the dates well, they are still rather gooey. Experiment though, and see what works for you. After the dates are incorporated, I add in any other wet ingredients such as flavour extracts. The agave goes in last, just a teaspoon or so if needed at all, to help bind the ingredients.

If the mixture has formed a giant ball in your processor (this is usually enough to overheat my machine!) then you are more than ready to form little balls or bars out of the mix. I like my mix a little drier (save the food processor!) and check the mix by making a sample ball. If it holds together well without being wet and mushy, it’s perfect! It’s easier to add wet to dry, so start conservatively with the dates and wet ingredients. You can freeze these suckers, or you can even dehydrate them for a drier texture, but that takes a lot of electric energy and they’re more than tasty enough as is. I would wrap them up in saran wrap to avoid freezer taste. You can easily pop them into your lunch box that way, too. If you don’t like them so hard, they keep well in the fridge too.

Way to Make Variations:

1) Use other dried fruit, such as figs, raisons, cranberries, cherries, apricots, or non-sugar dried tropical fruit in addition to some percentage of date mixture. In my experience at least half should be dates, though.

2) Use different nuts! I’ve tried all of the following, using whatever is in the cubbard: walnuts, pecans, Brazil nuts, macadamia nuts, peanuts, pistachios, almonds, hazelnuts… Did I miss any?

3) Add other raw vegan superfood powders, such as  a teaspoon or tablespoon of maca, lucuma, carob, or mesquite (white carob) in addition to the cacao powder (or replacing some of it)

4) Add spices such as cinnamon, cayenne pepper and ginger. Don’t forget sea salt in your basic recipe, by the way – it brings out the chocolate flavour!

5) Add coconut flakes as part of the dry mix. If you mix turns out wetter than desired, you can roll your cacao date balls up in them.

6) Add extracts: orange, vanilla, almond, peppermint…

7) If you need even more binding power and don’t want so much sticky sweetness, you can add a teaspoon or so of raw nut butter (This adds more fat though. Joy, joy.)

8) Don’t use cacao at all. (An less common choice for, cacao freak that I am.)

Some Variation suggestions:

Tropical: Use tropical fruit bits and use raw cashews for the nuts. Add 1/8 teaspoon ground ginger, 1/2 teaspoon finely grated lime zest, and 1 teaspoon fresh lime juice to the mix. Drop the cacao.

PB & J: Replace  1/4 cup dates for 1/4 cup dried cherries or cranberries; use raw peanuts for the nuts. Drop the cacao.

Blueberry Bliss: Use 1/2 dried blueberries and 1/2 dates; use almonds for the nuts. Add 1/2 teaspoon finely grated lemon zest, and a tsp of almond extract to the mix. Drop the cacao.

Cashew Cookie Dough: Use cashews nuts and twice as many dates.

Pistachio Heaven: Use raw pistachios and almond extract.

Mayan spice: Use any nut, add lots of cinnamon and cayenne pepper (careful, this is potent!)

I love dates because I love brown sugar. Dates taste like brown sugar candy, and they are a delicious and healthy way to satisfy one’s sweet tooth. One date has a mere 23 calories and is loaded with nutrition. Dates are an excellent source of carbohydrates (great for pre- or post-workout), contain no cholesterol, are high in fiber, and boast a wide range of nutrients, including calcium (32 mg per serving), Magnesium, Phosphorous, Potassium, Iron, Zinc, Copper, and Manganese. Dates also contain vitamins A1, B1, B2, B3, B5, C and more than 20 different amino acids; they help in the digestion and assimilation of carbohydrates, and help to regulate blood sugar levels and fatty acids content in our bodies.

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