I also decided it would be a good opportunity to test out some gluten-free dessert recipes I was curious to try. Another advantage of vegan food, I have realised, is that it is typically pretty resistant to going off - all this stuff was kept at room temp on a sunny day and was absolutely fine.
1) Nigella's carrot and pine-nut cake
I found this one on the BBC website, and figured Nigella would know good cake. I got doubly excited when I realised I could use some carrots we harvested from the community garden last weekend (H+O and I met through the garden). I also used 2 eggs Sadie gave me the other day when she had loads from her CSA - I feel like eggs are OK if I know they come from a good source, especially if they would otherwise go to waste!
3 tbsp pine nuts
2 medium carrots (approx. 200-250g/7-9oz)
75g/3oz golden sultanas
60ml/2¼fl oz rum (used Pimms instead)
150g/5oz caster sugar
125ml/4½fl oz regular olive oil, plus extra for greasing
1 tsp vanilla extract
3 free-range eggs (used 2 plus 1 flax egg (=1tbsp ground linseed+3tbsp warm water); reckon would work fine with 3 flax eggs)
250g/9oz ground almonds
½ tsp ground nutmeg, or to taste (forgot to put this in)
½ lemon, finely grated zest and juice
For the carrot cake, preheat the oven to 180C/350F/Gas 4. Line the base of a 23cm/9in round springform cake tin with baking paper and grease the sides with olive oil.
Toast the pine nuts by browning in a dry frying pan; set aside. Or use pre-toasted ones and skip this.
Coarsely grate the carrots, then sit them on kitchen paper to soak up excess liquid. Set aside.
Put the golden sultanas in a small saucepan with the rum / Pimms, bring to the boil, then turn down and simmer for 3 minutes.
Whisk the sugar and oil until airily mixed.
Whisk in the vanilla extract and eggs and, when well whisked, fold in the ground almonds, nutmeg, grated carrots, golden sultanas (with any rum that clings to them) and, finally, the lemon zest and juice.
Scrape the mixture into the prepared cake tin and smooth the surface with a rubber spatula. The batter will be very shallow in the tin.
Sprinkle the toasted pine nuts over the cake and put it into the oven for 30–40 minutes, or until the top is risen and golden and a skewer inserted into the centre comes out sticky but more or less clean.
Remove from the oven and let the cake sit in its tin on a wire rack for 10 minutes, then unspring and leave it on the rack to cool. To serve, transfer the cake to a plate.
This was dense and sticky and yummy.
2) Chocolate Black Bean Brownies
Stumbled across this recipe (liked the blog too) and thought it would be worth testing... Here's an alternative that might also be worth a try.
~1 1/2 cups black (or black-eyed) beans, defrosted
1/2 cup sugar
1/2 cup cocoa powder
1/2 cup applesauce (edit: tried subbing this with blended silken tofu plus a little more sugar - worked fine)
1/4 cup flour (rice flour for GF)
1/4 cup ground linseed
1 tsp baking powder
1 1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 tsp salt
good handful walnuts, coarsely chopped
handful chocolate, coarsely chopped
Heat oven to 350F, and lightly oil a baking pan.
Blend the beans until smooth. Measure the dry ingredients (except nuts and chocolate) into a bowl and mix with a fork. Add the applesauce and black-eyed beans and mix thoroughly with a fork. Add 3/4 of the nuts and mix.
Spread mixture in pan, and bake ~35 minutes, until the edges start to pull away from the sides of the pan.
Sprinkle the top with chopped chocolate and nuts, and cool well so that the chocolate re-sets before eating.
These were really simple, and really, surprisingly tasty (quite solid though). Might need to find an alternative to the applesauce as that's the one thing I don't often have in the cupboard. I used black-eyed beans as I discovered I didn't actually have any black beans in the freezer, and they were fine. Often rice flour can impart a nasty gritty texture to baking, but here I think it is in a small enough proportion that it doesn't matter. I made this again already (since I'd opened the jar of applesauce...)! This time I sprinkled some chopped walnuts on top as well as the chocolate, so it looked prettier.
3) Lime Tart
I was interested in making something with agar and found this recipe on ppk. I needed a GF, vegan piecrust, and remembered a nice-looking pie here. So...
For the crust:
2 cups ground almonds
1 cup ground linseed (used a mixture of linseed and chia)
1/2 cup cornmeal
1/2 tsp cinnamon
1/2 tsp salt
2 tbsp maple syrup
1 tbsp water
For the filling:
1 tablespoon finely grated lime zest (~2 limes)
2/3 cups fresh lime juice (~6-8 limes)
1 1/2 cups unsweetened almond milk, at room temperature
2 tablespoons agar flakes (or two teaspoons agar powder and skip the soaking step... used powder)
1 16 oz can coconut milk at room temperature
2 tablespoons tapioca flour (used cornstarch)
1/2 cup sugar
1 teaspoon vanilla essence
Heat the oven to 350F. Mix the almonds, linseed and cornmeal with a fork, then blend as well as possible, while adding salt and cinnamon. Keep going until the mixture becomes forms crumbly clumps. Then add in the water and maple syrup and keep mixing until well combined. Transfer the mixture to a 9 inch pie plate (lined with foil) and press it into the bottom and sides to form the crust. Make sure the tops of the sides are not too thin. Bake the crust for 10 minutes, remove and set aside.
Mix the almond milk and agar powder in a saucepan (or soak agar flakes for 15 min). Separately, mix together coconut milk, cornstarch, sugar and vanilla. It’s important that the coconut milk is at room temperature so that it doesn’t affect the agar when you add it.
Turn up the heat on the agar and bring to a boil. Keep a close eye so that it doesn’t boil over. Immediately reduce heat and let simmer for about 15 minutes, until agar is dissolved. If using powdered it will only take about 5 minutes to dissolve.
Once dissolved, slowly whisk in the coconut mixture and then the lime juice and zest (don't add too quick - that'll make the agar gel too soon). Then whisk often for about 10 minutes, until it has thickened. If it isn’t thickening, turn the heat up, but you don’t want it to boil.
Pour into the pie crust and let cool for about half an hour. Then move to the fridge for at least 3 hours, until fully set. Garnish with lime slices, if you like.
I wound up with about twice as much pie crust as I needed, so froze the other half. I also had too much filling so poured the rest into a bowl and added some pink food colouring. Probably half quantities would be fine for making one tart in future. When it was all set I cut the pink stuff into 2cm cubes. Then I cut some of those into thin hearts to make kitschy decorations.
I liked it, but the jellyish filling and robustly textured crust might not be to everyone's tastes? The colour was a bit off - could have been more green. I expected the crust to fall apart but it was fine. It was quite a lot of work squeezing the limes!
Everything disappeared without trace, so I take that as a good sign!
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