Vegan dark chocolate-chocolate chip scones

9 Feb

In keeping with the chocolate theme I bring you another yummy dessert, though this one is just a little bit healthier than the usual- which is a good thing! I often bake vegan treats, not only because of my lactose issues, but because if you’re going to eat something sweet, why not make it healthier too? This is not to say that just because something is vegan it’s automatically good for you (ahem… oreos) but replacing eggs with tofu or egg replacer, and cow’s milk with soy or nut milk usually cuts out a big chunk of fat and calories. Another advantage to vegan baking is that you can happily lick the spoon or mixing bowl without worrying about salmonella from raw eggs.

The other day I was craving chocolate and came up with this recipe for vegan chocolate-chocolate chip scones using vegan chocolate chips from Whole Foods. This is a great recipe for those wishing to get started with vegan baking since there’s no need for egg replacer and you can use any milk substitute you like instead of the almond milk. For me, almond milk adds just a hint of a sweet nutty flavor and is my favorite milk substitute, though any milk will do.

These scones are amazing with coffee!

Enjoy!

Ingredients- Yields appx 6 scones:

1 cup unbleached all purpose flour

1/4 cup plus 2 Tablespoons organic cane sugar (not the large crystals like sugar in the raw)

3 Tablespoons Hershey’s special dark cocoa powder

1 teaspoon baking powder

1/4 teaspoon sea salt

3 Tablespoons Earth Balance buttery spread

1/2 cup vegan chocolate chips

1/4 cup almond milk

Instructions:

1. Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit (do 375 if you use a convection oven- they tend to run a little hotter.)

2. Whisk together flour, sugar, cocoa powder, baking powder, and sea salt.

3. Next, cut in the Earth Balance using a pastry blender, two knives in scissor-fashion, or kitchen aid mixer on low with paddle attachment. Blend until the mixture is crumbly.

4. Stir in chocolate chips and gradually add the almond milk a little of the time, mixing after each addition until the crumbs just hold together and form a dough.

5. On a lightly floured surface, pat or roll the dough into a 1/2 inch thick circle, then use a pizza cutter or knife to cut into even-sized triangle sections. Place each section onto an ungreased cookie sheet and bake for 12-15 minutes.

6. Cool slightly, and serve warm. We loved these with strawberry and raspberry preserves :)

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Chocolate cake with raspberries and ganache

2 Feb

The theme in my desserts every February is chocolate, and this year is no exception. To kick off the month, here’s a picture of my most recent cake. I made this using the “perfect all American chocolate butter cake” from the book The Cake Bible by Rose Levy Beranbaum. This is my go-to chocolate cake recipe and I love it!

I baked the cake in a deep 8″ cake pan, baking it a little longer than the recommended time at a slightly lower temperature. I also substituted Hershey’s special dark cocoa powder for regular cocoa powder and it turned out perfect. I sliced the cake in half horizontally to make two separate layers and spread a thin layer of seedless raspberry jam on the bottom layer. Normally I fill this cake with ganache, but decided to ice the cake with it instead.

Here’s a recipe for the ganache:

8 oz semisweet chocolate, chopped

1/4 cup heavy cream

1/4 cup butter, cut into small pieces.

Place all the ingredients in a double boiler and stir until melted and smooth. You can also place everything in a microwave safe bowl and microwave at 30-second increments, stirring well each time before heating again, until it’s melted.

You can pour it on the cake right away and spread with a spatula, or refrigerate for a few minutes to firm it up slightly and make it spreadable like icing.

 

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Dairy-free lemon chess pie

30 Jan

A while back I posted about my epic pie fail in trying to “veganize” lemon chess pie. I’m happy to report that although I didn’t make it vegan, I was successful in making a dairy-free version that tastes identical to the original. Baby steps, right? I still plan on making a vegan version someday, but for now I’ll take whatever success I can get!

I make a pie very similar to this one at work and as tempted as I am to try a piece, the recipe calls for milk and a ton of butter- which is a no-go for me and my lactose intolerance. Replacing dairy in recipes has become almost second nature to me, but in baking I still sometimes run into trouble with proportions. I really think that’s where I went wrong before. Too much liquid obviously means a soggy pie. Conversely, not adding enough ice water to a crust will make for a very crumbly, hard to manage mess. Whew! So much to think about! Before I share the recipe I’ll let my geek flag fly and share a little history on chess pie.

Though chess pie is famous here in the Southern United States, the pie actually originated in England. The name “chess” is actually thought to be an Americanization of the word “cheese” since it sort of resembles a cheese-less version of an English lemon curd pie. Actually there are a few theories on the name. Another one is that the word “chess” came from the word “chest” as in “chest pie.” The explanation for this was that there was so much sugar in this particular type of pie that it didn’t require refrigeration and could be kept in a pie chest. They’re not kidding about the high sugar content either! One pie generally had between one to two cups of sugar in it! Definitely not the healthiest pie, but oh so good! Chess pies have a consistency similar to custard pies, but with a little more “substance” to them. There are many different flavor varieties such as buttermilk, vanilla, lemon, and chocolate, and some are even made with vinegar to counteract the sweetness.

For this recipe I used fresh lemons and their zest, and have substituted the butter with Earth Balance buttery spread, and the milk with almond milk. If you prefer, any other milk substitute will work but I like the hint of sweetness you get with almond milk. As for the crust, you can use a premade pie shell from the store or make your own. If dairy is a concern for you make sure to read ingredient labels, as not all pie shells are dairy free.

Here’s the recipe:

For the crust:

(based on a recipe from the kitchenaid’s Baking Basics cookbook)- makes one 8 inch pie crust

1 cups + 2 Tablespoons unbleached all purpose flour

pinch of sea salt

1/4 cup + t tablespoon vegetable shortening

3 Tablespoons ice cold water

Parchment paper

Pie weights, or dried beans

8 inch pie dish

fork

1. In a large bowl, mix the flour and salt until well combined.

2. Cut the shortening into bits and add to the flour and salt mixture. Use a pastry blender or two knives in scissor-fashion to cut the shortening into the flour until it’s crumbly.

3. Add the ice water, a tablespoon at a time, and blend with your fingers until a soft dough forms. Shape the dough into a ball and chill for a half hour in the fridge.

4. On a lightly floured surface or pastry cloth, roll the dough into a circle, 1/8 of an inch thick. Carefully lift the dough- you can lightly fold it into fourths or drape it over your rolling pin- and place it into the pie dish.

5. press the dough into the pan with your fingers and trim the excess dough from the sides so you have a one inch overhang. Fold that extra inch of dough under itself and use a fork or your fingers to make a decorative edge.

6. To make this pie you have to blind-bake the crust first to keep the bottom from getting soggy. To do this, first preheat your oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit.  Use a fork to prick holes in the bottom of the crust and line the crust with parchment paper. Place the pie weights or dried beans on the parchment and bake for about ten minutes. Set it aside to cool for a few minutes before attempting to remove the pie weights or beans.

For the pie filling:

2 cups granulated sugar

2 Tablespoons cornmeal

1 Tablespoon unbleached all purpose flour

Juice and zest of two lemons (about 1/4 cup)

1/4 cup unsweetened almond milk

2 tablespoons melted Earth Balance

4 eggs

1. In a large bowl, combine sugar, cornmeal, lemon zest, and flour, and mix well.

2. Add the almond milk and the lemon juice and mix well.

3. Add the melted Earth Balance, and mix well.

4. In a small bowl beat the eggs slightly, then add to the rest of the pie mixture, mixing just enough to incorporate the eggs. Don’t overbeat or you will ruin the pie! Pur into the prepared pie crust.

5. Lower your oven to 325 degrees and bake the pie for about 40 minutes until browned and the center is just set. The pie may crack a little and jiggle slightly, which is normal. Serve warm.

Sources:

http://whatscookingamerica.net/History/PieHistory/ChessPie.htm

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chess_pie

2011 in review

4 Jan

The WordPress.com stats helper monkeys prepared a 2011 annual report for this blog.

Here’s an excerpt:

The concert hall at the Syndey Opera House holds 2,700 people. This blog was viewed about 19,000 times in 2011. If it were a concert at Sydney Opera House, it would take about 7 sold-out performances for that many people to see it.

Click here to see the complete report.

Combined post for December 2011

3 Jan

As a baker, the Christmas/holiday season is the busiest time of the year for me. Rather than make a bunch of separate posts for everything I baked (seriously, it was a lot!) I thought I would do one combined post for December for everything I did. Here goes!!

Christmas cakes

Most of the cakes I did last month were Christmas themed. Here are my favorites:

Red velvet with buttercream icing and fondant decorations.

 

Vanilla pound cake with buttercream and fondant holly

 

More vanilla pound cake! The flowers are fondant and the leaves are buttercream.

 

Fruit Cakes

Last year a friend introduced me to English Christmas cake- which is actually a rich fruit cake iced with royal icing. I was hooked and couldn’t wait to make them again! This year I did it right and started my cake four weeks early and and “fed” it about half a bottle of brandy throughout those four weeks. The result was a moist, rich fruitcake that I couldn’t stop eating. I was actually sad when it was gone! Since there was so much alcohol in it my kids couldn’t try it, so they begged me to make them their own. For that one I substituted Apple juice for the brandy but made it five days before and kept it in the refrigerator. Both were a big hit.

Nonalcoholic fruit cake for thte kiddies

The best fruitcake I have ever had.

The decor on the white and gold fruit cake was inspired by a cake from Elaine MacGregor’s book Wedding Cakes From Start to Finish, an the recipe for the cake came from here.

Parties

December is also a huge month for birthdays in my family. Both my husband and my oldest son have birthdays in December, so I was also busy baking for them. For my husband’s birthday dessert I decided to go non-traditional and make a cookie pizza instead of a regular birthday cake. All I did was buy a roll of sugar cookie dough (yeah, I know that’s cheating but I was REALLY busy that week!) I used an aluminum pizza pan and rolled the dough out into one large circle and baked it at a slightly lower temperature until it was cooked all the way through (Since it was so big the 12 minute baking time wasn’t enough.) Once the cookie was completely cool I smoothed on a very thin layer of cream cheese so that the strawberry “pizza sauce” wouldn’t soak into the cookie and make it as soggy. For the sauce I pureed 3/4 cup of frozen strawberries with two teaspoons of sugar in the food processor until the sauce was smooth and the sugar was dissolved. For cheese I shredded slightly softened white chocolate with a cheese grater, and for the topings I used a combination of hand sculpted and hand painted fondant, and red fruit leather cut into circles as pepperoni.

For my son’s birthday I made chocolate cupcakes with chocolate ganache- his favorite. He wanted a ninja turtles theme so I googled ‘ninja turtle cupcakes’ and saw a lot of results where bakers used oreo cookies as manhole covers and made it look like the turtles were coming up out of the cupcakes. I loved the idea so I tried it and it worked out great!

This last picture is of a dessert tray I made for a girl’s night out party for my church group. I had a lot of fun putting this together! Included on the tray were mini berry mascarpone tarts, mini tiramisus, cake balls, raspberry macarons, and chocolate macarons.

 

So there you have it. Highlights from my busiest month of the year. I’m looking forward to some relaxation now that it’s all over!

Before I sign off, I just want to give a big thanks to everyone who keeps up with my little blog. It really means a lot to me! I hope you all have a very happy, very sweet 2012 :)

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The great food blogger cookie swap- Dairy free chocolate chip cookies

13 Dec

Last month I signed up to participate in what is quite possibly (in my experience anyway) the BIGGEST cookie swap ever. Organized by Lindsay from Love and Olive Oil and Julie of The Little Kitchen, this yummy exchange was meant to give food bloggers from around the world a chance to try each others’ cookies and exchange their favorite cookie recipe- because after all, the holidays just aren’t the same without a face full of  homemade cookies.

Each of us was given the names and addresses of three other food bloggers (some of us grouped together according to location or dietary restrictions) and told to bake three dozen cookies- one for each of the bloggers. Now that the cookies have all been shipped (and in my case devoured) I’m excited to share my matches and the recipe I used for the swap. My only regret is that I forgot to take pictures of the cookies before my family attacked them like hungry vultures. Oh well.

The first cookies to arrive came to me from Kelly of  On the Move Veggie who sent me some delicious lemon poppyseed cookies YUM!

The next day was like Christmas in my mailbox when I got both of the other cookie boxes at the same time! Seriously, I haven’t been so happy to see the mailman since… well, it’s been a long time. I was so excited to see pumpkin biscotti from Kimberly of Badger Girl Learns to Cook. They were delicious with tea!

Last, but not least, Michelle of Pour L’amour du Beurre sent some truly amazing honey no-bake cookies.

Ladies, I just want to say thank you! I really enjoyed your cookies and loved participating in such a fun blog event! I honestly can’t wait to do it again :)

As for me, I kept it simple and made some dairy free chocolate chip cookies. These are great for when you just want something sweet and simple without spending too much time in the kitchen. I adapted this recipe from the recipe for Neiman Marcus cookies, originally making it a vegan cookie, but this time adding the egg instead of the egg replacer now that I am eating eggs again. No matter how many new cookies I learn how to bake, I always find myself coming back to this recipe.

1/2 cup Earth Balance vegan margarine
1 cup light brown sugar
3 Tbsp granulated sugar (or organic cane sugar)
1 egg substitute (I use Ener-G egg replacer)
2 tsp vanilla extract
1 3/4 cup unbleached all purpose flour
1/2 tsp baking soda
1/2 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
1 1/2 tsp instant espresso coffee powder (optional)
1 1/2 cups vegan chocolate chips (or carob chips)

1. Preheat oven to 300 degrees Fahrenheit. Cream the Earth Balance with the sugars until light and fluffy.

2. Prepare egg replacer according to package directions and add with the vanilla, then beat until well mixed (appx 30 sec.)

3. Sift dry ingredients and beat into butter mixture at low speed until completely incorporated.

4. Stir in espresso powder and vegan chocolate chips.

5. Use a small cookie scoop (I used a 3 tsp sized scoop) to drop cookie dough onto a lightly greased or parchment lined cookie sheet, making sure to leave about 2 inches in between cookies. Use the back of a spoon or your clean fingers to press the cookies into small circles.

6. Bake for about 12-15 minutes or until the cookies are lightly browned around the edges. If you used egg replacer the cookies will be ready a little faster than those baked with real eggs. Be sure to keep an eye on them to prevent them from burning.

I’m so glad I participated in this cookie swap!!! Thanks again ladies, your cookies were delicious ;)

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Epic Pie FAIL

14 Nov

 

When I first started my weekend baking job a year ago, I was mortified at the fact that I couldn’t bake a pie to save my life. Ok… well, maybe I’m exaggerating but my point is that out of the many attempts I had made to bake a pie from scratch, only a handful had been successful. Most of the time my successes were due to store bought pie crust or making an easy peasy graham cracker crust (or baking a frozen Marie Callender pie. Damn those are good.) The other part of the time, my successes were due to baking with my husband, who I must admit makes a kickass Dutch apple pie. In fact, before I met him I had never had a homemade pie before.

Anyway, I had been hired at this bakery as holiday help which, right before Thanksgiving, meant making hundreds of thousands of millions of pies (though I’m exaggerating, that’s what it felt like.) There were pumpkin pies, pecan pies, chocolate pies, lemon pies…every kind of pie imaginable. Once I went in for training I was relieved that I wouldn’t be responsible for making pie crusts, only the fillings, then baking them. Seems simple, right? Wrong. I maimed those pies. KILLED them, and nearly lost all self confidence while I was at it. You see I suffer from a disease called overmixing. I throw the ingredients together, I mix, then I get paranoid that I haven’t mixed enough so I mix some more. Then, I love the burn that I get in my arms from mixing as fast as I can so I mix some more. THEN I start thinking ‘Oh crap I haven’t worked out this week!’ so I mix some more to compensate, and before I know it the pie filling has gone from a rich, velvety consistency to over-whipped, tired, slimy goop. So you may be asking yourself what happens when one overmixes pie filling…. I’ll tell you! EPIC pie FAILS. They don’t rise, the somehow end up all hollow and empty inside… much like me after mixing up GALLONS of pie filling and baking 7 or 8 pies at a time, then having to throw them away because I couldn’t just trust myself and my mixing abilities from the beginning. Over the course of the year I became more conscious of my problem and was able to work on it more, and now I’m proud to say that I haven’t destroyed a pie in nearly three months. Until today.

Today I had an idea to make a vegan lemon pie. Even though I could easily have just made the pie dairy free and still used eggs, the extremist in me decided to go big or go home and attempt to make a chess pie without eggs. Have you ever had chess pie? It’s almost ENTIRELY made up of eggs. Eggs and sugar are the two main ingredients in fact.  I decided that I would substitute the eggs in the pie for silken tofu- which is usually a great egg replacer in baking when you want a custardy, dense finish (which I did.) What I ended up with was reminiscent of the bog of eternal stench from the movie labyrinth. Despite baking for over an hour, the filling was a sickeningly yellow bubbly, slimy, liquidy mess. It looked like a snot pie. The sight of it was revolting, but being the cheapskate eternal optimist that I am I decided not to fling it in the garbage can from the get-go and instead let it cool to see if it would somehow miraculously come together as it stopped boiling in its crust and become the pie I had envisioned in my head. No such luck. After cooling it for four hours it was just as soupy as it had started out. But did it taste good? Nope. Actually, it tasted like vomit. Curdled, lemon flavored vomit. They could have made a Harry Potter jellybean with this pie. It was THAT bad.

So… it was with wounded pride and offended taste buds that I dramatically tossed the pie in the garbage and lamented the $5.61 that it cost me to make the damn thing. What’s that expression about time wounding all heals? Healing all wounds? Who knows. Maybe someday when the scars have faded I’ll try it again. Or maybe I’ll stick to Marie Callenders.

Some people are just not meant to bake pies.

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