Showing posts with label white chocolate recipe. Show all posts
Showing posts with label white chocolate recipe. Show all posts

Friday, March 2, 2012

No-Sugar Maca Mojo Bark (aka White Chocolate Take 2) and New Finds

I mentioned on Monday that a good friend had nudged me to share a recipe that turned out really well. I'm really grateful for the prod (thanks, Terry!) because I threw this together in a blur in the midst of grading, and if I don't post it, I'll forget what I did. It's already been almost two weeks, so let's see how I do.
That "blur" of work seems to be a fairly consistent state at the moment. It's midterm week, and there have been various technical bugs all along--I've spent hours on the phone with the technical support folks, which has eaten into lecture-writing time. Today was one of those gorgeous bright-sun-in-the-eyes days that's why Phil got me this billed cap for my birthday, together with the happy green top and some long underwear under my jeans. I feel so lucky--and not just because I can keep working with the sun right in my eyes!
Yes, the little computer nook in the background of the next picture isn't so much sun-in-the-eyes, but most of my work for this course is on the "window workstation" computer.
So, about this second go at white chocolate/bark. You might remember my "not quite white" chocolate for the holidays. That used quite a bit of coconut cream powder, which some people find undesirable for various reasons, including the 1% casinate (dairy derivative) in it. I wanted to make another version that didn't use that--and this resultant attempt uses quite a few "unusual" or not-right-there-in-the-supermarket ingredients. But it also features the embedded fig and goji pieces that I so enjoyed last time. If you omit those, it's sugar free and candida friendly. Given the recherche ingredient list, let me share this "easy to find" tip: this stuff--creamed coconut--is basically the same stuff as coconut butter! It's incredibly cheaply available in Europe, and you can even find it in Anchorage. Just make sure to get the organic kind: some of the conventional brands have sulphates or other preservatives added. This package is 7oz, which is just under a cup. I used a whole block for this recipe.
No-Sugar Maca Mojo Bark (no dairy either!)
1 cup coconut butter, melted (or use one package of "creamed coconut")
1/2 cup cacao butter, melted
1 teaspoon vanilla powder

1 teaspoon white stevia powder
1/2 teaspoon salt
7/8 cup lucuma powder 

1 tablespoon maca
3/4 cup inulin (oligosaccharide, feeds good bacteria, naturally sweet-tasting)
1/4 cup yacon powder

3 dried figs, chopped
1 tablespoon goji berries, chopped

Mix together the coconut and cacao butters. Stir in the stevia, vanilla and salt.
Gradually add in the rest of the dry ingredients--lucuma, maca, inulin and yacon powder, and stir gently until everything is fully incorporated and there are no powdery pockets! Once everything is smooth, add in the finely chopped figs and berries.
You can pour it onto a tray, or into bar molds.
Refrigerate to set.
 This is not very sweet, very rich, but in a tummy-comforting, not a stomach-turning, way, and I was taken by surprise by how maca-ish it is! It really has a predominating malty flavor--which goes well with the figs and gojis. And actually, maca and coconut is an incredible flavor combination--it's like they're made for each other--so having the chocolate base contain more coconut than cacao butter worked well for this combination.

What do you think? Do you think you'll make this, or is the list of unusual ingredients offputting? Lucuma is getting easier and easier to find, as are inulin and maca.

Recent Discovery--Flax Milk!


I'm probably not a pioneer with this, as Homer, Alaska, is often the last place on the planet to see new health foods, it seems, but I found this "Flax milk" at the store today, and had to try it out. I was puzzled and curious, because flax is not a creamy seed at all--you wouldn't get a "milk" if you blended flax seeds and water like you would with hemp seeds.  It turns out that it's blended with flax oil, not seeds, and contains a fair amount of tapioca starch and gums as well (as do most store-bought nut milks--I'm ok with it).

Only 25 calories in a cup! Lots of calcium, and obviously lots of omega-3's, with fewer omega-6's than hemp milk.

 It's also unsweetened, which I really like, but it has the consistency and color of regular milk.
It doesn't have a distinctive "flax" taste at all. It actually tastes very good to me. I go back and forth on the economics of buying something with so few calories per serving--if I buy something with 100 calories in a cup, I'll take a quarter or eighth of a cup and water it down, thus getting more bang for my buck. Sure, I can do that with this too, but it'll end up pretty watery real quick (which doesn't mean I don't do it anyway!) Nonetheless--definitely worth a try, and a great new addition to the growing array of non-dairy milks!

I hope you enjoy the maca bark/white choc! Have you tried flax milk? Would you?

Friday, December 23, 2011

Bliss Connect #3: New Goods in the House and Two Recipes From Yesterday's Pics

Well, I seem to be consistently posting something for the Bliss Connect Challenge right at the eleventh hour! It just so happens that this week's Challenge ties in beautifully with something I wanted to talk about today anyway, with a little personal tweaking. The week's challenge is to mention the health or wellness item that tops my wishlist this year and will make next year the healthiest ever, and to give a virtual gift!

It so happens that four new items have made their way into our household recently, which are definitely improvements to life. And I want to share two recipes for goodies pictured in yesterday's post, for Shannonmarie and Amber, who asked. This might make it a fairly long post, but it's lots of pictures and deliciousness, so please bear with me.

Three of the new things are better replacements for things we had already, and it's kind of coincidental that they arrived during the holidays. They are all certainly health and wellness related. The number one would be...a new rebounder!

I've mentioned a few times how much I love rebounding. The old one was a super-cheapie, though, and I've barely rebounded for several months, because I kept having to mend it after every ten minutes of use, and mending it was very difficult. It lasted about six months and cost $50. If I pay $300 for one that lasts ten years, that's actually cheaper! This one is a Cellerciser and it was a demo model, so it was actually a little less than $300.  Extras include that the legs fold, the whole thing folds in half, and it comes with two spare springs, a carry case, and a bunch of reading material I don't have time to get into right now!

I did have time to jump straight on the rebounder itself, though, when we picked it up yesterday evening. I got straight on and bounced and bounded and jogged and flew for fifteen minutes. It was SO MUCH FUN! And infinitely better than the old one.

Here's the really wonderful thing, though: after that fifteen minutes of bouncing at 6pm, together with a beach hike earlier in the day, I had my first good night's sleep for about two and a half weeks! It's not that I hadn't been exercising before, either--I sure had been. But I read somewhere that improved sleep is one of the benefits of rebounding. I'll have to try that again!

Other new things: I think I mentioned that during the power outages in the storms a couple weeks ago, our tea-kettle and my beloved immersion blender both bit the dust. Well, they're replaced, with improvements!
Our old tea-kettle was very communicative. It had a temperature gauge, which I really liked, and turned color as the water heated up. What I didn't like was that it also squealed. A lot. Every time you put the jug on the base, it would squeal. Every time the water boiled, it would squeal. Every time you turned it on or off, it would squeal. No making tea in stealth while Phil slept!

Its replacement doesn't tell me when the water reaches 175-180 (my preferred temp for tea-making), but I can actually pretty much tell that by ear. The replacement tea-kettle is not communicative, but silent. And every time I put the jug down on the base, I'm so grateful for the silence. Every time! It's been a couple weeks and I'm still not used to it (Ms Oversensitive to High-pitched Noises that I am...).

The immersion blender was the third Kitchen Aid model I'd blown out in as many years, and I was ready to look elsewhere. The Juiceman cost about the same, but has 550 Watts, which is a big step up.
 It comes with the same useful goodies--the wand that does most things, the whisk, and the mini food processor, which is actually not so mini--it's probably twice the size of the Kitchen Aid one!
 The wand has four blades instead of two, and they're shorter, which makes it easy to clean.
I haven't had it long enough to really put it through its paces, but it actually seems a little quieter than its predecessor, and definitely does a good job. One thing I'll need to get used to is that the wand, whisk and mini processor attach to the motor by twisting on and off rather than snapping, like the Kitchen Aid did. With the Kitchen Aid, I sometimes had trouble with the motor and part separating, which was freaky and horrible (nasty grinding sounds and a whirring, unattached motor in my hand), but it'll take some time for me to get used to the much tighter and stiffer, if safer, twist-on-and-off attachment. I liked being able to snap the motor off real quick and leave the wand standing in the mix (with the motor still attached, it would fall over, taking everything down with it. Don't ask me how I know that).

The fourth item: I finally got a food scale! It is tiny--my chef knife next to it is for scale (ha ha).
It only goes up to eleven pounds, so it's not going to be a major all-purpose scale, but it means that I can finally make a bunch of recipes from Sweet Gratitude without guessing what I'm doing.

Which brings me, in a roundabout way, to the Pomegranate Fondants. No, they're not in Sweet Gratitude--they're out of my head! But I was looking at what Sweet Gratitude does with Irish Moss in terms of weights and ratios in order to give me some ideas.

I wanted a soft fondant as opposed to a creamier, denser truffle. Some of it, I made into hearts; some, I simply poured into an 8x4 pan, cut into squares...

...and finally covered, mostly with chocolate, but some I covered with carob.

The hearts are definitely the prettiest, though!
And here is the recipe:
1 cup pomegranate juice
1.5 oz soaked, chopped Irish moss (about a cup and a quarter)

1/4 cup xylitol
pinch salt
pinch vanilla powder

1/4 cup cacao butter, melted
2 tablespoons non-gmo soy lecithin

Blend the pomegranate juice and Irish moss very well. You'll need to stop a couple times and scrape the moss fragments down the side of the blender.

Add the xylitol, vanilla and salt, and blend again; taste test ad adjust if necessary.
Finally, add the cacao butter and lecithin, and blend very well.
I think I might have added a half teaspoon of xanthan gum as well, but I honestly am not sure!

Pour into molds of choice, or simply into a pyrex dish, and refrigerate to set.
The fondants are soft, and it's really nice for them to have a coating. I used my home-made very dark chocolate to coat them, and also home-made carob "chocolate" for a few. But you can use any kind of chocolate that you love most to cover it.
I hope the recipe makes sense!

And here's the recipe for the Not Quite White Chocolate:
1 cup melted cacao butter
1 teaspoon vanilla powder
2 tablespoons maple syrup
1/3 cup xylitol, powdered in a coffee grinder
7 oz of a combination of coconut cream powder and lucuma (maybe a cup of coconut cream powder and a quarter cup of lucuma)
2 tablespoons tocotrienols

Small handful goji berries, chopped
1 calimyrna fig, finely chopped

Mix the vanilla powder into the cacao butter. In a food processor, gradually add the coconut cream powder and lucuma. About halfway through, add the maple syrup and xylitol, and tocotrienols, and pulse gently until all the dry ingredients are incorporated.

Pour into molds or into a dish, and mix in pieces of goji berry and fig.

*Note: the coconut cream powder contains a tiny amount of a milk derivative (casinate). It's not more than 1%. I'm pretty allergic to dairy, and I don't seem to have a problem with this in small quantities. I don't feel entirely comfortable using a product that contains dairy, but it's such a minute amount that I'm kind of skating by with it.

As you can see from the photo, I over-processed this and the cacao butter separated. Never happened to me before, and initially I was mortified. But I added some shredded coconut, some sunflower lecithin and more tocotrienols, and decided that I didn't mind the less smooth texture and two-tone color effect. These work especially well with the bits of dried fruit in there, and the two-tone roses are cute, I think. Better luck next time, though!

There's something I really want to talk about on here related to something I said in my last post. But I also think I may have to post the recipe for this thing I made this morning. Simple, replicable and really, really good.
Maybe I can do both!

What's at the top of your Holiday wish list?