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Monthly Archives: December 2014

Breaking a food blog rule for Christmas & Vegan Lentil Nut Loaf

24 Wednesday Dec 2014

Posted by Aissa in Gluten Free, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

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Tags

Christmas dinner, Gluten free, Lentil Nut loaf, recipe, Savoury, Traditional, Vegan

I am visiting family for the Christmas break. So I am laptop-less and without my large collection of baking supplies. This means I may not post many recipes. I brought a Stollen with me, which turns out I put too much rose oil in, I think I lost count when adding the drops. My terrible attention span strikes again! Turns out the stollen is especially lovely toasted this time though.

Most years I make the very traditional Lentil Nut Loaf for Christmas dinner. It is handy as it can be pre-made, sliced and popped under the grill or in the oven to heat up. Here is the blog rule breaking part….I feel awful doing this but I am going to share the recipe without a picture of it! 😦 Don’t hate me!!!!

It is just that this Christmas I am going to have a festively seasoned soup like thing instead. Therefor I am not making said Lentil Nut loaf and have no pictures. Previous to blogging I did not photograph my food, surprisingly enough. 😉

Here is a link for this year’s dinner over on the PPK.com, Mushroom Hot Pot. I have adapted the recipe a little; I use fresh shiitake in it and leave out the red peppers and lemongrass. I think lemongrass tastes slivery coloured, metallic and a little medicinal. I am not a fan in other words. I have the Hot Pot with veggies on the side and maybe lentils or beans thrown in to it.

Here is my imageless….

Very Traditional Vegan Lentil Nut Loaf

This recipe is a mix of many, from cookbooks and various websites. It also changes slightly every time I make it. I seem to have never written down the many versions!!! Only for my friend Fiona asking for the recipe recently it may never have appeared in text form. 🙂 I think the most influential recipe for my Lentil Nut Loaf is from My Vegan Cookbook, Lentil Loaf, it is only fair to give him credit. Also he has pictures !! (Hides face behind hands and blushes)

I do a Basic tomato sauce to spread on top of it before it goes in the oven.

  • A tin of tomatoes or passata
  • A scant dessertspoonful of coconut oil
  • One finely chopped onion
  • Three finely chopped cloves of garlic
  • A round teaspoon of dried oregano
  • Black pepper to taste
  • A pinch of sea salt or pink Himalayan salt
  • A quarter teaspoon of rapadura/sucucant sugar alternatively you can use date syrup. It helps reduce the tartness but you can leave it out.

Cook off your onion and garlic in the oil until the onions are soft and clear. Add everything else and heat through. The loaf will be in the oven for forty minutes so the sauce will definitely be cooked by then! O and do the sauce first as you will be adding a bit to the loaf.

Next the Loaf-y Bit!

Pre-heat your oven to 190C/370F. You will also need a lightly greased loaf tin, tin foil and a bowl!

  • Two cups of cooked lentils, I suggest brown or puy lentils
  • A cup of ground almonds
  • A cup of some sort of breadcrumbs that suit you wheat free, gluten free etc.
  • A tablespoon of cornstarch / fine maize meal
  • Two tablespoons of natural no salt peanut butter
  • A tablespoon of your premade tomato sauce
  • Nearly all recipes call for two sticks of grated celery-I do two carrots instead
  • Garlic to taste but no less than three cloves
  • One large or two small chopped onions
  • A dessertspoon of coconut oil
  • A half of a teaspoon of mustard
  • Half a cup of chopped fresh parsley
  • A teaspoon of dried thyme
  • A quarter teaspoon of cumin
  • A tiny pinch of sea salt
  • A dash of tamari
  • A little black pepper to taste
  • A small dash of apple cyder vinegar

Sooo cook your onions and garlic with the dessertspoonful of the coconut oil until the onions are transparent. Leave to cool down for a five minutes.

The puy lentils!

I had a picture of puy lentils!

In your bowl combine all the other ingredients and then add in your onions and garlic to them. Press it all together. If not sticking together you can add another spoon of tomato sauce.

Grab your loaf tin, put some of your tomato sauce on the base and side. Add in your lentil loaf mix and put the rest of the tomato sauce on top. Cook for twenty minutes and then cover with tinfoil ( to stop the top burning). Cook for another twenty-five minutes. Let it cool for a minimum of ten minutes before turning out and another ten before slicing.

Serve with your favourite veggies, salad and maybe some vegan gravy! It is very filling and is just as lovely the day after.

Organic salad

Also found a picture of salad

Once again if you celebrate the Yule, enjoy it! Hope you had a good Solstice, a good almost finished Hanukkah! Or maybe just some time with friends and or family with a few days off work! Xs Aissa

It’s the Silly Season It’s Vegan Stollen Time! & Marzipan recipe

16 Tuesday Dec 2014

Posted by Aissa in Bread, Cake, Sweets, Traditional, Vegan

≈ 1 Comment

Tags

Bread, Cake, marzipan, recipe, Stollen, Traditional, Vegan

I have just updated this post 2015 style! if you want to check that out it has more details! Other wise read on! 🙂

I have been making Stollen for Christmas for a few years. Clearly alcohol laden fruitcake is the Irish tradition, but I never liked it much. I was the person who ate the marizpan off the outside! I came across a wonderful recipe for vegan stollen here on “Seitan is my motor”.  The instructions are very clear! Which is what won me over. I was previously a bit intimidated by enriched dough. Knowing if you have kneaded enough, throwing the yeast in on top of the salt and immediately killing it ( 😦 ) etc. Kneading is all about getting your back into it and not being tempted to add more flour 🙂 Once you make this you will realise it can be done, to delicious results.

I have adapted the recipe a little and I make my own marzipan for it. My  changes are few, you have to respect yeast no messing with the recipe too much or the magic chemistry will be off. I use coconut oil instead of margarine, I use a third of a cup. I rub it with coconut oil too. As you would expect because I am a vanilla fiend I use a generous dessertspoon of vanilla powder. Finally I do not like raisins- I can stand a sultana in a scone …but raisins eep! and shiver! so I use two thirds of a cup of chopped organic un-sulphered apricots in my stollen.

It takes a little planning. You make the plain dough the night before and leave it to proof in the fridge. You bring all to together, shape, leave to rise and bake the next evening.

Here is mine naked out of the oven !

Triple mini stollen

Triple mini stollen

Ready to wrapped and hibernated for a bit.

snowy stollen

snowy stollen

Since I make my own marzipan I put my rose flavour into that instead of the mix. You just cannot get good quality marzipan here. Since I buy my ground almonds in bulk … because I  bake so much… it makes sense to make my own.

Marzipan is a wonderful human invention! So versatile! The almond-y heart of your stollen perhaps little marzipan balls that you can dip in melted dark chocolate and leave to set in the freezer. Tasty treats for over the holidays.

Marzipan

  • 200g/ two cups of ground almonds
  • 100g/ one cup org vegan icing sugar
  • A teaspoon of vanilla powder/ a pod/ paste
  • One tablespoon of fresh lemon juice
  • Two tablespoons of maple syrup
  • A quarter teaspoon of sea salt/ himalayan pink salt
  • Half a teaspoon of almond extract
  • Optional: Eight ground apricot kernels or increase the almond extract to one teaspoon
  • Seven drops of food grade rose oil* or a generous dessertspoon of rose water
  • One dessertspoon of cold water

*mine is in an almond oil base as pure rose oil is like twenty five euros a bottle!

Put your dry ingredients in a bowl. Make a well in the centre and add the wet, not the water though! Press it all together. If it still a little crumbly you can add your water and press it together again. It should form a ball like biscuit/ cookie dough. Cover in tinfoil/ baking paper and leave in the fridge for at least a half an hour.

If using in your stollen you will be rolling into three little logs. If you plan to make marzipan chocolate balls you will have billions of them!!! So maybe half the recipe, you could also leave out the rose and use orange zest and a little orange oil or orange flower water instead!?

Hope you guys try it. It really lasts, unless you end up eating it really fast, which has been known to happen. If you are clever and hide one, you can toast slices of it too, sooo good!!!

Wil try and post again soon, but just incase Happy Christmas, Solstice, Hanukkah, New Years, or a bit of time off work! 🙂 Xs Aissa

 

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