I had really enjoyed my chocolate yule log, it was so indulgent yet not at all heavy and
sickly sweet (meaning I could eat a lot in one go). It was the combination of
the light and airy fat-free swiss roll sponge combined with the luxurious (but
healthy) chocolate frosting that made
such an amazing pairing and so it got me thinking….how else could I achieve
that same effect?
Frosting is the obvious answer, so this time instead of
going for the obvious cupcake and frosting scenario, I decided to make another
tray of swiss roll sponge but this time instead of rolling it up, I cut out
circles with a cookie cutter and frosted those instead. So then you have mini chocolate sponges.
But the chocolate sponge needed something a little bit special and a
little bit (ok, a lot bit) seasonal to top it.
I’ve already given you a number of cranberry and
mincemeat inspired creations (and I haven’t quite finished with the cranberries yet!) so I
didn’t really want to go down the fruit route again. This left the Christmas spiced combo up for
grabs. Not that I mind…I love ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, vanilla- all warm and
creamy dreamy. Mmmmm.
So egg nog anyone? Or maybe more accurately in this case,
simply ‘nog’. Or even more appropriately… choco-nog mini sponges!
Ok, so now you’ll think I’m crazy…but…I have never
actually tried egg nog. I’m not sure I’ve ever even come across it on the
shelves (although often if you’re not looking for something you don’t realise
it actually exists when its right in front of you face!) So, here I am making what I call a ‘nog’ frosting
having never actually tried egg nog before!
This may be nothing like real ‘nog’ but it’s a warm and creamy nutmeggy-vanillary
frosting and to me that sounds like a noggy creation…or what I imagine one to
be!
I’ve used banana in this recipe which does give a
little bananary taste. If you would prefer a more neutral base to let the spices shout
more loudly then feel free to reduce or omit the banana and substitute for more
cashew (or other neutral) nut butter instead.
I know…I really must find some egg nog to try this
Christmas, I’ve heard the vegan versions are pretty good so I just need to
track some down! In the meantime whipping up a bit of this frosting with some
almond milk and a dusting of nutmeg on the top may well just do the trick- I’d certainly
recommend it and it's definitely the best way to clean up the remnants in your blender!
Recipe:
mini choco-nog sponges
Ingredients
Frosting
¾ cup cashew nut
butter
4 dates
½ tsp vanilla extract
½ tsp rum extract
¼- ½ tsp ground nutmeg
½ a frozen banana (or another ¼ cup nut butter)
½ cup firm tofu (water pressed out)
3 tbs maple syrup/brown rice syrup/agave nectar
Pinch of stevia powder (approx. 1/6 tsp or to taste)
3 tbs coconut butter melted- if you want a thicker
frosting (omit for a soft whippy frosting)
Makes approx. 1 ½ - 2 cups
Sponge
10 1/2 oz. firm silken tofu
1/3 cup rapadura
1/3 cup agave syrup
1 tbs vinegar
1 tbs water
1 tbs vanilla extract
1 tbs ground flax mixed with 2tbs hot water
1 cup whole wheat spelt flour
¼ cup ground almonds
1 tsp baking soda
1 tsp baking powder
½ tsp salt
1/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder.
Makes approx. 20 mini sponges (depending on their size and shape)
Method
Prepare frosting by adding all the ingredients to the food processor
and blending together until smooth. If your blender is less powerful you may want to chop up the dates and soak them in a little hot water first. Once fully blended, the mixture will be thick but fairly runny.
Set aside to use as a soft frosting or if you added the coconut butter for a
thicker frosting, spoon into a bowl and allow to firm up in the fridge for an
hour or two.
To make the mini sponges. Preheat oven to 180C degrees.
Line a 10x15 inch pan with baking parchment.
In food processor, mix tofu, rapadura, agave, vinegar,
water, vanilla and flax mix (see note below). In a medium bowl, whisk together
flour, ground almonds, baking soda, baking powder and salt. Pour the blended
tofu mixture into flour mixture; stir together thoroughly.
Spoon the batter into the prepared pan. Smooth the top of
the batter evenly and bake for 10-12 minutes.
Once the sponge is cool, lift out of the pan, place on a
cutting board and using a circle (or any simple shape) cutter, cut rounds of
sponge out of the slab. There will be a little wastage (or nibbles), so to avoid this you could cut the slab into
squares.
Once the frosting is prepared, drizzle, spoon or pipe the nog
frosting onto the individual sponges and serve immediately. The frosting and
sponges can be prepared up to a day in advance and stored separately for last
minute frosting.
You´ve never tasted eggnog ? Neither the vegan one ? Please do me a favor : go to the next store, get yourself some incredibly delicious vegan nog and pass out from the divine taste of this amazing invention :)
ReplyDeletehi foodandblood- you know what i've just been looking on line and i don't think vegan nog is sold anywhere in the UK! That's crazy (and i'm very dissapointed!)
ReplyDeleteHi, thankyou, I did quite a bit of research and came up with a recipe of my own- a combination of many different recipes and quite similar to the second link. It tastes good to me but i have no idea if it's like the real thing! I'll post ot anyway. ;-)
ReplyDelete