Dates also have many nutritional benefits, particularly
when compared with many other sweeteners and are also very popular with raw
foodists. Without going into great detail here; dates are a rich source of
dietary fibre, iron and a number of minerals, and are also very rich in
antioxidant flavonoids offering protection to the cells in the body.
I use a lot of dates, particular in their raw form in my smoosh bar varieties, so I have bought
a large box in bulk making for an
economical syrup. I use organic halawi dates, but either halawi or medjoul
dates (which are larger and slightly more juicy) should work fine. Medjoul may
even be preferable but since I haven’t tried using these dates I cannot confirm
this.
You can either make a date paste or a syrup simply
depending on how much water you add. Paste like syrups work better at binding
things together whereas a looser syrup works best to spoon over or mix through-
i.e spooning over the sticky toffee pudding…Mmmmm!
Since dates naturally have a caramelly, toffee like flavour
they make the perfect sweetener for a toffee or caramel flavoured dessert, this
can be enhanced with other sweeteners such as brown rice syrup when a very
sweet caramelly flavour is required in a desert, but on their own they provide
a lovely subtle sweetness. I also add a touch of vanilla extract to the syrup
to subtly enhance the flavour, but other flavours or spices could be used too.
The date syrup pictured used 1 cup of water.
Recipe: date paste/syrup
Ingredients
1 heaped cup of dates (I used 1 heaped cup to compensate
for the fact the dates were whole and not packed in- so you want to visually
aim for a fairly packed cup)
½ cup hot water- for
a thick paste
1 cup hot water- for
a thick syrup ( used this for my granola bars)
1.5 cups hot water-
for a smoother easily spoon-able syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract- optional
Method
Place the dates in a
small/medium bowl. Pour the required amount of boiling water over the dates and
leave to soften for approx. 30 minutes. Once softened pour the contents of the
bowl, along with a little vanilla extract, in to a blender (I used my thermomix)
and blend until smooth.
Pour the syrup into a jar and
store in the fridge if not using straight away.
This keeps for at least two weeks in sealed container.
Note: the more water used the more 'dilute' the dates become and therefore less sweet the syrup. If you are afer a sweet syrup you may like to add a little stevia or brown rice syrup also.
For tips and info on recipe measurement conversions, ingredients, substitutions and the methods behind how I do things.... check out my 'baking tips' tab at the top of the page.
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