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Raw Carrot-Banana Cake

Have carrot pulp?  Make cake!

Raw Carrot-Banana Cake (adapted from Healthy Simple Living)
Serves 4 – 6

PRINTABLE VERSION

INGREDIENTS

*3/4 c pecans
*4 medjool dates, pitted and diced
*1.5 c carrot pulp
*1/2 c shredded coconut
*1.5 tsp flax seed oil
*1.5 Tbsp ground flax seed
*1 small, ripe banana
*Dash cinnamon
*Dash of nutmeg

METHOD

Pulse pecans and dates in the food processor using the “S” blade. Add the remaining ingredients and pulse again until a “dough” forms.

Transfer “dough” to ramekins, filling each half-way. (I only found two small ramekins — where did the other two disappear to?! So I took the remaining dough and added it to a larger “ramekin” style bowl.)

Dehydrate on 145F for one hour. Reduce to 105F for another 3 hours. Flip the cake out of the dishes directly to the dehydrator screen and dehydrate for 4 more hours.

I made this incredible frosting and spread it on the carrot-banana cake.

This dessert was delicious!  Even the omnivore husband loved this raw, vegan cake!

Original post on JL goes Vegan:  Food & Fitness with a side of Kale.  You can follow JL on Twitter and Facebook.

Strawberry-Rhubarb Crisp for Springtime

A sure sign that Spring has finally come is the first sighting of rhubarb in stores or at farmers’ markets. Its gorgeous red is immediately attractive, and is so seductive that there is no way to resist buying it!

I’ve made rhubarb pies, quick breads, dessert bars, and all sorts of other variants, including a savory chicken dish once; but my favorite way to use those beautiful stalks is to make a simple crisp. It’s not particularly photogenic, I admit! But it’s easy to make and absolutely sublime with hints of sweetness, tartness, and spice all rolled into one luscious dessert … :)

Strawberry-Rhubarb Crisp

1-1/2 cups chopped rhubarb
1 quart strawberries, chopped
juice of 1 orange
1/4 cup sugar
1/3 cup white whole wheat flour
1/3 cup brown sugar
1/3 cup quick-cook oats
1/2 teaspoon cinnamon
1/3 cup butter, melted

Preheat oven to 350F. Grease a 9″ pie pan.

Combine the rhubarb, strawberries, orange juice and sugar; place into the pie pan.


Combine the flour, brown sugar, oats and cinnamon; pour the butter over the mixture and combine well. Spread the oat mixture over the fruit.


Bake for 35 minutes, until the topping is golden and the fruit is bubbling. Let cool a bit, and serve with vanilla ice cream or whipped cream … or both!

“floo·zie \ˈflü-zē\: a usually young woman of loose morals.” Thus a Food Floozie is not a woman who can be seduced by virtually any man, but rather a woman who can be seduced by virtually any food (other than sushi).

For more blathering about recipes, restaurants, beverages, ingredients, and anything else even tangentially related to food, please come visit me Monday through Friday at Food Floozie or check out my mostly-regular Tuesday posts on AnnArbor.com.

A Most Decadent Delight


Is that a gorgeous photo, or what???

Let me assure you — as beautiful as that fruit tart looks, the visuals can’t begin to compare to how luscious it was!

Tom had gone to our favorite bakery, Decadent Delight, to pick up some Luv Bugs — the adorable filled and frosted pastries we’d enjoyed so much last Valentine’s Day that we absolutely wanted to have them again for our celebration.

But — gasp! Decadent Delight was closed that day; they had been swarmed over the weekend, but we hadn’t thought to go shopping quite that early … we’d thought mid-morning on the day itself would be sufficient. Nope — the word has gotten out, and pastry chef extraordinaire Bryant Stuckey’s treats are now in high demand!

The Luv Bugs had made my AnnArbor.com listing of 5 Fabulous Favorite Foods Found in Ann Arbor as well as my Food Floozie 10 for ’10 top ten list for the past year. They’re sorta glorified and sophisticated Twinkie-like goodies, cakes with filling and frosting and adorable little faces. Alas, we will have to wait until next year … :(

Instead, Tom went back over the weekend and bought two of the exceptional cinnamon rolls. (You do know that the proper way to eat these, of course, is to unswirl them, starting with the outer edge and working towards the center …?)

But he also came back with two other treats, consolation prizes to relish instead of the Luv Bugs — the gorgeous fruit tart above and one featuring caramelized pears.

The berries on the tart were so plump and so juicy that one could almost feel transported to summer when eating them. The colors were deep and intense, as were the flavors. And the pastry cream supporting them was truly a perfect complement — thick, creamy and not so sweet that it competed with the stars of the show.

And then there was the crust, which was flaky and crumbly without shattering when broken either by a fork (if one is civilized) or by teeth (when one is so zealous that she picks up the tart to simply eliminate any barriers between her and her beloved!). It held its shape and supported the filling just as it should without making a mess. This excellent crust also made an appearance in the pear tart, which — believe it or not — even surpassed the fruit one … who could have thought it possible?

The pears were perfectly cooked, just barely resistant to the bite, not mushy and not crisp. Pears, of course, have perhaps a 10-minute window in which they are neither hard as rocks nor slimy goo. To work within that brief time span and also poach them to an ideal consistency without overcooking them requires skill.

There was not a heavy, thick caramel layer in this tart, but rather a hint of sweetness to enhance the subtly flavored pears. And the buttery crust which wonderfully supported the fruit and pastry cream in our other lovely dessert also served the pears ideally.

So, whether you’re looking for breakfast, for a treat to go with coffee, or simply an indulgence, I assure you that Decadent Delight will satisfy any whim.

416 West Huron Street
Ann Arbor, MI 48103
734-761-8740
info@decadentdelight.com

“floo·zie \ˈflü-zē\: a usually young woman of loose morals.” Thus a Food Floozie is not a woman who can be seduced by virtually any man, but rather a woman who can be seduced by virtually any food (other than sushi).

For more blathering about recipes, restaurants, beverages, ingredients, and anything else even tangentially related to food, please come visit me Monday through Friday at Food Floozie or check out my mostly-regular Tuesday posts on AnnArbor.com.

Pistachio Tart

IMG_6610

Here is a tart I made for one of our Top Chef nights. I thought it was appropriate to make a nut tart for the foodnuts!

1 ready-made pie crust (I used Trader Joe’s)
3 cups pistachios, divided (2 cups and 1 cup)
1 cup sliced almonds
5 TBS butter
3/4 cup light brown sugar
1/3 cup dark corn syrup
2 TBS half and half
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 cup (or more) chocolate chips, melted

Preheat oven according to pie crust directions

Roll out pie crust to fit a 9-inch tart shell. Line tart shell with crust. Bake as directed for single -crust pie until golden.

Pour 2 cups pistachios and sliced almonds over the crust in a single layer. Chop the remaining cup of pistachios, set aside.

Preheat overn to 350 degrees F

In a heavy saucepan over medium heat, melt butter with brown sugar, corn syrup, half and half and vanilla. Bring to a boil, stirring constantly. Pour the hot mixture over the pistachios and almonds in the crust.

Bake for 10 minutes, or until bubbly and golden. Let cool on a wire rack.

When cool, drizzle with melted chocolate chips (Melt in microwave in a plastic bag. Snip corner and drizzle). Garnish with chopped pistachios. I put colorful little leaf sprinkles on too because it was fall.

A word for the wise – it’s probably a good idea to put a cookie sheet on a lower rack in the oven to catch the bubbling over part.  Brown sugar and corn syrup are pretty messy to try to clean out of the bottom of your oven.

Edmund would have never gone to the Queen

if he’d first sampled the Turkish delight (home-made, including rose-flavored) at the aptly named Turkish Delight cafe in Pike Place Market in Seattle.

We love this stuff; it always disappears quickly

We love this stuff; it always disappears quickly

This summer, Roslyn and I visited the market for the first time in around 10 years — and were very excited to find this cafe and their fresh Turkish delight — something very difficult to find, at least for us.

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