Sunday, December 26, 2010

Trust Me Cake with Gaggy Frosting, and Christmas 2010

We had such a wonderful Christmas this year in our home, and I hope you did too! I was trying to think of which dish I made that I should post, when I realized that I had forgotten to take any pictures of the ones I brought to the family potluck dinner. So, by default, here's another cake! We all love cake, don't we? Every year I make a Happy Birthday, Jesus, Cake, but what kind of cake it is changes year by year. I call this year's cake Trust Me Cake because it doesn't have any margarine or oil in it. But, it does have a cup of Vegenaise, kind of like the old mayonnaise cakes. Now, trust me! It tasted good! I have to thank G for the inspiration for the frosting's title. I tried to make a glaze, but it came out very stiff and unforgivingly thick. However, it screamed chocolate, and you have to swallow hard to get this frosting down. So, as only a kind husband would do, that's now permanently spoiled by good vegan food, he said, "This is gaggy." The children loved it, though, and I'm not an objective judge of chocolate because it's all good to me. I think this frosting reminds me of a firm piece of fudge being forcibly spread on cake. So, depending on how that sounds to you, this will be an enormous failure, or an incredible success. So be it. Here it is, along with some other food pics, pictures of GR's room (which I'll explain below), and of some firefighters. My apologies for the absolutely terrible lighting of the food shots. They were either blue, orange or totally blinding with light. Use your imagination, please.

Here's our menu for this year:

Breakfast:

Trust Me Cake with Gaggy Frosting
Oatmeal Chocolate Chip Cookies made by ten-year-old GR!
Tiger Balls
Pecan Pie Cookie Cups
Chocolate Chip Pecan Bars
A variation on my Scrambled Tofu - this year I made it with asparagus and mushrooms
Molasses Touched Pancakes with Homemade Maple Syrup
Homemade Breakfast Links - I've come up with a mind-blowing recipe, I must say!
Fried Red Potatoes with Red Bell Peppers from my mom
A Fruit Platter from my mom
Coffee
Yum Berry Juice
Apple Cider

Dinner and Dessert with the extended family:

Manicotti Lasagna - was supposed to manicotti, but transformed into lasagna
Tofurky with gravy
Gorgeous Round Rolls, which I forgot at home
Pecan Pie Cookie Cups


Trust Me Cake. That frosting hardened so fast and so firm, I could probably have set a cup of water on it, and it wouldn't have given way. The nice thing is, I was able to make some pretty swirls. Do you like my pretty swirls???


Here's a slice of that cake. Again, I didn't trust the amount of my frosting. I had way too much on top and barely anything in the middle. I was actually going to call it Trust Me Frosting, as well, until G said it was gaggy. Then it was a no brainer; I had to use that. Anyhow, feel free to put way more in the middle than I did. G said he would prefer much more in the middle and would even sacrifice the frosting on the sides of the cake to ensure he would have enough in the middle. He's very helpful like that. Did I ever tell you that before he met me, he only lived on peanut butter sandwiches and oatmeal? Now, he's full of very helpful suggestions - I can't thank him enough. Do you have helpful husbands, as well, that offer advice but never pick up a spatula?

Our Christmas Cookies: GR made the Oatmeal Chocolate Chip ones all by herself, on top are Tiger Balls, and the Chocolate Chip Pecan Bars and Pecan Pie Cookie Cups are on the bottom.

Christmas Breakfast Table: Cookies and Trust Me Cake with Gaggy Frosting, Scrambled Tofu, Homemade Breakfast Links, Molasses Touched Pancakes, Homemade Maple Syrup (in blue pitcher), my mom's Fried Red Potatoes with Red Bell Peppers, a Fruit Platter, we had Yum Berry Juice, Coffee, and my mom brought Apple Cider. It was good!

I couldn't fit everything on my plate, so I had the fruit, fried potatoes, my homemade breakfast links and tofu scramble.

Now, for GR. My girl loves Christmas v e r y m u c h !! She allowed me to take pictures of her bedroom, which is decorated for Christmas all year round. Except for a Patrick Starfish picture and her soccer trophies, these are her only decorations. All year round. Did I tell you she likes Christmas? I didn't even take a picture of everything, there is so much more! Welcome to her room... Here she is on her bed with her snowman and her penguin friend next to her. And, of course, she's wearing her Christmas peace symbol necklace. Various strings of lights surround her room. By the way, her room is painted shades of Christmas colors. Her windowsill is decorated with fluff, presents, there's a Grinch there and a snowman. On her little lamp table is a reindeer. She has a snowman rug on the floor, stockings and wreaths are on all the walls, and snowflakes line every wall and hang from the ceiling. You can see the new icicle lights that we bought her for Christmas to add to her decorations.


This is the top of her dresser. I like how she mixes religious items in her decorations, as well, because in our home we remember the spiritual aspect of the holiday. Just to the right of this, is a small, decorative sleigh hanging on the wall.

Here's a decorated wall, with candy canes lining the floor. You can barely see the Christmas tree night light. To the left of this shot, she has decorated her closet doors with the message "Merry Christmas" with hand-made snowflakes falling into a waiting snowdrift below.


I tried and tried to turn this picture, but it wouldn't cooperate for me. GR has hung massive amounts of garland from her doorway that you have to walk through before you can even enter her room. It's Christmas all the time in there, and you can't help but cheer up when you go in! Thank you, GR, for sharing!


We also deliver Christmas cookies every year to the firefighters on Christmas Day. SR stayed home to watch a new video, but GR and JK came along. They both got helmets afterwards.

Trust Me Cake with Gaggy Frosting

Ingredients:

Cake:

2 cups of flour
2/3 cup of cocoa
1 and 1/4 tsp. baking soda
1/4 tsp. baking powder
1 and 2/3 cups of vegan or raw sugar
1 and 1/2 Tbs. EnerG Egg Replacer
6 Tbs. water
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 cup Vegenaise
1 and 1/3 cups of water

Frosting:

2 - 4 oz. pkgs. of Baker's German Sweet Chocolate
2 Tbs. vegan margarine
6 Tbs. water
2 cups powdered sugar
1/4 tsp. salt
1 tsp. vanilla extract

Directions:

For the cake:

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray two round cake pans with non-stick spray and flour the bottom and sides, shaking away the excess flour. In a medium bowl, whisk together the flour, cocoa, baking soda and baking powder. In a large bowl, mix with an electric mixer on medium speed the sugar, Egg Replacer, the six tablespoons of water and vanilla extract. Beat until well creamed together, perhaps three minutes. Add the Vegenaise and mix on medium-low speed, until there are no lumps. Alternately add the flour mixture and the one and one-third cups of water and continue to mix on medium speed, until well blended. Divide batter between the two pans and bake for 30 minutes, until a skewer or toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool in pans on cooling rack for fifteen minutes, then invert cakes onto rack to finish cooling.

For the frosting:

When the cakes are completely cool, put the chocolate, margarine and water in a small pot and heat over medium heat, until all is melted. Stir frequently. In a medium bowl, whisk together the powdered sugar and salt. Add the chocolate mixture little by little, whisking after each addition. Add the vanilla, and whisk thoroughly. Makes enough frosting for a two-layer cake. Feeds five hungry vegans for a few days.

Thursday, December 23, 2010

Gorgeous Round Rolls, Giveaway Photo, and Festivus

As I forge forward on my baking journey, saving money at every turn, I've made another bonanza discovery: I not only figured out that my homemade bread costs around 50 cents to make, but now I can make more than two dozen rolls for the same price! Instead of paying almost four dollars for nine bagged rolls at the grocery store with a bunch of strange ingredients, I can make beautiful (gorgeous?), big rolls at home with simple ingredients for a tiny fraction of the cost. What's also nice is I can prepare my bread right along with it: since I make two bowls of dough for two loaves of bread at the same time (soon to be four, I hope), I just convert one of those bowls into rolls. Or, you can just have a roll making day - the second rising is shorter than that for bread, and the baking time is also shorter. I adapted this recipe from an old baking book I own. By the way, I have switched to using Active Dry Yeast from Rapid Rise Yeast. Not only can I buy it in bulk, but I like how it makes the dough feel when I knead it and how it rises. I explain how to use it in the directions below. Have fun, eat well, and save money!



Finished rolls on a plate. Now, what's interesting about this photo and the next three are they were taken the first time I made these rolls. The ones on the plate do not have a soy milk glaze, and I now prefer the glaze. They also came out a little smaller than the second time I made them because it was a colder day. Sometimes dough doesn't rise as well in colder weather, so keep that in mind if you see that happening. But, they were still cute, so I added them.



A rough ball of dough from the main lump. You can either flatten the dough out and cut proportionate sizes, or tear off chunks from the dough still in the bowl. I've done both, and I prefer the more barbaric method of tearing, but cutting ensures more equally sized rolls.



Roll the bottom end inward by sections, like this.



Turn it over, and you'll have a lovely roll ready for its second rise. Make sure you make the initial ball, here, half the size you want it to end up to be.



I made two batches this day: this is the first batch which yielded about three dozen rolls.



This is the second batch which yielded over two dozen. I made the initial balls a little larger, I guess. But, we suffered through them.



A close-up. Aren't the little darlings so cute? But, you can see how they brown more with the soy milk glaze - I like that.



We also received our giveaway win from Dirty Duck this week! The blessings were downright crazy when that box arrived! As you can see below, the only Lara Bar that wasn't ripped open before I grabbed the camera was mine. I was going to split it with G, but he didn't want half, so oh, well, I ate it. The package was really from Lilly the Duck; the return address had her name, and she even sent us some of her feathers. Maybe she lost them while frantically packing the box! In either case, the feathers have been equally divided between the three shorter members of the family and are safe in their rooms. I made a dish with a box of penne pasta last night, kind of a spaghetti soup, and it was good. We all thank you, Dirty Duck family!


The Goods


Last year we started celebrating Festivus, made famous by Seinfeld. G wants you to know that we are Reformed Festivuvians because we decorated our pole with Christmas bows - apparently the pole should be bare. We will air our grievances tonight and have feats of strength against the leader of the home, G, to try to knock him from power. Last year, the feats of strength included pinky wrestling. This year G tried to suggest seeing who could eat the most cookies, but we didn't fall for it. We can tell he's nervous.


Our cheerful Festivus pole belies the serious tone of this life-changing holiday. All heads-of-households, Beware!




Gorgeous Round Rolls
Ingredients:

5 cups of flour
2 Tbs. of salt
1 pkg. of Active Dry Yeast, or 2 and 1/4 tsp. of bulk Active Dry Yeast
4 Tbs. warm water
2 cups of cold water
Extra flour for kneading
1/4 cup of soy milk

Directions:

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour and salt. In a small bowl, whisk together the yeast and warm water until the yeast is dissolved. Create a well in the center of the dough, almost all the way to the bottom of the bowl, and pour in the dissolved yeast. Mix in just enough of the surrounding flour to create a pudding-like texture. At this point, many recipes will tell you to let this rest for ten or twenty minutes and see if it develops a frothy mix. This is to check the freshness of the yeast; however, if you know your yeast is fresh, go ahead with the next step. Add a cup of cold water into the well, and mix in some of the surrounding flour. Add the last cup of cold water and mix in the rest of the flour. On a floured surface, scoop out the dough, and sprinkle some flour on top. Knead for ten minutes, adding just a little bit of flour if the dough gets sticky. Wash out your bowl, and put the dough in it. Cover with a damp dish towel and let rise until doubled in size, about two hours. Punch down the dough in several spots to get out the air bubbles - you can flour your fist if your sticking to the dough. Spray a cookie sheet with non-stick spray. Tear off clumps of dough about half the size of what you want your roll to be, and tuck the ends under. See photos above. Place each roll on cookie sheet, with tucked side on the bottom, cover with a damp dish towel, and let rise until doubled in size, about 40 minutes. They will continue to "grow" when baking, so don't worry if they're not exactly double in size. Preheat oven to 425 degrees. Put the soy milk in a small bowl, and with a basting brush, brush a bit of soy milk over the top of each roll. Bake for 20 minutes. If some milk dribbles on the baking sheet, it will turn brown; that's okay, nothing is burned. Cool individual rolls on cooling rack. Makes between two and three and a half dozen rolls, depending on how big you make your initial balls of dough. You can freeze them and thaw later for a quick reheat in the oven. I heat them in the oven for ten minutes at 350 degrees. So good straight from the oven! Feeds five hungry vegans for a couple of days.

Monday, December 20, 2010

Homemade Flour Tortillas

On my continued quest to stretch our budget and make as much from scratch as possible, thereby saving money and eliminating artificial ingredients, I've turned to making our own flour tortillas. I've already posted a few recipes with them featured in meals, but I've yet to post the recipe to make the tortillas themselves. There are a number of recipes already on the web, so mine is probably not a unique recipe, although I'm posting it. What I'm offering more rather, are tips on how to make the best ones.

For instance, I've tried fat-free versions, and they just didn't have the same flavor, and they burned on the pan, to the point where we could taste burn, not flavor. Also, remove as much loose flour as possible from each tortilla before dry-frying it, as well as brushing away flour from the center of the griddle between each tortilla. The loose flour will continue to cook and burn onto the tortillas. I've not seen this mentioned in any of the recipes I found and figured out how to resolve this out eventually on my own. So, after you roll out the tortillas and have them in a stack, take a pastry or basting brush and lightly brush off the flour from the tortillas while it's in your open hand. When you are ready to flip the tortilla, brush it again, and while the tortilla is on your spatula, brush any remaining loose flour away from the center of the griddle. I hope this makes sense. I usually end up with a floury stove, but it's easily cleaned up. Also, the recipes I've seen call for a very hot griddle, but again, I've had burned tortillas with that. So, I've lowered my heat and cooked them for a few seconds longer with great results.

There is nothing like a homemade tortilla. They are fluffy, and especially wonderful, while they're still warm from the griddle. The ones from the store now seem flat and less flavorful. It takes about a half-hour or so to make them, and I end up with between twelve and 20 tortillas, depending on how big I make my initial balls, so it's very cost-effective too. You can try them with my Breakfast Burritos, if you like.



Homemade Flour Tortillas

Ingredients:

3 cups flour
2 tsp. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
6 Tbs. shortening
1 and 1/4 cups warm water

Directions:

In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder and salt. Add the shortening and blend it well with a pastry cutter or fork. Add the water and stir well. Knead the dough for three to five minutes on a lightly floured surface. Take a clump of dough, roughly the size a little larger than a golf ball, and roll it into a ball. Place each ball back in the bowl, and let them all rest for fifteen minutes. Sprinkle a little flour on a cutting board and roll out each ball into the shape of a tortilla. You'll want to get it as thin as possible because they fluff up when cooked. Place in a stack, slightly staggered to facilitate easy picking up. Sometimes the bottom ones will stick, so staggering them kind of prevents this. Heat a griddle, with no oil, to just past medium heat. My stove dial goes up to 10, so I set my dial to 6. Make sure the griddle is hot before adding any tortillas. Pick up a tortilla off the stack and brush away the loose flour, from rolling it out, with a pastry brush. Put on the center of the griddle and cook until the bottom has a few brown speckles on it. Pick up the tortilla with a large pancake spatula and brush away any flour from the center of the griddle. Flip the tortilla back on the griddle, upside down. You will see air bubbles form, and that's a good thing. Check the bottom, and if it's speckled brown, it's done. Each tortilla takes about a minute or so to cook completely, so it's a fairly fast process. Remove the tortilla from the griddle, being sure to brush it free from flour and the center of the griddle as well. Eating loose flour on a tortilla doesn't taste good. Cook all the tortillas this way, and you're done! Makes about a dozen or so tortillas. Feeds five hungry vegans.

Friday, December 17, 2010

Tempeh with Kale and Carrots in Miso Peanut Sauce

I've been playing around with tempeh lately, a food that until recently I wasn't super crazy about. Now that I've figured out how to temper its bitterness by sauteeing it, tempeh and I are becoming good friends. So, now, I'm having fun trying out creative dishes with it, and this is my latest one. It has a sauce that's reminiscent of my Chunky Miso Soup, which is the first dish that I mixed miso and peanut butter. I think you should definitely try that combination because they really go well together. Throw in some inexpensive carrots and some garden-grown kale, served alongside some mac and chreese, and you're looking at an affordable, yet filling, meal. Hope you like this as much as we do.



Tempeh with Kale and Carrots in Miso Peanut Sauce

Ingredients:

2 Tbs. canola oil
3 pkgs. tempeh, diced in one inch cubes
1 cup of carrots, sliced diagonally
2 cups of kale, chopped or torn
2 Tbs. miso
1/2 cup creamy peanut butter
1 and 1/2 cups of water
1 tsp. garlic salt

Directions:

Heat oil in large pan over medium heat. When hot add the tempeh and saute for fifteen minutes, stirring occasionally, until browned. Add the carrots and cook for another five minutes. Add the kale and cook for three more minutes. Whisk the miso, peanut butter, water and garlic salt together in a medium bowl. Pour over the pan ingredients and cook for another two minutes, until all is coated and warmed through. A new kind of taste! Feeds five hungry vegans.

Sunday, December 12, 2010

Pecan Pie Cookie Cups

This is my brand new cookie recipe that I developed just for Millie's Cookie Extravaganza in which she invited me to participate. When she asked me a few months back, I agreed, thinking how much fun it was going to be to develop a brand new cookie, but then I kept having to e-mail her to let her know that my recipe was taking longer to develop than I thought. The filling was tricky, but finally I had a version I was happy to submit. When she first brought the Extravaganza up to me, I included my family in on the decision making process on what kind of cookie to create. My first thought, as always, leaned towards chocolate, but G's favorite flavors are pecan, molasses and butterscotch. So, it was no surprise when he suggested pecan pie. I reminded him these had to be cookies, and then we struck gold: Pecan Pie Cookie Cups! With molasses, just for my G. Butterscotch couldn't be worked in here, but I'll think of something for him. I hope you have fun making these; they were a total hit with my blessings, so I feel confident passing on the recipe to you.


Pecan Pie Cookie Cups



Creating the wells

Filling the wells. This picture was taken before I had perfected the filling; I was just taking shots documenting the steps. So, the filling isn't my latest version, and I'm not using a tablespoon here. Ignore the details, just get lost in the big picture. :-)


What happens when you go nose first into a Pecan Pie Cookie Cup - thank you, JK. But notice how the filling stays in the cup? It's wonderfully creamy, but firm enough to hold its shape.


Pecan Pie Cookie Cups

Ingredients:

Cups:

2 and 1/4 cups flour
1 tsp. baking soda
1 tsp. salt
1 cup vegan margarine, softened
1 and 1/2 cups vegan or raw sugar
1 Tbs. EnerG Egg Replacer
4 Tbs. water
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1/2 cups pecans, ground

Filling:

2 and 1/2 cups water
2 and 1/2 Tbs. agar agar flakes
1 and 1/4 cups brown sugar, packed
1/2 tsp. salt
2 tsp. vanilla
2 Tbs. molasses
Pecan halves

Directions:

For the cups:

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. In a medium bowl., whisk together the flour, baking soda and salt. In a large bowl, cream together the margarine and sugar. Add the Egg Replacer, water and vanilla, and beat until well mixed. Add the flour mixture by halves and beat on medium or low speed until thoroughly blended. Add the ground pecans and stir until well mixed. Lightly grease a cupcake pan, bottom and sides, and lightly flour each bottom of every cup. Take the cookie dough by tablespoon and form a ball. Put each ball into a cup, and create a small well with a melon baller. Make sure you do not create a hole all the way through. Bake for ten minutes. When done, take the melon baller and go around each well gently to make sure they retain their shape. Cool on a rack for fifteen minutes in the pan. Take a butter knife and carefully run it around each edge of the cups, and gently remove each cookie cup. Finish cooling completely on the rack. When completely cool, place the cups on a cookie sheet to prepare for the filling step.

For the filling:

Put all of the ingredients, except the pecans, in a medium pot on high heat. Bring to a boil. Lower heat to medium and cook for ten minutes, stirring occasionally, until agar agar is dissolved. Pour into a mixing bowl and let cool for 30 minutes. Stir thoroughly every ten minutes while the mixture is cooling. After 30 minutes, set your mixer on low speed and slowly work your way up to medium speed, beating the filling. Beat for ten minutes, then return to medium low speed and beat for five more minutes. You may need to periodically scrape the side of the bowl to ensure that all the filling gets continually beaten. I know this sounds like a long time to hold a mixer and beat, but it's worth it to get the right filling. The end result should resemble loose pudding. Spoon the filling by tablespoon into each cookie cup. Nestle a pecan half on top. Chill for several hours to finish setting. Can be served cold or at room temperature. The filling will not harden but stay creamy, but will be firm enough to stay in the cup while being eaten. Very good and unique. Makes about 30 Pecan Pie Cookie Cups. Feeds five hungry vegans for a couple of days.

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Two-Toned Nectarine Peach Pie

"What?" you ask, "A mouth watering nectarine peach pie at this time of year?" Oh, yes, I can reassure you it is true! You see, my sister-in-law has a small orchard of trees in her backyard. The home belonged to my late mother-in-law, and she spent years planting gardens, flowers, and a wide variety of trees. Now, her daughter has the privilege of living there, and the rest of the family can continue to enjoy the fruits of my mother-in-law's labor. Over the summer, when the children and I visited her, my sister-in-law invited us to pick as much fruit as we could handle. I didn't realize until then how many trees of nectarines and peaches we were talking about, but there had to be six or eight of them. Full of fruit! I call this a two-toned pie because she had both white and orange flesh of both nectarines and peaches. We were in heaven. She gave us the biggest box she could fine and was more than happy to see some of this fruit get picked. When we got home from his sister's, G was quite surprised to see such a haul come back with us. We started eating them right away, but they were so ripe that we knew we were going to have to preserve them. Unfortunately, I was leaving with the children the next day for three days with my parents at Lake Tahoe. So, G took it upon himself while we were gone to peel, slice, sugar and freeze all of those nectarines and peaches! I came back to a freezer full of goodness. So, yes, we had a fantastic pie, and if you have access to super fresh summer fruit, I encourage you to freeze it, so you can enjoy their sweetness months later.

A couple of tips:

If you have frozen fruit, definitely drain the juice after thawing it, even taking a spoon and stirring the fruit in a colander to release more juice. In the past I've made the mistake of just partially draining the juice, but the juice made the crust so wet, that it was hard to seal the top to the bottom. Also, more juices are released during baking, so that pie became a big juicy mess, albeit a tasty one. I wouldn't rinse the fruit, though; for some reason it seems like you'd be rinsing away flavor. If you are using fresh fruit, you shouldn't have to worry about draining. Also, you normally want to pre-bake a bottom crust when the filling is a wet one, like this one. I usually line the unbaked shell with wax paper and top it with dried beans to weigh it down. This time, I didn't have dried beans handy (I know!), so I just pre-baked it without any weights. It actually turned out fine. To see how to pre-bake a crust with bean weights, I explain it in my recipe for my Pecan Raisin Tart. After you lay the top crust on the fruit, take a small, sharp knife and trim off any big edges. If there are gaps where more crust is needed, take some of the extra dough and pinch it to the crust where you need it. You can see in the picture below that is what I had to do in one spot. It doesn't make for an absolutely picture-perfect pie, but it still eats the same. I actually probably had too much crust around the edges, and my crust baked over the rim of the pie pan. If that happens to you, just carefully crack the edges off, munch on them before the kids can grab them, and slice as usual.



Two-Toned Nectarine Peach Pie


A slice of this sweet pie! You can see how the fruit is still very juicy, even after being drained.


Two-Toned Nectarine Peach Pie

Ingredients:

For the crust:

Makes enough dough for a double-crust pie

2 and 1/2 cups flour
5 Tbs. vegan or raw sugar
1 Tbs. EnerG Egg Replacer
14 Tbs. chilled vegan margarine, cubed
6 Tbs. cold water


For the filling:

4 cups of frozen white and orange flesh nectarines and peaches, thawed and drained
1 cup of vegan or raw sugar

Directions:

For the crust: In a food processor with the pastry blade, pulse together the flour, sugar, and Egg Replacer. Add the margarine and process until the it becomes grainy. Add the water through the feeding tube and process until dough lumps up into a ball. If you are doing it by hand, whisk together the dry ingredients. Use a pastry cutter or fork to blend the margarine in. Add the water and continue mixing, using your hands if necessary. Divide the dough in half, shape into disks, wrap in wax paper and chill for 20 minutes. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees. Take one of the disks, and roll it out on a floured surface to a round that will cover the bottom and sides of your pie pan. Lay crust in pan, making sure edges are gently pressed down. Use a fork to poke holes all over the bottom of the crust. Bake for 20 minutes. Cool on a rack.

For the filling and rest of pie: When the bottom crust is cooled, roll out the top crust into a round large enough to cover the top of the pie, plus an inch or so more to compensate for the fruit. Mix the sugar and fruit together and pour onto the bottom crust. Lay the top crust on top. Cut away large, extra edges. Pinch the two crusts together to create a scalloped edge. Use a sharp knife to make several slits on top. Adorn with dough fruit, if you wish. You can attach this adornment with a dab of water on the back before putting on the top crust. Bake for 45 minutes, making sure the crust is nice and golden. Delicious. Feeds five hungry vegans for a couple of days.

Sunday, December 5, 2010

Whole Wheat Spaghetti with Creamy Pumpkin Sauce

This is a very easy and quick dish to make, if you have pumpkin on hand. I used four of my bags of pumpkin puree and came up with a new twist on pasta sauce. I also put soft silken tofu in to add a creamy texture: I mashed mine this time, but I think blending in a food processor would be a great idea. It warmed our tummies and was fun to try something a little different. I hope you give it a shot.

Also, be sure to swing by Millie's blog to check out my recipe for Pecan Pie Cookie Cups for her Holiday Cookie Extravaganza. She invited me to contribute, and I was more than happy to oblige. My recipe will appear on her blog on December 7th, and I'll post it on mine some time after.



Whole Wheat Spaghetti with Creamy Pumpkin Sauce
Ingredients:

1 lb. pkg. whole wheat spaghetti
1 cup silken soft tofu, mashed by hand or blended in food processor
4 cups pureed pumpkin
1 tsp. dried basil
1/2 tsp. paprika
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
salt and pepper to taste
Optional:
Nutritional yeast flakes
Red pepper flakes

Directions:

Prepare pasta according to package directions. While water for pasta is heating up, combine remaining ingredients, except for the optional ingredients, in a medium pot. Cook over medium heat for ten minutes, then turn down heat to medium low for an additional fifteen minutes. Spoon sauce over pasta and top with nutritional yeast flakes and red pepper flakes, if desired. Feeds five hungry vegans.

Wednesday, December 1, 2010

White Cake with White Butter Cream Frosting

This cake first made its appearance on Thanksgiving a few days ago, with its friend my Pumpkin Cream Cheese Roll. But, it seems, it developed a small fan base of its own, with a few commenters showing interest in it, and Robyn from Girl on Raw requested the recipe. So, the cake that four-year-old JK practically ate single-handedly now has her own show! On holidays and other special days, once a cake is sliced, or any dessert that we have has been "started," I let my family have a piece after every meal, so that's why some of our desserts don't make it past day two. I think the cake and frosting have just the right amount of sweetness, and I think I actually could have put a bit more between the layers than I did. I'm always wondering if I'll have enough to spread around, so I tend to skimp in the middle, but I'm not going to do that anymore!

White Cake with White Butter Cream Frosting


Oh, that pumpkin dessert thinks it has it going on, but it needs to watch out for...the caped crusading cake!!


White Cake with White Butter Cream Frosting
Ingredients:

Cake:

2 and 1/2 cups cake flour
1 and 1/2 cups vegan or raw sugar
1 Tbs. baking powder
1 tsp. salt
1/2 cup shortening
1 cup soy milk -- UPDATE:  I now add a total of two cups soy milk
1 tsp. vanilla extract
1 Tbs. EnerG Egg Replacer
4 Tbs. water

Frosting:

1/2 cup vegan margarine, room temperature
1/8 tsp. salt
3 and 3/4 cups powdered sugar
1 tsp. vanilla extract
3 Tbs. soy milk

Directions:

For the cake: Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Spray two round cake pans with an oil spray, and lightly flour their bottoms. Set aside. In a medium bowl, whisk together the cake flour, sugar, baking powder and salt. In a large bowl, cream the shortening to soften it completely. In a small bowl or mug, whisk together the Egg Replacer and water. Alternate the flour mixture and the milk into the shortening, beating with a mixer on medium speed. With the last addition of milk, add the Egg Replacer mixture and the vanilla extract. Beat for three minutes, until completely smooth. Divide between the two cake pans, and bake for 30 minutes, (UPDATE: I now bake for 35 minutes) or until a toothpick inserted comes out clean. Cool for fifteen minutes in their pans on a cooling rack. Then carefully invert the cakes out onto the rack to finish cooling.

For the frosting: When the cakes have completely cooled, prepare the frosting. In a medium bowl, cream together the margarine and salt. Starting on low speed and working up to medium, beat in the powdered sugar. Add the vanilla extract and the soy milk, and beat on medium speed for three to five minutes, until the mixture is creamy and smooth. Makes enough frosting for one double layer cake. Feeds five hungry vegans for a couple of days.