Paleo chocolate cake

Giving up grains, dairy, refined sugar and processed/junk food doesn’t mean no treats! This cake was so easy and very tasty, the kids loved helping and eating!

I pinched the recipe from Paleolithic diet recipe book, originally called chocolate loaves.

Makes a small cake, can double the recipe and make 2 with a filling e.g. Cashew nut butter, in the middle.

Ingredients:

2/3 cup unsweetened cocoa powder

2/3 cup coconut flour

1/3 cup arrowroot

1/2 tsp baking powder

1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda

5 eggs

1/4 cup raw coconut oil – melted

2/3 cup raw honey

1 tsp natural vanilla extract

Method:

Preheat your oven to 160•C (140•C fan) grease a small cake tin or 8 individual loaf tins.

Sift together the dry ingredients.

Beat together the wet ingredients and add to dry ingredients. Fold through until incorporated.

Pour the batter into your tin or oven proof dish. Bake for 25-30 min until cake tester comes out clean.

Remove to a wire rack to cool before serving.

Nut butter / coconut butter made a nice topping, otherwise my kids favourite is to make some Nice-cream (blended frozen berries & banana) topped with frozen blueberries, or add some fruit or just enjoy plain.

   
    
   

   
Enjoy X 

Paleo egg wrap lunch

One of my kids favourite meals used to be tortilla wraps. Since the whole family are eating clean, refined grains are off the menu, how sad. However these tasty egg wraps make a great alternative and are super easy to make. My kids love them, result!

All you need are eggs and coconut flour. You can substitute the coconut flour with almond flour (ground almonds) if you wish.

Ingredients:

2 Eggs

1 tsp coconut flour

1 tsp coconut oil or clarified butter

Wrap fillings of your choice

Method:

Mix your eggs with some coconut flour and seasoning. I use 2 eggs with 1 tsp coconut flour. I use my stick blender to prevent lumps, but you can whisk it if you don’t have a blender.

 

  Heat your pan and add oil, pour in egg mix and tilt your pan so that you have an even layer of egg mix covering the pan.

  
When the sides of the egg start to lift from the pan, flip it and cook other side. Remove from pan.

  
Add your fillings and roll it up. Iceberg lettuce adds a wonderful crunch and paleo mayo tastes delicious. You can also make a wrap for each person and leave all the fillings in the middle of the table, allowing everyone to make their own. 

   
   

Enjoy x 

Paleo Veggie Brekkie 

This is my ‘Ssh everyone’s asleep’ breakfast, when I’m working at the crack of dawn. This mixture of baked vegetables (and optional fruit), nuts and seed goes down well as breakfast or a snack, my daughter takes some to school for her snack and I sometimes keep some in my bag for emergencies.

I’m starting my whole3040 on Monday so I had better start preparing myself. Its round 2 for me and round 1 for my husband. He’ll be doing whole30 and I’m doing an extra 10 days.

I first made Ditch the Carbs Grain-free Granola and added some grated carrot and apple. Since then I’ve kept on adding more and more veggies, that now it has to be called Veggie Brekkie. You don’t taste the vegetables and the fruit just add a little sweetness. These all reduce down to about a third by the end.

All of the ingredients are completely optional, quantities are also optional. Make it according to what you like or what you have. My family all love it (it has not always been that way, especially for my 3 year old), so I make a large batch. I store it in the fridge however we went camping last month and it was fine left out in the hot tent for almost a week (but I don’t recommend that).

I usually eat it with some berries and avo. My kids put Greek yogurt with theirs.


Use your food processor to grate the veg or to chop it up finely. If you don’t have one, I’d consider getting one, I use mine everyday, it saves so much time. This needs a lot of attentive observation so cook it while you have another kitchen job. It’ll need at least an hour to cook, maybe longer if you include the mashed ingredients, and you’ll need to watch and turn it regularly.


UPDATE: I wanted to make a lower carb version, so I left out the fruit and sweet potato. I just has carrots, courgette and celeriac (first time using it in the brekkie), along with the usual nuts, seeds, coconut, oil and spices. I left out the avo because I wanted to cook it a little quicker and easier. It tastes so good, you wouldn’t recognise the difference. Not even my biggest critics (kids) could taste the difference.

Another cheap low carb ingredient which worked well is suede. This time suede, carrots and courgette. Try to really brown your coconut flakes, they add a wonderful crunch.


Ingredients (this is what I used for this large batch. All ingredients and quantities are optional):

1 large courgette (zucchini) – grated

4 carrots – grated

1 sweet potato – grated

1 apple – grated (Granny Smith give flavour great)

1 avo – mashed (don’t include if it’s your first attempt, scroll down to the bottom for explanation)

1 banana – mashed (again not for your first one)

500g nuts – lightly chopped

100g mixed seeds (no dried fruit, it will burn).

1-2 tbsp cinnamon

1-2 tbsp allspice or mixed spice

1 tsp ground ginger

1 tsp salt

Sprinkle nutmeg

1 tsp 100% cocoa powder

About 4 heaped tbsp coconut oil (or olive oil, you need some kind of oil, don’t leave this out).

100g desiccated coconut

100g coconut flakes

Method:

The vegetables take longer than the nuts so I do them on 2 trays.

Preheat the oven to 220 degrees.

Line your largest tray with 2 layers of grease proof paper, all the moisture will come out of the vegetables.

In a large mixing bowl, mix the fruit, veg, salt and spices (I added the cocoa to the nuts but you add it where you like). Melt about 2 heaped tbsp coconut oil and pour it on, mix it well. All your veg needs to have a fine coat of oil.


 Spread it out on your tray evenly and cook for 15 min, turn/mix and spread it out and cook for another 15 min. The smell is unusual but this is normal.


In the meantime mix your nuts and seeds. One of my little bags of seeds had goji berries with them. These burnt and I had to pick them out, so avoid any dried fruit.


Melt the rest of the oil and add any spices and salt and spread on second lined tray (1 layer of grease proof is fine).

 The first tray has now cooked for 30 min on high and should have reduced to half. Now turn the oven down to 180 and cook for 10 min. Put the nuts in on the shelf below the veg. Watch them both, turning after 10 min and cooking for another 8-10 min and repeat. Turn it sooner if you think its going to burn. As soon as the nuts are browned and the pumpkin seeds start to split, take them out. Keep cooking the veg until it has shrunk to about a third.


  Now add your desiccated coconut and flakes, it helps to break it up. Cook and turn for 3-5 min intervals until it becomes dry and crumbly – if you used mashed ingredients, it seems to take forever, be persistent.
  
 Allow to cool and mix in the nuts. Add some more desiccated coconut if you’re like me and love it. Enjoy! Let me know how you like to eat yours and if any other veggies work well with it.
** Why no mashed ingredients in your first one? Preparing it without mashed ingredients is quicker and easier. It doesn’t form a clump and spreads much easier. There’s also less chance of it burning. 

  
   
 
   
 You can add your coconut flakes to your nuts when they have started to brown. Toast the flakes until they are brown and crunchy. Add your desiccated coconut at the end.

   
 
Sadly I had no coconut flakes for this batch. It was  half a suede, 1.5 courgette and four carrots. I mixed in mixed spice, cinnamon, salt and oil. I added all spice to the nuts. It turned out great.

Good luck x

Blueberry Paleo pancakes… with hidden avo sshhhh

Wherever I can, I sneak extra veggies into my kids meals and get great satisfaction when they don’t detect them. My kids are super suspicious and are not fooled easily. A small avo went into this batch undetected. I would rather thay got their energy from healthy fats than sugars. Replacing the sugar in the banana, with the fat from the avo, will keep us all fuller for longer.

The batter is a little green but when cooked they are their usual golden colour, without a single shade of green.

*UPDATE: I now add a tsp of coconut flour to the mix to help bind it. I also add my blueberries at the end instead of cooking them, they hold together better and sometimes the blueberries stick to the pan. *

Ingredients:

4 eggs

1 1\2 over bananas

1\2 OR 1 small Avocado

1\2 tsp baking soda (bicarb)

1 tsp cinnamon

1 tsp allspice

1\2 tsp salt

Fresh/frozen blueberries.

Coconut\olive oil to fry

Method

Combine all the ingredients, except blueberries and oil, in your blender/stick blender jug. Blend until smooth and check that it has a batter consistency. If its too runny, add some more avo\banana (almond flour would also work), if its too thick, add an egg or a little water.


Pour about 1-2 tbs of batter for each pancake, add a few blueberries to each one. Cook them over a medium heat and keep them small otherwise they are difficult to flip. Don’t try to cook too many at once, you need room around them when flipping.


 When they start bubbling, its time to carefully flip them.


 Once cooked serve immediately. We eat ours with some berry coulis (I simply heat some mixed frozen berries and blend), coconut, sometimes nut butters or butter, sliced banana, Greek yoghurt (kids only)… My kids love them, hope you and yours  do too.


Paleo carrot, courgette (zucchini) and banana loaf.

Spotty blackened bananas looking at me from the fruit bowl. Yes today has to be the day to try out a new recipe. The result was delicious!

Carrot cake and banana loaf are two great recipes that work together (I have previously made these muffins from Paleo Newbie site). Courgette is going in as well because I have found that it can be secretly added to many savory and sweet recipes without being detected by my main critics (my kids), who hate courgette and refuse to eat it.

Get the kids involved with this easy recipe, I’m sure they’ll love it.

UPDATE: Since posting this blog I have made the recipe again using 1.5 cups of grated carrot and courgette mix. It turned out great, it almost filled my tin. I cooked it at the lower temperature of 170 degs (fan) for 1h25. I checked it at 1h15 and it was looking toasted on top, but cake test proved it wasn’t cooked, so I gave it 10 more minutes. It came out black on top (see photos below) but tasted great. Didn’t taste burnt at all.

Ingredients:

  1. 1 1/4 c ground almonds (aka almond flour)
  2. 1/2 tsp bicarbonate of soda
  3. 1/2 tsp baking powder
  4. 1/2 tsp salt
  5. 1 tbs cinnamon
  6. 1/2 tsp allspice
  7. 3 eggs
  8. 2 mashed over ripe bananas
  9. 1/4 c coconut oil
  10. 1/2 c nut butter (crunchy if you can)
  11. 1/3 c honey
  12. 1/2 c grated carrots (pack it into the cup)
  13. 1/2 c grated courgette (packed in)
  14. 1/2 c chopped nuts (I use walnuts, but any will do)
  15. Anything else that tickles your fancy e.g. Cacao nibs, raisins, dates…
  16. 1 extra banana for decoration

Method:

Preheat the oven to 180 degrees Celsius

Line the bottom of a 26 cm loaf tin with parchment paper/baking sheet and grease the sides.

Combine the first 6 ingredients in a large mixing bowl.

Make a well and add the next 6, mix well

Fold in the vegetables, nuts and whatever else you fancy.

Pour into your 26cm loaf tin.

Slice the last banana long ways and place over the top, I give it a sprinkle of salt as well.


Cook for about an hour, do a cake test. Cook longer if needed.

Cool for a few minutes, then cut around the sides to make sure they don’t stick, turn out and allow to cool.

  

Below is the recipe with 1.5 cups carrot & courgette mix.  

Muffins

Alternatively you can pour your mix into 12 large cupcake cases and cook for around 25 min

Enjoy x