Lotus Biscoff Dessert Shots … literally the sweetest kind of dessert!

Lotus Biscoff Dessert Shots … literally the sweetest kind of dessert! With the most delicious layers of happiness on repeat, this simple, fuss free and fun dessert shot is going to be your new favourite. I love playing with Biscoff and creating new desserts.

If you are team Biscoff, this is for you. If you are wondering what the hype about Biscoff is, then this is for you. AND if you’ve never heard of Lotus Biscoff, then welcome to a wonderful new world of flavours and textures that give you joy! As you might have noticed, this is one ingredient I love ‘desserting‘ with, and no, nothing is sponsored.


Calories too of course and that’s why these dessert shots work beautifully. They pack a punch of flavour in small portions so you can get your sweet fix without too much guilt! Desserts in small portions or desserts that cater to 2-4 servings is what I really enjoy making now. I love how special they make you feel, how mouth watering and attractive they look and how fun they are to create.

That they are make ahead is another bonus, and yes, these are great crowd pleaser. If you’re looking for a quick simple dessert to feed a bunch of folk, these Biscoff Dessert Shots might well be the answer. You can always use a vegan butter and cream substitute to make this vegan since Biscoff is a vegan plant based product.

When catering for a large number, my advice is to do a quick small dry run to familiarise yourself with the process, figure out the visuals in the glass/bowl you choose, and get an idea of the portions you’d get from a recipe. Finalising the garnish is also something I would do at this time to take the pressure off on the main day when there are a million other things to do…

At the end of the day, it’s a simple recipe that can be tweaked almost endlessly and that’s the beauty of no bake desserts. Making it a dessert shot in single serve dessert glasses is one of my favourite ways to do dessert. You can always use food safe disposable / single use acrylic dessert glasses if the dessert needs to be transported or if you’re planning this for a kids party. Glass is a little fragile while transporting or when kids are involved, so it’s always nice to have options!

I love doing dessert shots and have made several interesting versions over the years and I think you can do that too. It’s as simple as maybe picking one hero ingredient, Lotus Biscoff, as in this case and playing around with layers. Other ideas include Nutella, blue matcha, pistachio, Oreos, coffee etc. Alternatively, pick a dessert like Black Forest for inspiration, or then a treat like Snickers, then mimic the layers. I think you get the drift!

If you’re looking for more inspiration of the Biscoff type, and I don’t blame you for that, I’ve got you covered! You can find a collection of reels on my Instagram handle at Passionate About Baking. I absolutely love making desserts with this delicious and addictive Lotus Biscoff spread and can offer you a delicious Biscoff dessert recipe for each day of the week! They’re all eggless recipes too.

Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

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Lotus Biscoff Dessert Shots

These small serve Biscoff dessert shots are quite the perfect dessert. They pack a punch of flavour in petite portions to offer a sweet fix without too much guilt! I love how special they make you feel, how mouth watering and attractive they look and how fun they are to create.
Course Dessert
Cuisine belgium, Mediterranean
Keyword Biscoff, biscuit, cookies and cream, cream, dessert, dessert shot, glass dessert, Lotus, Lotus Biscoff, no bake, small desserts, speculoos, vegetarian dessert
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 0 minutes
Chilling time 30 minutes
Total Time 45 minutes
Servings 2

Ingredients

Biscuit base

  • 40 g Lotus Biscoff biscuits crumbs
  • 10 g Clarified butter/ghee.

Biscoff cream

  • 120 g cream 25% fat
  • 1 tsp icing sugar
  • 60 g Lotus Biscoff spread, smooth softened

Crumb layer & garnish

  • 40 g Lotus Biscoff biscuits crumbs

Biscoff layer & topping

  • 150g Lotus Biscoff spread, smooth melted

Instructions

Layers

    #1 – Biscuit base

    • Stir together the crumbs and clarified butter / ghee until you get a uniform, moist crumb mix. Layer each glass with approximately 25gs of the mix, using a tamper or spoon to gently push into place and get a flat surface.

    #2 – Biscoff cream

    • Whip the cream and sugar until medium stiff peaks. Add the biscoff spread and whip until smooth and fluffy.
    • Fit a piping bag with a 2A nozzle and fill it with the cream. Pipe the Biscoff cream over the biscuit base less than halfway of the dessert glass. {Look at the image for reference}

    #3 – Biscoff spread

    • Pour 40-50g melted Biscoff spread over the cream into each serving glass and place the glasses in the freezer for about 10 minutes until the spread is firm. {You can eyeball the amount you wish to use}

    #4 – Biscoff crumbs

    • Top the Biscoff spread with approximately 2 tbsps of Biscoff crumbs.

    #5 – Biscoff cream

    • Pipe the Biscoff cream over the crumb layer, leaving a little space to top the dessert with melted Biscoff spread.

    #6 – Biscoff spread

    • Pour approximately 30g melted Biscoff spread over the second cream layer and leave to set in the fridge for 15-20 minutes.

    To finish

    • Edge the dessert shot with Biscoff biscuit crumbs.

    Video

    Notes

    To melt the Biscoff spread, simple place the required amount in a heat proof bowl. Microwave for 15 seconds at a time, stir with a wooden pick, and repeat as required. You can also melt the spread placing the bowl over hot water.

    No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipe with walnuts, garlic and rosemary… simple and delicious

    No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipebread is love and this is a fine example! There are times you need comfort that only a simple, fuss free home made bread can offer, this is that recipe! A simple one bowl, hand mixed dough, rested overnight, that is bursting with flavour when baked the next day, bread doesn’t get better than this.


    I absolutely love no knead breads and this is my current favourite. There’s something addictive about freshly based focaccia and even though it tastes really nice the next day too, there’s barely ever any left over. This No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipe with walnuts, garlic and rosemary is very very forgiving. I love the moistness it offers, the flour to water ratio baking up a beautiful crumb.

    Look at it and you’ll know what I mean. Each bite is full of flavour and enticing. For someone who mostly shares dessert recipes, it might come as a surprise to you dear reader, but my heart is 100% savoury.

    There is nothing I enjoy more than a moreish home baked breadTurkish Lamb & Purslane Pide, No Yeast Pizza, savoury crackers etc. Throw in some garlic and rosemary and you have my attention, 100% of it!! My Cheesy Garlic, Walnut & Rosemary Soda Bread  is another bread that screams love!

    No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipe with walnuts, garlic and rosemary is as simple as stirring together the ingredients in a bowl, covering the bowl with some clingwrap and leaving it to slow rise overnight in the fridge. It’s a great make ahead no knead bread option because the next day this simple bread demands very little of your attention, and yet yields the most delicious end product.

    I used bits and bobs of left over flour for the recipe. I also added my favourite ingredients to add delicious taste notes – fried garlic, chopped walnuts and snipped fresh rosemary. Walnuts are possibly my most favourite nuts to use and I use them often! I’m making this focaccia again very soon with red Leicester cheddar and home made jalapenos, probably walnuts too. The focaccia bakes well and slices well too, with the best little pockets of air!

    These are my favourite kind of bakes and I find them sooooooo satisfying. I’m always torn between making a fougasse or focaccia because I love them both. The focaccia won this time. Let’s see which bread I bake next. For now, I hope you enjoy this fuss free no knead Focaccia with walnuts, garlic and rosemary. It is my current favourite bread!

    Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking or drop a comment here on the blog if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

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    No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipe with walnuts, garlic and rosemary… simple and delicious

    This No Fuss No Knead Focaccia Recipe with walnuts, garlic and rosemary is very very forgiving and very delicious too. I love the moistness it offers, the flour to water ratio baking up a beautiful crumb.
    Course Appetiser, Breakfast, Side Dish, Snack
    Cuisine Italian
    Keyword baking, bread, eggless, focaccia, one bowl, yeast
    Prep Time 15 minutes
    Cook Time 25 minutes
    Proofing 12 hours
    Total Time 12 hours 40 minutes
    Servings 4 people

    Ingredients

    Focaccia

    • 200 g all purpose flour {maida}
    • 50 g bread flour {or use 250g all purpose flour}
    • 1/2 tsp salt
    • 3/4 tsp yeast instant
    • 1/2 tsp baking powder
    • 1 cup water warm
    • 6-8 tbsp extra virgin olive oil

    To top

    • Walnut halves, sliced garlic, fresh rosemary, Maldon sea salt

    Instructions

    • Stir together in a bowl until all the water has been absorbed. Clingwrap the bowl and place it in the fridge overnight.
    • Take the bowl out of the fridge and leave it at room temperature for an hour. Oil your hands before you handle the dough since it will will feel quite loose and hydrated.
    • Add in a tbsp of extra virgin olive oil, fresh chopped rosemary sprigs and fried garlic slices and gently fold the dough somewhat like you would fold sourdough. Repeat 3-4 times. Finally, bring into a ball, tucking the edges underneath.
    • Line a 6" round baking tin with parchment and grease the sides with butter / ghee.
    • Add a tbsp of extra virgin olive oil to the base and place the dough in the tin, folded side underneath. Cover lightly with the clingwrap. Leave for 1-2 hours.
    • Preheat the oven to 210℃.
    • Pour over another 1-2 tbsp extra virgin olive oil over the top and poke your fingertips across the surface to make deep indents all the way down.
    • Drizzle with more extra virgin olive oil if desired, and top with roasted walnuts, fresh rosemary, sliced garlic and Maddon sea salt.
    • Bake for 20-25 minutes until the focaccia is well risen and the top is light golden brown. Slide a sheet of foil over the top if the walnuts are getting too dark.
    • Cool in tin for 30 minutes, then demold and cool.
    • Serve warm or at room temperature.

    Notes

    You can use 1 tsp dried yeast in total with no baking powder.
    You ca also use 250 gm all purpose flour and no bread flour, or 250g bread flour only.

    10 Delicious Eggless Mango Desserts to make now

    10 delicious Eggless Mango Desserts you NEED to make before the season ends. I can’t say it enough even though I keep repeating myself over and over again, mango season is a season we love to love here on the subcontinent! If there’s one thing that makes the Indian summer bearable, it’s definitely mangoes.

    There is just SO MUCH you can do with mangoes and for me the most fun thing to do is create eggless desserts around mangoes! We’re now looking at the last month of the mango season here on the subcontinent and yes, there are still loads of ripe, juicy, delicious mangoes available. This Eggless Mango Trifle Pudding I shared recently is too delicious and so refreshing. It’s really simple as well!

    I’d say grab a few kilos, chop and freeze some for smoothies etc, make a few jars of eggless mango curd and freeze them for later perhaps, else go ahead a try some of the recipes I’ve shared below. Of course, there are several more egg free mango desserts on the blog too.

    There’s never a better time to get your mango dessert skills sharpened and most of my dessert recipes are simple and straightforward {read fuss free}. I’m sharing a selection of bake and no bake eggless mango desserts, most of them one bowl recipes and honestly, this is just a handful. I have to confess that my favourite part is garnishing them because the pop of ‘mangocolour always brightens the dessert table!

    There’s something for everyone, and I really enjoy making these eggless desserts time and again. I often use different elements from different recipes to create a completely new dessert and that keeps me inspired through the season. The collage below tells you pretty much how much and more you can do with elements from different recipes!

    Most of the eggless mango desserts are make ahead and I love that freshly diced mango adds such a pop of colour to the garnish. Throw on a few fresh organic rose petals {I grow my own desi gulab}, maybe fresh mint, some chili flowers and you’re good to go!

    Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking or share a comment here on the blog if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

    Quite The Perfect Recipe For No-Bake Mango Cheesecake … Deliciously Easy
     A recipe that uses just 4 ingredients for the cheesecake filling, this is the quickest, eggless, no bake mango cheesecake. It's also the simplest one!
    Check out this recipe
    No bake Mango Mascarpone Tart
    When life gives you mangoes, you make this tart! A crisp biscuit crumb gives way to a nice bite of slightly tart mango, then the sweetness of mascarpone floods the palette. The jelly really makes this shine!
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Mango Saffron Pistachio Tart Cake
    Mangoes, saffron and pistachios come together to create magic, an eggless cake worth every crumb! Makes one 8" tart cake
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Coconut Lime Mango Cake
    When you think of a match made in heaven, count this in. A flavourful moist crumb, deep mango in every bite and a quick simple frosting that makes this eggless cake so special!
    Check out this recipe
    Photo credit: https://www.instagram.com/passionateaboutbaking
    Eggless Saffron Mango Tres Leches Cake
    The mango season is incomplete without a mango tres leches and this egg free version is sooooo good!!
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Nobake Mango Cheesecake with mango jelly
    Hello mango season, my favourite season of all! This no bake, eggless, no gelatine cheesecake celebrates the best summer has to offer, nature is currently a riot of colours.
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Mango Cream Dessert Box
    With layers of absolute deliciousness, it's another dessert that screams summer! A light sponge {part wholegrain}, a stabilized vanilla cream, diced mangoes {I used slightly tart mangoes here}, eggless mango curd poured over… and repeat. What's not to love? I love the play of textures and flavours, the refreshing bites of fresh mango and the slightly tart mango curd all please the palate. If you don't have a 4" dessert box, go ahead and turn this into a layer cake or trifle.
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Baked Mango Swirl Cheesecake
    Simple, smooth, indulgent, no cream cheese yet ever so satisfying! Makes one 6" cheesecake
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Mango Custard Pudding
    Light, gentle, refreshing and so creamy even though there’s no cream in it!, this is dessert perfect for summer when mangoes are aplenty! I love the beautiful set, though you can set it in bowls as well if you don’t want the extra fuss.
    Check out this recipe
    Eggless Mango Dream Cake
    If dreamy desserts are what you crave, if you love mangoes as much as we do, this tin box cake is for you! With mangoes, cream, saffron & pistachios, this eggless Mango Dream Cake is deeply delicious and so satisfying!
    Makes one tin cake {5.5x3inch}
    Check out this recipe

    Gluten Free Peach Cherry Crumble … buttery, wholesome, delicious

    Gluten Free Peach Cherry Crumble … one of the simplest, quickest to make and satisfying desserts for summer, the stone fruit crumble always gets my vote! This peach cherry crumble is quite addictive with a burst of flavour and deliciousness, an almost guilt free dessert! It’s a quick wholesome dessert which is one of the best ways to use the bounty of summer brings.

    I’ve been making crumbles forever. I think the first crumble I ever made was when a Daring Baker friend, Judy Chiapinni, mentioned years ago that it was the best way to use seasonal fruit that you had an abundance of, or if they were about to spoil. There’s been no looking back. For me, if everything else fails, CRUMBLE!

    I think the day I made my maiden crumble, I was hit by a revelation, maybe two! The first thing that struck me was how simple a recipe could be and how easily anyone could rustle up a crumble. It’s so basic. At best, you need a bowl and a fork {or fingers} if you have a limited kitchen, and an ovenproof baking dish. The possibilities are endless…

    Take a look at this beautiful Strawberry Chocolate Crumble. It’s a recipe you can find in my Chocolate Cookbook, a recipe by my sweet friend and uber talented chef Parul Pratap. I really enjoyed making the dessert, styling and shooting it ♥.

    In my husbands kitchen in the UK where he’s currently working, a crumble is one of the first things I make when I’m visiting. I normally eyeball ingredients since his kitchen is really really basic, yet the crumble is always delicious! A crumble is quite a no brainer and there isn’t much that can go wrong …

    Think apples and raspberries, blueberries, apple walnut, strawberries and apple with thyme, raspberries with pistachios, mangoes and peaches, sometimes a hint of ginger … any fruit I find in his fridge, any nuts in the pantry, I crumble. That said, my favourite season is when stone fruit appear at the local bazaar here in North India even though I do make quite a mean Apple Crumble all through winter!



    Once summer is in full swing and stone fruits rule the roost, it’s quick crumbles for breakfast often. I play with the toppings depending on the ingredients I have on hand. Oats are usually always part of my crumble for the bite that they give. Otherwise a mix of wholewheat and all purpose flour, nuts definitely, raw sugar, clarified butter / ghee or salted butter … you get the drift!

    I always find it fascinating how something so simple can be so so DELICIOUS! Dive into a warm, freshly baked crumble and you will know what I mean. It satisfies at so many levels. The bite of buttery oats and nuts on top, the baked fruit cooked down releasing their fruit juices underneath … all pure magic. Dive in just as is, drizzle some cold unsweetened cream over, else really enjoy it with a scoop of vanilla ice cream!


    Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking or share a comment here on the blog if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

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    Peach Cherry Crumble

    Crumbles are the best way to easily use the bounty of stone fruit summer brings. This peach cherry crumble is most delicious with a burst of flavour and deliciousness, an almost guilt free dessert!
    Course Appetiser, Breakfast, Dessert
    Cuisine American, British
    Prep Time 15 minutes
    Cook Time 1 hour
    Total Time 1 hour 15 minutes
    Servings 4 people

    Ingredients

    Oat topping

    • 100 g whole rolled oats
    • 50 g khaand / raw sugar
    • 25 g almonds
    • 50 g salted butter chilled , diced

    Fruit filling

    • 6 peaches chopped
    • 150 g cherries pitted
    • 2 tsp cornflour
    • 2-3 tbsp khaand / raw sugar
    • Juice of 1 lime

    Instructions

    Oat topping

    • Run the oats, almonds and khaand/raw sugar in a hand blender until ground to a fine meal. Add the butter and process to mix to a moist pea sized crumb.

    Fruit filling

    • Stir together.
    • Preheat the oven to 170C.
    • Turn the fruit filling into a 7″ baking dish and level out.
    • Cover the filling completely with the oat topping, pressing gently into place.
    • Bake for 45-55 minutes until you see fruit juices oozing up the sides.
    • Serve warm or at room temperature.

    Eggless Tropical Mango Trifle Pudding… dreamy desserts for summer!

    Eggless Tropical Mango Trifle Pudding … with semolina and coconut flavouring the cake, this eggless trifle is delicious and dreamy. It has beautiful tropical tones with mango adding the oomph and freshness a summer dessert calls for!

    Mango is my most favourite thing about the Indian summer. The king of fruits as mango is rightly called gives us far too much happiness in the subcontinent. With hundreds of varieties from different regions of India, it’s a fruit that unites us as a nation as hot summer sweeps across the country.

    Every region of India has its own special way of celebrating this luscious fruit as the season begins. Mangoes show up in regional cuisines across the subcontinent in both raw and ripe form . Think curries, coolers, soups, smoothies, salads, sides and you definitely have something with mango. Some of my favourites include a aam daal that we had often as kids, a green mango chicken curry, mango kadhi, aam panna, aam ki chutney, aam ki lonji, aam ka achaar, raw mango salad, mango custard, mango lassi, mango kulfi, mango shake, mango sorbet, mango ice creamthe list goes on!

    For me, the mango season at home is an invitation to create colourful, refreshing and interesting desserts with colours and flavours that really brighten the day. I always make the most of the mango season and we are really fortunate to see a wide variety of juicy, ripe fruit through summer. Right from the quintessential alphonso that is well know world wide to some of my favourites for dessert- kesar, langda and sinduri, I waste no precious time all summer long!

    Hopefully you’ll find the season and the king of fruits as inspiring as I do. I made little puddings with the left over fruit, mango sauce and cream and they were really delicious as well.

    Do tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

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    Eggless Tropical Mango Trifle Pudding

    With semolina and coconut flavouring the cake, this eggless trifle is delicious and dreamy. It has beautiful tropical tones with mango adding the oomph and freshness a summer dessert calls for! A complete mango overload with all my favourite flavours in this very satisfying dessert bowl!
    Course Dessert
    Cuisine American, British
    Keyword baking, cake, cream, dessert, eggfree, eggless, eggless baking, eggless cake, fruit, homemade, mangoes, no eggs, one bowl, semolina cake, simple, summer dessert, tropical, vegetarian, vegetarian dessert
    Prep Time 30 minutes
    Cook Time 1 hour
    Chill 4 hours
    Total Time 5 hours 30 minutes
    Servings 6 people

    Equipment

    • 1 Knife
    • 1 Blender
    • 1 saucepan
    • 1 soup strainer/sieve
    • 2 bowls
    • 1 whisk
    • 1 Oven
    • 2 trifle bowls
    • 1 Piping bag
    • 1 Piping nozzle

    Ingredients

    • 150 g fine semolina suji / rava
    • 75 g castor sugar
    • 60 g oil
    • 1 tsp baking powder
    • 1/4 tsp baking soda
    • 180 ml cultured buttermilk plain chaas
    • 25 g desiccated coconut

    Vanilla cream

    • 250 g cream 25% fat
    • 1% fat tbsp cornflour
    • 3/4 tsp agar agar
    • 25 g sugar
    • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract

    Mango sauce

    • 300 g fresh mango puree strained
    • 50 g sugar
    • 1 tbsp cornflour
    • 1/2 lime juice of
    • 1 tbsp ghee

    To layer and top

    • 3 fresh mangoes diced

    Instructions

    Semolina/Suji Coconut cake

    • Makes two 5" cakes/trifles
    • Lightly grease and line two round 5" baking tins.
    • Place all the ingredients in a large bowl and whisk until smooth.
    • Divide between prepared tins, approximately 245g per tin.
    • Now begin preheating the oven to 180c for 10 minutes.
    • Bake for about 25-30 until light golden brown and the tester comes out clean.
    • Cool in tins for about 15 minutes, then gently demold and cool completely on cooling rack. Be gentle since the crumb will be quite tender.

    Vanilla cream

    • Whisk together all ingredients in a heavy bottom pan, then simmer, stirring constantly till thickened like a custard, 5-7 minutes.
    • Cool, whisking on and off to keep a skin from forming on top. The pudding will thicken as it cools.

    Mango sauce

    • Whisk together the mango puree, cornflour and sugar in a saucepan.
    • Simmer over low heat for 5-6 minutes, stirring constantly.
    • Once slightly thickened, take off heat and whisk in the lime juice and ghee.
    • Cool, then transfer to a glass jar and chill.

    Assemble

    • Place the cake at the bottom of the serving dish and top with diced mangoes, followed by the vanilla cream and mango sauce.
    • Finish off with diced mangoes. Pipe over with whipped cream if desired.
    • Garnish with fresh rose petals and mint.
    • Refrigerate for 3-4 hours/overnight to allow the cake to get nice and moist.

    Video

    Eggless Cherry Chocolate Tart Cake … delicious cakes for summer!

    Eggless Cherry Chocolate Tart Cake … delicious dessert ideas now that cherries are flooding the market! With the summer heat almost unbearable, with the temperature hovering between 45°C- 47°C for days on end, it’s summer fruit like these that make the days bearable! Even better and kind of indulgent if you pair them with dessert!

    Chocolate pairs beautifully with cherries and this quick eggless, part wholegrain dessert cake is quite delicious and very easy to make. The tart cake is something I bake quite often, this raised flan tart tin one of my best buys. I find it quite fascinating since it gives me a nice cavity to fill the cake with and the possibilities are many. My eggless cake always leaves the tin perfectly.

    Say cherries and you have my attention! Take a look at the different kinds of desserts you can make with this bright and cheerful stone fruit. Cherries in season add a splash of colour and endless possibilities for desserts. The hotter it gets in the plains of North India, the juicier and sweeter the cherries get, the more inspired I feel.

    Black Forest Gateau is an inspiration in itself and has led me to create so many versions of the German classic, like the Eggless Cherry Chocolate Cake Jelly Cake above and several more. Having a bottle of Kirsch or cherry brandy adds to the deliciousness.

    For a non alcoholic version or if you don’t have cherry brandy on hand, a simple cherry juice works beautifully as well. All you need to do is simmer a handful of juicy red cherries in about half a cup water with a dash of sugar until soft. Strain out the juice, add a dash of lime and cool it. Get even more creative with it, add a little agar agar powder and voila, you have cherry jelly like the one I’ve used below or in the Eggless Chocolate Cherry Flower Cake here.

    About this cake, I absolutely love how beautifully chocolate pairs with cherries here. I also love how hungrily my one bowl part wholewheat cake soaks up the generous glug of Kirsch {or a simple sugar syrup} giving you a really moist cake.

    The tart cake is one I make quite often, and this tart tin was one of my best buys. It’s given me endless joy! I’ve had such a great time thinking up flavours and combinations and the result is always pleasing and ever so satisfying. I keep trying to pick a favourite but I think I love each one I make. Tart cakes look quite pretty as well, don’t you think?

    That’s what I love about flavour pairings and desserts. You can always customise dessert for friends and family; it’s easy as easy can be. Whether it’s a black forest tart cake, a walnut/pecan orange nut cake, a tiramisu inspired one, raspberry chocolate, chocolate pistachio or then a seasonal favourite like saffron mango, there’s always something for everyone.

    I love to soak the cake somewhat generously, sometimes just as it comes out of the oven which makes it all the more delicious. So there you go, so many flavours, so many combinations in this Raised Flan Tin which is the best baking tin ever! Do tell me if you try the recipe, and do tell me what your favourite flavour pairings are.

    Please tag me on Instagram at Passionate About Baking or share a comment here on the blog if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!

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    Eggless Cherry Chocolate Tart Cake

    This Eggless Cherry Chocolate Tart Cake is a delicious and easy-to-make dessert perfect for hot summer days when cherries are abundant. The tart cake is one I make quite often, and this tart tin was one of my best buys.
    Course Dessert
    Cuisine American, British, French, Italian
    Keyword baking, cake, cherries, chocolate, dessert, drupes, eggfree, eggless, eggless baking, eggless cake, eggless layered cake, fruit, homemade, no eggs, one bowl, soup, stone fruit, summer dessert, tart cake, vegetarian
    Prep Time 1 hour
    Cook Time 45 minutes
    To set 6 hours
    Total Time 7 hours 45 minutes
    Servings 8 people

    Equipment

    • 1 Raised flan tart tin , Link above
    • 3 Mixing Bowls
    • 1 weighing scale
    • 1 Electric hand beater
    • 1 Oven
    • 1 Cherry pitter
    • 1 saucepan
    • 1 spatula
    • 1 balloon whisk

    Ingredients

    Eggless chocolate sponge

    • 210 g buttermilk
    • 35 g oil
    • 15 g clarified butter/ghee
    • 100 g castor sugar
    • 15 g cocoa powder
    • ½ tsp baking soda
    • ¾ tsp baking powder
    • 1 tsp apple cider vinegar
    • Pinch salt
    • 50 g wholewheat flour/aata
    • 115 g all purpose flour/maida

    Cherry pie filling

    • 250 g cherries pitted
    • 1 tbsp cornflour
    • 1 tbsp water
    • 50 g sugar
    • Juice of 1 lime

    Chocolate ganache

    • 100 g cream 25% fat
    • 100 g 55% couverture chocolate

    To moisten

    • 35 ml Kirsch {cherry brandy} or simple sugar syrup for moistening

    Garnish

    • Fresh cherries, mint, edible flowers etc

    Instructions

    Eggless chocolate sponge

    • Preheat the oven to 180℃.
    • Lightly grease the tart cake tin with oil.
    • In a large bowl, add all the ingredients and give them a good whisk. I use an electric whisk.
    • Pour the batter into the tin and tap sharply to settle the batter. Bake for 30 minutes, until the tester comes out clean. Cool the cake and demold gently.
    • Place the chocolate in a bowl. Heat the cream and pour it over the chocolate. Cover the bowl and leave until the chocolate softens. Stir until smooth.

    Cherry pie filling

    • Whisk everything together in a heavy bottom pan and gently simmer for about 5 minutes until thick and glossy and the cherries soften slightly but still hold shape. Strain the cherries out and reserve them in a bowl. Simmer the liquid until thick, then stir it back into the reserved cherries. Cool.

    Chocolate Ganache

    • Place the chocolate in a bowl. Heat the cream and pour it over the chocolate. Cover the bowl and leave until the chocolate softens. Stir until smooth.

    Assemble

    • Moisten the cake with Kirsch.
    • Add the cherry pie filling into the indent. Pour over a layer of ganache to cover the cherries.
    • Refrigerate the cake to set for 6 hours / overnight until the ganache is firm.
    • Dust the top with cocoa powder and garnish with fresh cherries, mint, edible flowers etc.

    Video

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