Eggless Saffron Thandai Cream Cake (Suji Cake)- Happy Holi

Eggless Saffron Thandai Cream Cake, a cake that turned out more special than I imagined. The textures and flavours all came together in perfect harmony, and this dense moist cake literally screams holi. Thandai mix in the filling flavoured the cake beautifully, and the sprinkle on top gave it added texture and flavour.

The suji cake is a twist to my eggless saffron halwa tea cakes inspired by the Middle Eastern basbousa. You will love the custard cream filling which is basically cream and milk thickened to a custard with cornflour. When such basic ingredients like semolina or suji yield such magic, baking is even more fun. Saffron, pistachio and rose petals can really uplift a dessert!

It’s quite fascinating to bake the cream layer between two layers of the cake. The custard sets basically because of the cornflour in the cream filling, and that is has been thickened over the stove first. Have to admit I was a bit nervous when I took the cake out of the tin the first time because I expected the filling to burst the banks and flow all over the place. Such a pleasant surprise to find it well formed!

Hope you try this over Holi, or anytime actually. Feel free to skip the thandai spice mix, flavour the custard filling with saffron, maybe pistachios. Don’t forget to tag me at @passionateaboutbaking if you bake this!

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Eggless Saffron Thandai Cream Cake

This cake turned out more special than I imagined. The textures and flavours all came together in perfect harmony, and the cake literally screams holi. Thandai mix in the filling flavoured the cake beautifully, and the sprinkle on top gave it added texture and flavour. The cake is a twist to my saffron halwa tea cakes inspired by the Middle Eastern basbousa.
Course Dessert
Cuisine Indian
Keyword baking, cake, cheesecake, dessert, eggless, eggless cake, eggless layered cake, Holi cake, homemade, one bowl, saffron, semoline cake, Thandai, vegetarian
Prep Time 20 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Servings 8

Equipment

  • Bowl
  • whisk
  • Oven
  • spatula

Ingredients

Cake batter

  • 150 g semolina/suji
  • 100 g clarified butter/ghee melted
  • 300 g sweetened condensed milk {3/4 tin}
  • 40 g almond meal
  • Generous pinch saffron strands

Thandai custard cream filling

  • 360 ml cream Amul 20% fat
  • 120 ml milk
  • 2 1/2 tbsp cornflour
  • 1 tbsp sugar
  • 2 tbsp thandai spice mix

Topping

  • 50 g condensed milk
  • 2 tbsp thandai spice mix

Piping

  • 240 ml cream Amul 20% fat
  • 1.5 tbsp cornflour
  • Rose essence
  • Few drops beetroot juice to colour

Instructions

  • Cake
  • Preheat the oven to 180C. Grease a loose bottom 7″ tin with ghee and dust with semolina. Place on a baking tray.
  • In a large bowl, whisk the clarified butter/ghee with the semolina and stand for 10-15 minutes.
  • Whisk in the condensed milk, almond meal and saffron strands.
  • Add HALF the batter to the prepared tin, and bake for approximately 20 minutes until light golden brown and firm to touch.

Prepare the cream filling while the cake is baking.

  • Whisk all the ingredients together in a heavy bottom saucepan until smooth. Simmer over low heat, STIRRING CONSTANTLY, until it thickens to a custard consistency. Be careful since it can catch the bottom if left unattended.
  • Take off heat and whisk well until smooth.
  • Pour the thandai cream filling over the first baked layer and sprinkle with 2 tbsp thandai mix.
  • Whisk the remaining half batter and gently spoon over the thandai mix and spread uniformly.
  • Return the cake to bake for a further 20-25 minutes until the top is light golden brown and firm to touch.
  • Take out of the oven, and pour over the 50g condensed milk, then sprinkle over 2 tbsp of thandai mix.
  • Leave the cake to cool in the tin to room temperature, then refrigerate for 3-4 hours until set.

Topping

  • Prepare the cream the same way as for the filling, then refrigerate until cold and of piping consistency. It'll be a light piping consistency.
  • Gently remove the cake from the tin and place on serving platter.
  • Pipe over with rose cream, scatter over rose petals, pistachio slivers.

Eggless Saffron Pistachio Halwa Madeleines

Eggless Saffron Pistachio Halwa Madeleines … one bite into these and the indulgence hits you. At three different times, 3 different people gave me similar feedback. One said halwa, another said laddoo, while a third said wow, like halwa, so good! So here we are, halwa madeleines.

One of my favourite ingredients to play around with in baking is saffron, and as I write this, the list of favourites just seems to multiply. Living in the Indian subcontinent is a blessing for people like me who enjoy the colours and chaos! There’s always something happening, a season change, or the onset of the festive season, often both together.

We’re blessed with local ingredients and flavours, local cuisines and a long year dotted with festivals. It’s enough to inspire anyone to constantly want to play with ingredients like saffron, pistachios, rose petals, ghee, almonds … as I said, the list is infinite, seems to multiply.

A while ago I made some Eggless Lime Madeleines which turned out really special. I think there’s some magic that gets created when almond meal and ghee come together, a certain indulgence. I’ve seen it in happen with my Wholegrain Mawa Cake, a cake that’s been tried several times by folk.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JARELseglOMu0026t=96s

With a blog that’s constantly hungry, I keep thinking of new food to feed it. These madeleines were the result of this. Also the result of some rather fine saffron that I recently used from Urban Platter as I worked some recipes for them.

The Saffron Pistachio Vegan Coconut Pudding turned out rather special. I think I’ll share it next, but for now, these little halwa babies or rather, these eggless madeleines. If you don’t have a madeleine tray, perhaps make them in a mini muffin tray or even small mini tart tins.

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Eggless Saffron Pistachio Halwa Madeleines

Simple, staple ingredients and oh-so-festive, these Eggless Saffron Pistachio Halwa Madeleines are small treats perfect for tea time. Dip them into dark chocolate or perhaps white chocolate, else serve them as they are, fresh out of the oven. They are delicious warm when the flavours really play their magic, and great at room temperature too.
Keyword baking, chocolate, dessert, eggless, homemade, sweet
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 20 minutes
Total Time 30 minutes
Servings 16 madeleines

Ingredients

Dry mix

  • 40 g almond meal
  • 100 g all purpose flour
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • Pinch salt
  • 2 tbsp chopped pistachios

Wet mix

  • 120 ml milk room temperature
  • 100 g honey
  • 70 g Ghee/ clarified butter melted, tepid
  • pinch Generoussaffron

To dip

  • 50 g dark couverture chocolate melted
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped pistachios

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 180C degrees.
  • Sparingly grease a 12 mold madeleines pan with ghee, and dust with flour.
  • In a large bowl, sift the almond meal, all purpose flour, salt and baking powder. Stir through the chopped pistachios.
  • ln another larger bowl, heat the ghee slightly {microwave for 30 seconds} and steep the saffron in it. Whisk in the honey, followed by the milk.
  • Stir the dry mix into the wet mix, stand for 5 minutes, then ladle into the mold.
  • Bake for 18-20 minutes until a toothpick tester comes out clean.
  • Turn gently onto a cooling rack, and cool completely.
  • Dip into melted dark chocolate and finely chopped pistachios if desired, then leave to set.

Spicy Chocolate Garam Masala Fruit Cake … a winter warmer this holiday season

Spicy Chocolate Garam Masala Fruit Cake … my first winter fruit cake with chocolate and not the last by far! I make a fruit cake every year during the holiday season. Each year I have a special spice to flavour my cake, the garam masala.

This year there are two things different. One, I’ve added the charm of chocolate to my fruit cake, and second that the fruit were soaked exclusively in rum. More specifically soaked in Captain Morgan Rum, resulting in a drop dead addictive fruit cake! Oh, and another twist, coconut sugar. YUM!

I did a dry run with the recipe to figure if I was on track. It was amazing but maybe needed a few changes. The second time around it turned out perfect. It’s a simple recipe that has a fruit mix, and wet mix, then a dry mix. Line up the ingredients, get organised and you’ll have this baby baking in under 30 minutes.

My holiday baking through winter has increasingly been flavoured by garam masala, a spice my mother used to lace her fruit cake with year after year. It comes as a surprise to many since they associate this quintessential Indian spice with curries, kebabs and savoury food.

However, if you take a leaf out of my book, or many if you desire, you will see a splattering of recipes using this flavourful and common Indian spice blend. If the West is famous for its pumpkin pie spice, the East is known for garam masala, quite literally ‘hot spice mix‘!

Hot it is not and that is pretty much a regional thing. While it is much ‘spicier’ down south, the North Indian garam masala is gentle, flavourful and extremely pleasing. Just a sprinkle completely changes the mood of any dish, so you can imagine what it did to my cake.

One bite of the cake and you get transported to winter wonderlands where warm spices, chocolate and rum embrace you with their warmth. The flavours come together really well, and each crumb screams HOLIDAY SEASON! 

To finish the cake, poke holes through it as soon as it steps out of the oven, and drizzle over the warm cake with a little more Captain Morgan Rum. Then let this beautiful, fragrant bake sit back and mature a little bit. Slice and serve once cold…

Or add another level of indulgence by drizzling over with a rum spiked chocolate ganache, top with candied orange slices and frozen berries! Dust with cocoa…

… and you have a show stopper!

ENJOY!

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Spicy Chocolate Garam Masala Fruit Cake ... the right winter warmer this holiday season

Spicy Chocolate Garam Masala Fruit Cake ...One bite of the cake and you get transported to winter wonderlands where warm spices, chocolate and rum embrace you with their warmth. The flavours come together really well, and each crumb screams HOLIDAY SEASON!
Keyword baking, chocolate, dessert, fruit, homemade, sweet
Prep Time 15 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 2 hours 15 minutes
Servings 6 people

Ingredients

Fruit mix

  • 150 g fruit mix {raisins berries, apricots, figs, orange, ginger etc}
  • 150 ml Captain Morgan Rum
  • 2 tbsp garam masala powder
  • 2 tbsp coconut sugar

Dry Mix

  • 1/2 cup all purpose flour
  • 1/2 cup almond meal
  • 1/4 cup cocoa powder
  • Pinch salt
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp baking powder
  • 1 cup chopped walnuts
  • 1/2 cup dark chocolate chips

Wet mix

  • 75 g clarified butter {ghee}
  • 1 cup coconut sugar
  • 1 egg
  • 1 tbsp Greek yogurt
  • vanilla extract

To top

  • 30 ml Captain Morgan Rum

Instructions

Fruit mix

  • Soak the fruit in the rum, 2 tbsp coconut sugar & garam masala for 2-3 days {or more if possible}. Check daily and top with more rum if required.
  • Preheat oven to 160C. Line the bottoms and side of a 6" round tin with baking parchment.

Wet Mix

  • In the bowl of a stand mixer, beat the clarified butter/ghee and coconut sugar until light and moussey.
  • Beat in eggs plus vanilla extract. Beat in the Greek yogurt.

Dry Mix

  • In a large bowl, whisk together the flour, almond meal, cocoa, baking powder, baking soda and salt.
  • Stir together dry mix with walnuts and chocolate chips.
  • Toss the fruit into the dry mix, then fold it all into the butter mix.
  • Transfer to prepared tin, even out and bake for 50-60 minutes until done.

To finish

  • Poke holes into the cake as soon as it comes out, and drizzle about 30ml of rum over it.
  • Cool completely and rest for a day.

Saffron Cheesecake … inspired baking!

Saffron Cheesecake …the best thing ever! Smooth, beautifully flavoured, most addictive, so satisfying. ​I know I’ve said this before, but honestly, this is my ALL TIME favourite cheesecake, a recipe I’m sharing here today. Flavouring this beautiful recipe is a very special product, the best quality saffron I’ve ever used, and it’s from Tahmina International. ​There is a heart-warming story behind the brand, and how it contributes back to society; a brave story that helps communities in conflict zones.One whiff of Tahmina transports you into another world, and I’m not kidding. I use a lot of saffron, always ensuring its good quality. After all you can’t go wrong with the most expensive spice in the world!I still remember when my son came back home from school years ago telling me they had learnt about the most expensive spice in the world! He was most impressed by his mothers in-depth knowledge when she said must be saffron! And his eyes opened as big as saucers when I showed him some from my pantry. He thought I was the richest mama in the whole world! Little did he know that in almost every kitchen here in India, there will always be saffron!Saffron is an inherent part of our existence, deeply rooted in our culture, both culinary and religious. While most auspicious ceremonies are embarked upon by a ’tilak’ that includes saffron, a wide variety of Indian desserts are delicately flavoured by this beautiful spice. You’ll also find savoury dishes that celebrate the fragrance – kormas, pulaos, kebabs and so much more. A little goes a long way, which is why using the best quality you can find makes so much sense.

We have always used saffron at home. My old aunt still makes her caramel custard with saffron as the central flavour and swears by it. I use saffron a lot too, and it’s one of my all-time favourite spices. One of my favourite uses has been my own special version of the Indian rice pudding or Zafrani Phirini, a recipe that I fast tracked to make super simple. Of course, now I have a new favourite, this Saffron Cheesecake flavoured most luxuriously and deeply by Tahmina’s saffronThat brings me to Tahmina. Derived from the Persian word ‘tahm‘, meaning strong and brave, Tahmina is an international brand with a vision to export transformational products from different conflict areas of the world. Their belief that economic development is one of the sustainable agents of change to war-torn societies resonates with me deeply, knowing that positivity like this can bring about much-needed change in a world torn apart by strife. It was heartening to hear the story, first hand for me as I was fortunate enough to meet the founder of Tahmina International in Gurgaon recently. She spoke so passionately about their maiden project, Afghan Saffron and Saffron-infused Teas, that I was moved. To see a brand so young and so brave, with such a strong vision to make the world a better place fills me with pride. To be able to get one of Afghanistan’s best luxury products saffron to international markets by connecting local farmers, employing Afghan women, and helping to develop an industry that can offer meaningful alternatives to an illicit drug economy is so meaningful. Tahmina breathes and lives this dream. They work hand in hand with communities, speak the local language fluently and are extremely proud of the quality of saffron made available to the international market.And proud Tahmina should be. I take in strong whiffs of the saffron as I pry open the beautifully designed box. When I first saw the branding and packaging, I was smitten. It was love at first sight. The colours, the design, the branding, the concept. For me, everything works like magic! And believe me, try a few strands of Tahmina’s saffron, and you will know what I mean. As the world’s most expensive spice sees a growing demand internationally, the popularity soaring, it’s so easy to fall prey to poor quality saffron.While Afghan saffron struggles to demand a good price in the international market, currently priced almost a seventh the price of Spanish saffron, Afghan saffron has been named the best in the world by the International Taste & Quality Institute for three years running. Given the relatively newer and largely underdeveloped saffron industry in Afghanistan, proper development and branding of this quality product should fetch it recognition and the price that is rightly due.  Tahmina is working towards shaping this future, raising hopes to rewrite their story!And if the saffron is as good as this, it can only be a win win situation for all. The flavours became deeper chilling in the fridge overnight, the cheesecake beautifully fragrant. It tasted like heaven! Light, silky, smooth, sensuous, all the flavours tying in beautifully. It’s a luxurious yet simple cheesecake to bake. I often bake large cheesecakes, but this time chose to bake little and medium-sized ones.The fun part was dressing them up with the saffron mascarpone frosting, then adding the garnish. I love how pretty all the colours look, like a dessert worth celebrating. The Saffron Cheesecake can be made a day or two ahead, frosted a day ahead too. It holds really well, so in many ways is the perfect dessert for a special celebration.And one last word before I leave you, do try their Saffron Black Tea Blend too. I’m not a huge tea drinker but I love iced tea in summer. I made a cold brew with the tea bags {look at that colour!}, sweetened it with a little honey, and added pomegranate pearls to the glass. So refreshing, and bursting with saffron flavour. So potent! I’ve got another saffron dessert brewing in my head as I write. Another time perhaps…

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Saffron Cheesecake

Saffron Cheesecake …the best thing ever! Smooth, beautifully flavoured, most addictive, so satisfying. ​I know I’ve said this before, but honestly, this is my ALL TIME favourite cheesecake. Flavouring this beautiful recipe is a very special product, the best quality saffron I’ve ever used from Tahmina International.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 1 hour
Total Time 6 hours 10 minutes
Servings 8 people

Ingredients

Biscuit base

  • 200 g digestive biscuits
  • 25 g pistachios finely chopped
  • 50 g unsalted butter
  • 1 pinch saffron strands generous

Saffron Cheesecake Filling

  • 150 g mascarpone
  • 175 g cream cheese
  • 300 g sweetened condensed milk
  • 200 g single cream
  • 25 g cornflour
  • 3 eggs
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla bean paste
  • 1 tsp saffron strands

Mascarpone Saffron Cream

  • 100 g mascarpone
  • 50 g whipping cream
  • 15 g {1 tbsp} icing sugar
  • 1 pinch saffron strands generous

To garnish

  • saffron strands
  • Pistachio slivers
  • Organic rose petals

Instructions

Biscuit base

  • Preheat the oven at 180C. Prepare one loose bottomed 8-9" round tin, or smaller tins as desired. Lightly grease the inside, and wrap the outside with heavy duty foil. Place on baking tray.
  • Place all ingredients except pistachios in jar of processor. Process until fine breadcrumb like mix. Stir in chopped pistachios.
  • Turn into prepared tin, press gently. Bake for 10 minutes. Cool on rack, then top with saffron cheesecake filling.

Saffron Cheesecake Filling

  • Place all ingredients other than saffron in jar of processor. Blend for 30 seconds to a minute until well mixed together. {I used the Thermomix, Speed 7, 20 seconds}
  • Add the saffron strands and mix in on low speed {Thermomix, Reverse speed 4, 5 seconds}
  • Pour over biscuit base. Pour about 1 cup of water into baking tray. Bake 170c for an hour/until slightly firm to touch. Cool completely, then cover and chill overnight.

Mascarpone Saffron Cream

  • Place whipping cream and sugar in a large bowl and whip to medium stiff peaks. Add mascarpone and whip on slow speed until blended, then add saffron strands and mix in on lowest speed for 20 seconds.
  • Transfer to piping bag fitted with star nozzle. Pipe over chilled cheesecake. Garnish with pistachio slivers, saffron strands and fresh, organic rose petals.

Roasted Cauliflower Salad – making the most of vegetables! #glutenfree #plantfood

Roasted Cauliflower Salad … not sure why it took me so long to discover this. There was a time that I disliked everything cauliflower other than a cauliflower based lamb curry or Gobhi Gosht that my mother made every winter. Cauliflower was the most boring vegetable at our place, and we looked in wonder as the literal truckloads that the farms around our place produced.Then I began gently trying a few things. First the raw nibble,then a quick stir fry, a vinegar based raw ferment. Then soup. Hmmm, now so bad. The big breakthrough came when I began making stuffed parathas {flatbreads} and everyone at home began enjoying them. Next a quick Indian stir fry that became one kids favourite. Yes, there was hope!Then one day I thought the oven is on, let me toss a quick lot of sliced cauliflower in olive oil and grill it. Turned out quite delicious and I couldn’t stop eating them off the tray. Be warned that this is addictive as it comes out of the oven, especially the bits that are crispy brown on the edges. Also be warned that the cauliflower shrinks quite a bit while baking, so a medium head of cauliflower might yield enough for 2 servings only.This Roasted Cauliflower Salad a great salad for winter, and also for spring. I have served this warm from the oven, as well as chilled overnight. It’s addictive good both ways. I have to say I love it because the garlic just shines. I usually up the garlic quite a bit. If you love garlic, you might consider doing that too!

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Grilled Cauliflower Salad

Grilled Cauliflower Salad is a great salad for winter, and also for spring. I have served this warm from the oven, as well as chilled overnight. It's addictive good both ways. I have to say I love it because the garlic just shines. You can play around with the dressing as you like.
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 30 minutes
Total Time 40 minutes
Servings 2

Ingredients

  • 1 medium cauliflower

Dressing

  • 3 tbsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 3-4 cloves garlic minced
  • 1 tsp red chili flakes
  • Sea salt
  • Juice of 1/2-1 lime

Garnish

  • 1/2 cup pomegranate pearls
  • fresh rocket beet greens etc.

Instructions

  • Preheat the oven to 180C.
  • Slice the cauliflower vertically to get a cross section of florets.

Dressing

  • In a small bowl, whisk together the olive oil, garlic, red chili flakes, sea salt and lime juice. Taste and adjust seasoning.
  • Place cauliflower in a large bowl. Pour the dressing over and toss gently to coat.
  • Lay the florets out on a baking tray in one flat lot. Do not overlap else the baking will be uneven.
  • Bake for approximately 30 minutes, until the edges begin to brown.
  • Serve warm or chilled pomegrabate pearls, rocket, beet greens etc.

Wholegrain Chocolate Buckwheat Sablés

“Food is something that manages to find a way in to approximately 12 out of every 10 conversations we have at Chumbak.”
Chumbak

Wholegrain Chocolate Buckwheat Sables – dark chocolate, a mix of wholegrain flours, a little all purpose too, brown sugar, sea salt, of course butter. All these come together to make an eggless cookie, the indulgent sable, a shortbread cookie is a French round shortbread cookie. Another eggless cookie, this time loaded with chocolate, and almost wholegrain, with the goodness of buckwheat {kuttu ka aata} makes for a great gift!

It’s a good time too, at Diwali, when it’s fun to bake and gift good things. With mithai or sweetmeats dwindling in popularity, chocolate always ensures happy gifting. I like to either gift handmade truffles, nut clusters, or then cookies paired with either a lamp, a birdcage, platters, jars etc. The new Gold Collection from Chumbak, with the already beautiful existing range, makes for beautiful gifts with my cookies. Gifts I would love to receive too. Take a look!

With wholewheat and buckwheat in this buttery chocolaty shortbread, I didn’t expect things to go so well. That they did, was amazing. I can safely say these are my best chocolate shortbread cookies to date, best eggless cookies too! They’re inspired and adapted from Chocolate Sables @ The Boy Who Bakes, and HE is so good in everything he bakes! I found them on Instagram and decided to bake a wholegrain version. I figured the food loving folk at Chumbak would love them too!

The dazzling beautiful range of lifestyle products from Chumbak, the quintessential owl included, has me smitten as you can probably see. Hoot Hoot!! I’ve been in love with their quirky designing, innovative products, Indian humour and what not! From a souvenier store for India and Indians in 2010, they’ve grown phenomenally over the past few years. Today, Chumbak is a design led lifestyle brand for products across apparel, home and accessories driven by the best philosophy ever – Make Happy!

This Diwali sees Chumbak creating absolute magic. Take a look at some of their range. I love the fact that I can mix and match infinitely, that I can do daytime setups with flowers, do a drop-dead gorgeous one for the night, build a terrarium within like Madhuli just suggested.  There is so much goodness for gifting. Wrap some baked goodies or chocolate truffles {recipe coming soon}, with them to make that perfect gift.

Chumbak retails over 75 categories across 30 plus stores pan India across formats. To buy any of these looks, a a whole lot more, do stop by here.

“This is what we live for, this is our philosophy and those big words that are synonymous with it. This is #makehappy!”

These few products are just the tip of the iceberg. They have something for every budget, something for everyone. I picked a gold and teal line, a touch of yellow, owls galore. Oh and this wooden cake platter above. Precious like the rest of the wood accents line. Now for the recipe of these cookies!

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Wholegrain Chocolate Buckwheat Sablés

Crisp, deeply chocolate, buttery, wholegrain, eggless, Wholegrain Chocolate Buckwheat Sablés are the yummiest cookies ever! Adapted from The Boy Who Bakes.
Course Snack
Cuisine French
Prep Time 10 minutes
Cook Time 15 minutes
Total Time 2 hours 25 minutes
Servings 2 dozen

Ingredients

Dry mix

  • 50 g wholewheat {aata}
  • 50 g buckwheat
  • 50 g plain flour
  • 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 1/4 black truffle sea salt {or sea salt}

Wet mix

  • 115 g unsalted butter room temp
  • 1 tsp vanilla extract
  • 100 g brown sugar
  • 125 g 52% dark chocolate, ground {or finely chopped}

Instructions

Dry Mix

  • Stir dry ingredients in a bowl to mix. Reserve.

Wet Mix

  • Place butter, brown sugar and vanilla in bowl of stand mixer with paddle attachment. Whisk on medium speed for 3-4 minutes until smooth.
  • Add the dry mix and ground chocolate, and mix on the lowest speed just enough for the dough to come together.{You can do this by hand to play safe}. Don't over-mix else the cookies will become hard.
  • Bring the dough together, either make a cylinder like roll, cling-wrap and chill for a couple of hours.
  • Alternatively, you could always use the dough for cut out cookies.
  • Preheat oven to 170C
  • Place on parchment lined cookie trays
  • Bake for 12-15 minutes until just firm to touch.
  • Cool completely on cookie racks
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