Fresh Cherry Cheesecake Cups… When colours, textures and flavours come together to scream delicious, delicious, delicious! These are nobake, quick, from scratch and taste amazing. Everything comes together in perfect harmony, the flavours and textures really please the palette.
The heat wave sweeping the plains of North India is unrelenting at 42°C. However, the hotter it gets, the better the stone fruit we see at the bazaar. Cherries are bursting with juice and sweetness, tempting you to play with them in dessert. Here’s a quick, fun and really satisfying way to use them.
A crisp biscuit base, juicy cherries, then a smooth white chocolate cheesecake filling topped with a sweet slightly tangy cherry jelly from scratch. It might look involved but it’s far from it. The cheesecake batter and the jelly pair very well indeed, that mirror finish ruby red jelly {#nogelatine} my favourite part!
Simple hand mixed, fuss free desserts like this make summer quite bearable, This was like diving into the ocean, so refreshing!
Do tag me on Instagram at passionateaboutbaking if you make this, or any other recipe from the blog. I’d love to see it!
When colours, textures and flavours come together to scream delicious, delicious, delicious! A crisp biscuit base, juicy cherries, then a smooth white chocolate cheesecake filling topped with a sweet slightly tangy cherry jelly from scratch. It might look involved but it's far from it. Makes 3 X 220ml servings
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Keyword agar agar, cake, cheesecake, cherries, chocolate, dessert, eggless, fruit, homemade, no bake, simple, summer dessert, sweet, vegetarian
Prep Time 30 minutesminutes
Cook Time 10 minutesminutes
Chilling time 4 hourshours
Total Time 4 hourshours40 minutesminutes
Servings 3people
Ingredients
Cherry jelly cheesecake
Biscuit base
85gDigestive biscuits
25gclarified butter/ gheesoftened
150-200gfresh cherriespitted
Cheesecake filling
150gAmul Fresh cream / 20% fat cream
35gcastor sugar {to taste}
1tspagar agar
Few drops almond extract {or vanilla}
100gwhite chocolatechopped
150gcream cheeseroom temperature, whisked until smooth
Cherry Jelly
75gfresh cherriespitted
165gwater
35gcastor sugar
1/4tspagar agar
Juice of 1 lime
Instructions
Biscuit base
Place the digestive biscuits in a processor /ziploc bag and blend to a fine meal. Stir in melted clarified butter/ghee.
Cheesecake filling
Place the cream, sugar and agar agar in a saucepan and whisk until smooth. Simmer over very low heat for 2-3 minutes stirring often. Strain and pour this over the white chocolate and leave to stand until the chocolate melts. Add the almond extract and whisk until smooth.
Whisk the chocolate mix into the cream cheese just before you need it. Taste and adjust sweetness as desired. Use immediately.
Cherry Jelly
Whisk the ingredients (except the lime juice) together and simmer for 5-7 minutes over very low heat until the cherries soften and break down.
Strain and add the lime juice. Leave to cool to room temperature. The jelly can be reheated gently and cooled to pourable consistency before using. If you pour hot jelly over the cheesecake filling, it’ll make the jelly cloudy.
Assemble – See Reel on https://www.instagram.com/p/CdVWolEASo-/
Press the biscuit base firmly into the bottom of the ramekins ( weck jars or glasses), approximately 35g in each.
Top with a layer of pitted cherries, 10-12, to make a flat layer.
Pour the cheesecake filling over the cherries and place the ramekins in the freezer for 30-45 minutes until the cheesecake is firm.
Gently pour the jelly over the cheesecake. Chill for 3-4 hours or overnight.
Fresh Mango Cherry Layered Cake … with a white chocolate lace collar, one of my favourite ways to dress up a cake. Simplest too! Light, refreshing, creamy and so satisfying, one of those ‘you must make at least once in a season’ cakes! Also a mango cake, one of my favourite fruit for dessert.
It was my dad’s’ birthday today. A few days ago he fell off the ladder while picking mangoes off his tree. Regular drama followed, an emergency hospital trip, stitches etc since he fell on his head. He’s a soldier and didn’t complain even once; that’s just how he is. Also fit as a fiddle again!
His tree bore him over 300 beautiful mangoes this year. Luscious, juicy and so satisfying. I’ve had my fair share of them from the ones that were raw and green, to baskets full of ripe ones now. Did I say I love this season?
I love using fresh seasonal produce in my desserts. It just makes me so happy. Also keeps monotony at bay! So much to look forward to.
A few days ago a reader asked me why I bake only eggless bakes now. It was just a choice I made for a bit, and now this cake has made me very happy!
I thought it fit to make a mango cake for today given all the mango drama that happened the last moth. I added some cherries too since I had really nice ones on hand. I’m back with a regular cake, eggs flour & cream, loaded with summer fruit. It was most delicious, and as you can imagine, it disappeared really soon!
Also back with a chocolate lace collar that inspired so many of you since I last shared a video of the same on Instagram. It got viewed 572K times! It’s something so simple, yet it really steps up the look of a cake, makes it special. There’s a peep into how I piped the collar on Reels on Instagram, so do take a look if you like.
Fresh Mango Cherry Layered Cake ... with a white chocolate lace collar.
Light, refreshing, creamy and so satisfying, one of those must make at least once in a season cakes!
Makes 1 8" layered cake
Best consumed within 24 hours since it has fresh fruit.
Keyword baking, dessert, homemade, sweet
Prep Time 20 minutesminutes
Cook Time 30 minutesminutes
Total Time 4 hourshours50 minutesminutes
Servings 8people
Ingredients
Sponge X 2
6eggs
1cupvanilla sugar
1tspvanilla extract
1/4tspalmond extract
1cupall purpose flour, maida
1tspbaking powder
1/4tspsalt
Filling
200gwhipping cream
50gicing sugar
1/4tspalmond extract
1large mango diced small
1cupcherriespitted, chopped
Frosting
200gwhipping cream
250gmascarpone
100gicing sugar
1tspvanilla extract
1/4tspalmond extract
Topping
Fresh fruit - diced mangoes, fresh cherries, mint
Instructions
Sponge
Preheat oven to 190C. Line the bases and sides of 2 X 8" round tins with parchment paper.
Sift the flour, baking powder and salt. Reserve in a bowl.
Place eggs and sugar in the bowl of a stand mixer. Whisk for 7-8 minutes on high speed until mousse like and tripled in volume.
Sift in 1/3 of the flour mix and fold in gently in figure 8 movements. Repeat twice, folding in carefully so as not to release the whipped in air.
Divide between the two tins and bake for 10 minutes at 190C.
Reduce the temperature to 180C, and continue to bake for another 20 minutes approximately until light golden brown and risen, and the tester comes out clean.
Remove to cooling racks. Stand for 5 minutes, then take out of tins, gently remove parchment paper, and leave to cool completely.
Divide into 2 horizontal slices each if you like.
Filling
Whip the cream with the icing sugar and extracts until firm. Sandwich the layers with the cream scattering fruit over the cream, then layering again.
I placed the layers in an adjustable dessert ring, covered and left it clingwrapped overnight. An hour is good too. I just like to divide the steps.
Frosting
Whip the whipping cream, mascarpone, icing sugar and extracts until firm.
Frost the cake with the cream.
Top the cake with fresh mangoes, cherries and mint leaves.
Decorate with a white chocolate collar if desired. {100g melted white chocolate. How to pipe the collar in 'Reels' on @passionateaboutbaking}
Jamun/ Wild Indian Java Plum Mousse. When Jamuns {wild Indian Java plums} are in season, a Jamun Mousse is always on the cards, a simple no bake dessert made at least once in the season. Jamuns are an acquired taste because of the astringent edge the fruit has, so the jamun mousse also carries a hint of that edge. If you enjoy jamuns, you will enjoy this.The secret to a smooth mousse is a smooth fruit puree, and this is no different. When we were kids, the first jamuns would only appear during the monsoons. We’d shake them off the trees, foraging was the only way to get to them. A small sprinkle over of rock salt and they would macerate, yielding the most amazing purple juice and taste that would shock the tongue in the nicest of ways. That the clothes would be purple, not to forget purple stained teeth, tongue, fingers & nails for days together. That was the joy of being oblivious to the parental stares of disapproval!Slowly over the last decade, jamun trees are the domain of birds, and kids nowadays don’t love the astringent taste as we did. Besides, they’re so spoilt for choice with so many more fruits now available, so foraging is a thing of the past. Lives in my memories with other fruit like shahtoot {mulberries} , ber {Indian jujube} and mangoes we ate off trees. Now everything comes neatly packaged at the local fruit vendor!However, to cut a long story short, must make the best of what the times have to offer. Use fruit in season when the taste is the best, ripeness at its peak. With jamuns flooding the market, this regional stone fruit makes for a great dessert, the Jamun/ Wild Indian Java Plum Mousse.… and with some left over fruit puree, I made these chia seed breakfast puddings. I’ll share the recipe next if you like!
Jamun/ Wild Indian Java Plum Mousse
When Jamuns {wild Indian Java plums} are in season, a Jamun Mousse is always on the cards.
Jamuns are an acquired taste because of their astringent edge, so the jamun mousse also carries a hint of the edge. If you enjoy jamuns, you will enjoy this.
The secret to a smooth mousse is a smooth fruit puree.
Keyword dessert, eggless, fruit, gluten free, glutenfree, no bake, sweet
Prep Time 10 minutesminutes
Cook Time 30 minutesminutes
Total Time 3 hourshours40 minutesminutes
Servings 4people
Ingredients
Jamun puree
500gJamun/ Wild Indian Java Plum
50graw sugar/boora
1tbspbalsamic vinegar
Whipped cream filling
50mlmilktepid
1 1/2tspgelatin
100gwhite chocolate
400mlsingle cream
30mlclarified butter {ghee}melted, cooled
50graw sugar/boora
Topping
1tspbrown sugar
1tsplime juice
Pinch Himalayan pink salt
Fresh mint to garnish
Instructions
Jamun puree
Wash the jamun well, drain, ass 50g sugar. Leave to macerate for about 30 minutes. Mash well with clean hands, removing as much pulp as possible. Blend the pulp until smooth, stir in the balsamic vinegar. Chill. Can be made a day in advance if need be.
Reserve 1/2 cup for topping. Add 1 tbsp brown sugar to this reserved cup, and microwave for 30 seconds, full power. Stir to mix, then stir in lime juice and salt. Chill.
Jamun Mousse
Melt the white chocolate with 100ml cream. Whisk until smooth. Leave to cool.
Sprinkle the gelatin over 2 tbsp of warm water. Leave to soften, then stir until clear. {Stand the bowl over warm water if required}
Place chilled cream, sugar and clarified butter/ghee in bowl of stand mixer and whisk on highest speed for 5-7 minutes until medium stiff peaks form.
Gently stir in the melted white chocolate mix and jamun puree, taking care not to lose the whipped in lightness of the cream. Taste for sweetness.
Strain over the gelatin mix, and gently fold in. Reserve 1/2 cup and pour the rest into stem glasses.
Stir about 1 tbsp of the reserved jamun pulp into the 1/ 2 cup reserved mousse, and top each glass. Leave to set in fridge.
Once set, top with jamun topping and fresh mint leaves.
Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake with Balsamic Cherries & Whipped Almond Cream … and how easy it was to bring the whole thing together using one basic magic machine in the kitchen. I’m talking about the Tefal Masterchef Gourmet that I recently received to review, and I have to say it is fab! Any new kitchen appliance is JOY for me, the prospects of using it to create something I enjoy, immense. Add to the experience the Tefal Hard Titanium Pan, and the joy doubled. I really enjoyed using the two.I’ve used Tefal products for a long time. Years ago when I worked with BA, I bought a lot of my appliances from the UK, and it was Tefal more often than never. I still have the Tefal Coffee Maker & Toaster for the 1990’s though it might well be a museum relic now! Just the nostalgia and connect to the days gone by made me happy to try the brand again now that it’s been launched in India.Unpacking the Tefal Masterchef Gourmet is like entering a candy shop. It has everything and more. The good thing about the machine is that it includes JUST ABOUT EVERYTHING you might need in the kitchen. Leaves you no requirement to buy additional appliances. I had to take a deep breath while unpacking as the bits and bobs seemed never-ending. I’ve yet to see a gourmet station that comes with a blender, slicer/shredder, meat mincer and juice extractor.I had to put it to use, and tried to churn out a cake using a few of the attachments. I have to say that the powerful 900W appliance did not disappoint. Seemed to do its job effortlessly and efficiently, with hardly any noise. My favourites were many, but the die cast beater that whipped up the cream to beautiful peaks won me over. Living here in India, that has to be one of the biggest challenges to making a layer cake with single whipping cream. {My secret is in the recipe below.}
Small amounts of cream just don’t get whipped up in large bowls, and often I reach for the electric hand beater. I like to make small desserts often for the family that are enjoyed and devoured quick. It gives me an opportunity to bake more often, keep experimenting and have fodder for the blog! It’s only when we have folk over that I need larger portions, and the large 4.6 litre capacity bowl works well for both.Thanks to its die cast beater and Flex Whisk Technology, the Masterchef Gourmet effortlessly whipped up the cream to beautiful peaks and made me SMILE! For me, that has to be the best thing ever. The appliance also effortlessly whips egg whites that are ultra fluffy and ultra airy, even from 1 egg up. That’s huge for me and for people who do home baking and need small portions. That it caters to larger portions as well is great!So I decided to experiment with a healthy chocolaty quinoa layer cake with a frosting, something much in line with my latest obsession of using whole grains. Add to it, the recent discovery of a love for quinoa, this was going to be fun. I put the blender to use for the quinoa, dark chocolate and wholegrain flour. The blender seemed light, yet was so efficient. It fits on top of the machine. It took me five minutes to figure out where it should go, but the French designed appliance had me covered. One look at the manual, and I found a neat hidden cap on the top.The appliance is very intuitive and fun to use. Within seconds, I had a crumb mix which I transferred into the large mixing bowl. In the next couple of minutes, I had batter. Really that simple! If you’d like a lighter cake, feel free to whip the single egg white separately, and fold it in gently towards the end.Flourless and wholegrain cakes generally have heavier crumbs, and it’s all a matter of taste. We love the bite and luxury whole grains offer. That said, I’m not a purist and I can’t wait to try a light as air sponge cake with the machine! Maybe that’s next!
While the cake was baking, I turned to the cherries. What a breeze. It aint no secret that I love good quality frying pans and this one from Tefal, the Hard Titanium Pan is my new love. Its Thermo-Spot ring turns full red when your pan reaches the right temperature for perfect searing. Fancy! The range has a pancake pan, a wokpan and 2 frypans.Also, you can use a metal spoon to stir, which is just so convenient. I don’t need to constantly switch between metal spoons I use everyday to special spatulas. And did I tell you that it’s easy clean? Yes, and how. I’m one of those who work in the kitchen and wash up everything and put them back when I’m done. The pan was a breeze to clean.So here’s the recipe, much in line with my current obsession of baking/cooking with whole grains and my hashtag of #makehalfyourgrainswhole. Happily, this is a trend that Tefal promotes too, “the emphasis is on family, sharing, and healthy ingredients“. You can make this cake eggless. Skip the egg, add a tbsp of yogurt but do note that the cake must be chilled and preferably not layered as the crumb is very delicate.You can also make it gluten free using oat flour instead of wholewheat flour. Same thing applies re the delicate crumb. Lastly, make this vegan by using coconut oil, coconut yogurt and coconut cream to experiment. I haven’t tried that yet but think of the immense possibilities. Once you have a kitchen appliance that works like magic sorted out, you can experiment endlessly! Have fun!
Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake with Balsamic Cherries & Whipped Almond Cream
Flourless and wholegrain cakes generally have heavier crumbs, and it's all a matter of taste. We love the bite and luxury whole grains offer. This Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake with Balsamic Cherries & Whipped Almond Cream is a simple one bowl cake. Topped with luscious whipped cream and seasonal cherries makes it a great tea or birthday cake. Recipe can be easily doubled.
Prep Time 20 minutesminutes
Cook Time 45 minutesminutes
Total Time 3 hourshours5 minutesminutes
Servings 4people
Ingredients
Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake
100gcooked quinoachilled
100gdark chocolatechopped, room temperature
50gwholewheat flour
50gclarified butter/ghee
100gjaggery
1egg
1tspvanilla extract
15gcocoa powder
1tspbaking powder
1tbspyogurt {dahi}
Balsamic cherries
300gcherriespitted
2-3tbspbrown sugar
1tbspbalsamic vinegar
1/2vanilla beanscraped {optional}
Simple Sugar Syrup
1/2cupWater
1/4cupraw sugar
1tbspKirsch {optional}
Whipped Almond Cream
200mlsingle creamchilled
30mlclarified butter/ghee
2-3tbspraw sugar
4-5drop almond extract
Topping
Fresh cherries
Sprigs of fresh mint
Instructions
Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake
Preheat the oven to 160C. Line the sides and base of a 4" springform round tin with parchment.
Place the quinoa, dark chocolate and wholewheat flour {or oats} in jar of Tefal blender. Attach to top of food processor and process for 10-15 seconds at a time, scraping down each time, until you get a breadcrumb like mix.
Place the above with remaining ingredients in the bowl of the Tefal Kitchen Masterchef Gourmet, with the paddle attachment fitted. Process on low speed for 30 seconds until you get a uniform mix. Don't overmix.
Transfer to prepared bowl. Bake for 35-40 minutes until a tester comes out clean. Cool in tin for 20 minutes, then cool completely on rack. Cut into two horizontal layers.
Simple Sugar Syrup
While the cake is baking, place both the ingredients in the Tefal Hard Titanium Pan and keep over medium heat, stirring until the sugar melts. Stir in Kirsch if using. Transfer to a small jug {or bowl}, and use same pan for cherries.
Balsamic cherries
Place all the ingredients in the Tefal Hard Titanium Pan and keep over low heat, stirring often. Feel free to use a metal spoon. Cook down until the syrup is nice and thick and the cherries are deep red. Allow to cool completely, transfer to a bowl. Chill.
Whipped Almond Cream
Place all ingredients in bowl of Tefal Kitchen Masterchef Gourmet with the whisking attachment fitted. Whisk on the highest speed for 4-5 minutes until the cream thickens and holds peaks. Taste and adjust sweetness if required.
Assemble
Place the lower layer of the Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake on a serving platter, and moisten with simple sugar syrup.
Top with half the Whipped Almond Cream, then half the Balsamic Cherries. Moisten the other layer of the Dark Chocolate Quinoa Cake with the sugar syrup and place on top.
Top with remaining cream. Garnish with fresh cherries and sprigs of fresh mint.
“I am starting to think that maybe memories are like this dessert. I eat it, and it becomes a part of me, whether I remember it later or not.”
Erica Bauermeister
Oat Walnut Trifles with Roasted Stone Fruit … one of those really interesting recipes that came together like it was just meant to be. Each element paired beautifully with the other. The oat walnut sponge offered great texture to ‘drink up‘ the juices of the vanilla roasted fruit, healthy as it was! The low fat cream whipped up beautifully with almond undertones, luxuriously settling down atop the soaked fruity sponge in pretty silky swirls. It was a dessert like poetry!
So much yumminess you might ask, such a divine dessert, yet why am I sharing it so late. Well this time the culprit was this huge scatter brain that jotted the Oat Walnut Genoise Sponge recipe down on that most ‘important scrap of paper, then promptly misplaced the darned thing. It took me several days to try and locate it, then I just gave up. Bits of the recipe for the sponge stayed in my head. It was quite a delicious nibble on it’s own, and many ‘cubes’ fell to nimble fingers!Then one day this dessert popped up on my insta feed with someone asking for the recipe. Spurred into action by the guilt of a failed promise, I set off once again to make the Oat Walnut Genoise Sponge. Of course I am a sucker for punishment yet I enjoy baking so much, so I recreated the base recipe from what I remembered, and happily it worked out just fine. This time I baked the dough/batter/dough differently, and for longer, in the form of tiny cookie pies with pretty dark chocolate ganached piped on top. They seemed an obvious choice as I was at the receiving end of some excellent KitchenAid bakeware.
Being part of the Kitchen Aid Culinary Council, these are things I really enjoy and am eternally grateful for! The mini pie pan is the sweetest ever, great great quality, and so are the measuring spoons. Fortunately enough, the doughy batter was a great choice for these cookies too!
So here we go, better late than never,Oat Walnut Trifle Bowls with Roasted Stone Fruit that were good to the last crumb! Feel free to use berries, fruit in season like mangoes etc. If you don’t have time for roasted fruit, make a simple sugar syrup to moisten the oat walnut sponge, and trifle on! Triflesare desserts with immense possibilities, great for failed bakes too as in these ‘Upcycled’ Butterscotch Blondie Puddings.
I am beginning to enjoy the challenge of creating with oats more and more. There is so much and more you can do. If you are like me, a dessert needs to be celebrated. Find a nice bunch of stemmed glasses, or beautiful glassware like this, and assemble your trifle. For a lighter version top with vanilla Greek yogurt, maybe piped almond quark! Will make a fit bressert {dessert for breakfast=bressert}!
Oat Walnut Trifles with Roasted Stone Fruit came together like they were just meant to be. Every element paired beautifully with the other. The oat walnut sponge offered great texture to 'drink up' the juices of the vanilla roasted fruit. The low fat cream whipped up beautifully with almond undertones luxuriously settling down atop the soaked fruity sponge in silky swirls.
Course Dessert
Cuisine American
Prep Time 15 minutesminutes
Cook Time 30 minutesminutes
Total Time 45 minutesminutes
Servings 6people
Ingredients
Oat Walnut Sponge
40goats
55gwalnut halves
20gbrown sugar
pinchsalt
2eggs
100gbrown sugar
1tsppure vanilla extract
20mlclarified butter/ghee
1tspbrown sugar
Vanilla Roasted Peaches & Plums
4peaches
5plums
75-100gbrown sugar
Juice of 1 lime
1/2vanilla bean
Whipped Almond Cream
300mllow fat cream, chilled
25mlclarified butter/ghee
4-5dropsalmond extract
50gicing sugar {adjust as per taste}
Instructions
Oat Walnut Sponge
Preheat oven to 180C. Line a 8" X 8" square baking tin with parchment.
Place oats, walnut halves, pinch of salt and 20g brown sugar in bowl of blender. Process briefly in short spurts until you get a fine grind. Don't over process else the nuts will leave oil.
In the bowl of a stand mixer, place the eggs, 100g brown sugar and vanilla extract. Beat on high speed until mousse like and doubled in volume, 5-7 minutes.
Gently fold in half the oat nut mix, then the other half.
Drizzle half the clarified butter over and fold in, then pour over the remaining.
Turn into prepared tin, sprinkle over 1 tsp brown sugar. Bake for 30 minutes.
Cool in tin completely. Then cut into cubes for the trifle.
Vanilla Roasted Peaches & Plums
Place all ingredients in oven proof dish, stir well to mix and roast for 30 minutes. Discard vanilla bean. Reserve.
Note: You can bake this alongside the sponge, or a day or two in advance.
Whipped Almond Cream
Place all ingredients in a large bowl. Whip with an electric hand blender on the highest speed until thick enough to pipe. Transfer to a piping bag fitted with a star nozzle.
Assemble
Take 6 dessert bowls. Layer the bottom with cubes of oat walnut sponge, top with roasted fruit and juices. Repeat once again. Pipe whipped almond cream swirls on top.
Keep chilled for a couple of hours, if not overnight, top with fresh cut fruit, walnut halves, some fresh herbs and serve.
“Fussing over food was important. It gave a shape to the day: breakfast, lunch, dinner; beginning, middle, end.”
Robert Hellenga, Philosophy Made Simple
Overnight Thandai Oats with Peaches & Plums, a no brainer at best. A recipe that took far too long to come, one that is the easiest and has a nice gentle touch. The home made Thandai Nut Mix adds a delightful touch, tying in well with the almond milk, sabja/basil seeeds and melon seeds. Of course, feel free to use chia seeds as they are super foods too, though imported. I use basil because they are locally available and swell up so beautifully. My sweet friend Madhuli @ My Food Court makes sure my supply of basil seeds is never ending.Peaches and almonds make for great pairing. What’s not to love about a breakfast that offers everything in a bowl? Oats, nuts and seasonal fruit? The nut factor comes in from this Thandai mix. Thandai, or sardai, is a cold drink prepared with a mixture of almonds, fennel seeds, magaztari seeds, rose petals, pepper, vetiver seeds, cardamom, saffron, milk and sugar. It’s a traditional cooler from the Indian subcontinent, one that is very popular around Holi, the festival of colour. The recipe for my Thandai Nut Mix is here on the KitchenAid India blog. There are hundreds of versions of the mix online, some more complex than others, yet most customisable to taste. Feel free to use your own, or a store bought variety, else add almond meal or chopped walnuts. If nuts are not your thing, maybe just skip them but do try this once. It’s quite gentle on the palette and ties in well with the stone fruit.Talking about stone fruit, this is the best time of the year to enjoy them to the maximum. I use them as much as I can these days. In bakes like crumbles, or trifles {as above}, just simply much through them, or then like this lemonade below. Elevate your simple everyday lemonade or nimbu paani to a Peach and Cherry Lemonade. Allow peach slices, pitted cherries and fresh mint leaves to sit in the lemonade for about an hour in the fridge. You’ll be delighted with the change in colour and gentle flavour.
What can be better than waking up to a chilled healthy and delicious breakfast on a warm summer morning. These Overnight Thandai Oats with peaches and plums are the best thing to wake up to. A no cook, beautifully balanced breakfast for a great start to the day! Oats + nuts + seeds + fruit herbs all share space in a make ahead jar. Use any seasonal fruit you like. Berries, mango, kiwi, pineapple, sapota etc.
Course Breakfast
Cuisine American
Prep Time 5 minutesminutes
Total Time 8 hourshours5 minutesminutes
Servings 2people
Ingredients
Overnight Thandai Oats
8tbspbreakfast oats
2tbspThandai Mix
2tbspmelon seeds
2tspbasil/sabja seeds
2tspbrown sugar{optional}
200mlmilk
Topping
2peaches,largesliced
2plumsdiced
2tbspmelon seeds
Few sprigs fresh mint
Few sprigs fresh mint
Instructions
Overnight Thandai Oats
Divide the oats, Thandai mix, melon seeds, basil/sabja seeds and brown sugar between 2 lidded glass jars. Top with just enough milk to soak the mix.
Stir gently, cover and leave to stand in the fridge overnight.
Topping
Next morning top with sliced fresh peaces and plums, scatter over with melon seeds and fresh mint