Farmacy Kitchen Cookbook by Camilla Fayed ($39.99), published by Hachette Australia.
Chocolate & Almond Nice Cream
GF R VG
Serves 6–8 servings
Preparation time: 15 minutes, plus 4 hours freezing
“Regulars at Farmacy know we love a nice cream. It was hard to choose which flavour to include. Emily loves this banana and almond version and could quite happily eat it every day. It has a creamy edge and chocolate fudge chunks in the middle. There are no grains in the recipe and no flour, and it is sweetened with natural sugars. All the ingredients support good health. This is a nice cream your body won’t mind you eating.” p.231
For the fudge
50g (1¾oz) coconut flour
3 tbsp cacao powder
6 tbsp maple syrup
¾ tsp vanilla extract
pinch of salt
For the ice cream
6 peeled, sliced and frozen bananas (you can use fresh but these take longer to set)
175g (6oz) smooth Almond Butter (see page 74)
3 tbsp maple syrup
1 tsp vanilla extract
Put all the fudge ingredients into a small food processor and blend until well combined. The mixture should resemble dry brownie pieces. Turn into a bowl and break up the mixture into chunks or finer pieces if desired.
Put all the ice cream ingredients into a blender and whizz at a high speed until completely smooth. Transfer the mixture into a freezer-proof container. Add the fudge pieces, folding them in with a spoon until they are evenly distributed. Freeze for 4–5 hours until set.
Almond Butter
GF VG
Quantity: approx 250g (9oz)
Preparation time: 20 minutes, plus 15 minutes cooking
500g (1lb 2oz) raw, peeled almonds, Unsoaked
“This recipe is a one-ingredient wonder that transforms almonds into a luxurious, velvety
spread. We use it as a butter replacement in our recipes and in a variety of plant-based
dishes. Almonds are high in vitamin E and are one of the most nutritional of all nuts. The
butter adds flavour and thickens sauces with all the nutty goodness that almonds provide.”p74
Preheat the oven to 150˚C (300˚F), Gas Mark 2. Place the almonds on a baking tray and put in the oven for 15 minutes. Be careful not to colour the nuts too much; do not fully toast them.
Place the nuts in a food processor and process at high speed for 2 minutes. Reduce to medium speed and process until the mixture has a creamy, tahini-like texture, and is smooth and velvety. If there are still lumps, continue processing. The mixture will go through different states, turning from almond meal to powder and then into butter. Be patient and scrape the bowl frequently, especially at the start. The time it takes will vary depending on the freshness of the nuts – this process can take up to 15 minutes.
Notes
This is one recipe for which you don’t need to soak the almonds. The almond butter works best when the nuts’ natural oils are warmed, allowing them to be released more easily. This recipe does not work with ready-ground almonds. Raw, peeled almonds produce a creamy and velvety butter texture free of the solids of the skin. Alternatively, you can use almonds with their skins to create a darker butter with a slightly different flavour.
This keeps well in an airtight container in a dry, cool place.
Hello,
Please help, I’m living in Borneo and believe it or not I can’t get coconut flour (although I am surrounded by coconuts!!) what could I use instead and what quantities.
I can get hold of regular flour, quinoa flour and that’s about it.
Many thanks for your help
Coconut flour – can you make your own from desiccated coconut – the dried flesh?
I am trying to make this for dinner for tomorrow, but I have mixed all the fudge ingredients together and have a paste – not very thick at that – bearing no resemblance to dry brownies pieces, and I fail to see how it could be a dry mix with so much maple syrup. What am I doing wrong?
I don’t know Judi- did you use coconut flour or desiccated coconut? The flour usually absorbs a lot of liquid .