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  reading time: 3 min




May I present to you this Summer Solstice Strawberry Sourdough Cobbler with elderflower cordial 🍓🌼 If you have already made a batch of homemade elderflower syrup (cordial) and are looking for a way to use it in recipes other than Hugo or lemonade, this recipe is for you! If you are late – like me –, then there's still time to take a walk or a bike ride, and harvest the last blooming elderflowers!

This time of year is ideal for wildcrafting and harvesting of any kind. Litha aka Midsummer aka the Summer Solstice is still in the air, and not only the sun is at full force, but everything that is blossoming and thriving around you at the moment also holds its greatest power, so I highly recommend gathering wild herbs and flowers around this time of year.


Corresponding plants and foods for Litha include fresh fruits such as berries, cherries, melons, peaches and lemons, lemon balm, verbena, lavender, meadowsweet, elderflower, honey cake, buttermilk, fruit wine and mead. At least 3 of these ingredients ended up in this cobbler!


I just love the combination of sweet, juicy fruit and the fluffy golden biscuit topping – which, thanks to the sourdough, is extra fluffy and soft, almost like a scone. Oh, and the melting vanilla ice cream on top! The essence of summer in a baking dish 😍


 reading time: 5 min





Who else has jumped on the fermentation bandwagon lately? 🙋🏼‍♀️ I've been a big advocate for homemade kombucha (mainly privately, but also on my blog!), and I've recently started to make my own sourdough bread using homemade sourdough starter. There will be a blog post on that in the future, but as of now I'm still experimenting to create my favourite recipe, so it'll take some more time to figure out ...

So in the meantime, let's talk about another very simple fermented food: YOGURT!

Vegan, dairy-free yogurt to be exact.
(Although I want to mention that you can easily make this non-vegan by using cow's milk or goat's milk instead of the soy milk, if that's what you prefer!)

This yogurt is incredibly delicious, thick, creamy, not too tangy, and best of all – super healthy!

Why? Most importantly, yogurt is a fermented product and therefore contains live bacteria, or probiotics, that have been shown to improve digestive symptoms such as IBS. (source) Making your own yogurt and using fresh, active bacteria is crucial in obtaining a beneficial immune and health booster.

Another reason to make your own yogurt is of course the price point. Making 750 ml (3 cups) of fresh soy yogurt cost me about 1,50 €: 0,95 cents for the soy milk, and about 50 ct for the vegan yogurt cultures (proportionally).
This makes about 1 € per 500 g – as opposed to 1,50 to 1,90 € per 500 g that I pay for plain unsweetened soy yogurt in the supermarket!

Use this yogurt as you would store-bought yogurt – plain, on top of oatmeal or muesli, in smoothies, in dips, in homemade ice cream, to make frozen yogurt etc.

PRO TIP: Save a few spoonfuls of your homemade yogurt to use as a starter culture for your next homemade yogurt (instead of the store-bought vegan yogurt cultures)! You can do this up to 10 times, then you should make another batch with store-bought cultures, to ensure a healthy and clean bacteria culture. Then use leftover yogurt as a starter again for up to 10 rounds of yogurt making, and so on.

 reading time: 5 min




Today's cranberry buckwheat cake falls into the recipe category "veganizing classic cakes".

This recipe has a little bit of a history: The all time favourite cake of J's granny has always been
Buchweizentorte, a buckwheat cake with lingonberry jam filling and a cream frosting that happens to be gluten-free. (Buchweizentorte is a traditional cake of her local area, the Lüneburg Heath, in the western German state of Lower Saxony where both buckwheat and lingonberries are native. Many local bakeries and cafés in the Heath serve this cake.)

Of course, this cake traditionally isn't vegan, but made with loads of eggs, milk, and whipped cream.
Not even joking, I looked at a dozen of different recipes online that featured a similar buckwheat cake, and almost all of them called for 6 eggs !!

It has been our secret mission for a couple of years now to create a vegan recipe of this cake! And at last, here it is. A delicate and airy vegan three-layer buckwheat cake with cranberry jam filling and a fluffy vegan cream frosting! When a piece is cut out, the gorgeous pink interior is revealed.

This cranberry buckwheat cake is
gluten-free
dairy-free
egg-free
light
airy
creamy
not overly sweet
slightly tart
slightly citrusy
& simply delicious!


And most importantly: It's granny approved!!

This recipe is ideal to prepare over two days – prepare the cake the night before, and continue with the filling and frosting the next day. The finished cake can even be chilled for another day before serving!



VEGAN CRANBERRY BUCKWHEAT CAKE

Preparation time: 2 hours
Main ingredients: buckwheat flour, almond flour, cranberries, cream
difficulty level: easy-moderate
serves: 12 (22-cm or 8-inch springform pan)
suitable for: vegan, lactose-free, gluten-free

Ingredients

Cake Batter:
200 g soft vegan butter or margarine
120 g raw cane sugar
250 g unsweetened applesauce (or sub soy yogurt + 1 grated apple)
2 tbsp lemon juice (or sub apple cider vinegar
)
1 tsp vanilla extract

300 g buckwheat flour, sieved
120 g ground almonds, sieved
(or sub ground hazelnuts)
2 tsp
baking soda
2 tsp baking powder
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
pinch of salt

grated zest of 1 organic lemon


Filling & Frosting:
400 g cranberry jam or lingonberry jam
600 ml vegan cream, chilled *
2 packs (16 g) whipping cream stiffener

Optional Toppings:
30 g vegan semi-sweet chocolate, grated

12 candied cranberries or lingonberries, or pomegranate seeds (or sub 3 tbsp cranberry or lingonberry jam)


Instructions

Pre-heat oven to 180°C / 350°F. Grease and flour a 22-cm or 8-inch springform pan.

To make the batter:

In a large mixing bowl cream together vegan butter or margarine, and sugar. Add applesauce, lemon juice and vanilla extract, and beat together to create a creamy and fluffy texture.

To the wet ingredients, add sieved buckwheat flour, sieved almond flour, baking powder, baking soda, ground cinnamon, lemon zest, and salt. Using an electric whisk, mix well until everything is combined. The batter will be quite thick. Don't mix too long, or else the batter will be too dense!

Transfer batter to the greased and floured springform pan. Bake in the preheated oven at 180 °C / 350 °F for 45 to 50 minutes, or until the top is pale golden brown and a skewer inserted into the middle comes out clean.

Remove the cake from the oven, and leave to cool in the pan for 10 minutes before removing the sides of the springform pan. Leave to cool completely on a wire rack.

To make the filling & frosting: 

Using an electric hand mixer on high speed, beat the vegan whipping cream with cream stiffener until stiff peaks form (it's best to use a metal container that has been stored in the fridge to chill).

Transfer half of the whipped cream into a bowl. Gently fold in half of the cranberry or lingonberry jam. This will make the cream nice and pink, and bring a lovely sweet-sour flavour to it.

Set both whipped creams aside in the fridge until needed.


To assemble:

Once the cake has cooled down, carefully cut the cake in thirds horizontally to make three equal layers. It's best to use a pie cutter or a long serrated knife for this.

Using a spatula, spread the bottom cake layer
evenly with half of the remaining cranberry jam. Spread about a third of the pink cranberry cream over the jam, leaving about a finger's width around the edge. (It will squash out a little when you sandwich the layers together.) Make sure that the surface is as smooth and even as possible.

Repeat with the next cake layer, using the remaining half of the cranberry jam and another third of the cranberry cream.

Lastly, carefully place the third cake layer on top. It's best to turn it upside down, so that the even side is up. Using a clean spatula, frost the top and sides of the cake with the plain whipped cream we set aside earlier (not the cranberry one). I actually decided to cover the top of the cake with my remaining cranberry cream instead.

Sprinkle with chocolate shavings, and pipe rosettes of the reserved cranberry cream (or in my case, plain cream) around the edge of the cake.

Place cranberries, lingonberries or pomegranate seeds on top of each of the piped rosettes (if using cranberry jam instead, spoon a little bit of jam on top of the cream).

Chill in the fridge for at least 1 hour, or until ready to serve.

Enjoy!



 
NOTES:
- If you've baked the cake the day before, you could drizzle a few tablespoons of rum over the top. This makes the cake a little moister – but not safe for kids any more!
- Instead of frosting the cake in cream, you can simply sprinkle it with icing sugar, and serve.
- You could also add some grated or chopped chocolate into the batter instead, or in addition to sprinkling it on top of the cake. (This is especially great when using hazelnut flour instead of almond flour.)
- Another variation of this cake I found online was to cover the cake with rolled out marzipan over a thin layer of whipped cream. Sounds yummy!
- * I use the Soyatoo Soy Whip that is already sweetened. If your vegan cream isn't sweet enough, add 2-3 tbsp icing sugar when whipping the cream.



If you are looking for more veganized German classics, you might like these:
Vegan Black Forest Cake | Schwarzwälder Kirschtorte
Vegan Snow White Cake | Donauwelle
Vegan German Bee Sting Cake | Bienenstich
Vegan Mole Cake | Maulwurfskuchen


♥

Maisy



 reading time: 6 min





Earlier this year I shared a recipe for a wintry snowflake/star-shaped cinnamon pull-apart bread, and today we are looking at its sunny cousin: the pesto flower pull-apart bread!

It uses the same twisting technique, but as the name suggests, its shape is meant to resemble a flower (or a sun in some interpretations), and instead of the cinnamon/butter/sugar mixture we used in the winter variation, this one is filled with savoury pesto. In our case, a mix of green pesto (homemade wild herb pesto) and red pesto (homemade sun-dried tomato pesto) – but feel free to get both from the store instead, if you prefer, or only use one kind of pesto for your bread.

This recipe is just the perfect pastry to bring along for a summer picnic or barbecue, or any type of potluck or get-together where you tear and share your food. The great thing is that you don't need to cut anything to serve. Everyone can simply pick off their own "flower petal" to eat 🙂

Quick, easy and delicious, this pesto flower bread is also a great one to make with your kids. (They can also help with picking the wild herbs, which is also fun!)

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Well, hello! My name is Maisy (pronounce: macy) and I’m the creative spirit behind this blog. You are welcome to join me on my journey to a more natural, slow-paced & healthier life!

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