We are sorry
we have been away for so long. To help you forgive us, I have prepared a little
surprise.
I take it
everyone has tasted (and probably adored with unrestrained devotion), Nutella.
Me too. My
father (wise man) forbid us to have some in the house, so I simply bought some
and hid it in my room. I would sneak out at night, cut slices of bread or
baguette and spread Nutella lovingly over it. As soon as I was a student in
Montréal, I bought Nutella and would eat it at every breakfast. More Nutella
than bread, a glass of orange juice to balance the sweetness with acidity and
it was simply delicious.
BUT. I grew
up. And I read Antigone’s article on Nutella. Revelation !! Home-made
Nutella CAN taste delicious and replace the industrial oily, too sweet paste I
used to buy. The best thing is you can eat it without guilt, it’s 100%
plant-based.
As Antigone
explains well in her article, in addition to not being healthy (which let’s
face it, we already knew, it was just too good for us to really want to face
the fact), Nutella is actually dangerous for your neurons, carcinogenic and contains
plastic derivatives.
Sooo,
instead of buying Nutella, I encourage you to try the home-made alternative:
the Choconette ! (see http://antigonexxi.com/recettes/a-la-table-du-petit-dejeuner/nutella-is-dead/ for the original version of Antigone’s article).
Let’s dive
straight in! (which I literally end up doing everytime I make this recipe. You
should see me with chocolate up to my elbows/nose, enjoying the child-like pleasure
of licking the remains on the spoon/mixer…).
Makes a
330 ml. or 11 oz. jar (the equivalent of a Bonne Maman jam jar)
Ingredients
:
- 15 dates (around 90 g. or 3 oz.)*
- 125 g. [1/2 cup] hazelnut butter
- 60 ml. [4 Tbsp] agave or maple syrup (or raw liquid honey)
- 30 g. [1/3 cup] cocoa powder
- 15 ml. [1 Tbsp] water
* For those
who don’t want to use dates, you can substitute 1/2 dried apricots and 1/2
dried bananas (but not banana chips!)
Preparation
:
1.
Rehydrate the dates in hot water for about 10 minutes (or 2 hours in cold
water)
2. Put all
your ingredients in a blender and… blend!
If your blender
is not very robust, add the cocoa last as it dries up the paste and makes it
harder to mix.
Use a
sterilised jar (10 minutes in boiling water), and keep the Choconette in the
fridge. Ours lasts for 2 to 3 weeks, but we usually finish it well before that !
You see that jar? That was my first go at it. It lasted 6 days. I now systematically double this portion ;)
You see that jar? That was my first go at it. It lasted 6 days. I now systematically double this portion ;)
R