Despite resigning myself to the reality that I suck at it, I find that I really do enjoy it. Kind of like singing. It's totally therapeutic. And having avoided blogging for a few months, I have a greater appreciation for how much I do enjoy it, if for no other reason than because I like talking about kind food, and I like looking at pictures of kind food, and I like preparing kind food, and I like going out and eating kind food and then talking about the kind food I ate. Same goes for kind shoes and kind purses and kind makeup and kind car seats.
Kind stuff is awesome.
Which brings me to my latest kind obsession. For my birthday in September I got a stunning cookbook: Chloe's Kitchen by the incredibly talented and adorable Chloe Coscarelli.
She gained recognition after blowing away the competition on Cupcake Wars with her vegan cupcakes, and has been charming the world with her insanely delicious food and lovable personality ever since. She definitely won me over, as evidenced by my almost daily quality time with her cookbook.
I seriously want to quit my job and just stay home all day and cook and bake stuff out of this book.
Anybody would after trying the recipe that sealed the deal for her on Cupcake Wars...the Ginger Nutmeg Spice Cupcake (Chloe's Kitchen p. 201).
I tried this recipe last month in preparation for Thanksgiving (us crazy Canadians celebrate in October). We spent Thanksgiving with some lovely friends, and I was especially thankful because they were hosting our first totally vegan Thanksgiving :) Not all our friends are vegan of course, but it is especially convenient having Thanksgiving dinner with the ones that are.
I was tasked with bringing dessert, and of course Chloe's cupcakes instantly came to mind as the perfect fall dessert...I mean, how could you go wrong with pumpkin, ginger, nutmeg, cloves, cinnamon, vanilla, and a Cupcake Wars championship title? Yahhhhh...you really can't.
Unless you're allergic to cinnamon, nutmeg and cloves, as is one of my co-workers. Then you could totally go wrong with this recipe. But that's the ONLY time, because this recipe is otherwise seriously perfect in every way imaginable.
The cake itself is moist and the spices come through beautifully, balanced perfectly with the fluffy vanilla bean buttercream. It's super easy to make too...the hardest thing about this recipe is scraping out the vanilla bean. The date caramel is the perfect finishing touch, and is also super easy to make...I just threw all the ingredients in my magic bullet (I did find that the recipe yielded wayyyy more date caramel than I needed). Now I just need to get one of those squeeze bottles for drizzling it on the icing.
I was so thrilled with the results that I gave into my inner fangirl and tweeted the pic to Chef Chloe...and being the sweetheart she is she made my night and re-tweeted me, because she is awesome like that :)
So these cupcakes were definitely a go for Thanksgiving dinner, but to put a festive spin on them I colored my Thanksgiving batch orange (with natural food coloring of course).
And to keep them safe I transported them in my nifty little cupcake transporter, a birthday gift from my bff :)
And because I'm Polish and we're all about overdoing it in the food department, I also made Cosmos Apple Pie from Vegan Pie in the Sky (p. 125) topped with Rad Whip (Vegan Pie in the Sky p. 199) which I paired with Luna & Larry's Coconut Bliss Ginger Cookie Caramel ice cream, resulting in the most amazing pie-ice cream combo to ever grace a Thanksgiving table. It was declared (and I quote), "The most incredible apple pie any of us have ever tasted."
Rob's Rating:
Ginger Nutmeg Spice Cupcakes - 4.5 Happy Tongues
Cosmos Apple Pie - 5 Happy Tongues
My Rating:
Ginger Nutmeg Spice Cupcakes - 5 Happy Tongues
Cosmos Apple Pie - 5 Happy Tongues
Both desserts were absolute perfection in my opinion. I definitely felt the earth shatter and heard the cherubim singing.
It was a pretty perfect end to an incredible kind Thanksgiving dinner of white borscht, millet cakes, breaded Gardein cutlets, mashed potatoes, scalloped potatoes, gnocchi, and veggies.
The table looks so pretty without a big dead bird in the middle.
Indeed, I am thankful for the start of kinder traditions.
And in the spirit of sharing our thankfulness, I'm thankful for my handsome Galahad's first mom, who sent me the above pic, and I'm thankful that she entrusted me with him when she had to find him a new home a few years ago.
And I'm thankful for banned ads, because when something is banned it makes people all the more inclined to watch it.
And I'm thankful for sanctuaries and rescue organizations and wonderful, compassionate people who appreciate the beauty and value and dignity of all sentient beings.
And rainbows. I'm definitely thankful for rainbows.
I will eat the pie. I hesitate on the cupcakes. I think crappy, day-old, low-end supermarket gingerbread cookies from days of yore have instilled this fear of ginger baked anything. But it's a little irrational cause I love ginger in soup, pickled ginger, ginger beer... The ice cream intrigues me. Where did you find it??? Loved the post, as usual, by the way.
ReplyDeleteOhhh noooo....you must give the cupcakes a try. They will blow your mind. And do it during the Christmas season, as the spices in the cupcakes are just so much more enjoyable at this time of year. They will restore your faith in ginger.
ReplyDeleteThe ginger cookie caramel flavour is only available across the border as far as I know...I get it at Bellingham Co-op and Whole Foods in Lynwood. I could pick up an extra tub next time I'm shopping...