DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt

DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt

I'm back! And I brought treats!! The hubby came back from being in Abu Dhabi for three weeks, just in time for our two year anniversary. My man got me our wedding cake stand, which I tracked down late one night while admiring our wedding pictures. I topped it off by re-created our wedding cake, complete with chocolate cake, chocolate bavarian cream (with vegetarian gelatin!), and chocolate whipped cream frosting. I snapped pictures, recording measurements, totally intending to share with you guys, then... we had structural failure. I'm talking disastrous failure. Apparently I'm incompetent at leveling cakes. Next year! 

DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home

We celebrated these past two years by taking off to Sonoma County for a whole week. We brought P, drank wine, and ate fantastic food. I can't wait to share all the details soon. In the meantime, Happy Halloween! What better way to celebrate than with DIY homemade candy. 

A couple years back while living in NYC, I developed a deep deep love for speculoos cookie butter at a Waffles and Dinges food truck. Since then, this Dutch delicacy has become pretty mainstream, even sold at Trader Joe's. Have you had it? If not, I have to warn you, it's seriously addicting. I often find myself going into the pantry with a spoon and coming out with the perfect one bite treat that always satisfies that little dessert craving. 

DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home

These cookie butter cups are like homemade peanut butter cups but better. They are made with dark chocolate and topped with sea salt which makes them totally sophisticated. Candy for adults. Goodbye processed mainstream candy. You've been replaced. 

DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home
DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt | Kneading Home

DIY Dark Chocolate Speculoos Cookie Butter Cups with Sea Salt 
Adapted from Food52
Makes about 24 full-size cups 

1 pound dark chocolate, roughly chopped 
2 tbsp coconut oil 
3/4 cup speculoos cookie butter 
Fleur De Sel* 

Prepare a rimmed baking sheet with 24 cupcake liners. Warm chocolate and coconut oil in a double broiler until completely melted. Or microwave mixture 30 seconds at a time, stirring until completely melted. Pour about 1/2 tbsp of melted chocolate into each cupcake liner. Smack baking sheet on the counter 3-5 times until chocolate forms a smooth layer on the bottom of each liner. Refrigerate for 15 minutes. 

Remove liners from the fridge and top each cup with a heaping 1/2 tbsp cookie butter (I used a cookie scoop). Using the back of a spoon, smooth the cookie butter into a flat layer on top of the chocolate base, leaving a tiny border around the edges for chocolate to drip down. Top each cup with just enough chocolate to cover, then use the back of a spoon to smooth the chocolate over the cookie butter, covering it completely. Top with a liberal sprinkling of Fleur De Sel (I wish I'd use more than I did in the photos). Refrigerate for 25-30 minutes until completely set.  

*I recently splurged on this, which I used, but you could totally use regular sea salt. 




Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream

Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home

I'm a firm believer that a good home should have fresh homemade ice cream in the freezer at any given time, and preferably multiple flavors. It's the perfect treat for guests and it lasts months (though it never makes it that long). I realize this makes me a snob and I'm okay with that. This week, my good friend came over to cook, and since most "normal" people cringe at the idea of dairy-free ice cream, I went with the full cream variety this time (though I'm more than certain you could substitute it with coconut cream + coconut milk and fully intend on updating you when I do). 

Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home

Since it finally feels like Fall, I wanted to celebrate with apples and cinnamon. I figured while I was at it why not throw an entire apple pie into the ice cream. So that's exactly what I did. What I love most about cooking is that you can pretty much do whatever the hell you want, there really aren't rules, the more creative you are the better, and chances are you can find a way to make it work. This philosophy applies so well to homemade ice cream. So this stuff starts with my favorite all-butter pie crust, and cinnamon nutmeg maple syrup stewed apples. How could I go wrong? The answer is I can't. This ice cream is fantastic in every way. 

Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream | Kneading Home

Cinnamon Apple Pie Ice Cream 
Makes one quart 

For the ice cream base: 
2 cups heavy cream 
1 cup whole milk 
1/4 cup plus 1 tbsp cane sugar, divided  
1/4 cup brown sugar 
1/4 tsp salt 
1 vanilla bean
1/4 cup maple syrup 
1 tsp cinnamon
1/4 tsp nutmeg 
3 egg yolks 

For the pie crust (from The Art and Soul of Baking): 
1 stick unsalted butter 
1 1/4 cups all-purpose flour 
1 1/2 tsp sugar
1/2 tsp salt 
3 - 4 tbsp cold water 

For the apples: 
2 large apples (I used Pink Lady) 
2 tbsp brown sugar 
2 tbsp maple syrup
2 tsp lemon juice
1/2 tsp cinnamon 

Make the ice cream base. In a medium saucepan combine heavy cream, milk, 1/4 cup cane sugar, brown sugar, salt, vanilla beans along with pod, and maple syrup. Cook over medium heat until mixture comes to a gentle boil. In a separate bowl whisk together egg yolks and 1 tbsp cane sugar. Pour about 1/4 cup of the warm cream mixture into the egg yolks and whisk quickly. Slowly add the rest of the cream mixture to the add yolks, a little at a time until completely combined. Pour entire mixture through a fine-mesh strainer to remove any egg chunks along with the vanilla bean pod. Stir in cinnamon and nutmeg, cover and refrigerate until cold, at least two hours.  

Meanwhile, slice your butter into 1/2 inch pieces and freeze for 15-20 minutes. Combine flour, salt, and sugar in the bowl of a food processor and pulse to combine. Add in butter chunks and pulse until the mixture looks like sand with pea-sized pieces of butter. With the food processor running pour in water. On a lightly floured surface, press the dough pieces together to form a disc and knead one or two times. Wrap in plastic wrap and refrigerate for 30 minutes. Meanwhile, preheat the oven to 350 degrees and line a baking sheet with parchment. Remove your dough from the fridge and roll it out onto your parchment paper until it's about 1/8 inch thick. Bake for 25-30 minutes until slightly browned around the edges. Set aside and let cool. 

Peel, core and slice your apples. In a small saucepan, combine apples, brown sugar, maple syrup, lemon juice, and cinnamon. Cook over medium-low heat for 20-30 minutes until apples are soft. Set aside to cool. Once cooled, add the apple mixture to a food processor with a blade and pulse 2-3 times until you achieve your desired consistency. Refrigerate. 

Pour the ice cream base into your ice cream maker, following your manufacturer's instructions. Just before your ice cream is finished churning, break up your pie crust into chunks and add about 3/4 of it to the ice cream followed by the apples. If you like a soft-serve consistency you can serve right away. Or pop it in my freezer for 20 minutes to harden up like traditional ice cream. Top with remaining pie crust crumbles and serve. 

 

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {Vegan + Grain-Free}

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies | Kneading Home

Fall seems to finally have arrived in Los Angeles, well as "Fall" as we're going to get, at least. It's still been super hot, but the sun is setting earlier, and the nights and early mornings are cold and crisp. I've busted out the fluffy socks and comfy flannel northface and holiday prep has already begun (don't believe me? check my pinterest). I am holiday obsessed, mostly when it comes to the food. You have to love all the juicy fruit of summer, but I think when it comes down to it Fall produce is my favorite, it's warm and cozy and grounding, really the season of comfort food, and I am the world's biggest comfort-seeker. Not to mention, have you seen the new Le Crueset color? I'm trying to justify buying a second, smaller one, just to have it filled with something delicious for christmas day.

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home

I knew I wanted to get into the Fall spirit by baking up something warm and cozy. I also happened to have a crap ton of apples from our CSA. So figured I would try adapting my favorite vegan cookie recipe into classic oatmeal raisin cookies. I figured why not embrace apple season and add some sweet apple chunks right into those bad boys? The result feels like a hug for your insides (in a good way, of course), with the added benefit of knowing that these are totally 100% good for you. 

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home

Healthy cookies? I know, you may be skeptical. But trust me, you won't miss the sugar because there's a nice helping of pure maple syrup. And the coconut oil, peanut butter, and blended dates make these cookies moist and creamy. Have I mentioned that they're vegan AND gluten free. What can I say? I aim to please. 

You should definitely make these tonight, then curl up with someone you love, even if that someone is a dog, and enjoy. 

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home
Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} | Kneading Home

Cinnamon Apple Oatmeal Raisin Cookies {vegan + gluten-free} 
Adapted from Minimalist Baker 
Makes 28 small cookies 

1 medium granny smith apple
Juice from 1/2 lemon 
1 cup tightly packed dates 
1 medium ripe banana 
1 tbsp peanut butter 
1/3 cup coconut oil 
1/2 cup maple syrup 
2 tsp cinnamon 
1/8 tsp nutmeg 
1/2 tsp sea salt 
1 cup almond meal 
1 1/2 cups old fashioned oats 
1/3 cup raisins 

Soak your dates in warm water for 10 minutes to allow them to soften. Meanwhile, peel, core and dice your apples into very small chunks (about the size of standard chocolate chips - yum). Place apples in a small bowl with cold water and lemon juice to keep them from browning. 

Drain and dates, then remove pits. Add dates and banana to a food processor (or blender) fitted with a blade and pulse several times until mixture is smooth. Add in peanut butter, coconut oil, and maple syrup and blend until pureed completely. 

In a separate bowl whisk together cinnamon, nutmeg, sea salt, almond meal, and oats. Then add the dry ingredients to the food processor. Pulse until just combined. Do not over mix - you want it chunky with oats intact. 

Transfer to a bowl and stir in apples and raisins. Preheat your oven to 350 degrees and line a baking sheet with parchment. Meanwhile, place your batter in the fridge to allow it to stiffen up a bit. Scoop about 2 tablespoons of batter to form cookies on your baking sheet. They won't expand so you can pack them in pretty tightly. Bake for 20-25 minutes until the tops of golden brown.