Blogging is hit and miss with me. Obviously. However, I have been recently encouraged by the recent new readers that have mentioned they've been keeping up. Not hard, since I'm not exactly greased lightning, here. Besides, the blog is mostly for me anyway, keeping track of fave recipes and such. I'll read back on it someday with interest when I'm old, and who knows- grandkids may read it someday and think i was nuts. In that case, lemme tell ya now, kids- TRY to eat stuff that come fresh out of the ground. Animals and stuff in boxes is only gonna carry you so far.
Today I made more almond milk, as usual- but this time I took off the brown husk prior to blending, which I knew would create a whiter milk and easier straining. I also knew it would make a creamier and smoother pulp, which in the back of my mind I wanted to use for something... What, I didn't know yet. I looked up and decided on an Internet recipe of cookies. Seems easy enough.
Swiped and adapted from Rawguru
Cookie Dough
1 ½ cup cashews or almonds (soaked, then dehydrated) and ground to a flour (I just use wet left-over pulp from making almond milk)
5 tbs. coconut butter
2 tbs. agave nectar
½ vanilla bean (seeds only) or 1/2 tsp. extract
Pinch or three of celtic sea salt
1/4 t cinnamon or to taste
pinch of nutmeg
3 dates, chopped fine
Water or coconut water only if necessary
In a blender or food processor, process till it comes together and forms a dough, add more coconut water if it is too dry or more almond flour to make it more doughy. Then shape into cookie shapes and dehydrate at 105 degrees for 10 hrs or until nice and chewy.
I waited maybe four hours and got into these babies. Definitely needs more time, Maybe I'll put them in longer and see how they are, but at this point they're a great starter cookie, now they just need some sorta frosting... ;-)
About Me
- Jo
- Wine Country, Ca, United States
- By day I am a Business owner, Mother and wife, house cleaner, taxi driver and laundress, obtaining physical health through raw food nutrition; this being my personal challenge. Actually I love cooking and learning new things, I am an on & off raw Foodist to help me with my Systemic Lupus; however I do eat raw fish and sometimes raw dairy. I guess I would consider myself a "raw pescatarian" aside from the occasional raw goats milk / cheese once in a blue moon.
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