Hey. You. Over there. Yes, you. I’m gonna need you to close
all those tabs with cute kitten memes and baby otter cams, because this post is important.
Which brings me to the dilemma faced by the vegan baker. When
virtually all brownie recipes call for copious amounts of eggs and butter, how
are we to create a version completely free of animal products without sacrificing
texture and flavor?
There are plenty of other vegan brownie recipes out there on
the internet, judging by the 1.5 million results a
simple Google search yields, all promising fudgy, chocolaty Nirvana through
the inclusion of ingredients like vegetable oil, vegan butter, flaxseed, and
even black beans. And nothing against black bean brownies—I’ve tried them, and
they’re pretty good...but honestly, you need a good ol’ fatty-fat brownie
recipe in your repertoire as well. Save the black bean brownies for when you
want an excuse to eat brownies for breakfast.
Even the brownies that don’t use black beans have some
issues as well. One common complaint I’ve heard is greasiness. Turns out,
substituting vegetable oil for butter can result in some pretty soggy,
overly-gooey brownies. Well...shit.
So what’s a vegan baker to do? Take a page out of Oh She Glows’ cookbook!
Trust me. |
It might seem strange that the best vegan brownie recipe I’ve
ever tried has come out of a cookbook that purports to be healthy and whole foods-based.
But it works, so I ain’t complaining.
The secret is...I don’t know, man. It’s a combination of
thorough recipe testing on Angela’s part and, like, the use of almond flour to
absorb all that coconut oil and turn it into rich fudginess instead of greasy
sadness. Plus the melted chocolate. Melted chocolate always helps.
(To be honest, I have no idea if that interpretation has any
basis in reality, actually. Maybe it’s magic. Maybe it’s Maybelline.)
OR THAT! source |
Either way, these brownies are pretty rad. Almost as rad as
a stegosaurus on a skateboard with sunglasses.
Almost, but not quite. source |
One step that you will not want to skip is the last step
before baking—smoothing out the top of the batter with a sheet of parchment
paper. That is completely necessary. It ensures that you get a nice smooth,
shiny top with a thin, crackly crust and dense, fudgy brownies underneath. I
have made these enough times to know that that
is a fact.
Just look at it. |
The only modification I have made to the original recipe is
to add espresso powder. That’s all. Well, that, and using “special dark” cocoa
powder instead of natural (which is sort of a blend of alkalized cocoa powder
and natural), which gave it a particularly dark color that may or may not be
desirable, depending on your tastes. So basically, you can use whatever kind of
cocoa powder you want, so long as it’s high quality and so long as you don’t mind
slight differences between batches.
...Do I sense an excuse to "experiment"? |
Honestly, I’m running out of ways to sell these to you. I
mean, look at those pictures. I didn’t have to do anything to them. Usually
brown, square desserts are not very photogenic, but damn if these didn’t get
photographed pretty easily. (And I’ll have you know that they were consumed
even more easily than that.)
Here’s the recipe.
_________
Vegan brownies
Adapted
from The Oh She Glows Cookbook by
Angela Liddon
Ingredients
14 grams • ground flaxseed •
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoon
45 grams • water • 3
tablespoons
120 grams • almond
flour • 1 cup
102 grams • all-purpose
flour • 3/4 cup
40 grams • cocoa
powder • 1/2 cup
2 grams • kosher salt •
1/2 teaspoon
1 gram • baking soda •
1/4 teaspoon
160 grams • nondairy
chocolate chips • 1 cup
85 grams • coconut oil •
1/4 cup plus 2 tablespoons
200 grams • granulated
sugar • 1 cup
62 grams • nondairy
milk • 1/4 cup
4 grams • vanilla
extract • 1 teaspoon
2 grams • espresso
powder • 1 teaspoon
Directions
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F. Grease a 9-inch
square cake pan and line with parchment paper.
In a small bowl, whisk together flaxseed and
water; set aside.
In a large bowl, sift together almond flour,
all-purpose flour, cocoa powder, salt, and baking soda.
Melt 80 grams • 1/2 cup chocolate chips and
coconut oil in a medium saucepan over low heat. When 2/3 of the chocolate has
melted, remove from heat and stir until smooth. Add in flaxseed mixture, sugar,
milk, and vanilla and stir to combine.
Pour chocolate mixture into the dry
ingredients. Stir just until combined and no streaks of flour remain. Fold in
remaining 80 grams • 1/2 cup chocolate chips.
Pour batter into prepared pan. Place another
piece of parchment on top and smooth the surface with your hands. Remove
parchment. Bake brownies for 28 to 34 minutes. Let cool in pan for 1 1/2 hours.
Yes, that is an order—you don’t want to cut the brownies too early and have
them crumble on you. Once fully cooled, slice into bars and devour.
_________
Single-serving. |
If you’re a chocolate lover, you may appreciate these
recipes as well.
Rich and thick spicy hot chocolate. For the upcoming
cooler weather.
Double chocolate zucchini bread. To use up that last
bit of zucchini.
Chocolate caramel “better than sex” cake. Is this
really better than sex? Only one way to find out!
These look SO good! And I love the skate-o-saurus :D x
ReplyDeletethanks Jules, me too :)
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