Blackberry Lemon Coconut Cream Bars

Friday morning, summer ended.  From my office window, I watched dark clouds blow in and with them came all autumn’s wet and windy glory, leaves swirling through the mist.  I trudged through the garden after school, feet tingly wet, and with muddy fingers, pulled fallen cornstalks, bolted lettuce, and withered melon vines.  I reminisced back to July and August, and even the day before, Thursday, when I was still picking blackberries, knowing all too soon, the weather would change.

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Each year I hoped they’d keep, knew they would not.  – Seamus Heaney

Blackberries. Blackberry picking. Our new apartment complex cozies up to the forest on this edge of town. Wild briers take over here, and to my delight, I have noshed on blackberries for weeks. While not many have found their way into a bucket for later, I’ve made it a mission to send summer off proper like with lemony-coconut cream blackberry bars. They just so happen to be raw, vegan, gluten-free, and super easy.

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Though the photos are a delicious mess, I’d still like to tell you about all the layers of goodness. Dates, nuts and spices make up the salty-sweet bottom layer, followed by fluffy coconut cream with a hint of lemon. The topping, so simple and divine, is pureed berries mixed with a bit of chia seeds to help it set. If they fall apart coming out of the pan, that means you were like me and in being overly anxious to taste, weren’t patient. That’s fine. As is running to snag some frozen berries from the store if all the wild ones in your area are long gone. Relish the last day of summer with me before snuggling into that sweater and pumpkin spice latte.

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This recipe is part of September’s Recipe Redux challenge to create a healthy no-cook dessert. 
 
Lemon Coconut Cream Blackberry Bars {raw, vegan & gluten-free}, inspired by Sprouted Kitchen
4-5 medjool dates, pitted
1/4 cup raw walnut pieces, toasted
1/4 cup raw almonds, toasted
1/2 cup almond meal
1/2 tsp. cinnamon
1 tsp. coconut oil
pinch of salt
1 15 oz. can full-fat coconut milk, chilled
2 Tbs. powdered sugar
zest from 1/2 a lemon
1 tsp. vanilla extract
2 cups blackberries
1 Tbs. chia seed
Stevia extract, to taste 
  • In a food processor, combine dates, nuts, cinnamon, oil and salt.  Puree until finely chopped and the mixture sticks together when pinched with your fingers.  Turn out into a square baking dish (I used a 6 x 8 glass container).
  • Open the chilled coconut milk and without stirring, spoon out the cream layer into a medium bowl.  With a fine mesh strainer, pour out the remainder of the can and keep all the cream that is in the top.  Reserve the watery milk for another use.
  • Whip the coconut cream along with the powdered sugar, lemon zest, and vanilla.  Pour atop the nut layer.
  • In the food processor, puree berries and chia seed until smooth.  Add stevia or sugar to taste.  Pour atop the cream layer, and set into the refrigerator to set for at least 2 hours.  (Or dig in and make a mess, like I did!)

Recipe Redux: Apricot & Roasted Hazelnut To-Go Oats

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My mother and I have an arrangement.  She gives me jam and pickled beets and the like, and I return the empty jars to her for the next go round.  Except when I don’t return the jars and begin to use them as my new Tupperware for traveling.  Usually it’s trail mix, granola or this time around, To-Go Oats.  She always eventually gets the jars back, as I start collecting too many.  In the meantime I have an excellent collection of portable containers.

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The last several years have seen me as an on again/off again weekend traveler.  These next few weeks are no exception, as I will be on the road again and again until mid-September.  I am definitely counting down the days (less than 30, I hope!) until W moves back for good.  I’m squirming in my seat and imagining all the activities we can enjoy together that have been missed this last year.  I just can’t wait.

Though I’ve always been big on traveling with food and eating a consistent diet no matter the circumstances, after discovering all of those pesky dietary restrictions in the last couple years, it has become mandatory to travel with a bit of food insurance.  Throwing a batch of oats with all the fixings into a pan is my thing.  I can leave the cooler with every random pantry item that I mightneed at home. Instead, breakfast is all there in a convenient jar to be poured into a pan and made into a bowl of goodness.

I like to add both old-fashioned thick oats and steel cut oats because I like lotsof texture.  This batch includes a strangely addicting mix of fennel seeds, dried apricots, cinnamon and roasted hazelnuts.  It is happiness in a jar.  I always add fresh fruit, and this time around decided to double up on apricots, adding fresh red apricots to the top once cooked. The beauty of this mixture is if you’re an oat and yogurt kinda person, this is practically muesli-esque and can be used both ways.

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Did I mention I am excited to now be participating in Recipe Redux?  This month’s theme is Raising the Bar on Food in a Jar.

Apricot & Roasted Hazelnut To-Go Oats, serves 1
1/4 cup old-fashioned oats*
2 Tbs. steel cut oats*
2-3 dried apricots, diced
1 Tbs. roasted Hazelnuts, chopped
1 Tbs. brown sugar or to taste
1/4 tsp. ground cinnamon
dash fennel seeds
1-2 fresh apricots or any available fresh fruit
  • Measure into a clean jar, spin the lid, and shake.  You’re ready to go!
  • To cook, boil 1 cup water in a small saucepan.  Add entire contents of jar, turn heat to medium and cook about five to 10 minutes, depending on desired consistency.  
* I use Bob’s Red Mill gluten-free oats, but any brand will work, if you’ve no gluten problems.

Peach & Rosemary Cornmeal Cake

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I have two confessions. One, I’ve been eating these Beet Burgers for at least one meal a day for the last five days. Mostly because I’m too stubborn to downsize a recipe and/or freeze leftovers in W’s absence. Oh, and they’re really good.

Two, growing up, I preferred the green, hard, unripe peaches and nectarines from the grocery store. Though I grew up quite close to orchard country, I didn’t like the squishy texture of a ripe peach. Never mind that there was no flavor. It was crisp. Like an apple. And I’ve always loved apples.

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All of that has changed. To the second confession, I mean. I still have leftovers. I went to the farmers market yesterday and bought peaches from my favorite orchard. In a couple weeks, they will begin bringing in the first apples in all their glory. But right about now, Willamette Valley peaches are in their prime. Because I tasted each variety before purchasing, I finally chose the giant Red Globes that were perfectly sweet and ripe. Normally, I would simply slice them up one by one and eat, slowly, letting the juice drip. Drop. Onto the counter, all over my blouse, syrupy fingers infecting everything they touch. With the most perfectly ripe fruit, I wouldn’t usually want to mask its style by fussing. But I’ve been in need of a cake; something slightly savory with texture and herbs.

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This cake delivers. Choose the ripest, choicest peaches you can find-Those flavors will shine through. I’ve adapted my recipe slightly so my cake is both gluten- and dairy-free. If you do not have a food scale, the gluten free flours total about 3/4 of a cup. If you have no dietary concerns, just sub in 3/4 cup all-purpose flour for the gluten free, and use regular milk instead of almond. I beg you, get out there (or into the kitchen) already and enjoy summer’s bounty of peaches while they last!

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Peach & Rosemary Cornmeal Cake, adapted from Bella Eats
Updated: 8/28/22
1 Tbs. ground flax seeds
2 Tbs. warm water
50 grams sorghum flour
20 grams arrowroot flour
15 grams / 2 Tbs. almond meal
120 grams  /  1 cup cornmeal
1/2 tsp. minced fresh rosemary
1 tsp. baking powder
1/4 tsp. salt
2 large eggs
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup non-dairy yogurt
2/3 cup plain unsweetened non-dairy milk
1/4 cup honey
1/4 cup sugar
1 ripe peach, sliced thin
drizzle of honey, to finish
  • Preheat the oven to 350 degrees F.  Oil and flour an 8- or 9-inch springform pan (or a cake pan).
  • In a small bowl, stir together the ground flax and 2 Tbs. warm water. Set aside.
  • In a large bowl, mix the flours, cornmeal, baking powder, salt and rosemary. Set aside.
  • In a large measuring bowl, stir together the eggs, oil, yogurt, milk, honey, sugar, and flax mixture.  Whisk well until frothy.
  • Pour the liquids into dry ingredients and stir until smooth and combined. Pour the batter into cake pan.
  • Arrange the sliced peach onto top of batter, beginning in the middle and working outwards.
  • Bake for approximately 30-35 minutes until toothpick comes out clean. Cool before serving.
  • When serving, drizzle a little honey over the top to finish.