#easy vegan recipe

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Base:

Cheating - buy a box of gluten free chocolate brownie mix

Or -

  • 1 cup of gluten free flour (you can use wheat flour if you want)
  • 2 tablespoons of ground linseed/flaxeseed
  • 3 tablespoons of oil
  • ¼ cup of almond or soy milk (others are fine too)
  • ¼ cup cocoa powder (you can also leave this out and have a vanilla flavoured base)
  • ¼ cup soft brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla essence
  • A pinch of salt

Optional

  • Cinnamon
  • Dessicated coconut
  • Ground almonds, walnuts etc


Mousse

  • x2 Silken tofu (this stuff: https://www.morinu.com/)
  • 1 block of whittakers plain dark chocolate (50% or higher is fine). You can use baking chocolate but it isn’t as good. If you can’t get whittakers, aim for a good quality block of 50% or higher chocolate that’s around 400 grams (or 14 ounces)
  • ¼ cup almond or soy milk (others might work too depending on your tastes)
  • A pinch of salt
  • ¼ cup of soft brown sugar
  • 1 teaspoon of vanilla essence (natural is better but not essential)

Optional

  • Cinnamon and nutmeg
  • Strawberries or other fruit
  • Maple syrup
  • 1 ripe avocado
  • Coconut oil
  • Agar Agar
  • Guar Gum
  • Cocoa powder
  • Chilli
  • Coconut flakes
  • Nuts

Method

  1. Preheat the oven to 180C (350F)
  2. Get a round spring form pan, it makes everything so much easier. Grease it if needed
  3. Mix up all your base ingredients in one go, you’re looking for a fairly thick mixture. Add almond milk and oil by the tablespoon if it’s too dry. Press the mix into the pan and make it as even as you can.
  4. Put it in the oven for 10-15 minutes. Either use the guide on the baking mix box, or if you’re not cheating, look for the surface of the base to gently spring back when you press on it a little. Worst comes to worst it’s not gonna matter if it isn’t super well cooked. Under cooked is better than overcooked.
  5. Leave the base to cool. If you’re in a hurry, put it in the freezer. I usually leave it in the freezer for an hour at least.
  6. Now you have to “press” the tofu. Get a bowl, put a seive over the top, and line the seive with a clean tea towel or cheese cloth. Put the tofu in the cheese cloth, and squeeze it, I find twisting the corners around helps. Water will come out, after a while, leave it in the seive to keep draining.
  7. Half fill a pot with water, now find a metal bowl that will fit in the pot. Break up the chocolate and put it in the metal bowl, and then float the bowl in the pot. It helps if they’re close in size, so just the bottom of the bowl is in the water. Bring the water to the boil and slowly melt the chocolate.
  8. Put the tofu in a blender, add the melted chocolate, and blend until smooth. Add the sugar, salt and vanilla and blend again. Over time it will get thicker. Taste test, add sugar if needed, or if it’s too intense, add a tablespoon of almond milk. Blend and test until it’s how you want it. Bear in mind that the flavours will smooth out in the fridge. I usually add cinnamon, maple syrup, and other stuff during this stage.
  9. If you want to use avocado, you’ll likely need extra cocoa powder. If it’s too runny, add some melted coconut oil, or a little agar or guar gum. Remember it will get a bit firmer after being in the fridge.
  10. Pull the base out of the freezer. If you want strawberries round the edges, now is the time to put them there. Then use a spatula to scrape the mousse into the pan. Spread it out as evenly as you can and add strawberries/other fruit, nuts, coconut etc on top.
  11. Chill in the fridge for at least a few hours. you should notice a change in how firm it is. When you want to take off the sides, run a knife around the edge first to loosen it.

Disclaimer: This recipe might no accessible for everyone, depending on what things cost where you are, or how easily things grow, but hopefully it can spread far and wide.

Uses: I put it on toast, pita bread, tortilla chips, crackers, I use it as a pasta sauce, put it on pizzas instead of cheese, add a dollop to minestrone, it also goes nicely with salads and other antipasto type snacks.


Ingredients(for a batch that makes about four half litre jars full)

  • A truly colossal amount of fresh basil. To give you an idea. I usually fill up four ten litre containers with basil from the garden.
  • Kale or Spinach (optional) - this will dilute the flavour, but it can be a good filler to make more pesto overall.
  • Garlic (preferably fresh) - You can use minced garlic but I find it has a different flavour. You want about half a bulb for a big batch, possibly more if you like garlic or the variety you have is milder.
  • Brewers yeast, Savoury yeast, or Nutritional yeast - About a cup for a big batch. You could also try vegan parmesan if you want.
  • Vegetable oil - About two cups, but you can adjust to get the consistency you want.
  • Cashew nuts - Pinenuts, Pumpkin seeds, sunflower seeds, and similar are all good substitutes.
  • Cumin seeds - About a teaspoon (optional but tasty)
  • Celery seeds - A pinch (optional but tasty)
  • Salt - About a tablespoon
  • A cube of veggie stock (optional)


  1. Method
  2. Strip the leaves off the stalks. Thin and soft stalks are fine to go in the mix but the thicker harder stalks don’t add to the flavour and they ruin the texture. Any leaves that have gone gross should be thrown in the compost.
  3. Rinse the leaves in water, drain them in a sieve, gently pat them dry with paper towels or a tea towel and put them through the blender in batches with a bit of oil each time. You’re unlikely to be able to fit everything in the blender at once so transfer batches to a big bowl. Ideally you want everything to be blended down to very very small pieces.
  4. Add the salt, half the brewers yeast, half the garlic, the nuts/seeds, and the spices to the blender. Run them through the blender with a batch of basil, and transfer to the big bowl. When it’s all been blended, mix everything together with a spoon. Taste test and run more garlic and brewers yeast through the blender and add according to your tastes.
  5. Store in clean jars (I boil the jars and lids in a pot of water). Try to fill the jars up as high as you can and pour a little oil over the top before sealing. The top few millimetres in each jar will likely oxidise and turn dark once it’s been opened again, this shouldn’t affect the taste but you can just scrape that bit off before using.
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