5-minute vegan fat-free chocolate muffins (with gooey centre!)

Quite possible the easiest and healthiest chocolate muffins you will ever make!

Makes 12 mini muffins or 7 large muffins

Ingredients
1 cup all-purpose flour
1 cup unsweetened apple sauce
1/2 cup to 1 cup sugar or preferred sweetener equivalent, depending on taste
3/4 cup (plant) milk of choice
1/4 cup cacao or cocoa
2 tsp baking powder
dash of vanilla
pinch of salt

Note: You will need a silicon mould as they will stick to paper muffin cups due to their low fat content.

Preheat oven to 180 °C. Dump all ingredients (no particular order needed!) in a large mixing bowl and mix with a whisk or wooden spoon until you obtain a smooth and pourable batter. This should not take long at all. Evenly distribute into the muffin moulds. Bake for 15-20 minutes. Turn off the oven and let them rest in the hot oven for 5 minutes, then take them out and let them rest on the bench for 10 minutes. Only remove them from the mould once they have cooled as they will stick.

Enjoy!

Vegan Glutenfree Lowfat Pear Streusel Muffins

It’s my birthday and I brought you muffins! Not any old muffins, but the most delicious, moist, fruity, fudgy, crowd-pleasing vegan glutenfree lowfat pear streusel muffins! Yes, that’s right. While anything involving the word “streusel” would usually conjure the idea of either vegan, gluten free or lowfat, these babies are exactly that. No white flour, butter or refined sugar involved, and with fat only coming from the fat naturally occurring in oats. Who is in?

Vegan Glutenfree Lowfat Pear Streusel Muffins
Vegan Glutenfree Lowfat Pear Streusel Muffins

These little delights were born out of the necessity to do something with a huge bag full of pears that our supermarket gave away for next to nothing as they were approaching their use-by date. Ever since my teenage years, I have enjoyed making muffins. It is such an easy way to use up whatever fruit you have on hand, it is quick, virtually fool-proof and the results never disappoint. Using fruit in muffins is also a great way to lower their fat content as the fruit keeps the nice and luscious.

Back to my bag full of pears and my obsession with muffins. So vegan glutenfree lowfat pear streusel muffins it was. I had never attempted streusel before so I am quite pleased how these babes turned out after the first attempt. As I said, they are ready in a jiffy and not complicated at all. Perfect if you just want to whip up something quickly for surprise guests or the 3pm munchies.

As my daughter and hubby (who are not into health food at all) devoured them, I can’t really say how long these will keep…:-)

Vegan Glutenfree Lowfat Pear Streusel Muffins

Makes 12 muffins

For the streusel:
1/4 cup oat flour
1/3 cup coconut sugar
2/3 cup oats
1/2 cup applesauce
cinnamon

For the muffins:
one cup soy milk or other plant milk
2 tbsp apple cider vinegar 
1 tbsp vanilla extract
1/2 cup applesauce
2 cups oat flour
1/2 cup coconut sugar
4 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp salt
cinnamon
4 pears, diced

Preheat oven to 180 °C and grease a muffin tin or line it with liners. In a large mixing bowl, mix the milk with the vinegar, vanilla and applesauce and set aside for 15 minutes.

Meanwhile, prepare the streusel by mixing all the streusel ingredients in a small bowl. Set aside.

After 15 minutes are up, add the oat flour, coconut sugar, baking powder, salt and cinnamon and gently stir with a wooden spoon until incorporated and you have a smooth batter. Fold in the diced pear. Scoop batter into prepared muffin tin, then divide the streusel on top of the muffins. Bake for 20-25 minutes and let cool in pan for another 10 minutes before taking them out. Best to store in the fridge in an airtight container.

Enjoy!

Gluten free, low carb, vegan carrot cake muffins

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Carrot Cake with whipped cream filling

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Carrot Cake with vegan frosting

Those who think that gluten free cooking is complicated and tasteless hasn’t tried these fantastic carrot cake muffins – they are ready in a jiffy, packed with fibre (they really are satisfying!) and beta-carotene, low carb and low GI, and of course completely gluten free, dairy free, soy free, and sugar free! Have I mentioned that they are extremely yummy, too?

For all frosting addicts out there who cannot or don’t want to have milk, yes, I created a dairy free frosting that tastes like a cream cheese frosting! And no, it does NOT contain Tofutti or any other GMO-laden soy crap. It is made with coconut milk – however, you won’t taste the coconut much in the final product so don’t fret if you are not the biggest coconut fan in the world – you will still like it, I promise. You can find the recipe here and below. Update: I created a new vegan and sugar-free frosting without any nuts. Recipe here.

Alternatively, these muffins are even better filled with my vegan whipped cream! Highly recommended! (see left-hand picture above)

Watch out, these delicious little cakes will be gobbled up before you know it – so better make a bigger batch if you need them for a party! You can easily double or triple this recipe. They last well in the fridge (in fact, they taste even better the next day) and you can freeze them without any worries.

Makes 12 muffins

For the muffin batter
2 eggs or egg replacer to make it vegan
100 g of honey (can be substituted with organic maple syrup or agave nectar)
40 ml olive oil
100 g plain gluten free flour
30 g flax seed
1 teaspoon gluten free baking soda
50 g nuts (almonds and/or walnuts are best, but you can use any nuts) – more nuts improve the flavour even further
1 1/2 cups of freshly grated carrots – the more carrots, the more moist and delicious your muffins will be
1/2 teaspoon xanthan (if your gf flour mix doesn’t contain it already)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt (or Celtic sea salt)
1 teaspoon vanilla
10 dates (optional, but adds taste and texture – could be replaced with raisins and/or sultanas)

For the frosting
1/2 can of coconut cream (full fat or light – both work fine)
1 teaspoon of honey
pinch of salt
80 g coconut oil
80 g vegan margarine (Nuttelex) or butter
1/8 teaspoon xanthan to thicken

Muffins:
-Preheat oven to 180° C
-Beat honey, eggs, oil, vanilla in a large mixing bowl until smooth
-In a separate bowl, combine the dry ingredients: flour, flax, soda, xanthan, salt and cinnamon
-Add to wet ingredients and beat until smooth
-Mix in carrots, nuts and dates and transfer batter to muffin pan
-Bake for 30 min or until a toothpick comes out clean

Frosting:
-Heat coconut milk, honey and salt, bring to the boil and let simmer for 10 minutes
-add xanthan, stirring continuously, bring to the boil and remove from heat – the mix should have a shiny surface
-stir in coconut oil, whisking or using a blender
-set to cool for 15 minutes and transfer to fridge for another 2 hours (the longer, the better), until mix has firmed up
-when it is thoroughly chilled, transfer coconut mix to a mixing bowl (you might need to blend it again with a stick blender to make it really smooth), add the margarine or butter and mix with hand blender for 2 minutes until thick and fluffy
-decorate muffins with the frosting using a cake decorator or silicon spatula

Enjoy!

Tips
– use sugar free orange marmalade instead of honey, to get a more tangy and zesty taste
– add some ginger to the dough for some exotic spiciness
– mix some gingerbread or pumpkin pie spice in the frosting for a delish Halloween or Xmas treat
– replace the carrots with cooked pumpkin or sweet potato for an extra luscious treat
– you can of course make this a cake instead of muffins. This recipe is enough for one round 20 cm baking pan. Double this recipe for a bigger cake.