LAURA KNIGHT-JADCZYK AND JOE QUINN
Since the 9/11 attacks, no book has provided a satisfactory answer as to WHY the attacks occurred and who was ultimately responsible for carrying them out - until now.
Joe, could you share any tried and tested recipe with exact amount of ingredients in order to really not regret? ;)
Try this:
5 T virgin coconut oil (for a better texture)
5 T organic cocoa powder
2-3 T zylitol
a few drops of pure vanilla extract
pinch sea salt
Heat gently over steam (may not need this step if temp is around 76 degrees, coconut oil will blend very well) Add chopped nuts to make a nougat, coconut flakes or sesame seeds make a nice topping, drop onto waxed paper and freeze or refrigerate :)
I don't think you'd regret Kate, even if you just experiment, because it's hard to get it wrong since most of it is figured out by tasting as you prepare. Here's what I do.
250grs butter, 125grs xlylitol, 150grs of 100% cocoa powder, a "splash" of vanilla extract, and as Mary says, you can add a couple of pinches of salt and powder the xylitol in a coffee grinder if you have one.
Heat the butter till it melts, no need to boil it, and then take it off the heat. Then add xylitol and cocoa powder and salt and stir it in until well mixed, then add some vanilla. Taste it to see if it is sweet/bitter enough, or if you want more vanilla.
Pour it into a chocolates mold or something similar and put in fridge to cool, or in freezer for faster cooling and hardening. You can also add some of your favorite chopped nuts to each section of the mold (if they don't bother you) or whatever you are using to pour the chocolate into.
to powderize the zylitol in a blender to make it smoother
thanks for both recipes :)
Chocalate delicious but as for me with two times less xylitol!
If your really interested in the health benefits, nothing beats eating raw Cacao Beans.
If you never have had them they will definitely show you how much typical chocolate processing takes away from their flavor.
They are bitter but have a very rich flavor of their own which can also vary from the local that they were grown in.
Not only do they have their own rich flavor but leave an aftertaste that lingers for quite sometime.
I particularly enjoy eating them with other dried fruits like pineapple or mango and drinking with clean water.
Nothing like a "chocolate bar" at all.
the point is that the cocoa bean and its derivatives are beneficial to human health. Sadly, most chocolate also contains dairy and sugar, which are decidedly BAD for human health. So, what's the solution? Makes your own! Try melting a lump of butter, adding powdered xylitol and 100% cocoa powder to taste, some vanilla extract, and put in the fridge or freezer. You won't regret it!