Rosh Ha’Shana is gone and
Yom Kippur is just around the corner.
This moist chocolate cake is a great way to break your fast!
Just about everyone loves
chocolate cake, especially if it is thick, rich and has that great chocolate
aroma. This is the ultimate
chocolate cake recipe! One of the greatest
things about my cake recipes is that you can add in the ingredients in ANY
ORDER you wish, so long as you add the eggs at the end!
Another plus to these cake
recipes is that you can mix these cakes by hand with a large spoon or spatula
and you only need a hand mixer for the egg blending and egg-white whipping at
the end of the recipe! You do not have to schlep out the big mixer for these sweeties!
Yochi’s
Ultimate Chocolate Cake!
Ingredients:
· 1 cup whole wheat flour
· 1 teaspoon baking soda
· 1 teaspoon baking powder
· 1 teaspoon salt
·
1/2 cup unsweetened
cocoa powder
·
1 1/2 cups sugar
substitute
· 1-2 tablespoons of coffee in about an
eighth of a cup of water
· 200 grams applesauce
· 1 1/2 cups water
· 3-4 teaspoons of vanilla extract
· 1 whole egg
· 4 egg whites
· PAM spray
What to do:
·
Sift flour into a
large bowl and then add the baking soda, baking powder and salt.
·
Slowly add in the cocoa
powder. Use the best quality unsweetened cocoa powder you can find!
·
Add the sugar and
mix.
·
A note of caution: Be careful when you
begin to add the liquid ingredients, as the cocoa powder doesn’t “like” to be
mixed with water and tends to start flying up in the air. “Wet” the powder by slowly pouring some
liquid over it and then blend slowly. As
more liquid is added to the mix, the cocoa powder will begin to behave itself!
·
In a separate cup or
small bowl, mix one to two tablespoons of coffee in about an eighth of a cup of
water. The water does not have to be hot!
I love a good strong coffee-chocolate mix. If you are not a particularly big fan of
coffee, use only one to two teaspoonfuls of this stuff.
·
Add applesauce and
mix well and carefully!
·
Add water and
vanilla. As usual, I love vanilla and
love to add a very generous amount to all my cakes!
·
Make sure all
ingredients are mixed very well before you add
the eggs. Remember that whole wheat flour
tends to stick to the bottom of the bowl.
·
Next add the whole egg.
·
In a separate bowl, whip the egg whites until
they are stiff (usually you will quadruple the original volume of the egg
whites) and then gently fold them into the
mix. You can add a bit of sugar into the eggs as they whip. This step
is key to creating a light
textured cake.
·
Spray a round Bundt
cake pan with PAM.
·
Pour the mixture
into the cake pan. The cake should fill
the pan until almost the very top.
·
Bake in a preheated
oven to 180°C for about 40 minutes. Baking time may vary
according to oven, baking pan thickness and season, so check the cake after
about 30 minutes of baking. The top should be
golden brown. Cake is ready when a
toothpick inserted in the cake comes out clean.
·
I do not invert the cake and
remove it from the pan, but rather cut slices as needed.
Portion size:
I cut 8-10 slices from my Bundt pan for a very points-friendly
dessert.
How to store:
Always store these cakes in
the fridge.
Be’Tay a’Von!
Ess – Never Fress!
Never eat while you are standing!
I was always taught that only animals
walk around with food in their mouths; that people must sit down and eat, even
if it is just a simple snack. This is
the difference between “essing” – how people eat and “fressing” – how animals
eat.
Obviously house cats are the
exception to this rule and everyone knows that!
My cats always take their time eating and never walk around with food in
their mouths. Mine only eat dry premium food and bite each morsel in half and
only eat one half – leaving the other half in the bowl, don’t ask! Fair enough, they are also finicky and know
a thing or two about training humans, but that’s another story.
Back to never standing while you
eat! You can drink a bottle of water
standing, but anytime you have to chew something – it should be done
while sitting!
This little piece of logic is very
important for healthy eating and successful dieting! One of the hallmarks of healthy eating is becoming
aware of what we put into our mouths.
This cannot be achieved when we are standing and eating. While standing, we simply cannot pay
attention to what we eat let alone how much we eat.
Think about it: at wedding receptions
we are “forced” to eat a large selection of dishes off of small plates, while
walking around looking for friends, avoiding relatives and making sure not to
get our nice Shabbas clothing dirty two minutes after arriving at the
Hall. It’s a nightmare, especially when
we know that (a) the food at the reception is usually better than the
meal served after the chuppah and (b) we will eat too much and then not want
the meal anyway.
Several issues are at play here. First of all: it’s a kind of “out of sight
out of mind” game our brains, mouths and stomachs play on us. When we stand and eat we cannot pay attention
to what
foods we are putting (ok, stuffing) into our mouths. Even as women, we cannot multitask the
standing, eating and paying attention actions all at once. So I really cannot tell if I just ate carrot
sticks, mini-meat balls or sushi!
Next I cannot keep track of how
much of each food/ingredient I just ate: one tablespoon? five
tablespoons? or a whole plate? My legs
are moving, my brain is doing all kinds of stuff and my mouth is moving, but
“there is no one home” to check on how much I am eating. My brain cannot tell me when I am full. I will probably only stop when the hall
either runs out of a certain food item or the chuppah begins!
Lastly, I cannot enjoy
my food while in transit. I cannot
possibility enjoy the aroma, taste, chewing, and sensation of each bite. This whole enjoying-your-food-experience is
still kind of new to me! Heck chewing my food is still a novelty, but I do enjoy
it.
Today, when I feel
myself rushing or not chewing each bite, I put down my fork and knife (or
spoon) and c-h-e-w. No, I do not chew
one hundred times. That’s ridiculous! But I do chew each bite and I do try to get
the most pleasure out of each one!
So listen to your momma
– chew your food slowly, enjoy your meal and DON’T WALK AROUND WITH FOOD IN
YOUR MOUTHS – only (some) animals do that!
So ess and don’t fress!
Gmar Chatima Tova! Tzom Moeil!
As soon as I'm off this fakakte 'no-gluten' diet.
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